CHAPTER 1 – THE DAY THE SKY BROKE
The helicopter was already burning when it hit the ground.
Captain Ethan Cross felt the impact before he heard it-a violent slam that snapped his spine forward and drove the breath out of his lungs. Metal screamed, glass exploded, and the world spun sideways before settling into a blur of smoke, fire, and dust.
When consciousness returned, it was accompanied by a sharp, insistent pain, spreading from his ribs down to his legs. Not fatal, yet deeply insistent: something is wrong, something is very wrong.
Coughing, Ethan forced his eyes open. The cockpit was crushed inward, the windshield shattered, and the nose of the helicopter was buried deep in the red dirt of northern Kandara, a country officially invisible on any map that mattered.
Unofficially, it was hell.
"Move... move..." Ethan muttered to himself, voice hoarse, tasting copper from a cut inside his cheek.
Training kicked in faster than fear could. He unbuckled, slammed against the floor, and rolled out of the twisted metal just as a secondary explosion ripped through the fuel tank. Fire bloomed behind him, hot enough to singe the hair on his arms.
He crawled until his hands hit stone instead of burning metal. Then he lay there, gasping, staring at the sky.
The sky was wrong.
It wasn't the calm blue he remembered from the briefing. It was torn apart by black smoke columns rising from the valley below. Distant gunfire popped like fireworks. Mortars thumped intermittently, almost rhythmic. Somewhere, a child screamed-high, thin, abruptly cut off.
Ethan closed his eyes for half a second.
You're alive. That's step one.
He forced himself to his feet and took stock:
Rifle: gone
Sidearm: holstered but scratched and grimy
Radio: cracked, dead
Team: missing
The last one hit hardest.
They had been six, crossing the border under cover of night-a black-ops extraction unit sent to retrieve a defector known only as Asset Orion. A scientist. A ghost. A man who allegedly carried proof that could collapse governments.
The mission had been simple: in and out. No witnesses.
Instead, Kandara's rebel militias had lit up the night sky like a war movie trailer. And now Ethan was alone.
A shadow passed overhead.
He froze.
Another helicopter-definitely not friendly.
He rolled behind a slab of stone as bullets stitched the dirt where his head had been seconds earlier. The chopper banked away, searching, but didn't circle back.
They think I'm dead.
Good.
Ethan stripped ammo from the crashed helicopter, grabbed a battered rifle discarded by his own team, and disappeared into the forest just as more voices echoed from the valley.
Hours later, he stumbled into the village of Tarak-9. From a distance, it looked abandoned. Up close, it looked massacred. Burned huts, bullet-scarred walls, and livestock left to rot in the sun.
Movement caught his eye: a woman bursting from a collapsed doorway, clutching a child, eyes wide with terror. Behind her, militia fighters shouted.
Ethan didn't hesitate.
He fired from cover, precise and ruthless. The woman ran. The child screamed. The fighters fell.
She stopped only when safely behind a wall. Their eyes met.
She wasn't Kandaran military. Too clean, too alert.
"Who are you?" she demanded in perfect English.
Ethan lowered his weapon slightly. "That depends. Are you Asset Orion?"
Her jaw tightened.
"No. But I know where he is."
Before Ethan could respond, the ground shook.
A convoy roared into the village-more militia, trucks loaded with men and heavy weapons.
The woman grabbed his sleeve. "If they capture him, thousands die. Not metaphorically. Literally."
Ethan looked at the vehicles, then back at her.
His orders were clear. But so was the look in her eyes.
"Name," he said.
"Dr. Mara Vale," she replied.
He nodded once. "Then run, Doctor."
They sprinted as gunfire erupted behind them, the warzone closing in like a trap. The forest swallowed them in darkness. Dust, smoke, and the smell of burning metal filled the air.
Hours passed in silence except for their own ragged breathing. Ethan's mind worked furiously. The helicopter crash wasn't an accident. The mission wasn't about extraction-it was containment. And somewhere in Kandara, a secret powerful enough to reshape the world was waiting, guarded by lies, blood, and a clock already ticking.
Ethan slowed, glancing back. Mara's eyes were burning with fear, determination, and something else he couldn't place.
"Where are we going?" he asked.
"The scientist," she said simply. "He's alive. And they will kill him if we don't reach him first."
Ethan's jaw tightened. His side burned with each step, but he kept moving.
This wasn't about orders anymore. It was about survival-and about doing what was right, even if the world wanted him dead.
Above, the sky darkened. The first stars struggled to pierce through smoke and ash. The war had just begun.