Declared Dead in Alaska, Emma Frost Returned Carrying 4 Rangers-eirian

The first thing Staff Sergeant Ryan Cole remembered from North Ridge was the sound of the radio dying.

Not all at once.

It cracked, spat, and came back in pieces, as if the storm was chewing the signal before it could reach Fort Richardson.

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“Base, this is Ranger 26,” he said, pressing the handset so hard his glove creaked. “We are pinned down. Repeat, pinned down on North Ridge with four critical casualties.”

Wind screamed across the ridge and drove snow into the side of his face.

The cold had gone past pain.

It had become something quieter and more dangerous.

His eyebrow was split, and every few seconds blood worked loose from the frozen edge and blurred his right eye.

He blinked it away and looked down the slope.

Wright was curled on his side, shaking too weakly.

Diaz had one arm clamped around his ribs, trying not to breathe too deeply.

Hayes was pinned under a slab of ice-crusted snow, his face gray beneath the beard stubble.

Another Ranger kept staring at his own hands because he could no longer feel his fingers.

And Emma Frost was gone.

“Our medic is missing,” Cole said into the radio.

His mouth resisted the next words.

He said them anyway.

“Buried by the avalanche. Frost is KIA. We need immediate extraction, but we have no LZ, no cover, and enemy movement closing from three sides.”

The recorded communications channel kept his voice exactly as he spoke it.

No context.

No mercy.

Just the official sound of a man deciding someone was dead because the mission needed the sentence to be clean.

Then the gunfire started.

Forty-eight hours earlier, Cole would have told any officer in Alaska that his team was ready.

At 05:40 on November 17, 2018, the briefing room at Fort Richardson glowed under hard fluorescent lights.

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