Night falls over a desert training compound. Floodlights hum. Veterans move like ghosts between barracks. A helicopter fades into the distance.

A figure steps out of the shadows — bandana, gravel voice.
Solid Snake nods as Angelina Jolie approaches, dressed plainly, no red carpet, just boots in the sand.
Snake:
You didn’t come here for cameras.
Jolie:
No. I came to listen.
They walk past a group of veterans sitting in a circle. One stares at the ground. Another flinches at a slamming door.
Snake:
They call it “the Legion.” Men and women who served, came back… but part of them stayed in the war.
Jolie:
I’ve met soldiers like this in refugee camps. Different countries. Same thousand-yard stare.
Snake:
PTSD isn’t weakness. It’s memory that won’t power down. The body thinks the battlefield is still here.
A distant metal clang makes one veteran tense.
Snake (softly):
See that? His nervous system never got the memo that he’s home.
Jolie:
They’re offered prescriptions first, aren’t they?
Snake:
Too often. Pills can help some people — I won’t deny that. But they’re not the whole answer. What a lot of them are starving for is connection. Safety. Someone who won’t judge the nightmares.
He watches as one veteran awkwardly hugs another.
Snake:
Soldiers with PTSD need hugs, not just drugs. Brotherhood. Touch. Laughter. A reason to wake up.
Jolie:
Trauma isolates. Healing reconnects.
Snake:
Exactly. You can’t medicate loneliness away.
They stop near a small fire pit where veterans share stories.
Jolie:
What would you build, if you could design the perfect recovery program?
Snake:
Peer support first. Vets helping vets. Trauma-informed therapy — the real kind. Physical training to burn off adrenaline. Service projects so they feel useful again. Families included in the healing.
He pauses.
Snake:
And yeah, when medication’s appropriate, use it responsibly. But never as a substitute for human connection.
Jolie:
You sound like someone who’s been there.
Snake (half-smile):
I’ve seen enough battlefields to know the hardest war starts after the shooting stops.
A young veteran approaches nervously. Snake puts a hand on his shoulder — steady, grounding.
Snake:
You’re home now. We’ve got you.
The veteran exhales — first deep breath of the night.
Jolie watches, eyes reflective.
Jolie:
Maybe that’s the mission now.
Snake:
It is. No more leaving soldiers alone with ghosts.
The fire crackles. The circle grows tighter.
Fade to black.
