They Tried to Bully the New Girl — Not Knowing She Was the Base Commander.-iwachan

Davies was still smiling when he walked into the briefing room.

That was what Rachel noticed first.

Not the pressed uniform. Not the forced confidence. Not the way O’Connor followed two steps behind him like a man borrowing someone else’s courage.

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The smile.

It was the same one he had worn on the Grinder that morning, when he shoved her hard enough to make her boot slip on wet asphalt.

Only now, the room was different.

No fog. No open Pelican cases. No junior sailors pretending to look busy.

Just a long conference table, framed photographs of command teams on the wall, a folded American flag in a glass case, and every senior department head on base waiting for Admiral Reynolds.

Davies dropped into a chair near the middle of the table.

O’Connor stood behind him, arms crossed, still enjoying the private joke from earlier.

“Wonder what this is about,” O’Connor muttered.

Davies leaned back.

“Probably another lecture about climate surveys and hurt feelings.”

A few men chuckled.

Not everyone.

Senior Chief Martinez, who had been on the base longer than most of them, kept his eyes on the empty chair at the head of the table.

He had heard rumors.

Not names. Not details.

Just enough to know the new commander was not someone anyone should underestimate.

At 1559, the door opened.

Admiral Reynolds entered first.

The room rose immediately.

“Seats,” he said.

Everyone sat.

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