She Took Iron Sights to a SEAL Sniper Match. Then the Sabotage Began.-olive

They laughed when Captain Emily Carter walked onto the Navy SEAL sniper range with an old M14 and no scope.

It was not the kind of laugh that filled a room.

Men like that knew better than to sound cruel when officers were nearby.

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It was smaller than that.

A breath through the nose.

A glance traded over a shoulder.

A smile that disappeared the second she looked in its direction.

Emily Carter had heard that laugh in war rooms, briefing rooms, helicopters, convoys, and hospital tents.

She had heard it from men who assumed she had been sent to take notes until she started issuing orders.

She had heard it from men who called her ma’am with their mouths and mistake with their eyes.

She had learned years ago that anger was not always useful.

Sometimes anger wanted to be loud.

Useful anger stayed quiet.

It watched.

It remembered.

It wrote things down.

Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake sat under a hard California sun, all concrete, dust, sunburned flags, and square buildings the color of old oatmeal.

The range smelled like hot sand, machine oil, and burnt coffee drifting out from somewhere it should not have been.

The Senior Sniper Invitational had drawn forty-two shooters from the kind of units civilians named carefully and veterans named less often.

Navy SEALs.

Army Rangers.

Recon Marines.

A Delta operator whose name did not appear on any list open to anyone outside the right locked rooms.

Forty-one men.

And Captain Emily Carter, United States Marine Corps.

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