Hidden Strike -

“We’re not going out the way we came. We’re going down.”

Korr cursed under his breath. “They know we’re here. Move.”

They surfaced a quarter-mile away, in a drainage culvert beneath the highway, just as the refinery erupted in a massive fireball—Meier’s delayed charge, detonating the server room and the chip with it. The sound was a physical wall of pressure. Hidden Strike

He stood on a dune two klicks east, binoculars pressed to his eyes, the thermal glow of the inferno painting his face orange. His men had done their job. The mercenary convoy, hired to escort the last Western engineers out of the war zone, was now a scattering of molten hubcaps and shredded tires. The engineers themselves—four civilians with no combat training—were supposedly dead. That was the official report.

“Swim through crude?” one of the engineers stammered. “That’s insane. It’s toxic. We’ll drown.” “We’re not going out the way we came

A coded signal.

He didn’t run.

But Rashidi knew better. He had not bombed the convoy to kill them. He had bombed it to capture them.

They found the engineers in a sub-basement control room, huddled behind a blast door. The four of them—two women, two men, all in oil-stained coveralls—looked less like valuable assets and more like terrified rabbits. Their leader, a sharp-faced woman named Dr. Amira Halabi, didn’t thank him. She just said, “About time. The backdoor isn’t in our heads. It’s in a chip we hid in the refinery’s main server.” His men had done their job

Korr was a ghost who occasionally worked for the CIA’s Special Activities Division. His last assignment had ended badly—a village in Idlib, a child with a grenade, a choice that still woke him up at 3:00 AM drenched in sweat. Now he was being sent back into the grinder for a reason that his handler, a woman named Delgado with a voice like crushed gravel, had only hinted at.

But as he helped Dr. Halabi to her feet, his satellite phone buzzed. A text from Delgado.