A Sniper Saw the Trap. Her Own Command Tried to Stop Her.-Quieen - Chainityai

A Sniper Saw the Trap. Her Own Command Tried to Stop Her.-Quieen

The wind at eleven thousand feet did not move around Sergeant First Class Morgan Vance.

It went through her.

It slid under the seal of her gloves, burned across the exposed strip of skin beneath her goggles, and slapped ice crystals into the side of her rifle until the scope hood clicked faintly against the rock.

Image

The Anaconda Range below her was almost gone inside the storm.

Jagged ridges rose and vanished in the whiteout.

The gorge beneath her position looked less like a valley than a wound cut through the mountain.

Morgan lay flat against the shale with her left shoulder tucked behind the customized Barrett .50-caliber rifle and her right cheek pressed to a stock so cold it felt alive.

Her breath was shallow.

Her pulse was slower than it should have been.

That was training.

That was repetition.

That was years of teaching her body that panic was a luxury other people could afford.

At 21:14, her thermal scope caught the first heat bloom near the mouth of a cave on the opposite slope.

At 21:17, she confirmed the second.

At 21:19, she marked the cave mouth on the laminated range card beside her with a grease pencil, pressing so hard the tip broke against the plastic.

She did not curse.

She did not move too fast.

She simply reached for the backup pencil taped to her left sleeve and wrote the distance again.

Thirty-eight hundred meters.

Impossible, according to people who treated impossible as a conclusion instead of a problem to solve.

Below her, through the shifting sheets of snow, an armored Ranger vehicle crawled into the valley mouth.

Behind it came another.

Then another.

Their drivers were moving carefully, but careful did not matter if the road itself had been turned into a coffin.

The rogue militia had hidden heavy artillery inside the cave.

Morgan could see the heat signatures.

She could see the disturbed snow.

She could see the faint human movement around the mouth of the rock, clustered in exactly the wrong way for a harmless patrol.

The Rangers below could see none of it.

Inside the tactical command tent miles behind her, General Briggs came through her earpiece with the cushioned arrogance of a man who was warm.

“Who’s she targeting?” he said.

There was laughter in his voice.

Morgan hated the laughter more than the insult that followed.

“Vance is a temporary replacement. At thirty-eight hundred meters in a mountain gale? She’s chasing ghosts, Major. Tell her to stand down before she alerts the entire sector.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *