They sneered at the old veteran’s tattoo, but everything shifted the moment the general rolled up his sleeve.

Then he made a grave mistake. He tapped Harold’s tattoo lightly, dismissively. For Harold, it was like a lightning strike. The aroma of stale coffee and bacon vanished, replaced by metallic blood and wet earth. The clatter of dishes became the distant “wump wump wump” of helicopter blades.
He was no longer in a vinyl booth. He was crouched in a humid jungle, rain dripping from enormous leaves. A young soldier’s muddy hand gripped his shoulder. “Stay with me, Eli. Stay with me,” whispered a voice. He remembered a makeshift needle: bamboo, ink, gunpowder. Silent, secret, for a mission that officially never existed.
The serpent eating its tail. The circle. Endless war. The star at its center. Them. Five points of a constellation in a dark sky. Not decoration. A scar. A promise.
Blinking, he was back in the diner. Ryder’s finger still rested on his arm.
Harold withdrew his arm slowly, face unchanged, though something inside had shifted. Beneath his placid surface, an ancient tide stirred. Karen moved swiftly. She had witnessed enough. Harold wasn’t just a customer—he was a gentle, consistent soul who always asked about her grandchildren and tipped far too generously. Seeing him mocked ignited a quiet fury.
She slipped into the cramped office behind the kitchen, dialing her old flip phone. She didn’t call the police; this was beyond that. Her cousin, Blair, worked as an administrative assistant at the JSOC command building. A long shot, but the only one.
Blair answered on the second ring, voice crisp. “General Lancaster’s office, Senior Airman Carter.”
“Blair, it’s Karen,” she whispered urgently. “Two of your people—active-duty operators—are harassing one of my regulars, an old man.”
“Call MPs,” Blair started, annoyed.
“No, you don’t understand,” Karen pressed. “The man’s name is Harold Sinclair. They’re mocking a tattoo—a serpent eating its tail with a star inside.”
Silence. Then Blair’s voice returned, strained, high-pitched. “Repeat that. Describe it again.” Karen did. “And the name?” “Harold Sinclair.” “Stay there. Don’t let them leave,” Blair said, and the line went dead.
At JSOC headquarters, Blair felt cold sweat. The name and symbol were not in any database. But whispers had circulated: legends of men who came before official units. Project Omega.
General Roland Lancaster, four-star commander of America’s elite special operations, was mid-briefing. She knew the rule: never interrupt, unless the building was on fire. She judged this close enough.
She knocked. A colonel cracked the door, annoyed. “What is it, Airman?”
“I need to speak with the general. Urgent.”
“Wait.”
“Sir, with respect, it cannot.” She pushed through, all eyes on her.
Lancaster’s eyes, like flint, met hers. “Airman, this better be the end of the world.”
She leaned close, low enough for only him to hear. “Sir, Harold Sinclair is being harassed at Sunny Side Café. Two active-duty operators mocking his tattoo.”
The change was instantaneous. The general’s composure evaporated, replaced by dark, thunderous fury. He rose, voice guttural. “Get my detail. Vehicles. Now. This meeting is over.”

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