They Treated Her Like a Mere Cadet – Until a Marine Stood Up and Commanded, “Iron Wolf, Stand By.”
The Entrance of Colonel Hail
By morning the base felt different. The air hung heavier. Conversations that once carried laughter now carried unease.
Inside the training hall, cadets filed into their rows, their chatter low but restless. The previous night’s incident—the strange system override, the mysterious notification—was all anyone whispered about.
Lieutenant Chase Harlon however seemed unaffected. He leaned casually against the podium, flipping through his notes with the relaxed arrogance of someone who believed the world revolved around him.
“Guess the medic’s secrets out,”
He said loudly enough for the rows nearby to hear, smirking.
“Probably hacked the system herself, desperate move for attention.”
A few cadets chuckled nervously, but no one laughed as easily as before. Something in the air felt unsettled, like they were standing on thin ice they couldn’t yet see cracking.
Ava Mercer sat quietly near the back of the room, her tablet closed, her posture steady. Her expression gave nothing away, but her chest rose and fell with slow controlled breaths.
Laya Reyes, sitting two rows ahead, glanced back at her and lowered her voice just enough to be heard.
“Ava,” she whispered, “what’s going on? Last night, that message.”
Ava didn’t answer. Her gaze stayed forward, unblinking, but Laya saw her hand steady but clenched tight against her knee.
Before another word could pass between them, the lights in the hall flickered once, then again, then they died completely. A low ripple of voices broke the silence.
The power cut lasted only seven seconds, but when the lights came back on, something was different. The central display monitors lit up with a new override notification.
This one carried no code, no clearance request, just a single name flashing in bright white text. Call Marcus Hail inbound.
It started faintly at first, the sound of footsteps echoing in the corridor. Then boots striking marble, steady, deliberate, precise.
The double doors at the end of the hall swung open and in walked a figure whose presence silenced the entire room without a single word. Colonel Marcus Hail, late 40s, broad-shouldered, decorated.
His chest bore rows of ribbons, his rank insignia gleaming beneath the harsh lights. But it wasn’t the uniform that froze everyone in place, it was the weight he carried.
The kind of weight only earned when you’ve led men into places they weren’t meant to come back from and brought them home anyway. Hail didn’t speak at first, he let the silence stretch, his gaze sweeping slowly across the room until it locked on Ava Mercer.
For the first time since arriving at Fort Concincaid, Ava shifted in her seat, not out of fear, not out of surprise, but recognition. Hail stepped forward, his boots clicking sharply against the polished floor.
When he finally spoke, his voice was low, calm, but it carried like thunder.
“Iron Wolf standby”
The entire room froze. Harlon, sitting at the front, blinked once, confused.
“Wait, what?”
Hail turned his head slightly, his eyes narrowing.
“Sergeant Ava Mercer, front and center”
Ava stood, not hurriedly, not nervously, but with the quiet precision of someone who had spent her life under orders far more dangerous than this. She walked down the aisle, boots striking rhythmically against the floor until she stood directly before him.
The colonel’s posture remained sharp, but his voice softened ever so slightly when he spoke again.
“Good to see you again, Iron Wolf.”
Gasps rippled through the room. Cadets exchanged bewildered glances, whispers breaking into a soft roar before dying again under Hail’s stare.
Harlon, still seated, leaned back in his chair and crossed his arms with a smirk.
“This some kind of show?” he muttered. “She’s just a transfer, a medic. We—”
Hail turned sharply, his eyes locking on him.
“Lieutenant,” he said, his voice like steel. “At ease. You’ve said enough.”
Something in Hail’s tone made Harlon’s jaw clench. His arrogance faltered for the first time since Ava arrived at Fort Concincaid.
