The Coffee Lady At FOB Echo Knew The Ambush Was Already Coming-rosocute

They called me the coffee lady because it was easier than asking why my hands shook.

At Forward Operating Base Echo, names stuck faster than dust.

A man could earn a call sign in one bad night outside the wire, or he could earn a joke in the mess hall because somebody louder decided he needed one.

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Mine came with a metal urn, burned grounds, and a limp nobody asked about.

My badge said Mary Collins.

My maintenance logs said Mary Collins.

The soldiers who took my coffee, my repairs, and my warnings called me Grandma when they wanted a laugh and coffee lady when they wanted to forget I was a person.

I was fifty-two, and to young warriors that number looked like an expiration date.

They saw the tremor in my right hand.

They saw the old field jacket with the faded black raven patch.

They saw the way I moved slowly when the mountain cold settled into my left knee.

They did not see the exits I counted.

They did not see the weather I read in the pressure behind my teeth.

They did not see the shoulder scar under my sleeve, or the reasons a woman learns to sleep lightly in a room full of men with weapons.

Forward Operating Base Echo sat in Afghanistan like a metal fist in a bowl of dust.

The mornings smelled of diesel, scorched coffee, hot rubber, and the chalky powder of eggs nobody wanted to eat.

I made coffee before sunrise, fixed Humvees before breakfast, and kept quiet when men half my age laughed because silence had kept me alive longer than pride ever had.

Master Chief Patricia Wells watched me more than the others.

She never mocked me.

She never trusted me either.

That was fine.

Trust is not a gift in places like that.

It is a debt paid slowly with proof.

Staff Sergeant Tommy Rodriguez had not learned that yet.

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