God of war's return

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God of war's return

Warlast updateLast Updated : 2026-05-29

By:  TeresaOngoing

Language: English
18

Chapters: 5 views: 5

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Ethan Cole returns to Crestfield City after five years of silence carrying nothing but a duffel bag and a debt that isn't his to pay. His father is dead. His family home has been seized. And the men he once commanded the brothers he bled beside are being decorated as national heroes for a mission that was his in every way that mattered. Nobody in Crestfield knows that Ethan Cole doesn't exist in any public military record. The name that exists classified, redacted, spoken only in the highest corridors of military intelligence is Ghost. The supreme commander behind three of the most consequential covert operations in recent history. The soldier four governments tried to eliminate and failed. The man whose real file carries a classification level that most generals will never hold clearance to read. Ethan isn't back for revenge. Revenge is beneath him. He's back because the people who destroyed his name made one critical miscalculation they assumed his silence was surrender. It wasn't. Working from a budget motel room and a mall security job, Ethan begins dismantling the corruption quietly and precisely freezing promotions, routing evidence to a journalist, cutting financial threads that connect his betrayers to a corrupt general named Hutchins who buried the true record of Operation Blackfall to protect his own interests. When Hutchins sends six armed contractors to silence him permanently, they end up on the ground in forty five seconds, and the footage reaches military high command before morning. The reckoning that follows is swift, public, and absolute. Hutchins is detained. Delta Seven faces tribunal. And in the middle of a half empty shopping mall, the second highest ranking officer in the country walks across the floor in full dress uniform and salutes a man in a security guard's uniform.

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Chapter 1

Chapter One: The Return

The bus rolled into Crestfield City at half past six in the morning, coughing exhaust as it groaned to a stop at the terminal on Fifth and Meridian. Passengers stirred awake around him a mother with a sleeping child on her lap, a college student with headphones still pressed to his ears, an old man in overalls who had been snoring since the last rest stop. They reached for bags, stretched sore necks, blinked at the pale morning light bleeding through the grimy windows.

Ethan Cole did not move.

He sat in the last row, the seat closest to the window, and looked out at the city he had not seen in five years. It had not changed much. The same grey skyline. The same row of commercial buildings lining the terminal street, their signs half-lit in the early morning. A pharmacy. A pawn shop. A breakfast diner with a neon OPEN sign that buzzed and flickered like it had been doing so for decades. Crestfield was not a city that reinvented itself. It simply continued, indifferent to what had happened to the people who had left it.

That indifference suited Ethan fine.

He waited until the last passenger had stepped off before he rose. He was not in a hurry. He had learned, in the years spent in places far more dangerous than this terminal, that the men who moved first were often the men who made the most noise. Ethan had survived on silence for a very long time. He intended to keep doing so.

He pulled his duffel bag from the overhead rack. It was a single bag worn military canvas, olive green, the kind that had been dragged through mud and sand and worse. It weighed about fourteen pounds. Everything he owned was in it, and he had packed it the same way he had packed every bag in the field: light, deliberate, nothing that wasn't useful.

He stepped off the bus and stood on the pavement.

The morning air was cool and carried the smell of the city exhaust, old concrete, coffee from somewhere nearby. A pigeon walked in a lopsided circle near a trash can a few feet away, unbothered by the foot traffic. Ethan watched it for a moment, then adjusted his bag on his shoulder and started walking.

Nobody looked at him twice. That was fine too.

The man they had last known the one who had shipped out five years ago, young and squared away and full of the kind of quiet determination that drill instructors either loved or broke that man had walked out of Crestfield to a small sendoff at the bus station. His father Raymond had come. Two neighbours. A woman named Dana who had kissed him on the cheek and told him to come back in one piece.

He had come back. Dana was long gone. He had no expectations about the rest.

He flagged a cab on the corner of Fifth and Meridian and gave the driver an address on the east side of the city without looking at the man. Sat in the back seat with his bag between his feet and watched the streets go by through the window. The driver tried conversation twice something about the weather, something about a road closure on the bridge and got nothing back both times. By the third block, the man had given up and turned on the radio at low volume. A morning talk show. People laughing about something Ethan didn't track.

He looked out the window.

Crestfield's east side was the kind of neighbourhood that people with money left when they got it, and people without money stayed in because they had no choice. His father had lived there for thirty years. Raymond Cole had been a man who believed in staying put, in maintaining what you had, in not reaching beyond your means. He had worked at a freight depot for most of his working life and had kept his apartment clean and his rent paid and his affairs in order. He had never asked for much. He had certainly never expected his son to become what Ethan had become and Ethan had been careful to make sure he never knew the full truth of it.

The cab pulled onto Mercer Street and Ethan paid in cash, exact amount, no tip not out of stinginess, but because tipping was a habit of men who planned to return somewhere, and he didn't know yet what he was planning.

He stood in front of the building on Mercer Street.

It looked worse than he remembered. The exterior paint had peeled badly along the lower sections of the facade, exposing grey concrete beneath. One of the buzzer panels near the entrance had been cracked at some point and repaired with packing tape that had since yellowed and come half loose. The small garden strip beside the entrance which his father had tended with quiet persistence, keeping a few modest plants alive through every season had been paved over with concrete.

Ethan stood there and looked at that paved over strip for a moment longer than he looked at anything else.

Then he went inside.

The stairwell smelled like old carpet and whatever someone on the first floor was cooking at this hour. He climbed to the second floor and walked to the end of the hall, to Unit 4. There was a new lock on the door a heavy duty deadbolt, the kind that cost real money, the kind people installed when they wanted to make it absolutely clear that something belonged to them now.

He knocked.

He heard movement inside. A pause. Then footsteps, slow and deliberate, and the sound of the deadbolt being drawn back. The door opened six inches and a woman looked at him through the gap. She was in her mid-forties, wearing a bathrobe and holding a coffee mug in one hand with the grip of a woman who had not yet had enough of it that morning.

She looked him up and down with the flat expression of someone who had answered the door to disappointment before.

"Whatever you're selling," she said, "I don't want it."

"I'm not selling anything." Ethan looked past her shoulder into the apartment. He could see the living room from where he stood. New furniture a cream sofa that would not have survived Raymond Cole's sensibilities, a glass coffee table, wall art that came in sets from a department store. "This unit belonged to Raymond Cole. He was my father."

The woman's expression shifted slightly. Not to sympathy. To something more guarded the look of someone calculating how much of a problem this conversation was going to be.

"Raymond Cole passed away two years ago," she said. "His brother Gerald inherited the property. Gerald sold it. I bought it through proper legal channels all documentation in order." She held the mug a little tighter. "I'm sorry for your loss."

She didn't sound sorry.

"Gerald isn't family," Ethan said.

"Gerald had the deed." She began closing the door. "I suggest you speak to a property attorney if you have concerns. I can't help you."

The door clicked shut. The deadbolt turned.

Ethan stood in the hallway and looked at the door number the small brass 4 that his father had polished every few months because Raymond Cole believed that small things mattered. It was tarnished now. Nobody had polished it since Raymond stopped being there to do it.

He stood there for only a moment. Then he picked up his bag and walked back down the stairs.

He found a motel six blocks away called the Crestfield Inn, which was a generous name for a two-storey building with a vending machine in the parking lot and curtains that didn't quite meet in the middle. He paid cash for three nights, took the key from a teenage clerk who didn't look up from his phone, and carried his bag up the external staircase to Room 14.

The room was exactly what it needed to be. A bed. A desk with a lamp. A bathroom with clean but cracked tiles. A television bolted to the dresser that he had no intention of turning on. He set his bag down and sat on the edge of the bed.

His father was dead.

He had known that for two years had received a brief, formal notification through a channel that almost nobody alive knew he still monitored. He had been in the middle of an operation when the message came through. He had read it. He had noted it. He had continued.

He was not a man who fell apart. He had trained that tendency out of himself in the early years, and the later years had reinforced the lesson with a thoroughness that left no room for debate. You processed what was necessary to process, you stored the rest, and you kept moving. Stopping was how you died or how you lost, and he had experienced enough of both to refuse it as a habit.

But now he was sitting on the edge of a cheap motel bed in Crestfield City. His father's apartment was occupied by a stranger. The men who had destroyed his name were somewhere in this city being celebrated as heroes. And for a long, still moment he simply sat with all of that and let it exist.

Then he reached into the duffel bag and pulled out a burner phone one of four he carried and dialled a number from memory. It rang once.

"This line is supposed to be retired." The voice on the other end was male, trained to steadiness, professionally controlled and yet underneath the first syllable there was something, a fractional catch that barely existed, the kind of thing only someone who had spent years reading voices under extreme pressure would even notice.

"I know," Ethan said.

Silence on the line. Then, lower, quieter the voice of a man recalibrating everything he thought he knew in real time:

"Sir. We thought you were dead."

"I know that too." Ethan lay back on the bed and looked at the ceiling. A long crack ran from the light fitting toward the window. He followed it with his eyes. "Give me seventy-two hours. After that, I'll need a full asset report. Everything current. Hutchins. Delta Seven. The Harmon Group. All of it."

"Understood." A pause. Then: "Sir ...... it's good to hear your voice."

Ethan considered responding to that. Then he ended the call.

He set the phone on the nightstand. Looked at the ceiling crack one more time. Outside the window, Crestfield City was waking up around him garbage trucks, early traffic, a radio playing from an open window somewhere down the street. The city continuing. Indifferent as always.

Ethan closed his eyes.

For the first time in five years, he slept without one ear open.

He had come home.

And the city had absolutely no idea what that meant.

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