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CHAPTER 2 — THE NAME THEY NEVER SPOKE The diner didn’t move. Not a spoon. Not a breath. Not even the hum of the neon sign outside. Rex stood frozen in front of Booth Seven, the silver hawk patch suddenly feeling heavier than leather should ever feel. The old man—Mr. Hale—didn’t sit back down. He just stayed standing. Calm. Straight. Like the room had belonged to him long before anyone else entered it. Outside, the engines of the armored SUVs were still ticking as they cooled. Inside, one of the suited men stepped forward again. “Sir,” he said carefully, voice controlled, “we’ve secured the perimeter.” Mr. Hale didn’t look at him. His eyes stayed on Rex. “You kept it,” Hale said quietly. “After everything.” Rex’s jaw tightened. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” But his voice didn’t hold anymore. Something in it cracked. The waitress stepped back slowly, one hand over her mouth, eyes locked on Hale like she was seeing him for the first time. Mr. Hale finally turned his head slightly. “Forty years,” he said. “And the unit still exists.” One of the suited men lowered his gaze. “Yes, sir. Barely.” That word—sir—changed the air. Rex noticed it. “So who the hell are you?” he snapped, forcing anger back into his voice. “Some retired soldier playing god in a diner?” Mr. Hale finally exhaled. Not tired. Not emotional. Just controlled. “I was never retired,” he said. A pause. “I was erased.” Silence deepened. Then he stepped closer to Rex, stopping just inches away. “And you,” Hale said, voice low, “are standing in the shadow of a name your family was never supposed to carry.” Rex swallowed hard. For the first time, he looked uncertain. / Chapter 1 / 2 2

CHAPTER 3 — THE BROKEN HAWK

CHAPTER 3 — THE BROKEN HAWK

The suited men moved without command.

One opened a black case on Booth Seven’s table.

Inside: folded military insignia, faded photographs, and a medal that hadn’t been issued in decades.

Rex stared at it.

Something inside him shifted.

The old man picked up one photograph.

A younger version of himself stood in uniform beside a man holding a baby wrapped in a white blanket.

“This,” Hale said softly, “was before the operation.”

The diner felt smaller now.

Tighter.

Like the walls were listening.

Rex shook his head. “Stop. I don’t care about your stories.”

But his eyes kept drifting back to the photo.

To the baby.

To the patch.

To the man he didn’t recognize—but somehow did.

Mr. Hale leaned slightly closer.

“Your father didn’t die in service,” he said. “He was left behind.”

Rex’s breath stopped.

“That’s not possible,” he whispered.

One of the suited men spoke carefully from behind.

“Records were classified. Entire squad removed from active files.”

The waitress whispered, barely audible:

“Removed… like they never existed?”

Mr. Hale nodded once.

“That’s what they called it.”

A long silence followed.

Then Rex’s voice broke through it.

“If you’re telling the truth… then why him?” he pointed at the patch. “Why keep this?”

Hale looked at the silver hawk emblem.

For the first time, something softer crossed his face.

Not weakness.

Memory.

“Because I told him to wear it,” Hale said.

A pause.

“And he never took it off… even when he knew it meant he wouldn’t come back.”

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The diner lights flickered once.

Outside, rain began to fall harder.

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