The Pilot Who Stole A Warthog And Exposed The General In The Bunker-olive

The heat inside the cockpit had weight.

It pressed down on Captain Reese Miller’s shoulders, filled the seams of her flight suit, and made the oxygen mask smell like rubber, dust, and old fear.

The A-10 beneath her waited on the runway like a blunt instrument pointed at a war that had already gone wrong.

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Three miles north, Outpost Delta was dying in pieces.

Reese could not see it yet.

She could hear it.

Every burst of static carried another shard of panic.

Someone was calling for ammunition.

Someone else was screaming for a medic.

Then General Thomas Reiker came over the net and did the one thing Reese had never heard a general do in front of trapped men.

He gave up.

“They’re inside the wire,” he said, breathing hard enough to flood the channel.

The voice belonged to a man with polished boots, perfect ribbons, and thirty years of building a career from other people’s blood.

Now it sounded small.

“Eastern barrier is gone. Heavy weapons are gone. We’re doomed.”

Reese stared at the runway shimmering under the noon sun.

Two hundred soldiers were pinned inside that outpost.

Corporal Jenkins had handed her coffee that morning so weak it looked like dishwater.

Specialist Caleb Miller had waved from the mess line with Reese’s last name on his uniform and a laugh that always hit her harder than she let on.

The tower cut in before she could answer Delta.

“Boar One-One, hold position.”

The controller sounded scared too.

“Surface-to-air threats in the valley. Command says you do not have authorization to lift off.”

Reese looked at the master caution panel.

No light told her what to do.

No warning system could measure the cost of obedience.

She knew what waited in the valley.

Shoulder-fired missiles.

Heavy guns.

Enough luck, and the armored Warthog would become a thirty-ton coffin.

Her mouth tasted like metal.

Then Jenkins broke through.

“Boar One-One, this is Misfit Two.”

His voice was thin and wet.

Reese leaned toward the radio as if that could pull him closer.

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