I watched my K9 partner take a bullet for me in Kandahar, and I’ve been a ghost ever since—but when I saw a group of kids cornering a defenseless stray with a lead pipe, the ghost finally came home, and I realized I wasn’t done being a soldier.
CHAPTER 2: GHOSTS IN THE LIGHT I drove with one hand on the wheel and the other resting on the dog’s flank. He was sprawled across the bench seat of my ’98 F-150, his breathing shallow and ragged. Every time I hit a pothole—and Clear Creek was basically one giant pothole—he’d let out a soft,…