The phone didn’t ring. There was only a brief, silent burst of static before a deep, gritty, instantly familiar voice answered on the other end of the line.
“Report, Commander.”
The title hit me like a jolt of electricity. I hadn’t been “Commander” in over a decade. But to the men I had led, the title was permanent.
“Ghost,” I said, my voice instantly shedding the soft, gentle tone of a retired grandfather, returning to the ice-cold, razor-sharp cadence of the man I used to be fifteen years ago when I commanded the elite, off-the-books Delta Task Force. “We have a Code Black.”
There was a dead, heavy silence on the other end of the line. A Code Black was the highest, most severe distress signal, reserved only for extreme, life-or-death situations involving the commander’s immediate family. It had only been used once before.
“Location?” Ghost asked, his voice instantly devoid of any warmth, all business.
“The Vance estate, Oakwood Hills,” I replied, starting the truck’s engine with a roar. “My daughter has been severely assaulted. There is a high probability of local law enforcement complicity and cover-up. I require a full, clean sweep.”