"The Woman They Shouldn’t Have Mocked" Chapter 4
Chapter 4
By the fourth day, Blackridge had turned Emily Carter into entertainment.
Not openly at first.
Military cruelty rarely announced itself honestly. It arrived disguised as humor, tradition, bonding—small humiliations delivered with grins sharp enough to cut but casual enough to deny afterward. Men laughed while they tested how much a person would tolerate. Once they discovered the answer, the behavior hardened into ritual.
Emily understood that pattern better than most.
Which was precisely why she refused to feed it.
Unfortunately, silence had become its own provocation.
The barracks smelled faintly of damp fabric and industrial detergent when Emily returned after evening drills. Outside, freezing rain continued ticking softly against the narrow windows while exhausted soldiers filtered through showers and conversations behind her.
Jake Miller’s voice carried easiest.
It always did.
“You see Reed loading her pack today?” he laughed from across the room. “Thought she was gonna snap in half.”
Ryan Brooks barked a laugh loud enough to echo off the concrete walls. “Nah. Carter’s too weird to break normal.”
Emily ignored them and continued toward her bunk.
Then stopped.
Her mattress had been overturned.
Clothes scattered.
Locker drawers left hanging open.
Someone had dumped a bottle of powdered detergent across her sheets so white residue coated the blanket like dusted snow.
A few nearby soldiers glanced over immediately before pretending not to watch.
Jake leaned back against his bunk with exaggerated innocence.
“Damn,” he said. “That happened to mine once too.”
Ryan snorted.
“Maybe the locker fairy hates quiet people.”
The room laughed softly around them.
Emily stood still for several seconds.
Not shocked.
Not angry.
Just tired in a way that settled somewhere beneath emotion entirely.
There had been a time, years earlier, when acts like this still hurt personally. Before Kandahar. Before hospitals. Before sealed reports and careful lies. Back then humiliation had felt immediate and sharp because she still believed cruelty meant something about her.
Now it mostly revealed things about other people.
Without speaking, Emily set her duffel bag carefully beside the bunk and began cleaning.
She folded each shirt again.
Shook detergent from blankets.
Reorganized the locker.
Every movement remained calm enough to irritate the watching men almost instantly.
Jake’s smile faded first.
People wanted reactions from suffering. Anger. Embarrassment. Tears if possible. Emily’s composure denied them the satisfaction they kept reaching for, and failure slowly transformed amusement into resentment.
Ryan watched her another minute before scoffing loudly.
“Seriously, Carter? You don’t get pissed about anything?”
Emily smoothed the corner of her blanket once before answering.
“Not about things that don’t matter.”
The room quieted slightly.
Ryan’s expression tightened.
Jake stood from his bunk.
“Careful,” he said. “You’re starting to sound arrogant.”
Emily finally looked at him.
Not challenging.
Not submissive either.
Just direct enough to make him suddenly aware of himself.
“You destroyed someone’s bed for attention,” she said evenly. “I don’t think I’m the arrogant one here.”
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A few soldiers looked away immediately after that.
Jake laughed once through his nose, though the sound came thinner than before.
“Jesus,” Ryan muttered. “She talks like a therapist.”
Emily returned to fixing the bunk.
Conversation resumed gradually around the room, but the atmosphere had shifted. Less playful now. Meaner beneath the surface.
Marcus Reed entered halfway through it carrying a clipboard beneath one arm.
He stopped near the doorway almost immediately.
His eyes moved from the overturned detergent container to Emily kneeling beside the bunk, then toward Jake.
Nobody said anything.
Marcus already knew.
“Interesting decoration choice,” he said finally.
Jake shrugged. “Wasn’t me.”
“Didn’t ask.”
Marcus crossed the room slowly.
Emily continued folding clothes without looking up, though she could feel his attention settling over her with uncomfortable precision.
Most people stared at her because they expected visible weakness.
Marcus watched her like he was trying to solve something.
That was worse.
“You gonna report it?” he asked.
Emily slid another shirt into the locker.
“No.”
Jake smirked faintly at that.
Marcus noticed.
“So you’re just okay with it.”
Emily paused briefly before answering.
“No,” she said quietly. “I just don’t think people like this are worth explaining myself to.”
Silence followed.
Ryan scoffed under his breath, but Marcus remained focused on her.
People didn’t survive military pressure like Emily by accident. He had started understanding that much already. The calmness wasn’t natural. It was constructed carefully, deliberately, like armor welded together over old damage.
The realization unsettled him more each day.
Because every now and then, beneath all that restraint, exhaustion slipped through.
Tiny cracks.
A delayed inhale.
The way her shoulders stiffened whenever someone approached from behind.
The way loud laughter made her eyes sharpen automatically toward exits.
Marcus had seen combat veterans behave that way before.
But Emily Carter was only twenty-two.
Later that night, after lights-out, the barracks finally quieted.
Rain continued falling steadily outside while dim security lights painted pale strips across the ceiling. Men snored softly around the room beneath the low mechanical hum of heating vents.
Emily remained awake.
She sat cross-legged on the lower bunk with her back against the wall, repairing a loose seam inside her duffel under the weak glow of a flashlight covered partially by cloth to dim the beam.
Only when she finished did she finally reach into the inner pocket.
Carefully.
Almost reverently.
Her fingers closed around folded paper worn soft at the edges.
The star.
Emily unfolded it slowly in her lap.
Faded blue construction paper.
Crooked folds made by small clumsy hands years ago.
Grace Nolan had been five when she gave it to her inside the rehabilitation hospital.
“You’re still here,” the little girl had whispered beside Emily’s bed while machines beeped softly around them. “Daddy says heroes leave stars behind after fires.”
Emily had kept it ever since.
Not because she believed in heroes.
Because Grace had.
The memory tightened unexpectedly inside her chest.
Across the barracks, a mattress creaked softly.
Emily looked up instinctively.
Marcus stood near the bathroom entrance partially hidden by darkness, having apparently risen for water.
For one brief second, his gaze dropped toward the paper star in her hands.
Then toward her face.
Neither spoke.
Emily folded the star immediately and slipped it back into the duffel.
Marcus looked away first.
But not before she caught something unfamiliar in his expression.
Not mockery.
Recognition.
As though he had suddenly realized she carried pieces of herself no one at Blackridge had earned the right to touch.
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