He dug his knuckles into my throat, thinking I was just another weak recruit he could break in front of the entire platoon. He didn’t know my hands were registered lethal weapons or that I outranked him in ways he couldn’t imagine. The silence that followed my next move wasn’t fear—it was the sound of his career ending.
CHAPTER 1: THE HEAT INDEX
The Mojave sun doesn’t just shine; it weighs on you. It presses down with a physical force, turning the air in your lungs into hot soup. We were at Fort Irwin, the National Training Center, standing in formation on a patch of gravel that had probably dissolved the boots of a thousand soldiers before us.
It was 1400 hours. The heat index was pushing 110. But the temperature wasn’t the reason the air felt suffocating.
It was Colonel Riker.
He was walking the line. Click. Scrape. Click. Scrape. The sound of his polished boots on the grit was the only thing audible over the distant hum of generators. Riker wasn’t just a commanding officer; he was a tyrant with a silver eagle on his collar. He believed in the “old corps,” which, in his translation, meant breaking people for sport.
And he hated me.
I was the anomaly. The glitch in his perfect matrix of testosterone and aggression. I was the only woman in this advanced infantry remedial course, a transfer with a redacted file that he hadn’t bothered—or didn’t have the clearance—to read. To him, I was a diversity hire. A quota filler. A soft spot in his iron wall.
“Eyes front!” he barked, his voice cracking like a whip.
I stared at the horizon, watching heat waves distort the mountains. I could feel his gaze before he even reached me. It was a physical sensation, like a laser pointer burning into the side of my neck.
He stopped. The silence stretched, tight as a piano wire.
“Private Miller,” Riker growled, addressing the kid next to me. Miller was nineteen, from Iowa, and shook like a leaf whenever the wind blew too hard. “Why is your uniform unbuttoned?”
“Heat, sir… I thought…” Miller stammered.
“You thought?” Riker sneered. “You don’t think. You bleed and you sweat. Fix it.”
Miller fumbled. His hands were shaking so bad he dropped his cover into the dust.
Riker stepped on it. He grounded the fabric into the dirt with his heel. “Pick it up.”
Miller froze. He looked at the boot, then at Riker.
That’s when I moved. I didn’t think about it. It was instinct—the kind drilled into me over a decade of operations that Riker would only see in movies. I bent my knees, swept my hand down, and snatched the cover out from under the arch of Riker’s boot before he could apply full pressure.
I stood up and handed it to Miller. “Secure your gear, Private.”
The silence that followed wasn’t just quiet. It was a vacuum.
Riker turned to me slowly. His face was a mask of disbelief that was rapidly hardening into pure, unadulterated rage. No one touched the Colonel. No one intervened. And certainly, no “little girl”—as he’d called me the day I arrived—undermined his discipline.
“Sergeant Ava,” he whispered. The dangerous kind of whisper.
“Colonel,” I replied, my voice flat.
He stepped into my personal space. I could smell the stale coffee and peppermint on his breath. I could see the red veins in his eyes.
“You think you’re special?” he hissed. “You think because you transferred in from some desk job in D.C. that the rules don’t apply to you?”
“I think the recruit needed his cover, Sir.”
He smiled. It was a jagged, ugly thing. “Let’s see how well you cover yourself.”
Then, he did the unthinkable.
He reached out, his hand moving faster than most eyes could track, and grabbed a fistful of my uniform collar. He twisted his knuckles into my windpipe, yanking me forward until our foreheads were almost touching…
His knuckles grind deeper, threatening to collapse my airway, but his mistake is thinking pressure alone is enough to control me. He doesn’t know I’ve survived things hotter, harsher, and far more lethal than a desert bully with delusions of grandeur. He doesn’t know that if he cuts off my air, instinct takes over—and mine is honed, sharpened, weaponized.
My vision narrows, not from lack of oxygen, but from focus. A calm settles inside me, the kind that only comes when adrenaline marries muscle memory.
“Let go,” I say, barely audible.
He tightens his grip. “Make me.”
So I do.
My left hand shoots up, grabbing his wrist, twisting sharply counterclockwise. The motion is clean, practiced, designed to separate joints if pressure isn’t released immediately. He grunts, the surprise cracking through his arrogance. My right hand comes up under his elbow, pushing hard, leveraging his own mass against him.
His knuckles slip off my throat.
Gasps ripple through the platoon, but I’m not done. Not when he’s still clinging to some fantasy of control.
He lunges for me again, his hand swinging in a wide arc—sloppy, emotional. I sidestep, grab the back of his collar, and pull. His momentum does the rest. He stumbles forward, face-first, catching himself with both hands in the gravel.
The sun glints off the tiny stones embedded instantly into his palms.
Silence.
The kind that feels like every molecule in the atmosphere is holding its breath.
Riker rises slowly, dust clinging to his uniform, his face flushed a dangerous crimson. “You’re done,” he says. “I’m having you court-martialed before sundown.”
“No, Sir,” I say, straightening my collar. “You’re not.”
He opens his mouth, ready to spit venom, but he stops when he sees the black SUV rolling across the training field, tires grinding gravel, windows tinted, engine growling with authority that outranks his entire personality.
The doors open. Two men step out—suits, earpieces, posture too rigid to be anything but federal.
And then the third door opens.
General Dalton steps out.
Four stars.
The kind of rank that makes colonels forget their own names.
Riker’s face drains of blood. He snaps to attention so fast his spine should’ve cracked.
“Sir!” he chokes. “I—I wasn’t expecting—”
“That’s obvious,” Dalton says. His voice is gravel and thunder.
I stand at attention, but Dalton’s eyes flick toward me first. I catch the tiny nod—permission to ease slightly.
Then he turns to Riker.
“What in God’s scorched desert happened here?”
Riker stammers, “Sir, Sergeant Ava assaulted—”
Dalton lifts a hand.
“Colonel. Stop talking before you hang yourself further.”
His gaze moves across the formation. “Anyone here want to tell me what they saw?”
The platoon stiffens. Eyes stare straight ahead. Not one soldier breaks rank—not out of loyalty to Riker, but out of fear of retaliation. Dalton knows it. He clicks his tongue, unimpressed.
“Miller,” I say quietly.
His head jerks. His Adam’s apple bobs. But he steps forward, voice trembling. “Sir… Sergeant Ava didn’t start anything. Colonel Riker grabbed her first.”
Dalton nods once. “Thank you, Private.”
Riker looks like he’s about to combust. “Sir, she undermined my authority—”
“Your authority undermined itself the moment you put your hands on a subordinate.” Dalton steps closer, towering over him. “Sergeant Ava is here on my directive. Her file is classified above your pay grade. And let me be very clear: if she broke your nose in front of these soldiers, I would pin a medal on her.”
Riker’s mouth opens, closes, then opens again like a fish dying on a dock.
Dalton turns to me. “Sergeant, with me.”
“Yes, Sir.”
I follow him toward the SUV while Riker is escorted away by the two suits, his protests fading into the desert heat.
When the doors shut behind us, Dalton exhales. “You didn’t waste any time making an impression.”
“He grabbed me,” I say simply.
“I saw.” He sighs. “You okay?”
“I’m fine.”
“You always say that.”
“Because it’s always true.”
The SUV begins moving, the training fields fading behind us. For the first time all day, I feel the suffocating heat start to lift.
Dalton removes a folder from a briefcase. “Your transfer wasn’t for remedial infantry, Ava. That was a cover. We have a situation.”
Of course we do.
His voice lowers. “A weapons convoy went missing two nights ago. Classified tech. Prototype-level. We have intel placing it somewhere on the outskirts of this base. Someone inside the chain-of-command is involved.”
I feel my pulse steady—the kind of calm reserved for chaos.
“Internal sabotage?”
“Worse,” Dalton says. “A mole with high clearance.”
“And you want me to find them.”
“I want you to stop them before that tech disappears permanently. And before whoever’s involved realizes we’re onto them.”
We roll past the perimeter, the desert stretching endlessly ahead.
Dalton hands me a tablet. On the screen: surveillance images, a night-vision shot of figures unloading crates, and one blurry image that makes my stomach tighten.
Colonel Riker.
Well. That explains the desperation in his grip.
Dalton watches my reaction. “We need undeniable proof. And we need it today.”
“What’s the tech?” I ask.
His jaw flexes. “Enough that if it gets into the wrong hands, you and I won’t be having this conversation tomorrow.”
The SUV slows near a remote training village—mock buildings, empty alleys, silence thick as concrete.
“This is where the trail leads,” Dalton says. “We believe the exchange happens before dusk.”
He steps out. I follow.
The air shifts. Lighter now. Charged. Dangerous.
Dalton clamps a hand on my shoulder. “Ava… whatever happens, you finish this.”
“I always do.”
He gives a rare, fleeting smile. “I know.”
I move through the mock village, boots silent on sandstone. Every window is a dark square. Every door a mouth waiting to swallow sound. The tablet pings softly—motion detected three buildings ahead.
I approach.
Voices drift through the cracked doorway—low, tense.
I ease closer and peek inside.
Riker stands with three contractors, crates stacked behind them. He signs a tablet, his posture cocky, as if he didn’t nearly face-plant in gravel fifteen minutes ago.
One contractor opens the top crate.
My blood chills.
Inside: a new generation railgun apparatus—compact, portable, lethal without recoil. Still in testing. Not supposed to exist outside secure labs.
Riker’s voice slithers through the room. “Once this is on the truck, we’re clear.”
Contractor: “Payment transfers upon delivery.”
Riker: “I want confirmation now.”
I slip inside through the back. Silent. Controlled.
Dalton wanted proof. So I hit record.
The contractor taps a code. A digital chirp echoes.
And then Riker’s head snaps in my direction.
Movement too sharp to be instinct.
He sees me.
His face twists. “You.”
The contractors reach for weapons, but I’m already moving. I spring forward, catching the first one with a kick to the solar plexus. He collapses, breathless. The second draws a pistol—too slow. I twist his wrist, the gun skittering across the floor, and slam his head into the crate edge.
Riker fumbles for his sidearm.
I don’t give him the chance.
I punch his arm upward, the gun firing into the ceiling. Dust rains down. He swings wildly, but desperation makes him sloppy. I catch his fist mid-air, pivot, and throw him across the room. He crashes into the crates, coughing.
The remaining contractor lunges with a knife. I dodge, grab his wrist, twist downward until the blade clatters. My elbow snaps into his jaw. He drops.
Riker scrambles to his feet, fury and terror tangled on his face.
“You don’t know what you’re doing!” he shouts.
“I know exactly what I’m doing.”
He charges.
I sidestep and let his momentum carry him straight into a wooden pillar. He hits it hard. Slides down. Groaning.
He looks up at me, defeated, sweat dripping, voice shaking.
“They promised me a way out,” he whispers. “They said no one would care. They said you… you were just a nobody.”
I crouch beside him, eyes level.
“You should’ve read my file.”
Dalton enters with a security team. They take the contractors into custody. Riker is cuffed, dragged to his feet.
Dalton studies the wrecked room, then looks at me.
“You got it?”
“Audio and video,” I say, handing him the tablet. “Everything you need.”
“Good.” He breathes out, tension melting. “This shuts down the entire operation.”
Riker screams curses as he’s hauled out into the sunlight, but they fade quickly—drowned by the desert’s wide, indifferent silence.
When the room is finally empty, Dalton turns to me.
“You handled yourself flawlessly.”
“Always do.”
He chuckles softly. “Come on. Let’s get out of this oven.”
We walk back toward the SUV. The sun hangs lower now, bleeding gold across the horizon. The oppressive heat eases into something almost tolerable.
Dalton opens the door but pauses.
“Ava… you saved careers today. Maybe even lives.”
I shrug. “Just did my job.”
He steps aside. “And you did it better than anyone else could.”
I climb into the SUV, letting the cool air wash over me as the doors shut.
For the first time since stepping onto this base, I let myself lean back, inhale deeply, and feel the tension leave my muscles.
Outside, the desert rolls by—endless, harsh, honest.
Dalton glances over. “You ready for your next assignment?”
I smirk. “Always.”
He smiles. “Good. Because after today… your file just got a little less redacted.”
We roll away from Fort Irwin, leaving behind the heat, the dust, and the Colonel who thought he could break me.
But in the end, he only confirmed what I already knew:
Some careers are built in the sun.
Others end in it.
And mine?
Mine survives anywhere.




