28 – Echoes of the Past: Traps and Secrets

Echoes of the Past:
Traps and Secrets

TF983 Rhys Calder
TF983 Callum Stroud with Dar Montgomery
TF983 Sean Kennedy with Callum Stroud

The perfect trap doesn’t look like a trap at all—it looks like a mistake only your enemy would recognize.
Just like the perfect connection doesn’t look like love until someone else finds it first.

Rhys

Rhys stood in the hallway outside Dar’s office, his shoulder against the wall, arms crossed. He observed sufficiently, cataloging the scene with calculated detail—or that’s what he convinced himself. Long enough to see Dar’s shoulder receive Callum’s lean, pointing towards the secondary monitor’s content. Long enough to see her nod without looking up, her fingers already adjusting the code before Callum finished his sentence.

It was textbook operational efficiency. That’s what he logged it as. Two analysts working in tandem, maximising output, minimising communication overhead. Clean. Effective.

Except it wasn’t just efficiency.

Callum shifted left; Dar’s hand reached for the mouse he’d just vacated. He murmured something about relay timing; she pulled up the exact data set before he asked. No wasted words. No clarification needed. They moved like two parts of the same mechanism, thoughts flowing between them as if they shared the same neural pathways.

Rhys made himself categorize it as assessing team dynamics. A soldier’s instinct to understand unit cohesion, to identify strengths and potential friction points. That was the correct frame for this. He applied it deliberately, the way he’d been trained to impose order on information that wanted to mean something else.

Callum straightened, stretching his back, and Dar immediately swivelled her chair to give him room. Neither spoke. Neither needed to.

He’d known her since the world ended—first her world, then his by extension. He’d held the line for her, pulled her back from the edge so many times he’d lost count. He’d been the anchor. The steady hand. He’d done everything right, hadn’t he?

Everything except let her breathe.

The thought arrived unbidden, unwelcome. Rhys shoved it aside with the same discipline he used to ignore pain during a forced march. Control wasn’t a flaw. It was survival. It was what kept people alive.

But Callum didn’t control her. He didn’t need to. He simply… understood. Her unique thought processes, mental leaps, and ability to discern overlooked patterns. They shared a language Rhys had never learned, one he couldn’t learn because it wasn’t about training or discipline. It was about how their minds were wired.

He could have acted. Months ago, when the tension between them had been something he noticed in the pauses—the half-second too long before either of them spoke—when her eyes had lingered on him just a fraction too long. He’d felt it—God, he’d felt it—but he’d held back. Told himself it was unprofessional. Told himself she needed stability, not complications. Told himself a hundred things that boiled down to one truth: he couldn’t let go of control long enough to risk it.

And now Callum was here, filling a space Rhys hadn’t even realised existed. Not the space of protector or anchor—Rhys still held that ground. But something deeper. Something that made Dar’s shoulders lose their brittle edge, made her lean into the work instead of bracing against it.

Rhys pushed off the wall as he heard Logan’s boots coming up from the basement, his movements precise and measured as he headed to the garage. His hand found the grip of his sidearm, fingers tracing the familiar contours. Muscle memory. Reliable.

He was her anchor. That was enough.

It had to be.


Logan

The safehouse buzzed with the sounds of people preparing for departure.

Logan ran a final check on his gear, hands finding the well-known lines of pouches and buckles. The ritual was muscle memory, a physical anchor against the mission’s uncertainty. Mags, medkit, blade—everything in its place. He forced a slow, steady breath, but the quiet tension remained, a sharp edge under the practiced calm.

In the comms and armoury rooms, voices sounded clipped and rushed. Conversations cut off a beat too early, and strained silences filled the gaps like gathering storm clouds.

Nobody relaxed. Their orders had arrived; the briefing packet spread across the metal table like a verdict. The mission had a shape and a destination. The waiting was over, but the intel felt old. A full week for readiness meant their target had a full week’s head start.
Logan climbed the basement stairs and paused in Dar’s office doorway, leaning against the frame. Dar and Callum hunched over her laptop, eyes and fingers tracking across multiple monitors.

Logan climbed the basement stairs and paused in Dar’s office doorway, leaning against the frame. Dar and Callum hunched over her laptop, eyes and fingers tracking across multiple monitors.

Neither noticed him—or if they did, they were too absorbed to acknowledge it. Their combined focus sparked something in Logan’s memory of his old team. He’d never seen his stepsister like this. Post-Barry, post-Zoe, she’d existed in a state of careful uncertainty, unmoored. Now she seemed rooted, grounded in a way he’d never witnessed. Callum was there beside her. Before Logan could examine the unfamiliar tightness in his chest, he pushed it down and returned his focus to the task at hand.

He retreated to the kitchen, set the kettle on, and reached into the fridge for milk when he spotted sausages. Callum had offered to make his mum’s Pembroke House Special tonight—giving everyone more prep time before tomorrow’s mission. Considerate.

Dar and Callum

On her screen, money bled sideways through encrypted accounts—tiny transactions that shouldn’t exist. She watched the data stream: a crime index dipped in one sector as another spiked half a world away, the blips too fast, too erratic for coincidence. To anyone else, it was statistical noise. To Dar, it was a ghost.

She pulled up Kozlov’s known hangouts and his network’s digital footprint, fingers moving with the same flat efficiency as always. She began laying out the breadcrumb trail—nothing obvious, nothing they’d flag as artificial. The encryption had just enough weakness to suggest human error. A crack in her usual perfection.

She typed faster now, embedding the intel within a routine status update routed through three relay points. Each node’s signature was unique; each transmission pause hinted at someone trying to erase their tracks.

A faint smile touched her lips as she entered the final command. The bait was set. Now came the waiting.

She leaned back, her eyes tracking the monitors, then felt the heat of Callum sitting beside her—a jolt that was brief but not entirely unwelcome.

“Good.” His voice was quiet, pitched for just the two of them. “Now we wait.”

He studied the monitors while his fingers drummed on the back of her chair, where he’d draped his arm earlier to watch the screens.

“You planted the error in the third relay node?” He leaned in, squinting at the code. “They’ll spot it faster if it reads like a bleed rather than a crack.”

He straightened and moved toward the window, stretching his spine. As his warmth faded, she was left with a peculiar, lingering ache.

The dying daylight outside cast long shadows across his face as he spoke. “Ashford’s too meticulous for sloppy. Give him something he thinks he uncovered, not something we dropped.”

Dar’s fingers stilled on the keyboard, her eyes tracking Callum’s reflection in the glassy surface of Zoe’s photo hung on the wall rather than turning to face him. “Not an error,” she corrected quietly, her voice carrying the same dangerous certainty as before. “A pattern break.”

She opened a second screen. “Look here—my usual methods are consistent. Predictable. Clean.” Her finger traced across the display. “This one? Slightly off. Like I was rushing, trying to get something out before anyone noticed.”

She swiveled her chair slightly, just enough to catch his profile. “Ashford knows my work. He’ll see the deviation, but he’ll also see the why—someone in a hurry. That’s what makes it believable. Like I was caught.”

Her hand hovered over the enter key, the final command waiting. “He’ll think he’s watching me panic. That’s the hook.”

Callum studied the screen in deliberate silence for a beat.

“Genuine panic’s harder to fake,” he said, stepping back to her desk. “But you’re right—Ashford knows you well enough. This looks like you caught off-guard. Not quite sloppy, not quite perfect.”

He leaned forward, his voice dropping. “Just remember—Ashford’s not your only audience. Kozlov’s techs will be dissecting every packet. If the flaw looks too convenient, they’ll burn the network and we get nothing.” A pause. “When they bite, the window will be seconds. We have to be ready to move.”

His hand briefly rested on her chair. “You see any shift in their traffic, you don’t wait—buzz me direct.”

“Copy that.” Dar’s fingers hovered above the keys as Callum’s hand lifted from her chair. She didn’t turn, but her voice carried the weight of understanding. “I’ve got eyes on all channels. Any shift—any flicker—and you’ll know before they do.”

She watched as the hallway’s light framed his silhouette when he pulled the door open. Her mind was already three steps ahead, running simultaneous scenarios while her primary focus stayed locked on the screens.

Her fingers finally pressed Enter, releasing the message. The timestamp registered: just slightly off. Perfectly imperfect.

She split her attention between Kozlov’s patterns and the incoming feed. Every shift, every anomaly—she’d catch it. The trap was set, and she held the strings.

The office fell into a charged silence, punctuated only by the whispered whirring of electronics and her steady breaths.

Dar and Logan

Dinner was relatively quiet and tense. Callum’s meal drew praise and requests for a repeat performance. Through her slightly opened office door, Dar heard Sean joking with Callum as they cleared dishes and started the dishwasher.

She turned back to her screen, its glow highlighting the fatigue in her eyes as she tracked patterns invisible to anyone else. Her thoughts moved faster than her hands could type; connections formed and dissolved in an endless cascade as she tried to make sense of what she was seeing.

It wasn’t clear yet why any of it mattered—but it would. She was certain of that.

“This isn’t random.” Her voice was practically a whisper.

Logan appeared in the doorway, mug in hand, steam curling upward. He’d been making tea—his third of the evening, the ritual that kept him moving when sitting still meant thinking too much. He paused mid-step, reading the room with the same efficiency he used to assess threat levels.

“What’s not random?” His voice was level, operational. Not demanding—asking.

Dar hesitated before answering. “The shifts.” She gestured at her screen.

Logan frowned and stepped closer. “You’re gonna have to be more specific than that.”

With one hand, she massaged her temple; the other pointed towards the screen. “Look here—this fund moved half a million through a hidden account last night. It’s legal on the surface, but if you follow the chain…” She clicked through several windows in quick succession before stopping.

Logan peered at the display from behind her, shaking his head. “I’m not seeing it.”

Dar tapped at one corner of the screen where another transaction appeared—smaller, but with the same pattern hidden underneath.

“Now?”

Logan’s eyes focused more closely as he studied the data. “…Yeah,” he admitted after a long moment. “I see it now.”

“It’s worse than just money shuffling.” Dar gave no time for reply, her tone sharp, full of certainty, yet without fear. “Someone’s testing something. Or someone.”

The air inside the safehouse had a particular stillness to it, the kind that made every small sound—a pipe settling, a car passing outside—land harder than it should have.

She brought up another file—a logistics report, formatted flawlessly. Too flawlessly. It was like the others that had trickled in all week: promising leads that stopped just short, urgent opportunities with thin justification. And through it all, Ashford’s name was conspicuously absent, a ghost in the machine.

Dar watched it all unfold with increasing unease—until clarity struck.

Not chaos—calibration.

“This isn’t her,” Dar spoke to herself. “And it isn’t him either.”

“Someone above them, then.” Statement, not a question.

“Yes.”

He nodded once, slow and deliberate.

“Callum see it too?”

She’s stop long enough to pick up her phone; tapping out a text, “He will now.”

“Good.” Logan picked up his mug, took a sip, eyes still on the screens. “You’ll need that.”

It wasn’t praise or relief, she realized, but simple acknowledgement. Logan saw operational value. He saw a complication removed. In his world, that was enough. She had found someone who mirrored her thinking, and for the first time, her stepbrother saw her as a stronger part of the team.

Logan straightened, mug in hand. “I’ll update the others if you find anything. You two keep working.”

He moved toward the door, hearing Callum’s footfalls coming down the stairs from the second floor, then paused. “Dar.”

She looked up.

“It’s good you’re not doing this alone anymore.” His voice was matter-of-fact. Then he was gone, footsteps receding down the hallway.