"The Woman They Shouldn’t Have Mocked" Chapter 2

Chapter 2 

Morning arrived at Blackridge without sunlight.

The storm from the night before had settled into a fine freezing drizzle that clung to everything—the barracks windows, the razor wire, the concrete parade ground already crowded with moving soldiers before dawn had fully broken. Floodlights cast long pale beams across the yard, turning the rain into silver static.

Emily had been awake for over an hour.

Not because of nerves.

Because the heating pipes inside Barracks C rattled every forty-three seconds, and somewhere down the hall a man snored with the rough uneven rhythm of untreated sleep apnea. Her body catalogued sounds automatically now. After years of training herself to wake at the smallest disturbance, silence itself had become suspicious.

She finished lacing her boots while the others still dressed around her.

Nobody spoke to her directly.

But she could feel them watching.

That part never changed.

Women in military spaces were observed long before they were understood. Every movement became evidence for someone else’s opinion. Too quiet meant arrogance. Too friendly meant weakness. Too competent made men defensive. Too emotional made them cruel.

Emily had learned years ago that there was no version of herself men found comfortable unless it was smaller.

So she stopped trying.

Outside, cold air slapped against exposed skin hard enough to sting.

The training field stretched wide behind the barracks, muddy from days of rain and carved with deep boot prints from years of drills. Soldiers gathered in loose lines while instructors barked assignments across the yard.

Marcus Reed stood near the equipment racks with a clipboard tucked beneath one arm. Even at a distance, there was something severe about the way he carried himself, like tension had hardened permanently into his posture.

He noticed Emily immediately.

Not because she stood out.

Because she didn’t.

Everyone else shifted, stretched, talked, cursed, complained. Emily simply joined formation and stood still beneath the rain with water running silently down the back of her neck.

Marcus frowned faintly.

People who controlled themselves that tightly always made him uneasy.

“Carter.”

Emily looked over.

Marcus jerked his chin toward a supply crate. “You’re carrying heavy load today.”

She walked over without argument.

Jake Miller leaned against the nearby rack watching with obvious amusement while another soldier snickered under his breath.

Marcus lifted one of the field packs from the crate and dropped it into Emily’s arms.

Then added another.

And another.

By the time he stepped back, her load weighed nearly twenty pounds more than regulation.

Jake gave a low whistle. “Damn, Reed. You trying to kill her before breakfast?”

Marcus ignored him, eyes still fixed on Emily.

Most recruits reacted immediately under pressure. Some complained. Some negotiated. Some tried to hide fear behind attitude.

Emily merely adjusted the straps once across her shoulders.

No visible annoyance.

No hesitation.

That irritated him more than resistance would have.

“You got a problem carrying it?” Marcus asked.

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Emily tested the weight briefly. Her shoulders tightened almost invisibly beneath the strain before settling again.

“No.”

Marcus crossed his arms. “You sure?”

“Yes, Sergeant.”

There it was again.

That flat controlled voice.

Not submissive.

Not emotional.

Like she had already decided pain was irrelevant before he asked the question.

Marcus watched her a second longer than necessary.

Then stepped aside.

“Move.”

The drill began hard and stayed hard.

Five-mile endurance run through soaked terrain.

Obstacle rotations.

Weighted crawls beneath freezing mud.

Blackridge trained soldiers the same way old machinery broke horses—through repetition, exhaustion, and humiliation until only instinct remained.

Jake stayed near Emily most of the morning for no reason other than boredom.

“Careful on the wall, Princess,” he called while she climbed the reinforced barrier ahead of him. “Wouldn’t want you chipping a nail.”

A few nearby men laughed.

Emily swung herself over the top without looking down.

Later during rifle drills, another soldier muttered loudly enough for everyone nearby to hear, “Still don’t know why command keeps sending women here.”

“Public relations,” Jake answered.

“Maybe they’re trying to soften the place up.”

“Yeah? Then they picked the wrong woman. This one looks dead already.”

That earned another round of laughter.

Emily kept cleaning her rifle.

Her hands remained perfectly steady even while rainwater dripped from her sleeves onto the metal frame.

But Marcus noticed something the others didn’t.

Every time someone moved too quickly behind her, her shoulders tightened first.

Every loud impact pulled her attention instantly toward exits.

Every shouted order made her eyes sharpen—not confused, not startled, but prepared.

Prepared for what, he wasn’t sure.

That bothered him too.

By midday, the rain had worsened again.

Mud coated boots thick enough to drag against movement while soldiers hauled weighted packs across the western training field. Emily had fallen behind slightly—not from weakness, Marcus realized, but from pain.

She hid it well.

Most wouldn’t have noticed.

But he saw the fractionally uneven pressure in her left leg every fourth step. Saw the way she adjusted her shoulder strap too carefully afterward.

Old injury.

Serious one.

Marcus slowed beside her while the others pushed ahead.

“You injured, Carter?”

“No.”

“That wasn’t a suggestion.”

Emily kept moving.

“Old nerve damage,” she said finally.

Marcus studied her profile beneath the rain.

“You planning on collapsing during my drills?”

“No.”

“You always answer questions like you’re writing a report?”

That almost earned a reaction.

Almost.

Emily glanced at him briefly then looked away again. “You ask a lot of questions for someone who doesn’t care about the answers.”

Marcus barked a short laugh despite himself.

Interesting.

Before he could respond, a sharp voice cut across the field.

“Reed!”

Everyone straightened automatically.

General Robert Hayes stood near the observation platform overlooking the training yard, dark coat moving sharply in the wind. Even from a distance, authority settled around him with enough weight to silence conversation nearby.

Marcus jogged toward him immediately.

Hayes barely acknowledged him at first. His attention had already shifted elsewhere.

Toward Emily.

She stood several yards away adjusting the straps of her soaked field pack while rain streamed from loose strands of dark hair near her collar. Mud stained her sleeves nearly black.

Exhausted soldiers surrounded her.

Yet somehow she still looked alone.

Hayes’s gaze lowered toward the identification patch fixed above her chest.

CARTER.

Then lower still.

Her service number.

Something changed in his face.

Tiny.

Immediate.

Marcus noticed.

“What is it, sir?”

Hayes didn’t answer at once.

His eyes remained locked on Emily like he was seeing something that should not exist anymore.

Then quietly:

“Where did she transfer from?”

Marcus frowned slightly. “Western Command, I think.”

Hayes continued staring.

Rain gathered along the sharp silver at his temples, but he seemed not to notice.

“That service number,” he said softly.

Marcus followed his line of sight again.

“You know her?”

A pause.

Too long.

Then Hayes looked away.

“No,” he said.

But the lie arrived a second too late.

Across the field, Emily felt it anyway.

That strange instinct people developed after surviving too long—the ability to sense attention before understanding danger.

She looked up slowly toward the observation platform.

For one brief moment, her eyes met Hayes’s across freezing rain and gray distance.

Recognition moved through him so visibly it almost looked like grief.

Emily’s stomach tightened.

Because she had seen that expression before.

Usually right before people realized exactly who she was.

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