CHAPTER 1: THE SOUL-DRAINING FORTRESS AND THE SHADOW GENERAL

 

Fort Bastion was not a military base—it was a massive prison disguised by concrete and dust. Here, the sunlight offered no warmth but only intensified the sense of isolation, and every gust of wind carried a hint of paranoia. At Bastion, suspicion was the highest order.

The man who ruled it was Major General Silas Kaine.

His hair was silver, but Kaine’s eyes were sharp and unaged, holding every dirty secret of the unnamed wars. Kaine’s authority did not stem from his rank, but from his mastery of psychological manipulation. He didn’t punish; he broke wills. Under Kaine’s command, officers learned to stay silent, bow their heads, and fear.

But this morning, the balance was shattered.

A transport helicopter landed on the main pad, kicking up a plume of red dust. Stepping out was Captain Elias Thorne.

Thorne did not appear outwardly imposing. He wore a crisp uniform and carried a thin personal file. But what sent shivers down everyone’s spine were his eyes—they were still as a deep lake, yet contained a light too intense, as if he had witnessed terrifying, unreleased footage.

Thorne was the sole survivor of the tragedy in The Grey Zone—a highly classified reconnaissance mission that had lost its entire team. For six months, Kaine had spread the rumor: Thorne had failed.

CHAPTER 2: THE DINNER OF THE SCOUNDREL

 

By evening, the atmosphere in the dining hall was stretched taut. Dinner here was not a time to relax; it was where Kaine chose his prey.

Thorne sat at the far table; his composure was a stark contrast to the surrounding suffocation. Kaine stood up. Every eye focused on Thorne.

“Captain Thorne,” Kaine’s voice cut through the silence. It wasn’t loud, but it tore through the quiet. “Today, we have a special guest. A man who returned from The Grey Zone… where he abandoned six teammates.

Kaine walked slowly toward Thorne. The weight of the medals on his chest seemed to be the weight of a guilty verdict.

“They say,” Kaine stopped right behind Thorne’s chair, “that you failed to identify the target. A small mistake, but the price was six lives.”

The entire room held its breath. Thorne remained seated, hands resting on his thighs, showing no reaction.

Kaine raised his voice, issuing an order: “Acknowledge it, Captain. Accept the responsibility for that cowardice!”

CHAPTER 3: THE REVERSED BLADE AND THE FORGOTTEN TRACE

 

Kaine approached the table and, without a word, slammed a stack of files stamped TOP SECRET onto the wooden surface, creating a jarring crack.

“This is the proof,” Kaine roared. “You failed to recognize the traitor in these photos, leading to…”

Before Kaine could complete his accusation, Thorne cut him off. He didn’t even need to look at the files.

“General,” Thorne’s voice rang out, deep and sharp as broken glass, “I have seen these photos. Hundreds of times. And I noticed one thing you missed, or rather, deliberately overlooked.”

Everyone stopped breathing. The tension now was no longer simple fear; it was frantic curiosity.

Thorne stood up, his movement smooth and precise. He reached out and gently flipped over one of the oldest, blurriest photos in the file—a shot of Kaine from years ago at an outpost.

“Look closely, General,” Thorne whispered, pointing to a tiny stain on Kaine’s uniform lapel. “That is the oil from the restricted zone in Sector 7—where we are running illegal arms shipments. The transport order was signed by you, just hours before my team was ambushed.”

Thorne took a step back, his eyes never leaving Kaine’s.

“The tragedy was not caused by my failure, General,” Thorne said, his voice now fully accusatory. “It was caused by a faulty order from a man who needs to keep silent—a man who has placed himself in the position of the traitor.”

CHAPTER 4: THE SILENCE OF THE VICTOR

 

Kaine was stunned. His eyes, previously icy, were now wide with horror. Kaine’s entire body trembled almost imperceptibly. Thorne had not openly accused him. He had simply placed a deadly question mark right in the middle of the room.

Richards, the former tyrant, was defeated by an act of defiance. But Kaine was defeated by irrefutable truth.

Kaine could not refute it. He could only stand there, his authority vanishing like fog under the sun.

Thorne did not bother collecting the files or waiting for an apology. He pushed his chair back into place, straightened his collar, and walked out of the conference room.

The sound of his boots on the concrete was not a sound of triumph. It was the sound of a silent declaration of war.

Behind him, the entire Fort Bastion was enveloped in a new silence—a silence of deep questioning and warning. Everyone knew: Captain Thorne carried a terrible secret.

And the game had officially begun.