"The Woman They Shouldn’t Have Mocked" Chapter 14
Chapter 14
The storm returned just after dusk.
Wind rattled hard against the outer barracks while sleet struck the windows in uneven bursts sharp enough to sound like thrown gravel. Most of Blackridge stayed indoors that evening, the recreation hall crowded with soldiers escaping the cold through beer, card games, and loud meaningless arguments about football rankings no one actually cared about.
Marcus Reed lasted twenty minutes before leaving.
The noise felt wrong lately.
Everything did.
He crossed the administrative corridor alone with his jacket half-zipped against the cold, heading toward the western stairwell where the officers’ gym remained mostly empty after hours. The fluorescent lights overhead flickered faintly, throwing long pale reflections across polished concrete floors.
Halfway down the corridor, voices stopped him.
Marcus slowed instinctively.
The conference room door near the operations wing stood partially open, warm light spilling into the hallway through the narrow gap.
“…telling you Hayes is digging again.”
A man’s voice.
Older.
Sharp around the edges.
Marcus recognized it immediately.
Captain Howard Vane.
Marcus stayed still without fully meaning to.
Inside the room, another officer exhaled heavily. “Then somebody needs to rein him in before this turns ugly.”
“It already is ugly.”
Papers shifted softly.
Marcus moved closer by instinct alone now, boots nearly silent against the floor.
“…the girl was never supposed to return here,” Vane muttered.
The words hit Marcus hard enough to stop him cold.
Girl.
Not soldier.
Not Carter.
Like Emily existed less as a person than a problem somebody failed to bury properly.
The second officer lowered his voice too much for Marcus to catch every word, but fragments still slipped through the doorway.
“…Mercer…”
“…public inquiry…”
“…records already cleaned…”
Marcus frowned slowly.
Cleaned.
What the hell did that mean?
Inside the room, Vane laughed once without humor.
“You think Washington cares about one traumatized private?” he asked quietly. “The convoy happened three years ago. It should’ve stayed dead.”
Marcus felt something tighten unpleasantly in his stomach.
Because lately every conversation about Emily Carter seemed to orbit the same thing—
Not sympathy.
Fear.
As though her existence itself threatened something much larger than one classified military disaster.
The second officer spoke again, voice tense now.
“And Hayes?”
A pause.
Then Vane answered softly:
“He’s starting to remember his conscience.”
The room chuckled quietly.
Marcus didn’t.
He stood motionless in the hallway while sleet hammered the windows farther down the corridor, trying unsuccessfully to organize the growing unease crawling beneath his ribs.
Convoy Seven.
Sealed records.
The general’s reaction.
Jake Miller shaking like a man watching his own reflection rot.
And now this.
She was never supposed to return here.
The phrase wouldn’t leave him alone.
Marcus had spent most of his adult life inside military structures. He understood politics existed above soldiers the same way weather existed above cities—distant, unavoidable, usually irrelevant unless it became severe enough to destroy things.
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But Emily Carter didn’t feel irrelevant to these people.
She felt dangerous.
Inside the conference room, chairs shifted suddenly.
Marcus stepped backward immediately just before the door swung wider.
Captain Howard Vane emerged first.
Tall. Gray at the temples. Uniform immaculate in the aggressive way officers sometimes used appearance to substitute for morality. His face carried the practiced calm of someone who spent years learning how to survive institutions by never allowing visible discomfort.
The second officer followed beside him carrying a folder marked RESTRICTED ACCESS.
Marcus turned smoothly toward the opposite hallway before either noticed him lingering nearby.
“Sergeant Reed.”
Marcus stopped.
Vane’s voice carried enough authority to freeze motion automatically.
He turned back.
“Sir.”
Vane studied him a second too long.
“You looking for something?”
“No, sir. Gym.”
The captain’s gaze lingered.
Marcus forced himself not to shift beneath it.
Finally Vane nodded once. “Carry on.”
Marcus walked away steadily without hurrying.
Only once he turned the corner fully did he realize tension had locked across his shoulders hard enough to ache.
Something was wrong.
Not rumor wrong.
Not military bureaucracy wrong.
Bigger.
The realization unsettled him more than he wanted to admit.
Because Marcus Reed understood violence. Understood cruelty too. Blackridge functioned partly through both. But this felt colder somehow—organized in a way human damage rarely was unless powerful people benefited from it remaining hidden.
Outside, the storm worsened.
Marcus skipped the gym entirely and cut across the western yard instead, boots crunching through sleet gathering along the concrete paths beneath floodlights. Wind tore through the base hard enough to sting exposed skin while distant thunder rolled low across the mountains.
His thoughts kept circling back toward Emily.
Not the scars.
Not the panic attack.
The look on her face afterward.
She hadn’t looked angry inside the locker room.
She looked exhausted.
Like humiliation itself no longer surprised her enough to hurt properly.
Marcus hated remembering that.
Ahead, Captain Vane exited the operations wing carrying the restricted folder beneath one arm before heading toward the older administrative buildings near records storage.
Marcus slowed automatically.
Then, against his better judgment, followed.
The decision arrived before morality caught up.
Vane moved quickly through the storm, coat snapping sharply in the wind while security lights flashed pale silver across wet pavement. Marcus kept distance between them instinctively, years of field exercises teaching him how to move unnoticed when necessary.
The older administrative section sat mostly abandoned after dark.
Too old.
Too inconvenient.
Most modern operations had shifted elsewhere years ago.
Vane unlocked the side entrance and disappeared inside.
Marcus waited ten seconds before approaching carefully.
The hallway beyond remained dark except for weak emergency lighting lining the floor.
He could hear footsteps deeper inside the building.
Then voices.
Marcus moved silently down the corridor until pale light appeared beneath a partially opened archive room door ahead.
Vane stood inside speaking to someone Marcus couldn’t fully see.
“…already accessed the convoy backups,” Vane was saying sharply.
A second voice answered from deeper in the room.
“What about the surveillance footage?”
“We’re handling it.”
Marcus went completely still.
Surveillance.
The archive room.
Emily.
His pulse sharpened instantly.
The hidden camera.
Someone had seen her there.
Inside the room, papers slammed hard against a desk.
“You should’ve transferred her somewhere quieter,” the unseen voice snapped. “Hayes recognizing her accelerated everything.”
Vane lowered his voice.
“We didn’t expect him to remember.”
Marcus felt cold move slowly through his chest.
Not weather.
Understanding.
This wasn’t random institutional neglect.
People actively monitored Emily Carter before she even arrived at Blackridge.
Which meant somebody knew exactly who she was the entire time.
Inside the archive room, Vane spoke again.
“If Carter keeps digging, this becomes political.”
The unseen voice answered immediately.
“Then make sure she stops.”
Silence followed.
Heavy enough that Marcus suddenly realized how dangerous this conversation truly was.
Not gossip.
Not corruption in the abstract.
A coordinated effort.
And Emily Carter sat directly in the center of it whether she understood the scale yet or not.
Marcus stepped backward slowly from the doorway.
The floor creaked beneath his boot.
Inside the archive room, conversation stopped instantly.
Marcus’s pulse slammed hard once against his ribs.
Then Vane’s voice cut sharply through the silence.
“Who’s there?”
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