Two heat signatures in the dark.

He thought about the scratches on the wall.

Each one a day survived.

thought about Emma singing to Terara through the fever.

Thought about promises made and kept and broken.

He pulled out his phone, found the photo of Emma’s St.

Christopher medallion, her grandmother’s gift meant to keep her safe.

It hadn’t protected her from capture from 5 years of hell.

But maybe it had done something else.

Maybe it had kept her human, kept her fighting, kept her taking care of Terara when everything else was lost.

“We’re coming,” he said quietly to the photo.

Hold on.

We’re coming.

Morrison heard him, nodded.

Phase 1 begins at 1400.

Everyone rest until then.

Eat, hydrate.

He paused.

And if you’re the praying type, now would be good.

Boyd wasn’t the praying type.

Hadn’t been since Afghanistan since he’d seen too much to believe in a god who gave a damn.

But looking at that thermal image, those two bodies holding each other in the dark, he found himself whispering words he hadn’t said in years.

Please let them survive this.

Let us get there in time.

Let Emma’s strength be enough for both of them.

The warehouse fell quiet as everyone found their own space to prepare, to think, to steal themselves for what was coming.

In 27 hours, they’d either be heroes or corpses.

either bringing home two soldiers who’d survived the impossible or dying in the attempt.

Boyd cleaned his rifle, checked his magazines, organized his gear, repetitive motions, muscle memory, the same things he’d done before a hundred missions.

But this one felt different, personal.

I’m sorry, he said to the empty air, to Emma and Terra, wherever they were.

I’m sorry we left you there.

I’m sorry it took so long, but we’re coming now.

Hold on.

Outside, dawn was breaking over Kentucky.

Somewhere in the mountains between Afghanistan and Pakistan, in an underground storage room, two women were watching their 1,827th sunrise in captivity.

Tomorrow, if Morrison’s plan worked, would be their last.

Tomorrow, they were going home one way or another.

The truck smelled like goat [ __ ] and diesel.

Boyd sat in the back of the second vehicle, AK-47, across his lap, watching the mountains grow larger through the dustcovered window.

They’d crossed into hostile territory 3 hours ago.

Every checkpoint, every curious look from locals made his finger twitch toward the trigger.

Morrison rode in the lead vehicle with two sals.

Sharp and Rodriguez in the third.

All of them dressed like arms dealers, worn military surplus, weak old beards.

that particular swagger of men who sold death for profit.

The radio crackled.

Morrison’s voice calm.

Checkpoint ahead.

Two guards, maybe more in the building.

Boyd pulled the Keia higher around his face.

Peters, sitting across from him, did the same.

Their driver and Afghan informant Morris entrusted slowed the truck.

The guards looked bored.

One barely glanced at the forged papers before waving them through.

Too easy.

Boyd’s neck prickled.

That feeling when things were about to go sideways.

They stopped 5 km from the water station hidden in a watt where flash floods had carved deep channels in the rock.

Morrison gathered everyone around a handheld GPS.

Sun sets in 3 hours, he said.

We go in after dark.

Set up observation posts here and here.

Watch the patterns tonight.

Confirmed the intel.

Still think they’ll stick to the timeline? Sharp asked.

They have to.

Too many buyers coming for the weapons exchange.

Morrison checked his watch.

But something feels off.

Boyd felt it, too.

The mountains were too quiet.

No shepherds, no travelers.

Like everyone knew to stay away.

They waited for nightfall, checking equipment, reviewing positions.

Rodriguez went over the medical procedures again.

How to stabilize Tara quickly, how to move her without causing more damage.

Tuberculosis means her lungs are [ __ ] he said bluntly.

Every movement could cause bleeding.

We’ll need to be gentle but fast.

At 2100, they moved out on foot.

3 km through rough terrain.

Night vision turning the world green and grainy.

Boyd’s pack weighed 60 lb.

Ammunition, water, medical supplies.

His knees screamed by the time they reached the observation point.

The water station sprawled below them, bigger than the satellite photo suggested.

Main building, six outuildings.

The underground storage entrance barely visible.

Lights everywhere.

Generators humming.

Guards walking lazy patterns.

Morrison set up the spotting scope.

47 fighters visible.

Three technicals.

That’s more than He stopped.

[ __ ] Boyd took the scope, saw what Morrison had seen.

New vehicles arriving from the north.

Not buyers for the weapons.

Military vehicles, not American, but professional, organized.

Who the hell? Sharp whispered.

The new arrivals set up a perimeter, disciplined, efficient.

One man stood out, tall, wearing clean fatigues instead of the mismatched gear of militia.

He walked like an officer.

Morrison’s informant, Khaled, crawled up beside them.

Pakistani is he whispered.

Intelligence service very bad.

What do they want? The women.

Word spread about American prisoners.

I wants them for trade.

Big leverage against your government.

Boyd’s stomach dropped.

If Pakistani intelligence took Emma and Terara, they’d disappear into a black site.

No rescue possible ever.

When? Morrison asked.

Tomorrow after morning prayer before the weapons exchange.

Morrison looked at his watch.

0230 morning prayer at 0500 2 and 1/2 hours.

We go now, he said.

That’s insane, Peter’s protested.

No reconnaissance.

No, we don’t have a choice.

Morrison’s voice was steel.

They move those women.

We lose them forever.

Sharp was already on the radio calling in the other teams.

Rodriguez started prepping trauma bags for immediate use.

New plan, Morrison said.

No subtlety.

We hit hard.

Hit fast.

Boyd, your team takes the storage entrance.

My team provides cover.

Sharp’s team secures the vehicles for extraction.

Rules of engagement? Boyd asked.

Anyone between us and them dies.

They move down the mountain in silence.

Boyd’s heart hammered against his ribs.

This wasn’t a rescue anymore.

It was a raid.

The kind that usually ended with bodies.

500 m out, they split up.

Boyd’s team, himself, Peters, and Ramirez, circled toward the storage entrance.

Two guards there smoking cigarettes, rifles slung carelessly.

Boyd lined up the shot, smooth trigger pull.

The guard dropped.

Peters took the second one before he could shout.

The entrance was a metal hatch like an old storm cellar, locked from outside with a chain.

Boyd cut it with bolt cutters, winced at the metallic snap that seemed to echo off the mountains.

Inside, concrete steps led down into darkness.

The smell hit immediately.

Piss, [ __ ] blood, decay.

Human misery concentrated into an assault on the senses.

Boyd switched to night vision moved down the stairs.

Peters and Ramirez behind him, covering angles.

At the bottom, a corridor, doors on both sides, most open and empty.

At the end, one closed door with a padlock.

They moved forward, checking corners.

Boyd’s finger on the trigger, every nerve screaming.

The closed door got closer.

Behind it, he could hear something.

Crying, talking, singing, soft, horse, barely audible.

A lullabi, one his grandmother used to sing.

Hush, little baby, don’t you cry.

Emma’s voice.

After 5 years, he recognized Emma’s voice.

Boyd shut the lock off, kicked the door open.

The smell nearly knocked him back.

Infection, waste, death, hovering.

His night vision showed two figures huddled in the corner, one sitting up, cradling the other, both in filthy rags that might once have been uniforms.

Emma.

The singing stopped.

The sitting figure’s head turned.

Through the night vision, he saw a face that barely looked human.

Sunken cheeks, cracked lips, eyes huge in a skeletal face.

“No,” she whispered.

“No, you’re not real.

” “Not again.

” Boyd pulled off his night vision, turned on his flashlight.

Emma, it’s Boyd.

Sergeant Boyd, we’re here to take you home.

Emma flinched from the light, drew the other figure closer protectively.

Terra unconscious, breathing in wet, rattling gasps.

“Bo’s dead,” Emma said.

“Everyone’s dead.

You’re just another dream.

” “I’m not dead.

I’m here.

We’re getting you out.

” Peters and Ramirez entered immediately covering the door.

Rodriguez pushed past them, went straight to Tara, started checking vitals, his face grim.

Emma watched him touch Tara and something snapped in her.

She lunged, feral, nails going for his eyes.

Don’t touch her.

Don’t you [ __ ] touch her.

Boyd caught her, felt how light she was, like holding a bird.

Emma, stop.

He’s a medic.

He’s helping.

She fought him.

weaker than a child but fierce.

They said that before said they were helping then they she broke off shuddering.

Emma Boyd made his voice command sharp.

Specialist Hawkins look at me.

Training kicked in maybe.

She stopped fighting, looked at him.

Really looked.

Her hand came up.

Touched his face like she was checking if he was solid.

Boyd.

Barely a whisper.

Yeah, soldier.

It’s me.

She started crying.

Horrible dry sobs because she probably had no moisture left for tears.

We tried to escape.

Tried so many times, but Terra got sick and I couldn’t carry her far enough.

And gunfire erupted outside.

Morrison’s team engaging.

We need to move.

Peters said now.

Rodriguez had an IV in Terara’s arm.

Was preparing a litter.

She’s in bad shape.

Kidney failure, severe dehydration, TB advanced to Can she survive transport? Boyd cut him off.

Maybe if we’re fast.

Boyd lifted Emma.

She weighed nothing.

Maybe 80 lb.

Peters and Ramirez got Terra on the litter.

The others, Emma said suddenly.

The other prisoners.

Three kids in the next room.

Local boys.

Please.

Boyd looked at Peter’s who was already moving.

found the boys, teenagers, beaten but mobile, gestured for them to follow.

They moved up the stairs into chaos.

The compound was a battlefield.

Muzzle flashes, tracers, someone screaming.

Morrison’s team had positioned on high ground, laying down suppressing fire.

The ISI forces were returning fire, disciplined and effective.

Move, Boyd shouted.

They ran, Emma in his arms, Peter’s and Ramirez carrying Tara, the three boys following.

Bullets snapped past, kicked up dirt.

Someone was shouting in Poshto.

An RPG exploded against a building to their left.

Sharp’s team had the trucks running.

Boyd threw Emma into the back of one, jumped in after her.

Peters and Ramirez loaded Terra, Rodriguez still working on her, pumping bag after bag of saline.

Where’s Morrison? Boyd shouted.

still covering.

Sharp gunned the engine.

We leave in 30 seconds with or without.

Morrison’s team came running.

All but Morrison.

Where is he? Sharp demanded.

Went after someone.

Peters gasped.

Said 5 minutes.

We don’t have an explosion.

The building Morrison had entered erupted in flame.

Boyd saw a figure stumble out carrying something.

Morrison, his arm hanging wrong, carrying a box.

He made it to the truck, collapsed in.

“Go, go!” Sharp floored it.

The three trucks tore out of the compound, RPGs exploding behind them.

Boyd held Emma as she curled against him, her fingers digging into his vest.

“Is this real?” she kept asking.

“Is this real?” In the other corner, Rodriguez worked frantically on Tara.

Her breathing was getting worse, blood on her lips.

Morrison crawled to her, took her hand with his good one.

“Baby, it’s Jake.

Can you hear me? We got you.

We’re going home.

” Tara’s eyes flickered open, unfocused, glazed with fever, but she squeezed his hand.

“Jake?” Barely audible over the engine.

“Yeah, baby.

I’m here.

Emma, she’s safe.

” Boyds got her.

Tara smiled just a little.

Kept my promise.

Kept her alive.

You did.

You did so good.

Boyd watched them.

This reunion five years delayed.

Morrison crying openly.

Terara fighting for each breath.

Emma had crawled over taken Tara’s other hand.

Stay.

Emma begged.

Please stay.

You can’t leave now.

Not when we’re so close.

But Boyd could see what Rodriguez already knew.

Tara was dying.

5 years of fighting, of surviving, and her body had nothing left.

They drove through the night.

Rodriguez doing everything possible.

But an hour from the border, Tara’s breathing stopped.

Morrison tried CPR.

Rodriguez pushed more drugs.

Emma screamed, begged, promised Tara anything if she’d just breathe.

Nothing worked.

Tara Mitchell died free, holding her husband’s hand with Emma singing that same lullabi she’d probably sung a thousand times in that cell.

The trucks kept driving toward safety, toward home, but they were bringing back only one of the two soldiers they’d come for.

The safe house was a farmhouse 40 km inside friendly territory.

Boyd carried Emma inside while Morrison refused to let go of Terara’s body.

He sat in the truck bed, cradling her, whispering apologies that nobody could bear to hear.

Emma wouldn’t leave Tara either.

When Rodriguez tried to examine her, she fought him until Boyd let her go back to the truck.

She climbed in beside Morrison, took Terara’s cold hand.

“She’s getting cold,” Emma said.

“She hates being cold.

We need more blankets.

” Morrison pulled off his jacket, wrapped it around Terara’s still form.

Emma tucked it carefully like she’d done this a thousand times before.

Sharp stood at the farmhouse door, satellite phone pressed to her ear, arguing with someone about extraction.

The local Afghan family who owned the place stayed hidden upstairs, paid well to see nothing.

Rodriguez approached Boyd.

Emma needs immediate treatment.

Severe malnutrition, dehydration, infected wounds, and mentally.

He glanced at the truck.

She’s not processing that terra’s gone.

Give her time.

We don’t have time.

ISI forces are mobilizing.

We need to move to the extraction point.

Boyd walked to the truck.

Emma was telling Tara a story about Montana, about the horses on her family’s ranch.

Her voice, hollow, automatic, like she’d told these stories so many times they’d worn grooves in her mind.

Emma, Boyd said gently.

We need to get you looked at.

Can’t leave her alone.

She gets scared when she’s alone.

Morrison looked up, eyes red and swollen.

It’s okay, Emma.

I’ll stay with her.

You promise you won’t let them take her? I promise.

Emma kissed Tara’s forehead, whispered something Boyd couldn’t hear, then let him help her down from the truck.

Her legs barely held her weight.

Inside, Rodriguez had set up a makeshift medical station.

Emma sat passively as he started IVS cleaned wounds, burns on her arms, some old, some recent.

Scars everywhere.

When Rodriguez lifted her shirt to check her ribs, Boyd had to look away.

Her back was a map of torture.

How long? Rodriguez asked quietly.

“How long have they been hurting you?” Emma stared at the wall.

They stopped counting after a thousand days.

Terra kept track, though.

little marks on the wall.

The she said we needed to know for when we got home so we could tell exactly how long.

Her voice cracked.

She was going to tell Jake everything.

Every single day so he’d know she never stopped thinking about him.

Rodriguez kept working.

Antibiotics, fluids, pain medication Emma refused to take.

Makes me fuzzy, she said.

Need to stay sharp.

Watch for them.

You’re safe now.

Boyd told her.

Emma laughed bitter and sharp.

Said that before when the rangers came, but it wasn’t rangers, just them pretending, testing us.

She pulled her knees to her chest.

Terra figured it out.

The accents were wrong.

Saved us from saying too much.

Sharp entered.

Extraction in 3 hours.

Helicopter to Bagram.

Then medical transport to Landtool.

She paused.

Emma, your parents are waiting in Germany.

Emma’s whole body jerked.

My parents think I’m dead.

No.

Boyd told them yesterday.

They know you’re coming home.

Emma turned to Boyd and for the first time since finding her, he saw the girl who had joined his unit 6 years ago.

Young, scared, but holding it together.

Mama’s okay.

Daddy, your mom’s been sick, but she’s stable.

Waiting for you.

Emma nodded, then suddenly grabbed Boyd’s arm.

The box.

Morrison had a box.

When he came out of that building, Boyd had forgotten.

Found Morrison still in the truck with Terara, the box beside him.

Metal, locked, covered in dried blood.

Morrison looked up.

The commander’s office found this in his safe.

He handed it over.

Haven’t opened it.

Boyd broke the lock with his knife.

Inside, passports, documents, USB drives, and photographs.

dozens of them.

Emma and Tara at various stages of captivity.

Some from early on, still in uniform, defiant.

Others showing the progression of starvation, illness, torture.

But in every photo where they were together, they were touching, holding hands, embracing, supporting each other.

One photo made Boyd’s hands shake.

Recent based on how thin they were.

Terra obviously sick, lying with her head in Emma’s lap.

Emma singing based on her expression.

Terrace smiling despite everything.

Love in hell.

Morrison took that photo, held it against his chest.

She smiled.

Even there, she could still smile.

Emma had come outside.

Rodriguez’s IVs rolling beside her.

She saw the photos scattered on the truck bed.

“They like to document,” she said flatly.

“Said someday they’d show the world how they broke the American women.

” She picked up one photo early in their captivity.

But they never broke us, hurt us, starved us, did things I can’t.

She stopped.

But we never broke.

Tara made sure of that.

How? Sharp asked softly.

Emma sat on the truck’s tailgate, her hand finding Terra’s.

She said, “We were still soldiers.

Still had a mission.

Our mission was to survive and go home.

Every day we stayed alive was a victory.

Every day we stayed human was winning.

She traced Terara’s wedding ring still on her finger.

First year I wanted to die.

Begged her to let me give up.

She wouldn’t let me.

Said I had to get home.

Tell people what happened.

Make sure they knew we never surrendered.

Peters appeared.

Movement on the perimeter.

Vehicles may be 3 km out.

Pack up.

Sharp commanded.

We move now.

Morrison stood.

I’m not leaving her.

We’ll bring her.

Sharp promised.

She comes home with us.

They loaded quickly.

Emma insisted on riding with Terara’s body.

Morrison and Boyd flanked her, weapons ready.

The convoy moved fast through the dawn light, racing toward the extraction point.

Emma talked the whole way, not to them, to Tara.

Telling her about the helicopter coming, about going home, about how Jake was there and Boyd and everyone who’d searched for them.

Remember we talked about this, she said to Terara’s still form, what we’d do when we got home.

You were going to see Jake.

I was going to see the horses.

We were going to testify.

Make sure everyone knew.

Her voice broke.

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