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General Matthews barely glanced at the soldier cleaning the Barrett .50 in the corner of the armory—just another routine maintenance task. But when he noticed the small badge on her uniform and read "3,200-meter confirmed kill," he stopped dead in his tracks. "Soldier, that's impossible. No one has made a shot at that distance." Staff Sergeant Luna "Ghost" Valdez was invisible to most officers—just the quiet sniper who kept her Barrett .50 spotless in the back of the weapons bay. She'd been methodically cleaning her weapon for hours, a ritual she performed every day with surgical precision. But Luna was hiding in plain sight. Her uniform carried badges and qualifications that told the story of a military career that pushed the boundaries of human achievement. Advanced sniper schools, classified unit assignments, and specialized training programs that most soldiers never knew existed. The 3,200-meter shot that caught the general's attention wasn't luck—it was the result of four hours of preparation, environmental analysis, and ballistic computation that culminated in what would be the longest confirmed kill in military history. When General Matthews demanded a demonstration, Luna's 1,200-meter precision shot at the base range was just a glimpse of capabilities that existed at classification levels beyond normal military operations. ● DISCLAIMER: This is a work of fiction created for entertainment purposes only. Any resemblance to real events, military operations, or actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. The story, characters, and incidents portrayed are fictional. No identification with actual military personnel or events is intended or should be inferred.