The Captured Ranger Medic Who Turned a Prison Cell Into a Trap-eirian

The enemy commander made one mistake.

He thought a locked room meant control.

He thought concrete, steel, cameras, and tired men with rifles could turn an American soldier into a prop.

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He thought fear belonged to him.

Commander Rashid Hassan smiled through the bars of my cell and told me one American woman would not last a week in his compound.

I did not answer him.

I was looking at the rusted hinges.

I was looking at the guard rotation.

I was looking at the blind spot above the corridor where the camera had been mounted too high by a man who did not expect anyone to study angles from the floor.

I was looking at the dented medical tray one of his men had forgotten near the wall.

By then, my mouth was split.

My left shoulder burned from the blast that had thrown me away from my team.

Dust had dried along my hairline.

Blood had crusted under my nose.

My wrists still held the deep red marks from the zip ties they had cut off after throwing me into the cell.

But I was breathing.

That mattered more than they understood.

The first thing Hassan said when his fighters dragged me into the mountain compound was not my name.

It was not my rank.

It was not even a question.

“Put her in the dark until she remembers she is not a soldier anymore,” he said.

That was how I knew what kind of man he was.

Men like Hassan did not ask questions first.

They gave orders because orders made them feel bigger than the facts in front of them.

Two fighters shoved me down a narrow hallway carved into the mountain.

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