Bullied at Bootcamp, Her Hidden Tattoo Made a Colonel Salute-eirian

They laughed at me the moment I arrived at bootcamp…

The laugh was the first thing I heard when I opened the passenger door of my rusted pickup truck.

Not the wind coming off the Colorado foothills.

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Not the barked orders near the intake table.

The laugh.

It cut through the diesel smell, the wet-mud stink, and the rubbery heat rising from the training yard like I had stepped onto that NATO compound for their entertainment.

The truck did not help.

Its paint had faded from blue to a tired gray in places, and the right headlight had been cracked since Kansas.

The passenger door screamed every time it opened.

Around me, recruits stepped out of expensive SUVs and spotless rental cars with duffel bags that looked newer than my entire life.

They had polished boots, clean haircuts, tactical watches, and that shiny kind of confidence that usually belongs to people who have not been tested by anything worse than inconvenience.

I had worn combat boots, a faded gray T-shirt, and an old backpack hanging together by one strap.

To them, that was enough evidence.

One of them laughed openly and said, “Army recruiting thrift-store models now?”

The others joined him because cowardice is easier in groups.

I did not look at them.

My name is Olivia Carter.

At least, that was the name printed on my temporary NATO compound badge when the intake sergeant slid it across the table at 0710 hours.

Olivia Carter.

Cadet.

Training Group C.

There was also a liability waiver, a medical clearance form, and a training conduct acknowledgment with my signature line highlighted in yellow.

Paper has always been easier than people.

Paper does not laugh before it understands what it is looking at.

The NATO training compound sat in a stretch of Colorado where the mountains looked close enough to touch and far enough away to make a person feel small.

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