A Marine Major’s Quiet Correction Shook a Buried War Review-olive

The Marine general laughed at her kill count in front of thirty officers, two Pentagon lawyers, and a wall-sized screen showing her face beside the word REVIEW.

The laugh was not loud at first.

It was practiced.

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It was the kind of laugh a powerful man uses when he wants a room to know permission has been granted.

Permission to doubt.

Permission to smirk.

Permission to treat a decorated Marine major like a problem that had finally been dragged into daylight.

Major Evelyn Shaw sat at the far end of the conference table with her hands folded over a black leather notebook.

Her dress blues were immaculate.

Her silver oak leaves caught the cold fluorescent light each time she breathed.

Her dark hair was twisted into a tight bun at the base of her neck, and the narrow scar under her left eye looked almost white against her calm face.

She did not look embarrassed.

She did not look angry.

She did not look afraid.

That was the first thing Lieutenant General Thomas Harlan noticed.

It bothered him more than he wanted it to.

Because he understood rooms like this.

He had built a career in them.

No windows.

Gray walls.

One American flag standing in the corner.

The Marine Corps emblem mounted on the opposite wall.

A polished conference table long enough to make anyone seated at the far end feel like they had been pushed away from their own defense.

At the front of the room, the projector glowed with classified slides.

MISSION AFTER-ACTION REVIEW.

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