“We can’t treat that injury,” they insisted, turning her away without help—until they discovered the woman they had dismissed and left to suffer was a Navy SEAL, a revelation that instantly shifted the balance of power.

The sky over the Kandar Plateau had the pale, indifferent color of early morning bone when the first explosion cracked the silence in half.

It wasn’t cinematic. It wasn’t heroic. It was violent in the most practical sense — a concussive thud that shoved air out of lungs and flipped armored vehicles like toys dropped by an impatient child. Within seconds, …

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