Then I leaned back on the cot and closed my eyes.
For seven months, while my family called me dead weight, I had been building Aegis. Satellite anti-jamming software. The exact tool David’s unit never had when they called for extraction and died in the dark waiting for a signal that never came.
I pitched it to Vanguard Aerospace. They bought it. All of it. The code, the patent rights, the military integration pathway. They made me Chief Technology Officer and partner before the ink was dry.
My family didn’t know because they never asked what I did when I shut the door.
To them, I was just the widow in the wrong room.
At 7:58 a.m., the garage floor started to shake.
Heavy engines. More than one.
I stood up, brushed the dust off my jeans, and pulled the door open.
Two black armored SUVs sat in the driveway.
Master Sergeant Miller stepped out of the lead vehicle in dress uniform. Two operators from David’s old unit moved behind him, scanning the house like they were entering hostile ground.
Miller came to attention and saluted me.
“Mrs. Vance,” he said. “General Sterling sent us. We’re here to take you home.”

Part 3: The Driveway
The front door flew open.
My mother stepped out first, still in her house slippers, face blank with confusion. Chloe came behind her, then Julian, then my father, already angry because he didn’t understand what he was looking at.
“Clara,” my mother said, “what is this?”