The Clerk Colonel Briggs Humiliated Was The Team’s Last Shot-Cherry - Chainityai

The Clerk Colonel Briggs Humiliated Was The Team’s Last Shot-Cherry

The slap was the first thing most people remembered, because it was loud and public and impossible to pretend away.

But it was not the beginning.

By the time Colonel Harlan Briggs knocked Greer Ashford to the concrete, the day had already burned through a helicopter, a ridge line, a shattered extraction plan, and the last easy assumption anyone on that landing pad had about the quiet logistics specialist from Montana.

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Smoke crawled across the tarmac in flat gray sheets.

The medevac rotors kept screaming behind the line of stretchers.

A fuel drum rolled half an inch every time the wind from the blades hit it, making the kicked rifle case scrape softly against the concrete.

Greer tasted blood and dust at the same time.

She stayed on one knee with her palm pressed flat, feeling tiny stones bite into her skin, because standing too quickly would have given Briggs the satisfaction of seeing her stumble.

He wanted panic.

He wanted apology.

He wanted the clerk.

That was the word he had used, and everyone had heard it.

Not specialist.

Not soldier.

Not the woman whose name was written on the manifest that got every round and bandage onto that aircraft.

Clerk.

“You pathetic little clerk.”

The insult had landed in a place much older than the bruise forming along her cheek.

It had landed in a hardware store in Butte, Montana, where rifles hung behind the counter and men talked about elk, weather, recoil, sons, and wars that grew longer every time they were retold.

Greer had been the youngest child in a house already built around boys.

Her brothers knew where the gun oil was kept, which drawer held the cleaning rods, and which thermos their father filled before deer season.

Greer knew the sound of those preparations from the hallway.

She learned the pattern of being left out before anyone ever said the words.

Her mother, Ellen, had been the only one who seemed to notice the difference between a child being quiet and a child being trained to disappear.

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