"The Woman They Shouldn’t Have Mocked" Chapter 28
Chapter 28
Mercer asked for privacy.
General Hayes refused immediately.
Emily surprised herself by agreeing.
“Five minutes,” she said quietly.
The courtyard had emptied enough by then that even the rain sounded cautious around them. Military police lingered near the administration entrance while officers pretended not to watch from behind darkened windows across the operations wing.
Marcus looked like he wanted to argue.
Emily avoided his eyes entirely.
Because if someone stopped her now—if someone spoke gently or tried protecting her from this conversation—she might finally lose control in a way she could not pull back from afterward.
Mercer led her toward the old conference annex beside the western administration corridor where unused briefing rooms sat mostly abandoned after modernization upgrades years earlier.
The room they entered smelled faintly of dust and cold coffee.
Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead.
Rain slid endlessly down the narrow windows facing the courtyard.
For several seconds neither spoke after the door closed.
Emily remained standing.
She refused to sit with him.
Mercer looked exhausted suddenly without cameras or officers around him. The polished confidence from outside had cracked somewhere between the courtyard and this room, leaving behind a man who suddenly looked far too human for the damage attached to his name.
He loosened his coat slightly like breathing had become harder.
Emily folded both arms tightly across herself.
“Well?” she asked.
Mercer stared at the table between them.
Then quietly:
“I never meant for this to happen.”
Emily laughed once.
Soft.
Broken.
“That sentence should honestly be carved onto military buildings.”
Mercer flinched.
Good.
Rain tapped softly against the windows while silence spread heavily through the room.
Emily watched him carefully.
Three years.
Three years she imagined hating him as a monster because monsters were easier to survive emotionally than ordinary frightened men.
Now all she saw was someone weak enough to let institutions feed on truth while pretending helplessness excused it.
And somehow that hurt more.
Mercer rubbed one hand slowly across his face.
“When I woke up after Kandahar, they kept me isolated for almost a week.” His voice sounded rough now, stripped clean of political polish. “Doctors. investigators. Senate advisors.” He swallowed hard. “My father arrived before I could even walk properly again.”
Emily said nothing.
Mercer looked up finally.
“They told me the convoy reports were inconsistent.”
The phrase made something cold move through her chest.
Of course they did.
Always the same language.
Inconsistent.
Confused.
Unstable.
Like trauma itself became a convenient tool once powerful people needed survivors doubted.
Mercer continued quietly.
“At first I thought they were talking about combat details. Tactical failures. Communication breakdowns.” His jaw tightened faintly. “Then I realized they meant you.”
Emily stared at him.
“You realized.”
The repetition carried enough contempt to visibly wound him.
Mercer looked away immediately.
“They said you were severely traumatized. That your memory had fragmented after the burns.” He laughed weakly under his breath. “They kept telling me the military needed a clear narrative before the media got involved.”
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Emily suddenly felt exhausted.
Not emotionally.
Physically.
Like her body had finally reached the limit of carrying all this anger upright.
“So you stayed quiet.”
Mercer closed his eyes briefly.
“Yes.”
The honesty almost hurt worse than lies.
Emily walked slowly toward the window because looking directly at him had become unbearable.
Outside, rain blurred the courtyard into pale distorted shadows.
She remembered hospital televisions replaying his face beside patriotic headlines while she sat alone trying to relearn how to move through pain without screaming.
Heroes return home.
Leadership under fire.
Valor.
Meanwhile nurses whispered about erased commendations outside her room like she was already too broken to matter.
Behind her, Mercer’s voice lowered almost to a whisper.
“I thought they’d fix it later.”
Emily shut her eyes.
There it was.
The sentence every coward eventually reached.
I thought someone else would repair the damage after I benefited from it.
She turned slowly back toward him.
“You thought wrong.”
Mercer nodded immediately.
“I know.”
“No.” Her voice sharpened. “I don’t think you do.”
The room tightened instantly.
Emily stepped closer now.
Not violently.
But with years of buried grief finally surfacing hard enough to breathe.
“You went home to interviews and medals and people thanking you for surviving.” Her hands trembled visibly again. “I woke up every morning wondering if I imagined saving people because nobody would even say my name out loud.”
Mercer looked physically ill.
Emily kept going anyway.
“Do you know what trauma does when everyone around you insists your reality happened differently?”
Rain hammered harder against the windows.
Mercer swallowed hard but didn’t answer.
“It makes you distrust your own mind.” Her voice cracked slightly now despite all attempts to steady it. “I spent years thinking maybe I hallucinated parts of Kandahar because every official record treated me like background debris.”
The silence afterward felt devastating.
Mercer stared at her like he finally understood the true shape of what happened.
Not stolen commendations.
Not military corruption.
Psychological annihilation.
He looked down at his hands.
“I was afraid.”
The confession came quietly.
Emily almost laughed again.
Instead she whispered:
“Of what?”
Mercer’s jaw tightened visibly.
“Of losing everything.”
The answer hollowed the room instantly.
Because for Emily, there it was at last.
The entire truth stripped clean of politics and institutional language.
Not ideology.
Not patriotism.
Fear.
Ordinary selfish fear powerful enough to sacrifice another human being beneath it.
Mercer looked at her carefully now, eyes reddened faintly with exhaustion.
“I kept telling myself speaking up later would still matter,” he admitted. “Then too much time passed.” His voice roughened further. “And every year it became harder to admit I’d let them bury you.”
Emily stared at him a long moment.
Then quietly:
“They didn’t bury me alone.”
Mercer flinched harder than if she’d shouted.
The rain softened slightly outside.
Neither moved.
Neither looked away.
For one strange suspended second, Emily suddenly saw exactly who Elias Mercer truly was—not a villain, not even an evil man.
Just someone too weak to stop terrible things once they started benefiting him personally.
And somehow that realization destroyed the last remaining fantasy she’d carried about revenge.
Because monsters were easier to hate than frightened men who regretted themselves too late.
Mercer took one hesitant step forward.
“Emily—”
“No.”
The word came instantly.
Firm.
Final.
Mercer stopped.
Emily looked toward the door because suddenly she could not remain inside this room another second without breaking apart in ways she refused to let him witness.
Not tears.
Something worse.
The complete collapse of anger into grief.
“You don’t get forgiveness because guilt finally caught up to you,” she said softly.
Mercer’s face tightened painfully.
Emily reached the door before stopping one last time.
Without turning around, she asked quietly:
“When you saw them praising you on television... did you ever think about me?”
The silence behind her lasted too long.
Then finally:
“Every day.”
Emily closed her eyes briefly.
Not because the answer comforted her.
Because it didn’t.
At all.
She opened the door and walked out into the rain without another word, leaving Elias Mercer alone inside the dim conference room with the unbearable weight of finally being seen clearly by the woman whose life he helped destroy simply because he was too afraid to stop it.
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