The storm hit the docks just as she stepped off the ferry. Rain sllicked the wooden planks and turned the horizon into a wall of gray. To anyone watching, she was just another drifter, a woman in a weathered leather jacket, duffel bag slung over one shoulder, boots clicking against wet wood. But her eyes told a different story.
Eyes like that didn’t wander without purpose. They’d seen things that left marks deeper than scars. They’d watched good men die. They’d made choices that haunted the space between heartbeats.
She walked toward the naval checkpoint with the same calm stride one might use walking into a grocery store, except her destination wasn’t for the faint-hearted. Naval Base Coronado, home of the U.S. Navy SEALs.
The rain intensified. Thunder rolled across the Pacific like artillery fire. She didn’t quicken her pace, didn’t seek shelter, just kept walking, one boot in front of the other, toward a place she’d sworn she’d never see again.
Seven years ago, she’d walked through these same gates for the first time. Twenty-one years old, fresh out of Bud’s training, selected for something that didn’t officially exist. She’d been so young then, so certain the world made sense, so convinced that doing the right thing mattered.
The woman walking toward those gates now was twenty-eight. The seven years between felt like seventy.
Security noticed her immediately. A civilian trying to access restricted military property was always suspicious. But this one had something else about her. Something in the way she moved. The way her eyes tracked every vehicle, every patrol route, every sight line without seeming to look at anything at all.
“Ma’am, stop right there.” The guard stepped forward, hand resting on his sidearm. Not threatening, not yet. Just ready.
She stopped. Rain ran down her face. She didn’t wipe it away.
“This is a restricted area. You need authorization to proceed.”
Slowly, deliberately, she reached into her jacket. The guard’s hand tightened on his weapon. She produced a military ID card, worn at the edges, laminated surface scratched from years of use.
The guard took it, studied it under his flashlight. His frown deepened.
“This ID expired three years ago.” He looked up at her.
“You can’t check the credentials,” she said. Her voice was quiet, steady, the voice of someone who’d given orders under fire. “Then call your CO.”
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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