She Crawled Through a Blizzard and Found Her Commander’s Betrayal-olive

I thought my unit left me behind in the freezing storm because I was badly injured, but after crawling two miles and tracking down the source of the leaked coordinates, I realized my own commander planned the ambush to wipe us all out completely.

The whiteout hit Firebase Volkov before dawn, hard enough to wipe the ridgeline off the world.

Snow struck my helmet in sharp little bursts, like sand thrown by an angry hand.

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The cold had weight.

It pressed through my sleeves, through my collar, through the torn seam of my glove, until even my bones felt like they belonged to the storm.

The air smelled like burned powder and frozen dirt.

There was blood in my mouth, metallic and warm, and every time I swallowed it, my stomach tried to reject the truth my mind had not caught up with yet.

My name is Kate Morrison.

Recon scout, U.S. Army, twenty-eight years old.

I was trained to read the world after other people missed it.

Tracks in snow.

Tire cuts in mud.

A pressure plate hidden under loose dust.

A pause in a man’s voice before he decided what version of the truth he wanted to sell.

That morning, flat on my stomach at the bottom of a ravine, none of that training felt impressive.

It felt small.

My left leg was broken badly enough that I knew before I looked.

You do not need a medic to tell you when bone has stopped sitting where bone belongs.

My boot felt too tight and too loose at the same time.

Every breath sent pain up my shin and into my teeth.

For three seconds, my rifle was gone.

That scared me almost as much as the leg.

The M24 had been with me long enough that I knew the nick near the bolt by touch.

I dug through the snow with torn gloves until my fingers struck cold metal, then dragged it back against my chest like I had found a handhold on the edge of the world.

The grenade had come from nowhere.

No shout.

No muzzle flash.

No messy exchange of fire that would let you build a clean report afterward.

One second our recon team was moving low along the ridge, spaced out and quiet under a sky the color of old steel.

The next, the ravine opened beneath me, and the world became snow, rock, fire, and the sickening knowledge that I was falling wrong.

At 03:27, my radio cracked.

The sound came thin through static, warped by the weather, but the voice was clear enough.

Lieutenant Hail.

“Morrison’s down. She’s dead. Pull back now. That’s an order.”

I tried to scream.

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