Page 24 of Scars of Honor


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“You want them to survive,” he said. “That’s your flaw.”

“No,” I replied evenly. “That’s my line.”

Sentinel chuckled softly. “You don’t get lines anymore, Scout. You get choices.”

The screen split.

Two feeds appeared.

One showed a man strapped into a chair—mid-thirties, military posture even under sedation. Breathing shallow. Alive.

The other—

A woman. Younger. Civilian. Eyes wild with fear.

“You recognize the protocols,” Sentinel said. “You know how this ends.”

I closed my eyes for half a second.

Not to brace.

To decide.

“You want me to optimize your outcomes,” I said.

“I want you to engage.”

“If I refuse?”

He didn’t answer.

He didn’t need to.

I opened my eyes and stepped closer to the console.

“Logan,” I thought, steady and focused.

This is where I stop whispering.

I keyed in a single adjustment—not enough to save both.

Enough to delay.

Enough to alter stress-response thresholds just slightly off baseline.

Sentinel leaned forward.

“What did you change?” he asked.

I met my reflection in the glass.

“Your assumption,” I said.

The system recalibrated.

Not dramatically.

Quietly.