The Combat Dog Who Exposed the Commander Buried by Her Own Unit-eirian

Rain kept sliding down the harbor glass at Port Meridian like the city itself was trying to wash something away.

Gate 7 was built for people who did not wait with everyone else.

Oil executives. Private contractors. Military transport officers with badges that opened doors most travelers never noticed.

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That evening, the men inside the executive lounge acted like the room belonged to them because every room had belonged to them for too long.

Then Riley Mercer walked in wearing a mechanic’s jacket.

No polished luggage.

No badge on display.

No fear.

Her boots left rain on the floor. Her dark hair was tied back in a careless knot. A tool bag hung from one hand. She crossed the lounge with the quiet patience of a woman who had learned not to waste breath on men who mistook silence for weakness.

Lieutenant Mason Doyle saw her first.

Beside him, Cole Barrett grinned before he even knew her name.

Between them lay Cerberus, a black Belgian Malinois with a scarred muzzle, amber eyes, and a tactical harness that made nearby contractors lower their voices. The dog had served in places that would never be printed on a boarding pass. He had ignored every handler after one classified operation and tolerated Mason only because orders had trained him to tolerate men.

Mason lifted his glass.

“Lost tourist at the wrong gate.”

Cole added, “Maintenance access is downstairs, princess.”

The lounge laughed.

Riley looked at the sign above the restricted corridor, then back at them.

“I can read.”

The room should have heard the warning in her calm.

Cerberus did.

The dog lifted his head. His whole body changed before any human understood why. He stared at Riley as if a voice only he could hear had called him back across seven years.

Cole tugged the restraint. “Cerberus.”

The dog did not blink.

Riley turned fully toward him.

Something broke in the animal then.

Not rage.

Recognition.

He whined so deeply that the contractors stopped laughing. Then he snapped the restraint, crossed the lounge, and dropped flat at Riley Mercer’s boots.

Security reached for weapons. Mason shouted. Cole cursed.

Riley only crouched and touched the scar behind Cerberus’s ear.

“Still hate airport floors, huh?”

The dog trembled.

Mason’s glass slipped from his hand and shattered.

Because Cerberus did not submit like that to strangers. He did not melt against anybody’s hand. He did not place his body at anyone’s feet unless that person had once stood over him in fire, smoke, and command.

Riley Mercer.

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