He Tried to Humiliate the Only Woman in the Tournament

Five hundred soldiers watched as a man twice my size tried to end my military career with a single kick. He called me a little girl, mocked every woman who had ever worn a uniform, and expected the crowd to cheer when I fell. Instead, what happened next was caught on hundreds of phone cameras—and it changed the entire atmosphere of that base in a matter of seconds.

My name is Avery Mitchell, and four days before that fight, I became Sergeant Ryan Briggs’ favorite target.

The joint-training program at Fort Liberty, North Carolina, had brought together personnel from different branches for advanced combat exercises. The mornings smelled of dust, wet grass, and black coffee. The gyms echoed with clanging weights and shouted commands.

At 5:00 a.m. on my first day, I walked into the weight room carrying a coffee cup and my training notebook.

The moment Briggs saw me, he stopped his set.

“Hold up,” he announced loudly. “Who let the lost kid in here?”

A few soldiers chuckled.

I ignored him and headed toward the stretching mats.

“Hey,” he barked. “I’m talking to you.”

I calmly rolled my shoulders before answering.

“Avery Mitchell. Navy Special Warfare. Joint training assignment.”

His grin spread slowly.

“Navy, huh? They letting little girls play operator now?”

Laughter followed.

I kept stretching.

That seemed to irritate him more than any response ever could.

For the next four days, he turned my assignment into a public spectacle.

During runs, he stayed beside me just to criticize my pace.

In the gym, he corrected every exercise whether I needed help or not.

During classroom sessions, he asked questions outside my specialty and smirked whenever I answered honestly.

Soon, others followed his example.

Whispers in hallways.

Snickers in the dining facility.

A shoulder deliberately bumped into mine near the barracks.

Someone even left a pink plastic tiara inside my locker.

I didn’t react.

I didn’t argue.

I didn’t complain.

I simply remembered every face.

Every name.

Silence isn’t weakness.

Sometimes it’s evidence.

On the fourth day, the hand-to-hand combat tournament bracket was posted.

The event would be held before commanders, instructors, Pentagon observers, and hundreds of military personnel.

When Briggs saw the bracket, his smile told me everything.

He wanted a public execution.

At lunch, I overheard him talking.

“When I embarrass her in front of everyone,” he said, “she’ll be on the first flight back to wherever they found her.”

A younger soldier hesitated.

“Sergeant, isn’t she actually trained?”

Briggs laughed.

“She weighs 130 pounds. Physics doesn’t care about feelings.”

Neither does accountability.

That evening, Commander Daniel Hayes stopped me outside the barracks.

He was a veteran of multiple special operations deployments and carried the calm confidence of someone who had seen everything.

“If you face Briggs tomorrow,” he said quietly, “he’s going to try to hurt you.”

“I know, sir.”

“You could withdraw. Nobody would blame you.”

I shook my head.

“With respect, sir, that’s not happening.”

He studied me.

“Why?”

I looked toward the field where workers were setting up bleachers.

“Because every woman here has spent years watching people like him get away with it. If I walk away, he wins again.”

The next day, the tournament began.

My first match ended in ninety seconds.

The second was harder.

The third left my ribs screaming after a brutal hit that stole my breath.

But I adapted.

Thirty seconds later, my opponent tapped out.

Across the field, Briggs kept advancing too.

Every victory looked more like punishment than competition.

He slammed opponents harder than necessary.

Smiled when they limped away.

And after his semifinal win, he pointed directly at me.

The crowd understood.

The final was set.

By the time we stepped into the ring, the atmosphere had completely changed.

Five hundred soldiers surrounded the mat.

Phones were raised.

Officers stood in the front rows.

Even the wind seemed quieter.

Briggs leaned close enough for me to smell the mint gum beneath his mouthguard.

“You’re just a little girl playing soldier,” he sneered.

Then he attacked.

His boot shot toward my knee with enough force to cripple me.

For a split second, time slowed.

My ribs burned.

My pulse turned icy.

And I thought about every woman who had ever been mocked, dismissed, or intimidated into silence.

Then I moved.

My hand snapped out.

I caught his leg before impact.

The crowd gasped.

The phones kept recording.

And in that frozen instant, as his eyes widened and balance disappeared from beneath him, Sergeant Ryan Briggs finally realized he had made a terrible mistake.

But what happened next was about to leave five hundred soldiers absolutely speechless…

PART 2

I caught Sergeant Ryan Briggs’ kick with both hands.

For one heartbeat, nobody moved.

Not Briggs.

Not the referees.

Not the five hundred soldiers standing around the mat with phones raised and mouths half open.

His boot hovered inches from my knee, trapped in my grip.

The force of the strike still traveled through my arms and into my ribs, sending a hot line of pain across my side. He had thrown that kick low and hard. Not to score. Not to test me. Not to compete.

He had thrown it to damage.

His eyes widened when he realized I had stopped it.

That was the first mistake he made.

The second was trying to pull back.

I stepped in.

Not away.

In.

My shoulder turned. My hips dropped. I swept his standing leg with a short, clean motion that used his own weight against him. Briggs’ body left the ground like someone had cut the strings holding him upright.

The sound he made when he hit the mat was not dramatic.

It was dull.

Heavy.

Final.

The crowd gasped as one body.

I released his leg and stepped back.

Briggs rolled once, slapped the mat with both hands, and scrambled up, face red beneath the protective headgear.

“Lucky,” he snarled.

The referee moved between us.

“Control yourself, Sergeant.”

Briggs didn’t look at him.

He looked at me.

There was no smirk now.

Only humiliation.

I could see it burning through him, brighter than anger. Men like Briggs could survive pain. They could survive injury. They could even survive losing, as long as they could explain it away.

But being embarrassed by the person they had spent days mocking?

That was different.

He charged again.

This time he came high, swinging for my upper body with a hook meant to rattle my skull even through the gear. I slipped outside the strike, caught his wrist, and drove my forearm into his shoulder line. His momentum carried him past me.

He stumbled.

Another murmur went through the soldiers.

Briggs turned, breathing harder now.

I said nothing.

Silence had followed me for four days.

Now it stood beside me like a weapon.

He feinted left, then lunged for a body lock. That was what everyone expected him to do eventually. He had at least seventy pounds on me, maybe more. If he got his arms around me and drove me backward, the match could become exactly what he wanted—a display of raw size and force.

So I let him think he had it.

His arms closed around my torso.

My ribs screamed.

The crowd noise vanished beneath the sound of my own breathing.

Briggs squeezed and tried to lift.

I hooked one foot behind his heel, shifted my weight, and dropped my center of gravity. He grunted, confused by the resistance. I framed my forearm against his collarbone, turned my hip, and redirected the lift into a throw.

He went over my leg and onto the mat again.

Harder this time.

A shout broke from somewhere in the crowd.

Then another.

Not laughter.

Not mockery.

Shock.

Briggs slammed one fist against the mat.

I stood over him for one second too long.

Not to gloat.

To make sure every camera caught the expression on his face.

The disbelief.

The fury.

The dawning understanding that the little girl he had promised to destroy was still standing, and he was the one looking smaller with every exchange.

“Point,” the referee called. “Mitchell.”

The word traveled across the field.

Mitchell.

Not sweetheart.

Not princess.

Not little girl.

Mitchell.

Briggs rose slowly.

His mouthguard showed between his clenched teeth.

“You think this is cute?” he whispered.

I rolled my shoulders and reset my stance.

“No.”

He came at me again, but now he was reckless.

That made him dangerous.

A reckless fighter forgets defense. A humiliated fighter forgets rules. Briggs was both.

He threw a knee that came too close to illegal contact. I twisted away, but it clipped the edge of my rib cage. White pain exploded across my side. My vision narrowed.

The referee barked a warning.

Briggs smiled.

There it was again.

Not confidence.

Cruelty.

He had found the injury from my semifinal match, and he wanted to dig his fingers into it.

He advanced, aiming everything at my ribs.

A jab to the body.

A shoulder drive.

A hard shove during a clinch.

Each impact sent a hot pulse through my side. My breath shortened. My legs stayed steady because I ordered them to.

I had learned long ago that pain is not a command.

It is information.

Briggs pressed forward, believing the match had finally turned.

“Feel that?” he muttered during a break. “That’s physics.”

I looked at him through the headgear.

“No,” I said. “That’s panic.”

His jaw tightened.

He rushed me.

I saw the opening before he finished moving.

His right shoulder dropped. His weight shifted too far forward. His left hand floated low because he wanted power more than control.

I pivoted, caught his arm, and locked it against my chest. My foot stepped behind his. My hip became the hinge.

For a fraction of a second, Briggs stood helplessly off balance, too big to correct himself in time.

Then I threw him.

He hit the mat so hard the referee flinched.

This time, the crowd erupted.

Not everyone cheered.

Some did.

Others shouted in disbelief.

Several soldiers simply stared as though the laws of the world had been quietly rewritten in front of them.

Briggs lay on his back, chest heaving.

I stepped away again.

My ribs burned. Sweat slid down the side of my face. My hands ached from impact, and one knee felt unstable from the first blocked kick.

But I remained upright.

Briggs did not.

“Point,” the referee called. “Mitchell.”

The scoreboard changed.

I was ahead.

That should have made him careful.

Instead, it made him vicious.

When the match resumed, Briggs did not tap gloves.

He charged.

The referee barely had time to step back.

Briggs drove forward with a roar, abandoning technique for force. His shoulder slammed into me. I absorbed it badly. Pain flashed through my side, and for the first time, my feet slid toward the edge of the mat.

The crowd surged closer.

Phones lifted higher.

Briggs felt me give ground.

His eyes lit.

He shoved again.

This time I dropped to one knee.

A sound came from the soldiers around us, part gasp, part warning.

Briggs leaned down, close enough that only I could hear him.

“Stay down.”

For one second, I almost did.

Not because I wanted to quit.

Because my body was tired.

Because pain was blooming in places I did not have names for.

Because the weight of five hundred eyes can be heavier than any opponent.

Then I looked beyond Briggs’ shoulder.

Near the front row stood a young female private I had seen in the dining facility two mornings earlier. She had been at the table when Briggs called me a mascot. She had looked down at her tray and said nothing.

Now she was staring at me with both hands clenched at her sides.

She was not asking me to win.

She was asking whether standing back up was possible.

So I stood.

Briggs’ smile died.

The referee checked my eyes.

“Mitchell, can you continue?”

“Yes.”

“Are you sure?”

I nodded once.

Briggs laughed under his breath.

The referee turned to him.

“One more questionable strike and I disqualify you.”

Briggs lifted both hands.

“I’m clean.”

He was lying.

Everyone knew it.

But the match continued.

The final exchange began slowly.

Briggs circled, breathing hard through his nose. Sweat darkened his shirt. Dust clung to one side of his face from the mat. He still looked powerful, but power without discipline had started to betray him.

I let him come.

He tried another low kick.

This one was meant for my thigh, not my knee, but the intention behind it was the same. Break movement. Break balance. Break pride.

I stepped outside it.

He recovered and swung high.

I ducked.

He reached for my collar.

I caught his wrist.

For a moment, we locked together in the center of the mat.

His strength pressed down like a wall.

My ribs protested with every breath.

He pushed.

I gave half an inch.

He pushed harder.

I gave another half.

Then I stopped giving.

His face tightened.

I felt the exact moment he committed too much weight.

That was all I needed.

I turned under his arm, trapped his wrist, stepped behind him, and drove him down into a controlled shoulder lock. He hit the mat face-first, one arm pinned, his own momentum folding him beneath me.

The entire field went silent.

I increased pressure just enough.

Not to injure.

To remind.

Briggs grunted.

His free hand hovered above the mat.

He refused.

Of course he refused.

I could feel him fighting the tap, fighting the cameras, fighting the reality of every insult returning to him with interest.

“Tap,” I said quietly.

He bared his teeth.

“Never.”

I shifted my weight.

A sharp breath tore from him.

The referee dropped closer.

“Sergeant Briggs, respond.”

Briggs’ hand trembled.

The crowd watched.

Every woman he had mocked seemed to stand in that silence.

Every laugh he had encouraged.

Every shoulder check.

Every pink tiara.

Every little comment designed to make someone feel temporary in a place they had earned.

His palm hit the mat.

Once.

Twice.

Three times.

Tap.

The referee’s whistle split the air.

“Match! Winner—Mitchell!”

For one second, nobody reacted.

Then the field erupted.

Voices crashed over the mat from every direction. Some soldiers shouted my name. Others simply yelled because language had failed them. The young private near the front row covered her mouth with both hands.

Commander Hayes stood still, arms crossed, but his eyes followed Briggs with the cold attention of a man filing away evidence.

I released the lock immediately and moved back.

Briggs rolled onto his side, clutching his arm, face twisted with humiliation.

The referee raised my hand.

The crowd grew louder.

Phones were everywhere.

Hundreds of tiny black lenses reflecting sunlight.

I should have felt victorious.

I did not.

I felt tired.

And very aware that men like Briggs rarely accepted defeat as an ending.

He pushed himself up and staggered toward me.

The referee stepped between us.

“Back off, Sergeant.”

Briggs ignored him.

His eyes were wet with rage.

“You think this proves something?” he shouted.

The crowd quieted by degrees.

I lowered my raised hand.

“It proves the match is over.”

He jabbed a finger toward me.

“You got protected. That’s what happened. Everyone here wanted the story. Tiny little female operator takes down the big bad man.”

A few soldiers shifted uncomfortably.

Briggs turned toward the crowd.

“You all saw it. She got every call. Every warning went against me.”

No one answered.

That made him worse.

He pointed toward the officers.

“This is political. This whole program is political. You put women in places they don’t belong, then punish anyone brave enough to say it.”

Commander Hayes finally moved.

He stepped forward, slow and controlled.

“Sergeant Briggs.”

Briggs froze.

The command in Hayes’ voice cut cleaner than shouting ever could.

“You will stand down.”

Briggs’ chest rose and fell.

For a moment, I thought he might obey.

Then his gaze slid back to me.

And he smiled.

It was not the broad, arrogant grin from the first day.

It was smaller.

Meaner.

“You want to know why she’s really here?” he said loudly.

The crowd stilled.

Commander Hayes’ expression darkened.

“Sergeant, that’s enough.”

But Briggs had already crossed some internal line. Humiliation had made him reckless, and reckless men often drag secrets into daylight without knowing whose shadow they expose.

“She didn’t earn this slot,” Briggs said. “Ask around. Ask why Navy sent her. Ask what happened on her last deployment.”

The air changed.

I felt it instantly.

Not because of the words themselves.

Because he knew something.

Or thought he did.

My fingers curled once, then relaxed.

Commander Hayes moved closer.

“You are out of line.”

Briggs laughed.

“Of course I am. That’s what they say when someone tells the truth.”

He looked at me.

“What was his name, Mitchell? The guy who didn’t come back?”

The crowd’s noise vanished.

My breath stopped somewhere behind my ribs.

Not from pain.

From memory.

A dark room.

A broken radio.

Blood on concrete.

A voice saying my name once, then not again.

Briggs saw the change in my face and pounced.

“There it is,” he said. “Maybe ask her how many people paid for her mistakes before you make her the hero of the day.”

Commander Hayes stepped between us fully now.

“Sergeant Briggs, you are relieved from the field. Now.”

Two instructors moved in from opposite sides.

Briggs lifted his hands, laughing, but the laugh shook.

“You can drag me off, but you can’t bury the truth.”

I met his eyes.

For the first time since the match began, I spoke loud enough for the whole ring to hear.

“No. You can’t.”

The words landed strangely.

Briggs blinked.

He had expected denial.

Anger.

Panic.

Instead, I gave him agreement.

That frightened him more than the tap had.

The instructors escorted him away from the mat while the crowd watched in uneasy silence.

The tournament was technically over.

But everyone understood something else had begun.

Commander Hayes turned to me.

His voice lowered.

“Mitchell.”

“I’m fine, sir.”

“That wasn’t my question.”

“No, sir.”

His eyes held mine for a long moment.

“You need medical.”

“I’ll go.”

“And after that, we talk.”

“Yes, sir.”

The medic confirmed what I already suspected: bruised ribs, no fracture, strained wrist, swelling near the knee where Briggs’ opening kick had nearly landed. He wrapped me, checked my breathing, and muttered something about stubborn operators being the same in every branch.

Outside the medical tent, the base had changed.

People looked at me differently now.

Some with respect.

Some with discomfort.

Some with the awkward expression of people replaying their own laughter from earlier in the week.

The pink tiara was gone from my locker when I returned.

In its place was a folded note.

No name.

Just one sentence.

Thank you for standing up.

I sat on the bench and held that note longer than I should have.

Because here was the thing no one tells you about public victories: they do not erase private damage.

They only make it harder to hide.

By 1900 hours, the videos were everywhere.

The first clip showed Briggs throwing the kick.

The second showed me catching it.

The third showed the throw.

The fourth, filmed from a better angle, caught the tap.

By nightfall, military forums were dissecting the match frame by frame. Anonymous accounts argued about technique, weight class, gender integration, and whether Briggs had intended to injure me.

But one video spread faster than the rest.

The aftermath.

Briggs shouting.

“What was his name, Mitchell? The guy who didn’t come back?”

That line became its own fire.

At 2100, Commander Hayes called me into a conference room.

He was alone.

No aides.

No instructors.

No legal officer.

Just him, a folder, and two cups of coffee.

One pushed toward my seat.

I remained standing until he gestured.

“Sit down, Mitchell.”

I did.

My ribs objected.

He noticed but said nothing.

For a while, he studied the folder.

Then he looked up.

“Briggs has been temporarily removed from training pending review.”

I nodded.

“He claims you provoked him.”

“Of course.”

“He claims the tournament was biased.”

“Of course.”

“He also claims he was warned about you by someone before you arrived.”

That made me still.

“Someone?”

Hayes opened the folder and slid a printed message across the table.

It was a screenshot of a text conversation.

The sender’s name was blocked out.

The visible message read:

Mitchell is trouble. Don’t let her become the face of this program. Ask about Operation Black Lantern.

I stared at the words.

Operation Black Lantern.

The room seemed to drop ten degrees.

Hayes watched me carefully.

“You recognize the reference.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Classified?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Then don’t discuss operational details.”

“I wasn’t going to.”

He leaned back.

“But Briggs knew enough to weaponize it.”

“Apparently.”

“Who would send this?”

That was the question.

I wished I did not already have possible answers.

Black Lantern had been six years ago.

Officially, it was a failed extraction in hostile territory.

Unofficially, it was the night I learned that orders can be clean on paper and rotten in execution.

Seven of us went in.

Four came out.

One of the dead was Lieutenant Marcus Vale.

The man Briggs had hinted at.

The man whose name still woke me some nights when the world was too quiet.

Hayes folded his hands.

“Mitchell, I read your public record. Commendations. Deployments. Instructor evaluations. Nothing explains why someone would target you before you even arrived.”

“My public record wouldn’t.”

“Does this involve misconduct?”

I looked at the coffee cup.

The surface was black and still.

“Yes,” I said.

Hayes’ jaw tightened.

“Yours?”

“No, sir.”

He did not ask more.

Not yet.

That restraint told me why people followed him.

Instead, he said, “The Pentagon observers are concerned. Not because you won the match. Because Briggs’ conduct became public and because classified operation names are now appearing online.”

My stomach tightened.

“Online?”

He turned the folder around.

Someone had posted:

Ask Avery Mitchell what really happened during Black Lantern. Heroes aren’t always heroes.

No username I recognized.

No profile photo.

Already shared.

Already copied.

Already spreading.

I read the sentence twice.

Then I set it down.

“Someone is trying to discredit me.”

“Yes,” Hayes said. “And Briggs may only be the first tool.”

The words settled between us.

The fight had looked like the main event.

It was not.

It had been the match that cracked the surface.

Underneath was something older.

Darker.

More deliberate.

Hayes took a slow breath.

“I need to know whether this could compromise the joint-training program.”

“With respect, sir, if someone is leaking classified references to manipulate personnel, the program is already compromised.”

His eyes sharpened.

“Agreed.”

For the first time that day, I allowed myself to lean back.

Pain flared, then settled.

Hayes studied me.

“Why didn’t you report Briggs earlier?”

“I was collecting evidence.”

“You had evidence after day one.”

“Yes.”

“Then why wait?”

“Because a private complaint becomes a personnel dispute. A public pattern becomes undeniable.”

He nodded once.

“You let him reveal himself.”

“I gave him space to be himself.”

Something like grim approval passed through Hayes’ expression.

Then he said, “And now someone has given us space to see there’s more.”

At 2300, I returned to the barracks.

The hallway went quiet when I entered.

Not hostile quiet this time.

Uncertain quiet.

A few soldiers looked away. Others gave small nods. One woman near the stairwell straightened like she wanted to say something but couldn’t find the words.

I saved her the trouble and kept walking.

Inside my room, I found another note slipped under the door.

This one was printed.

Not handwritten.

You should have stayed invisible.

I picked it up using the edge of a towel and placed it in a clear plastic bag from my gear kit.

Then I checked the window.

Locked.

Vent.

Clear.

Closet.

Empty.

Old habits never really sleep.

My phone buzzed.

Unknown number.

For a moment, I simply stared at it.

Then I answered.

No one spoke.

I listened.

Breathing.

Slow.

Controlled.

Not accidental.

“Who is this?” I asked.

A voice came through.

Male.

Distorted slightly, maybe through an app.

“You always were hard to break, Mitchell.”

My pulse slowed.

That was how fear worked in me now.

Not racing.

Narrowing.

“Identify yourself.”

A quiet laugh.

“Still giving orders.”

I stepped away from the door and put my back to the wall.

“You sent the message to Briggs.”

“I sent a truth. He chose what to do with it.”

“Black Lantern is classified.”

“Only to people who believe files stay buried.”

My grip tightened around the phone.

“What do you want?”

“To remind you that heroes are manufactured. So are scapegoats.”

The word struck too close.

Scapegoat.

I said nothing.

The voice continued.

“Six years ago, you walked out carrying a story that made everyone comfortable. You got promoted. Decorated. Protected.”

“That’s not what happened.”

“No? Then tell them.”

“You know I can’t.”

“There she is,” he whispered. “The perfect soldier. Silent even when silence makes her guilty.”

Outside my room, footsteps passed and faded.

I kept my voice level.

“Why now?”

“Because you were about to become useful to them again.”

“Them?”

“The people who left Marcus Vale to die.”

My throat tightened.

The name in his mouth felt like a violation.

“Marcus died because extraction failed.”

The line went quiet.

Then the man said, “Marcus was alive when they called it off.”

For one second, the room disappeared.

I was back in the dust.

Back under broken light.

Back dragging a wounded teammate toward a door that never opened.

“That’s a lie,” I said.

But my voice did not sound certain enough.

The caller noticed.

“Check the final transmission log.”

“There was no final log.”

“There was. You just never saw it.”

The call ended.

I stood motionless in the barracks room, listening to the empty line.

Six years ago, I had filed my report three times.

Six years ago, I had asked why the extraction window closed early.

Six years ago, a colonel with tired eyes told me the matter was reviewed and settled.

Six years ago, I learned that survival could feel like accusation.

My phone buzzed again.

This time, a file appeared from an unknown sender.

No message.

Just an audio attachment.

I did not open it.

I called Hayes.

He answered on the second ring.

“Mitchell?”

“I received a call. Then a file.”

His tone changed immediately.

“Do not open it.”

“I know.”

“Where are you?”

“Barracks.”

“I’m sending security.”

“Sir, there’s something else.”

“What?”

I looked at the phone in my hand.

“He mentioned Marcus Vale.”

Silence.

Then Hayes said, very quietly, “Say that again.”

“Marcus Vale. He claimed there was a final transmission log.”

Hayes did not respond.

“Sir?”

His answer came slowly.

“Mitchell, lock your door.”

“It is locked.”

“Do not speak to anyone else. Not instructors. Not trainees. Not friends.”

My skin prickled.

“You know something.”

“I know Marcus Vale’s brother is on base.”

The world narrowed to a single point.

“What?”

“He arrived yesterday with the Pentagon observer group.”

I turned toward the small mirror above the sink.

My own face looked back at me, pale beneath the harsh barracks light.

“What’s his name?”

Hayes exhaled.

“Major Nathan Vale.”

My memory supplied a face from the tournament crowd.

A man in dress uniform standing near the front.

Still.

Watchful.

Not cheering when I won.

Not reacting when Briggs shouted Marcus’ name.

Just watching.

As if he had come to see whether I would break.

A knock struck my door.

Three times.

Firm.

Measured.

I held the phone tighter.

“Commander,” I whispered, “someone’s here.”

Hayes’ voice hardened.

“Do not open that door.”

The knock came again.

Then a man spoke from the hallway.

“Chief Mitchell?”

Not Briggs.

Not security.

A calm voice.

Educated.

Controlled.

“I’m Major Vale.”

My breathing stopped.

On the phone, Hayes said, “Mitchell. Step away from the door.”

Major Nathan Vale spoke again, lower this time.

“I know what they told you about my brother.”

A pause.

Then the words that split six years of silence wide open.

“And I can prove they lied.”

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