The Quiet Woman Behind Hangar 7 Was Not Who The SEALs Thought-eirian

He put his hand on me behind Hangar 7 because he thought nobody important was watching.

He was wrong about that before his fingers ever touched my collarbone.

The wall at my back was cold, the kind of cold corrugated steel holds even after the California sun has been on it for an hour.

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It came through my blouse and into the bone of my left shoulder as Chief Special Warfare Operator Tyler Hawkins shoved me against it and called me sweetheart like it was a rank.

The air smelled like jet fuel, salt, hot asphalt, stale coffee, and gun oil.

Somewhere above us, gulls screamed over the roofline, then lifted away as if even birds knew better than to stay too close to a man proving himself for an audience that was not there.

Hawkins had three fingers pressed near my collarbone.

His thumb was too close to the hollow of my throat.

His wrist was turned inward.

Too confident.

Too careless.

Too close.

I looked at the hand before I looked at him.

Hands tell the truth faster than faces.

A face can practice innocence.

A hand shows intent.

‘Whatever badge you stole to get on this base,’ he said, leaning close enough for me to smell the coffee on his breath, ‘it stops mattering right now.’

I let him finish.

There are moments in uniform when speaking too soon gives away more than silence ever could.

I was not in uniform that morning.

That was the point.

I had worn a plain navy blouse, gray slacks, low shoes, and no visible insignia because the briefing I was about to lead required me to know what my command looked like when nobody thought command was in the room.

The black leather case in my right hand carried documents for Briefing Room Two.

The badge in my jacket pocket had been scanned at the security desk.

The west access corridor camera had been recording since 0837.

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