Two Marines Picked The Wrong Woman In A Bar Near Camp Lejeune-eirian

The first thing I noticed was the smell of bourbon soaking into the scarred wood beneath my cheek.

The second was the hand clamped around the back of my neck.

For half a second, I let myself stay still.

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Not because I was helpless.

Because stillness tells you things panic never will.

The jukebox near the restroom had gone quiet between songs, and the whole room had narrowed to small sounds.

Ice clicking in a glass.

The old air conditioner tapping behind the vent.

Somebody’s boot shifting once under a table and then going still again.

My sweater sleeve was damp from beer spilled earlier in the night, and the varnish under my cheek felt sticky, worn smooth by years of elbows, bottles, and men leaning too close to women who had already told them no.

Then the man above me bent close enough for me to smell mint gum over whiskey.

“Wrong place, sweetheart,” he whispered. “You’re coming out the back with us.”

His name was Corporal Cody Mercer.

He was twenty-four, broad through the shoulders, and sure of himself in the way certain men become sure when the world keeps moving aside for them.

The Marine twisting my wrists behind my back was Lance Corporal Ryan Holt.

His grip was clean.

Precise.

Almost instructional.

He had controlled people before, or he had practiced on people he considered too weak to count.

There is a difference between a drunk man grabbing and a trained man positioning.

A drunk man wants power.

A trained man wants angles.

Holt had angles.

Eleven customers sat inside O’Malley’s Tavern that Friday night, a low-ceilinged place near the Camp Lejeune perimeter where the fried onions always smelled a little burned and the floorboards never stopped creaking.

A college basketball game played silently above the bar.

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