The Nineteen-Year-Old Shooter Who Made a Defense CEO Panic-Quieen - Chainityai

The Nineteen-Year-Old Shooter Who Made a Defense CEO Panic-Quieen

Master Chief Jonas Graves threw my file into the Nevada dirt and laughed.

The folder landed open in the dust, one corner bending under the weight of a boot print that did not belong to me.

The sound was small, almost nothing compared with the wind snapping the Helix Defense banner against the fence, but it hit me harder than a shout.

Image

Paper has a particular sound when someone disrespects it.

Dry.

Careless.

Final.

“Wall Street bought us a child sniper,” Graves said.

Twelve SEALs laughed with him.

I did not pick up the file.

I looked past him at the black Range Rover parked near the shade structure, then memorized the license plate while Rourke Halston stood beside it wearing sunglasses that probably cost more than my first car.

That was my father’s first lesson to me, long before I knew what a patent schedule was.

Do not react to the insult.

Record the detail.

Graves made me stand in front of the entire unit while he read my father’s death settlement like a joke he had been saving for breakfast.

He held the packet between two fingers, like grief had an odor.

“Aria Vance,” he said. “Nineteen. Reno, Nevada. Provisional placement through a federal oversight program. Daughter of Lucas Vance.”

A few men stopped laughing when they heard my father’s name.

That tiny pause told me more than Graves meant to.

My father had not disappeared from memory.

He had been disappeared from paperwork.

Graves kept going.

“Long-range shooter. Dead contractor. Left behind one kid, one rifle, and apparently one very expensive lawsuit.”

The sun was already brutal.

It sat high and hard over the range towers, bleaching the desert until every rock looked white around the edges.

My 65-pound pack bit into my shoulders.

Sweat had dried twice on my collar.

Dust stuck to my lips every time I breathed through my mouth.

Behind Graves, the Helix Defense banner kept snapping against the chain-link fence.

Behind that, beyond the prefab barracks and the long desert track, Nevada went on forever.

And beside the Range Rover stood Rourke Halston.

Former SEAL.

Current CEO of Helix Defense.

Wall Street’s favorite war-tech prince.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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