“Garrett, you’re the only one with a shot!” Beck yelled.

“How’d you know?” Beck asked.

While the men above dismissed her warnings over the intercom, Garrett strapped into the ball turret—a glass bubble slung beneath the fuselage, vulnerable as an eyeball. The creature swooped. Its claws sheared off the radio antenna. The pilot, Beck, finally saw it: a living nightmare, faster than any Zero.

But as the plane climbed over the Pacific, a real shadow fell across the top turret—not a myth, but a massive, winged creature with leathery skin and a hunger for aluminum. The crew called it a “rogue cloud” on radar. Garrett called it by its name: Shadow in the Cloud .

She had one belt of ammo, a jammed feed mechanism, and thirty seconds before the thing tore the wings off.

In any crisis—work, survival, or war—the person with the most accurate, unpopular information is not the problem. They are the solution. Don’t shoot the messenger. Ask what they saw in the shadow.

Garrett wiped soot from her face. “Because shadows don’t move against the wind. And I was the only one looking down when everyone else was looking up.”

In the claustrophobic belly of a B-17 bomber, Flight Officer Garrett was already fighting two battles: the sexist crew who refused to believe a woman could be their new armament specialist, and the gremlins they’d mocked her for believing in.