The Scar That Proved a Dead Navy Medic Was Still Alive-mdue - Chainityai

The Scar That Proved a Dead Navy Medic Was Still Alive-mdue

The glass hit the floor before I could cover my shoulder.

It shattered across the tile in the back hallway of Sullivan’s Harbor Bar, so sharp and sudden that every muscle in my body snapped tight before my mind had a chance to catch up.

For one second, the whole room went still.

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The beer cooler kept humming behind me.

The mop bucket smelled like lemon cleaner and old bar water.

A strip of fluorescent light buzzed overhead, catching on the broken pieces of glass scattered near the polished black shoes of the man standing in the doorway.

I turned so fast my shoulder burned.

I grabbed my denim jacket from the chair and pressed it to my chest, trying to hide skin that had already been seen.

The man in the doorway looked like he had stepped into the wrong room and found the wrong decade waiting for him.

He wore a dark Navy service uniform.

He was tall, broad-shouldered, clean-shaven, and pale in a way that had nothing to do with embarrassment.

His hand was still raised, frozen in the air, like he had been reaching for the office door when his body forgot how to finish the motion.

“I’m sorry,” he said quickly, turning his face away. “I was looking for the manager’s office. I didn’t—”

“Get out,” I snapped.

The words came out hard enough to make even me flinch.

He should have left.

That was how normal people handled a moment like that.

They apologized, stepped backward, looked at the floor, and gave a woman whatever dignity was left in the room.

But he did not move.

His eyes were not on my chest, or my bare arms, or anything that would have made this easier to hate him for.

They were locked on the mirror above the prep counter behind me.

In that mirror, the back of my left shoulder was visible above my tank top.

A web of raised scar tissue crossed my shoulder blade in jagged lines, pale and twisted under the ugly bar light.

It looked like broken lightning.

It felt like a hand reaching out of the past and taking hold of my throat.

My name is Hannah Mercer.

I am thirty-two years old.

At Sullivan’s, I was just Hannah from the dinner shift, the quiet waitress who remembered every regular’s drink, traded shifts when somebody’s kid got sick, and wore long sleeves even when the air outside felt like it was melting over the parking lot.

People noticed things in a bar.

They noticed who tipped in cash.

They noticed which married men took off their rings before ordering whiskey.

They noticed which sailors got loud after their third beer and which ones only got quieter.

But they did not notice me.

That was the whole point.

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