The Admiral Mocked Her On Deck, Then Read Her Real Rank-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Admiral Mocked Her On Deck, Then Read Her Real Rank-nga9999

The entire hangar bay went silent when Admiral Richard Harlan pointed at me like I was a trespasser.

“Who let this woman on my aircraft carrier?”

His voice cracked across the steel deck with enough force to stop conversations, footsteps, and breathing.

Image

The Atlantic wind pushed through the open hangar bay doors, sharp with salt and fuel, lifting strands of my hair across my face.

Somewhere above us, metal rigging knocked softly against steel.

Nobody moved.

Every sailor turned.

Every officer froze.

And my younger brother, Captain Travis Monroe, stood beside the admiral in dress whites and smiled like he had been waiting his whole life to see me humiliated in public.

I stood there in a plain black coat with no medals on my chest and no escort at my shoulder.

One hand rested on the folder tucked against my ribs.

Nobody saluted.

Nobody recognized me.

Not yet.

The USS Jefferson Pierce was ninety-seven thousand tons of American force floating in the gray Atlantic, and I had stepped onto her deck without ceremony for a reason.

No announcement.

No aide-de-camp.

No row of polished officers preparing the room before I entered it.

I had come in looking ordinary because ordinary people are told the truth faster than powerful people.

The fastest way to learn the truth about a command is to walk in looking powerless.

Admiral Harlan took two hard steps toward me.

He was not tall enough to tower, but he had the body language of a man accustomed to people making room.

His shoulders were squared under two stars.

His jaw was tight.

His eyes moved over my coat, my folder, my windblown hair, and decided I was not worth more than a warning.

“This is a restricted military vessel,” he snapped. “You don’t stroll onto my ship like you’re visiting a shopping mall.”

A few junior officers looked away.

That was the first thing I noticed.

They knew something was wrong.

They just did not know what kind of wrong it was.

The young petty officer near the tool carts kept both hands on a wrench and stared at the deck between us.

She was young enough to still believe rank protected order.

She was old enough to know humiliation when she saw it.

Travis folded his arms.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *