The Admiral Humiliated Her In Front Of Troops, Then The Phone Rang-Cherry - Chainityai

The Admiral Humiliated Her In Front Of Troops, Then The Phone Rang-Cherry

Everyone at the military base watched in absolute silence as the highest-ranking officer made me his target to show dominance.

I let him think he won.

He did not realize my true mission as an undercover operative.

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He also did not realize his entire career was ending in exactly twenty-four hours.

The metallic taste of blood hit my tongue before my brain fully processed the impact.

It came sharp and warm, copper flooding the back of my mouth while the concrete stole the air from my lungs.

One second I was standing on the floor of Iron Summit’s main hangar with a folder in my hand and a logistics discrepancy on the screen behind me.

The next, I was on my back under fluorescent lights, staring up at steel beams, maintenance catwalks, and the enormous American flag hanging at the far end of the bay.

The smell of engine oil sat thick in the hangar.

So did fear.

There were more than a thousand soldiers present for the morning readiness briefing.

Infantry.

Mechanics.

Pilots.

Supply officers.

Medical staff.

Everyone who mattered and everyone Hargrove wanted to frighten.

Admiral Victor Hargrove stood over me with one combat boot planted close enough to my shoulder that I could see dried mud in the tread.

His face was red with the satisfaction of a man who believed he had just turned a human being into a warning.

To them, I was Lena Cross, civilian data analyst.

I was the quiet woman from logistics who signed into archive terminals, wore plain slacks, drank bad commissary coffee, and spoke only when the numbers did not add up.

I had spent three months becoming forgettable.

That was harder than most people think.

A room will ignore a woman if she gives it permission.

I gave them permission every day.

I let junior officers interrupt me.

I let commanders mispronounce my name.

I let Hargrove’s executive officer call me “sweetheart” once in front of two clerks, then watched him laugh when I did not react.

I carried folders.

I fixed spreadsheets.

I sat in the back of briefings and typed with my shoulders slightly rounded.

Nobody at Iron Summit knew that before I ever touched their logistics database, I had spent years learning how to enter rooms where people wanted me dead and leave with what I came for.

Nobody knew I was a Master Chief Navy SEAL operating under deep cover.

Nobody knew that the boring little badge clipped to my jacket had become the most dangerous object on the base.

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