The Navy Officer’s 2 A.M. Distress Signal That Exposed Her Stepfather-xurixuri

At 2:00 a.m., the first sound I heard was not a knock.

It was the whole front door jumping in its frame.

My apartment outside Naval Station Norfolk had been quiet until then, wrapped in the dull hum of the air conditioner and the faint rattle of the vent above my bed.

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The room smelled like starch from the dress uniform I had pressed the night before, and the kitchen tile was cold enough that I remembered it even before my feet touched the floor.

For the first time in weeks, I had been asleep without checking the lock twice in my mind.

Then the door shook again.

Harder.

The sound went straight through me.

Not because I did not know danger.

I had heard danger overseas in a hundred different forms, from the whine of incoming fire to the sudden silence that came right before everyone moved at once.

This was different.

This was personal.

“Ava!”

My name cracked through the door, thick with whiskey and old ownership.

I sat up so fast the sheet tangled around my legs.

For one impossible second, I forgot I was Lieutenant Ava Reynolds.

I forgot the apartment, the base, the uniform waiting for inspection, the years I had spent building a life where men like Richard Lawson could not reach me.

I was a girl again, frozen in a hallway while adults pretended not to hear what was happening in the next room.

“Ava, open this door!”

The second I heard him clearly, my body knew before my mind wanted to admit it.

Richard Lawson.

My stepfather.

I had not spoken to him in three years.

Not on birthdays.

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