They Mocked Her At The Armory Gate Until Her Black Tide ID Hit The Screen-eirian

“Lost, sweetheart?”

That was how Petty Officer Haskell chose to start his morning.

Not with a regulation.

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Not with a professional question.

With a joke loud enough for the whole armory cage to hear.

He had a shaved head, a clean uniform, and the easy confidence of a man who had never been corrected in front of people who mattered.

He looked at my boots first.

Then my plain black hoodie.

Then the old canvas bag hanging from my shoulder.

By the time his eyes made it back to my face, he had already decided what I was.

A lost wife.

A civilian.

A problem that would apologize if he smiled wrong enough.

The second SEAL laughed from behind the counter.

His name tape read VOSS.

His laugh was not quick or careless.

It was mean.

It was the kind of laugh men use when they want everyone in a room to understand the rules before anything official happens.

Pick a side.

Pick it fast.

The armory smelled like CLP oil, rainwater, cold metal, old concrete, and coffee that had been sitting on a warmer since before sunrise.

The floor was damp near the entry mat.

A forklift beeped somewhere deeper in the building.

A printer behind the counter coughed one page at a time like it hated its job.

Above the access-control desk, a small American flag hung beside a laminated notice about restricted entry.

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