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Book III Hevi

The Girl with Two Names Book III Hevi

by

Two names.
One system.
No safe door.
BOOK SUMMARY
Hêvî means hope.
For Ensign Samantha Williams, it becomes evidence.
Fresh out of the Naval Academy, Sam enters Naval Intelligence ready to serve, read patterns, and trust the process.
Then her Kurdish name appears in a logistics stream where it has no reason to exist.
Hêvî Dilvin.
The record does not point to Sam alone. It points to her grandmother in Kurdistan, the woman behind the blue door who gave Sam the name before she ever knew it was hers.
Someone built the link.
Someone hid it inside contractor records, policy channels, and redacted systems.
Now Sam must follow the trail before her identity becomes leverage and her family becomes bait.
She has two names.
They made both of them evidence.
And this time, Sam is not waiting to be found.
The Girl with Two Names
HêVÎ (HOPE)
BOOK III

About The Book

Ensign Samantha Williams reports to an intelligence analysis cell in Suitland, Maryland, thirty days after graduation. She files her briefs. She watches the same supervisor return the same analysis, every time, within twenty minutes. Forty-two briefs in twenty months. Never an outlier.
She has been watching the pattern. She did not know the pattern was watching her back.
When Vance sets a classified record on the table, Sam reads the date twice. Three months after her Naval Academy enrollment, a contractor firm was already building a file on her and her grandmother. Not because of anything Sam had done. Because of a name. Two women on opposite sides of the world, connected on paper before Sam knew her grandmother existed in any system.
They did not discover the connection. They started with it.
What she maps is a network running from a Washington policy firm through a federal contractor and into the analysis cell where her briefs are suppressed on a sixteen-minute cycle. The supervisor is not conspiring. He is executing a protocol he received as legitimate standing policy. The distinction matters, because it tells Sam exactly where to aim.
Khalid al-Tikriti waits in Istanbul. He has not stopped. He never does.
Hêvî (Hope) is the third book in Patrick Guy Daniels', The Girl With Two Names series. If you've been following Sam Williams from Annapolis, you know she wins through documentation, not force. In this book, she finds out the enemy has been reading her file.

Get The Edge Coach Daniels

Get The Edge Coach Daniels

Patrick Daniels is a veteran volleyball coach, sports psychology-minded mentor, and longtime educator with 35 years of experience developing athletes and building winning team cultures. He’s known for blending high standards with real relationship-based leadership—helping coaches and parents turn pressure moments into growth, and talent into toughness. Heart of the Game is his hard-earned playbook for coaching that wins and lasts.

Patrick Daniels is a veteran volleyball coach, sports-psychology-minded mentor, and longtime educator who’s spent **35 years** building athletes and programs that hold up under pressure. Known for blending **high standards with real connection**, Patrick coaches the whole person—skill, mindset, leadership, and the habits that show up when the match gets tight and nobody feels “ready.” His credibility isn’t just built on seasons and scoreboards—it’s forged in adversity. Patrick was diagnosed with **Multiple Sclerosis in 2000**, a reality that eventually forced him to step away from coaching around 2010. Later, he survived a **stroke** that nearly took his life and fought his way back to his baseline level of disability. He also overcame **prostate cancer**, and during recovery faced a life-threatening **MRSA** infection that put him in the hospital for weeks and required months of rehabilitation. Through it all, he refused to let suffering write his identity—choosing instead to model resilience, discipline, and faith-driven purpose for the athletes and families he serves. Those battles became a blueprint for his coaching philosophy: don’t wait for calm conditions to lead well—**coach through the storm**. In *Heart of the Game* (and in the “Coach the Storm” message that runs through his work), Patrick pulls back the curtain on what actually builds durable teams: clarity, accountability, selfless culture, honest communication, and athletes who learn to think under fire instead of depending on a coach to rescue them. Patrick’s writing is direct, practical, and conviction-filled—made for coaches, athletes, and parents who want more than motivation. His goal is simple: help you develop competitors who can perform with poise, carry themselves with integrity, and win the moments that decide a season—and a life.

More Books by Get The Edge Coach Daniels

Heart of the Game

Volleyball Toolbox

Heart of the Game (Second Edition) is a no-fluff coaching playbook for building tougher athletes and tighter teams. Practical tools, real talk, and standards that show up under pressure—on the court and in life.

Coach The Storm

Building Chaos-Ready Athletes Through Ecological Coaching

Seeking the Edge

Your Individual Journey to Get The Edge Workbook

Get The Edge Workbook is a practical, athlete-centered guide to building mental toughness, emotional control, and next-level consistency. Through a progression of workshops—goal setting, teamwork, leadership, mental skills, emotional resilience, and performance tools—you’ll develop your personal “Edge” and learn how to hold it when the stakes rise. Designed to help athletes perform at the top of their ability—regardless of circumstances.

The Girl with Two Names Book I The Locket

Two families. Two names. One impossible journey

**Two families. Two names. One locket that opens a door to the truth—and a danger that won’t stay buried.**

The Girl with Two Names: Protocol

The Blue Door Protocol

She walks into the Naval Academy with one name on her papers and another buried in her blood. Sam Williams is a plebe. Hêvî Dilvin is a girl someone in Istanbul is paid to find. She has kept those two worlds apart since the day Thunder Daniels carried her out of Kurdistan. She cannot keep them apart much longer.
In Annapolis, the system does not need guns. It has paperwork and people who believe they are helping. Across an ocean, Khalid al-Tikriti has something worse: patience.
He found her name on a list.
Now he is watching her walk to class.