The Dean of Admissions at his Ivy League university had a face like a dried apple and a handshake that felt like wet cardboard. He looked at Shawn’s file—an ROTC scholarship kid who spent his weekends doing pushups in the mud—and muttered something about "scholarly pursuits." If only he knew that Shawn’s primary extracurricular activity involved learning how to disassemble a suppressed rifle in the dark while reciting Shakespearean sonnets to keep from screaming.
Shawn wasn’t even American. He was a foreign exchange project, a tactical oddity tossed into the shark tank of elite special operations. He had a Medal of Honor and a Victoria Cross pinned to the inside of his footlocker—not because he wanted the shiny metal, but because they made excellent makeshift shims for a wobbly cot in a damp Afghan cave. Technically, he was a cross-pollination experiment—a SEAL on long-term attachment to the SAS, essentially a high-speed, low-drag piece of military lend-lease designed to ensure that the US and UK could export their particular brand of 'security’ with perfectly synchronized, multinational efficiency. He’d landed the ROTC scholarship through a bureaucratic loophole in the 'Joint-Operations Talent Exchange'—an administrative nightmare of a program that basically allowed the Pentagon and Whitehall to trade human assets like baseball cards.
Being an international hybrid SEAL-SAS operator meant Shawn was never quite sure which accent to adopt when interrogating someone. "Listen here, mate," he’d say, "you’re going to give us the coordinates, innit, or I’m going to have to do something remarkably unpleasant to your structural integrity, buddy." It confused the hell out of the locals. They didn't know if they were being liberated by the SAS or forcibly recruited into a frat house by a SEAL.
Shawn spent six years dodging things that go bang in the night. He’d been blown up in ways that defied physics, dangled from helicopters that sounded like dying lawnmowers, and eaten enough MREs to ensure his digestive system was now roughly 40% military-grade plastic. He had seen the absolute absurdity of geopolitical posturing—two empires arguing over a patch of dirt that mostly consisted of goats and bad vibes.
Then came The Day.
They were perched on a ridge, the air thin and smelling of stale gunpowder and regret. The CO—a man whose personality was a carefully calibrated mix of Pentagon bravado and Whitehall coldness, entirely composed of high-fives and sociopathy—pointed down at a village. Through the thermal scope, Shawn saw him: a four-year-old boy, wandering near a supply crate. He was carrying a wooden stick, pretending it was a sword, likely imagining he was fighting off a dragon.
"Take the shot," the CO hissed over the comms. "Threat neutralized."
Shawn stared at the kid. He was wearing a shirt with a cartoon cat on it. He wasn't a threat; he was a toddler who had clearly lost a war against his own shoelaces.
"Sir," Shawn whispered, "he’s four. He’s currently losing a duel with a blade of grass."
"He’s a future insurgent," the CO barked. "Eliminate him."
That was the moment the hero fantasy—and the entire transatlantic architecture of 'global stability' folded like a cheap lawn chair. Shawn realized that if he pulled that trigger, he wouldn't just be an extension of the apparatus; he wouldn't be a soldier anymore, just a professional bully with a better tax bracket. He didn't want to explain to his future children that his greatest contribution to global security was murdering a kid who hadn't even mastered long division yet.
Shawn put the rifle down, stood up, and walked off the ridge. He retired right there, that night. His integrity, it turned out, was more important to him, and the only thing he hadn't lost in the field. And honestly? He preferred it that way. It was much quieter than a battlefield, and the only people he had to shoot now were the ones who put pineapple on pizza.
Years on, Shawn made sure that boy had a bright future. He tracked him down through a private network of NGOs and old-school contacts, funneling anonymous support to ensure he had access to education, clean water, and a life far away from the shadows of the operations. He’s currently studying engineering in a city where the only explosives he’ll ever encounter are in a chemistry lab. It’s the most important mission Shawn ever completed, and it didn't require a single bullet.