Part 2: The Agent Naval Special Warfare Never Forgot
Part 1 of 2
The entire ceremony went silent.
Not polite silence.
Not respectful silence.
The kind of silence that falls when reality suddenly changes shape.
Commander Daniel Mercer stood rigidly before me, his salute unwavering beneath the California sun.
Hundreds of people stared.
My mother’s mouth hung slightly open.
My father looked like someone had punched all the air from his lungs.
And Jason—gold Trident shining proudly against his chest only moments earlier—now looked completely lost.
“They found the man you were hunting,” Commander Mercer repeated quietly.
My pulse slowed.
Not sped up.
Training does that.
Fear becomes colder.
Sharper.
More useful.
I stood carefully from my chair.
“Where?” I asked.
Mercer’s expression darkened.
“Not here.”
The crowd continued staring openly now.
Whispers spread across the ceremony rows.
Agent?
Hunting who?
What’s happening?
My mother finally found her voice.
“Commander… I think there’s been some misunderstanding.”
Mercer looked at her politely.
“There has,” he replied.
Then his eyes returned to me.
“A vehicle is waiting.”
I glanced toward the stage where rows of newly minted SEALs still stood at attention.
Jason’s graduation ceremony had effectively stopped because of me.
Again.
That part almost made me smile.
Not because I enjoyed embarrassing him.
But because my family spent years pretending I was insignificant.
Now an entire military ceremony had frozen in place over my existence.
The irony felt almost poetic.
“Olivia?” Jason said cautiously.
I looked at him.
Really looked at him.
Same confident posture.
Same carefully maintained image.
But beneath it now sat something unfamiliar.
Uncertainty.
“Who are you?” he asked.
I considered lying.
Old habits.
Compartmentalization.
But Commander Mercer had already destroyed any chance of anonymity.
So instead, I answered honestly.
“The person you stopped asking about.”
That landed harder than shouting ever could.
My father stood abruptly.
“Olivia, what exactly is going on?”
Mercer answered before I could.
“Your daughter served this country under Joint Special Operations Command for nearly a decade.”
My mother blinked repeatedly.
“No… she dropped out of Georgetown.”
“I did,” I replied.
Then I picked up my handbag.
“And the CIA recruited me six months later.”
Absolute silence.
Somewhere behind us, a child dropped a tiny American flag.
Jason stared at me like he physically could not process the sentence.
“You’re CIA?”
“Formerly.”
My cousin Hannah laughed nervously.
“Oh my God, are we doing spy jokes now?”
Nobody joined her.
Because Commander Mercer wasn’t joking.
Neither was I.
The commander lowered his voice slightly.
“We need to move.”
I nodded once.
Then my father grabbed my wrist.
Not violently.
Just desperately.
“Wait.”
I looked down at his hand.
He released me immediately.
For several seconds, he simply stared.
Like he was trying to reconcile two completely different versions of his daughter.
The disappointing dropout.
And the woman a Navy commander had just saluted publicly.
“What man?” he asked quietly.
That question changed everything.
Because the moment he asked it, memories returned instantly.
Blood on concrete.
Rain against embassy windows.
Gunfire in narrow streets.
A photograph burned around the edges.
And one name.
Nikolai Sidorov.
The man I had spent six years hunting across three continents.
I looked at my father calmly.
“You don’t want the answer to that.”
Then I walked away.
The black SUV waited beyond the ceremony parking lot beside a row of palm trees.
Mercer slid into the passenger seat while I climbed into the back.
The driver pulled away immediately.
Only after the naval base disappeared behind us did Mercer finally exhale.
“I didn’t expect you to actually come today,” he admitted.
“I almost didn’t.”
“That would’ve made things easier.”
I studied him carefully.
Commander Daniel Mercer looked older than the last time I saw him.
More gray around the temples.
More exhaustion in his eyes.
But still dangerous.
Men like Mercer don’t survive Naval Special Warfare leadership positions without becoming experts at controlled violence.
“You said they found him.”
Mercer nodded.
“Forty-eight hours ago.”
Every muscle in my body tightened automatically.
Nikolai Sidorov.
Former Russian intelligence operative.
Weapons trafficker.
Architect of multiple embassy bombings.
Ghost.