The Woman Behind The Fallen Log Who Would Not Stop Breathing-olive

Cassidy was at the rear of the patrol because that was where overwatch belonged.

Not because anyone had said she was fragile.

Not because anyone had said it out loud.

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But she had heard the pauses, the little tests, the way men who liked her well enough still watched her lungs on a climb and her hands after a long shot. Out in the deep green timber, none of that mattered. The forest did not care who doubted her. It did not care who believed in her. It only cared who made noise, who broke cover, and who breathed too loudly.

Hayes walked point like the trees were supposed to move for him. Russo carried the radio pack and complained under his breath about the humidity. Cassidy moved behind them with pine sap sticking to her gloves, her rifle heavy across her chest, and her eyes sliding from shadow to shadow.

The ambush took all of that normal away in one second.

The ground lifted.

Air vanished.

Sound became pressure, then ringing, then the hard ugly thump of machine-gun fire tearing through the trail. Hayes went down before he could turn. Russo hit the ferns with a scream that did not sound human, and Cassidy threw herself into the mud behind a fallen log because the part of her that wanted to live moved faster than the part of her that wanted to be brave.

For one second, she hated herself for it.

Then a round snapped above her helmet and ripped the thought away.

She was low behind the log, face pressed into rot, hands shaking so badly the rifle felt unfamiliar. The forest smelled like wet bark, smoke, and copper. Russo was ten yards away, trying to tie off his own leg with fingers that would not obey him. Hayes did not move at all.

Cassidy wanted to crawl to Russo.

She also knew that crawling to Russo would get her cut in half.

So she did the cruelest thing survival ever asks a person to do. She stayed where she was. She breathed through her mouth, swallowed the panic in pieces, and began turning the world back into a problem she could solve.

Ridge line. Heavy gun. At least three rifles. High ground. Her own rifle. One hidden angle.

The men above were still firing at the trail, not at her exact position. That meant they had geometry, not certainty. They knew where the patrol had been. They did not know where she had landed.

That ignorance was a gift.

Cassidy moved one inch at a time. Her sleeve dragged through black mud. Fern stems scraped her neck. She kept the rifle below the top of the log and searched until she found the narrow gap between a root and the wet trunk.

Through the scope, the world shrank.

No heroic music.

No perfect target.

Just a flash behind gray stone, a shoulder shifting where green should have been, and a man who believed the woman under the log was too frightened to answer.

Cassidy exhaled until there was nothing left in her lungs.

The rifle whispered.

The shoulder vanished.

For the first time since the blast, the ridge hesitated.

That pause was small, but it had weight. It told her they had not heard the shot. It told her they were confused. A second man broke cover and scrambled toward the heavy gun, and Cassidy followed him through the scope with her eye burning from sweat.

She fired again.

He fell short of the rocks.

The machine gun opened in a panic, chewing into trees and ferns, no longer precise. Bark burst above Cassidy’s cheek. Splinters peppered her face. Every instinct told her to stay behind the log, but every hour of training answered with something colder.

Move.

She crawled left, dragging the rifle and her body through mud until her knees felt skinned raw. Halfway to a cluster of stones, she passed Russo. His screaming had stopped. His eyes were open, fixed on the canopy as if he had seen something above the trees that she could not.

Cassidy did not say goodbye.

If she opened that door, she knew she would not be able to close it.

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