Her Sister Mocked Her Badge Until A Navy Commander Went Pale-mdue - Chainityai

Her Sister Mocked Her Badge Until A Navy Commander Went Pale-mdue

The ballroom smelled like buttered rolls, expensive perfume, and polished wood.

Rachel Monroe noticed all of it before she noticed her sister.

That was how her mind worked now.

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Entrances first.

Windows second.

Service doors third.

People last, because people were usually the messiest part of any room.

The Chesapeake Bay Club had dressed itself up for the hometown reunion with white tablecloths, gold-rimmed plates, and centerpieces low enough for gossip to travel over them.

Beyond the tall windows, the marina bobbed in the last orange light of evening, the ropes knocking softly against metal cleats.

Every few seconds, Rachel caught that hollow tap.

It sounded like a quiet warning.

She had been back in town for less than four hours.

Already, the past felt too familiar.

Her mother had hugged her too tightly in the lobby and whispered, “Please just have a nice night.”

Her father had patted her shoulder and said, “Your sister worked hard on this.”

Nobody said what they all meant.

Don’t make Lauren uncomfortable.

Don’t correct her.

Don’t ruin the version of the family she likes to show people.

Rachel had learned early that some families do not ask for peace.

They ask for silence and call it peace because it photographs better.

Lauren had always photographed beautifully.

She was the daughter who looked good in the front row of school plays, wedding receptions, charity dinners, and neighborhood Christmas cards.

She knew how to laugh at the right volume, hug with both arms, and make every person she met feel like an audience member who had accidentally been upgraded to VIP.

Rachel had never been that.

As a child, she hid in corners with paperbacks while Lauren collected friends.

As a teenager, she learned that being quiet made adults call her mature and made other kids call her strange.

As an adult, she discovered that quiet could be useful.

People underestimated quiet people.

Sometimes that saved your life.

Sometimes it saved other people’s.

Rachel sat two seats away from Commander Ethan Whitaker, Lauren’s husband.

Ethan wore his dress blues with the discomfort of a man who respected the uniform too much to enjoy wearing it as decoration.

He had shaken Rachel’s hand politely when she arrived.

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