A Navy SEAL Shoved A Hoodie-Clad Major. Then He Read His Orders-iwachan

The coffee should have been the easiest part of the deployment.

That was what Major Elena Vance remembered first when people later asked her when the whole thing changed.

Not the sealed orders.

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Not the military lounge.

Not the man with the Navy SEAL Trident patch who decided her hoodie meant she was nobody.

The coffee.

It had been 3:52 a.m. inside the VIP military lounge at Sea-Tac, and the air smelled like burned espresso, wet jackets, airport carpet, and the kind of fatigue that settles over travelers before sunrise.

Elena had been awake for thirty-one hours.

Her hair was pulled back badly.

Her gray hoodie had a loose cuff on one sleeve.

Her jeans were worn soft at the knees.

Her sneakers had enough miles on them to look like they belonged to a woman who had slept in airports more than hotels.

No one looking at her would have guessed she was a Major in the United States Army.

No one would have guessed she had spent seventeen years inside the darkest corners of Special Operations.

That was by design.

Elena had learned early that attention was expensive.

In Kandahar, attention could get a team pinned down.

In safe houses without addresses, attention could get a contact killed.

In meetings where men in polished boots confused volume with command, attention could turn a simple handoff into a performance.

So she kept her head down.

She got her coffee.

She checked the clock above the service door.

3:53 a.m.

The restricted movement window was marked for 04:15.

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