“The old Reflecting Pool bunker. Under the Lincoln Memorial. But Fisher—Reed knows you’re coming. He wants you to. It’s a trap.”
The broker’s muffled voice came through Sam’s fingers. “G-grimsdottir. Anna Grimsdottir. Third Echelon. She’s gone rogue—Reed forced her to fake Sarah’s death file.”
Sam leaned close. “Good. Traps are just ambushes that haven’t flipped yet.” Tom Clancys Splinter Cell Conviction
“Black Arrow. Who’s their D.C. handler?”
He moved through the service elevator shaft, climbing past exposed conduits. Every muscle remembered: the quiet three-point landing, the way to breathe through your mouth so your exhale doesn’t echo. Conviction , the old program called it. The license to act on instinct. No oversight. No extraction. “The old Reflecting Pool bunker
The safe house smelled of stale coffee and regret. Sam Fisher knelt by the window, the fractured moonlight catching the silver in his stubble. Three years ago, he’d walked away from Third Echelon. They told him his daughter, Sarah, was dead. Killed by a drunk driver. He’d buried her empty casket. Buried himself in grief.
Here’s a short story set in the world of Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell: Conviction , capturing its tone of gritty revenge, improvisation, and the signature “Mark and Execute” tension. One Match in the Dark He wants you to
Sam’s blood iced. Grim . His former colleague. The one person he’d trusted.
He grabbed a heavy glass ashtray from a side table. Tossed it to the far end of the room. It shattered. The guards turned, raised weapons. Sam moved in the opposite direction— toward Galliard —as the men fanned out toward the noise.