The 12-Mile March That Exposed What Rowan Mercer Was Hiding-mdue - Chainityai

The 12-Mile March That Exposed What Rowan Mercer Was Hiding-mdue

The morning of the 12-mile march began before the sun had fully cleared the tree line at Fort Dalton.

Rowan Mercer was awake before the first shouted order, sitting on the edge of her bunk with both boots already in her hands.

The barracks smelled of detergent, damp socks, and the sour edge of nervous sweat that never really left a training bay after six weeks of selection.

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Around her, other recruits moved slowly, bumping into footlockers and whispering curses at alarm clocks and sore knees.

Rowan did not speak.

She laced her boots the way she always did, twice through the top hooks, pulled tight enough that the leather pressed into her ankles before the march even started.

Chosen pain was easier to understand than the pain that arrived without asking.

Her uniform jacket hung from the foot of the bunk, dusty at the elbows and stiff at the collar from salt and heat.

She picked it up last.

That had become part of the routine too.

Boots first.

Belt next.

Ruck straps checked twice.

Jacket buttoned all the way to the throat.

No one at Fort Dalton understood why she did that in Georgia heat.

A few recruits had asked in the beginning, when curiosity still had energy behind it.

By week four, most of them had stopped asking because every person in the battalion was busy trying not to break.

But Staff Sergeant Cole Vega had never stopped noticing.

Vega noticed everything he could turn into pressure.

He noticed when Rowan’s sleeves hung loose.

He noticed when she tightened the strap across her chest before everyone else.

He noticed when she flinched at sudden hands, even if the flinch lasted less than a second.

Most of all, he noticed that she never opened her collar.

To Vega, that restraint looked like weakness hiding under discipline.

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