Back at the safehouse, Imran inserted the USB. There was no military doctrine. Instead, a single video file played.
He knew what it meant. The Indian spy agency, RAW, had unleashed their deadliest asset: —a mole so deep inside Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) that even the Director General didn’t know his real name. Vasuki had stolen the "Qaed-e-Sani Manuscript," a lost military doctrine outlining a full-spectrum retaliation strategy involving tactical nuclear deployments in the desert.
Without the manuscript, Pakistan’s nuclear red lines were an open book.
A recorded voice echoed. It was calm, educated, and horrifyingly familiar.
They reached the "shrine." It was a crumbling fortress, but Farnsworth’s thermal scope revealed a basement glowing with server heat signatures. Twenty armed guards, three snipers on minarets, and a central chamber shielded with lead—likely holding the manuscript.


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