The Logistics Clerk Who Opened a Rifle Case During an Ambush-Quieen - Chainityai

The Logistics Clerk Who Opened a Rifle Case During an Ambush-Quieen

The first round hit the command tent at 6:14 p.m.

Ava Reynolds knew the time because the cheap digital clock above the radio table froze when the console blew apart.

One second it was showing 6:14 in dull green numbers.

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The next second it was dead, cracked, and smoking under a spray of sparks.

The sound of the round was not like thunder.

Thunder gives you warning.

This was closer, sharper, and crueler, the kind of sound that made your shoulders fold before your brain caught up.

Canvas snapped above Ava’s head.

A metal tent pole screamed against its bracket.

Dust jumped from every crate in the command tent, and the air filled with the burnt stink of wire insulation, gun oil, sweat, and torn earth.

Ava had been kneeling over an intake clipboard when the first barrage came through.

She was not holding a weapon.

She was holding a grease pencil.

That was what everyone expected of her.

At Ember Ridge, tucked deep in the Oregon wilderness, Ava Reynolds was the woman people came to when a shipment was wrong, when a ration count did not match, when a crate had gone missing, or when somebody needed extra batteries and did not want to admit they had lost the last pack.

She knew how many bandage rolls were left in the medical locker.

She knew which ammo crates had been moved twice and which ones had not been signed back into inventory.

She knew which soldiers took too much coffee, which ones lied about it, and which ones were quietly mailing part of their pay home.

She was useful.

She was quiet.

She was invisible in the way competent women are often made invisible when competence does not look exciting.

Nobody had ever asked why she kept the rear supply row arranged in the exact same order.

Nobody had ever asked why one long steel container marked TECHNICAL TOOLS was always stacked behind two heavier crates.

Nobody had ever asked why she was the only person who touched it.

That was fine with Ava.

Questions had weight.

Answers had consequences.

A shard from the console caught her cheek when the second burst came through.

It sliced just beneath her cheekbone, thin and hot.

Ava touched it once and looked at the red on her fingertips.

Then another shot tore through the map table.

Colored pins scattered across the dirt like spilled candy.

Sergeant Cole Matthews yelled from the far side of the tent.

“We need a sniper! Anyone who can shoot, get the hell up here!”

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