They Mocked The Quiet Operator Until A Sniper Chose Their Gate-Ginny

The northern gate baked under a white sun that made every surface look sharp enough to cut skin.

I sat on an overturned ammunition crate with my rifle across my knees and my name stripped from my uniform.

No patch.

Image

No rank.

No explanation.

The anonymity was not a costume.

It was part of the transfer plan, a way to keep curious eyes from following the person who could stop the convoy, redirect it, or burn the route if the situation turned wrong.

That was how the order had been written, because the convoy coming through that gate was not supposed to attract attention.

The paper folded inside my vest called it a classified transfer and named me as the command authority for the package.

Most people on the base did not know that.

The base commander knew enough to leave me alone, and that was enough.

Everyone else saw a tired woman in dusty gear sitting near a gate where men liked to measure themselves out loud.

Brody Gallagher was one of those men.

He came across the gravel with two other contractors behind him, all three of them wearing gear so clean it looked ordered for a photograph.

Brody had the build of a man who had spent years learning how to fill a doorway.

Wyatt Henderson walked with a twitchy impatience that made his rifle bounce against his vest.

Colin Riggs was younger, loud when the older men laughed and quiet when they stopped.

They had a perimeter contract, an incoming convoy, and no discipline in the open lane.

Brody stopped in front of me and looked me up and down like he had found a mistake on a shipping manifest.

“You are sitting in my sector,” he said.

I kept my eyes on the ridge.

“Command tent is that way, sweetheart,” he added. “Coffee, shade, maybe somebody who needs a diversity briefing.”

Henderson laughed.

Riggs laughed half a second later.

The dogs beyond the wire had stopped barking.

That mattered more than Brody did.

He stepped closer until his shadow touched my boots.

“Pick up your little rifle and move,” he said. “Dead weight does not stand in the fatal funnel.”

There are insults that deserve an answer, and there are insults that tell you the speaker has already lost track of the world.

I did not answer.

The ridge east of the gate was a broken line of limestone, concrete, and rusted metal from an old water tower.

It sat far enough away that an average rifleman would underestimate it.

It sat high enough that a professional would love it.

The contractors were bunched together in front of me, three helmets bright against pale sandbags, three bodies making one neat target.

Brody crossed his arms and trapped his own rifle against his chest.

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