Chapter 3

THREE

Dante Olivetti barely made it through the front doors of Chase Security San Diego headquarters when the message hit his watch: Report to Mr. Bremen. Now.

He didn’t bother going to his desk. Nothing good ever came with “now.”

The elevator climbed with the soft hiss of wealth and paranoia.

Up top, sunlight poured in through floor-to-ceiling windows, the Pacific stretched out behind the glass.

Troy Bremen stood near one of them, coffee in one hand, tablet in the other, shoulders squared like ten contracts sat between his blades.

He didn’t turn when Dante entered. “Close the door.”

Dante did. “What’s going on?”

“You’re going to Colorado.”

Dante blinked. “Wasn’t planning on mountain hiking this week.”

Troy handed him the tablet. “You’re going undercover. Athletic staff. Non-commissioned officer. U.S. Air Force Academy.”

Dante stared. “You’re serious.”

“Very.”

“Do I even get a cover story, or are we just throwing me in a tracksuit and hoping no one notices I carry on like a tier-one op?”

“You’re a prior-service NCO with experience in physical performance and injury prevention,” Troy replied. “Contracted for the summer session and extended if needed.”

Dante raised an eyebrow. “Who’s the target?”

Troy met his eyes. “Shannon Johnson.”

Dante froze for a beat. “You’re joking. You want me to babysit the COO’s daughter?”

Troy’s voice didn’t change. “She’s not a civilian anymore. As of next week, she’s a cadet at the Academy. And she’s a high-value target.”

Dante exhaled through his nose. “She’s eighteen.”

“She’s also Meagan Johnson’s daughter. Meagan and Mike are both Academy graduates.

Meagan was Air Force intelligence at the time of her death,” Troy said, “which means someone’s always watching.

We’ve picked up renewed foreign pings on Johnson assets since spring.

Could be noise. Could be more. We’re not taking chances. ”

Dante leaned on the desk. “Does she know?”

“No. The Air Force Academy staff doesn’t know. Neither will her classmates, and it stays that way.”

“When do I report?”

“You fly out tomorrow. Get squared away. Cadets report Monday.”

Dante ran a hand down his jaw, processing. “End of June, right?”

“Yes, that is tomorrow. Colorado Springs is still dry this time of year. Cold at night, in the sixties. High seventies to low eighties by midday.”

“Good running weather,” Dante muttered.

Troy smirked. “You’ll need it. She’s got energy and nowhere to put it. She’s coming in hot. You keep her focused, unflinching and, above all, safe.”

“You expect her to be targeted?”

“We don’t know. But she’s a wildcard with a huge political shadow, two last names people track, and a mouth that doesn’t back down. That’s a dangerous mix for a cadet who hasn't even touched the tarmac yet.”

“Two names?”

“She’s coming in under her mom’s maiden name, McKenna. Mike put a covert name change through, at Shannon’s request.”

“Oh boy, that had to go over well.”

“He did it.” Troy’s brow arched. “Like I said, she’s coming in hot. And with the change, alone.”

Dante looked down at the roster already loaded with his alias. His uniform size. Housing placement. “You planned this a while ago.”

“We had contingency plans for her,” Troy said. “Ford Cox put you on top of a short list.”

Dante exhaled, already calculating what to pack, how to blend. He’d done protection before—hell, he was assigned to Troy’s protection team, but never like this. Embedded, yes, but never in a world where silence was written into the job description, and trust was earned over months, not minutes.

“This is going to get weird,” he said.

Troy nodded. “So don’t make it weirder.”

Dante gave a humorless chuckle. “What’s the call sign for babysitting a McKenna-Johnson?”

Troy’s eyes narrowed. “It’s not babysitting. It’s shielding.”

“Sure,” Dante grabbed the tablet, “just with better lighting and college credit.”

“You’ll do it right.” Troy grew quiet. “Meagan called her her Millenium Falcon. She was outer space with speed.”

Dante opened the door, already turning the mission over in his head. Falcon.

“Dante.” Troy’s voice dropped an octave. “She doesn’t get a second chance.”

Dante paused at the door, his lips tight. “You do remember I was Seventh Cav, right? Ground-pounder. Door-kicker. And now you’ve got me walking into Air Force territory in powder-blue polyester like it's normal.” He smirked. “You realize this is sacrilege, right?”

Troy didn’t even flinch. “You’ll survive. Just don’t salute everything that moves, and try not to break their morale with your posture.”

Dante nodded once and walked out.

COLORADO SPRINGS

The mountain air had teeth.

Dante Olivetti, now Dante Olivo, stepped out of the government SUV, boots crunching gravel outside the temporary NCO quarters tucked behind the cadet area like an afterthought. Every line of concrete and stone was precise, scrubbed, and humming with suppressed intensity.

Dante moved through check-in smoothly. The staff sergeant behind the desk barely glanced up as he stamped the forms, muttered something perfunctory, and slid over a plastic access badge. “Welcome to the Zoo,” he said, deadpan.

His nameplate read TSgt Olivo. His orders were tight, the kind that left no scent trail. As far as anyone in the building was concerned, he was the new performance and conditioning NCO for Lima Squadron.

No one knew what he was here for. And he intended to keep it that way.

His quarters were in one of the efficient and forgettable beige modular buildings, the kind of place built for short-term occupation and long-term anonymity. One room, one bunk, one shared latrine down the hall. Just enough space for a rack, a footlocker, and a vertical wall locker.

He didn’t waste time unpacking. The rucksack went under the bunk. The most important item was a slim matte-black data drive no larger than a car key. He didn't stash it in the footlocker or the desk drawer. That would be amateur hour.

Instead, he slid it into the custom-stitched hem of his regulation PT jacket, a pocket lined with RF-blocking fabric. Not something you'd find in standard issue. Failing that, he had a backup slot carved discreetly into the heel of his dress shoes. They were a holdover from a different life.

Then he made his way to the Athletic Readiness Wing.

His office sat off a quiet hallway between the kinesiology lab and a rehabilitation room still smelling faintly of antiseptic and sweat.

The room was square, sterile, and industrial, painted in matte gray.

It drank the light and gave nothing back.

A single frosted window filtered in the high-altitude haze.

The desktop terminal was already on, the welcome screen blinking.

He set down his field notebook and a folding blade he kept clipped inside the belt line of his cargos then opened the top drawer.

Inside were stashed nitrile gloves, alcohol wipes, and protein tabs in foil blister packs. Clean tools for dirty jobs.

He keyed in his fresh credentials. The squadron roster populated with quiet efficiency.

McKenna, Shannon. Lopez, Mia. Room 213B.

There were no flags and no notations. They were two cadets queued up to endure the crucible. Except she wasn’t just another cadet. Not to Chase. And not to him.

HOTEL OUTSIDE U.S. AIR FORCE ACADEMY

The motel room smelled like pine cleaner and nerves. Shannon stood by the window in regulation khakis and a plain blue T-shirt, her duffel packed and zipped tight. She hadn’t slept much. Not with her father tossing and turning like a man preparing for war.

He stood by the door now, holding her appointment packet with both hands, like it might vanish if he let go. “Last chance to back out.” He tried to smile, but it didn’t quite hold.

She shook her head. “I’m not backing out.”

“You don’t have to do this for her,” he said, voice low. “Or for me.”

“I’m not,” Shannon replied. “That’s why we put down McKenna on the forms.”

Mike blinked.

“Mom was a Johnson too. My name. My choice,” she added. “It’s my chance to do it for me.”

His throat worked, trying to swallow. He stepped forward and pulled her into a fierce hug. “I’ll be watching,” he said quietly into her hair. “You know where to find me.”

She pulled back. “I know. But please, not too much. It’s one of the reasons I picked McKenna.”

A knock came, two sharp taps. A Chase Security driver waited outside the door, mirrored shades in place, saying nothing.

Mike stepped aside. Shannon grabbed her duffel, squared her shoulders, and didn’t look back.

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