He Hit a Quiet Civilian at Lunch, Then NCIS Closed In-myhoa

The lunch rush at Camp Redstone always sounded louder than it needed to.

Metal trays clanged against steel rails.

Boots scraped over waxed tile.

Image

Plastic cups snapped under impatient hands near the soda machine.

Somebody laughed too loudly by the condiments, and someone else cursed when the coffee pot sputtered out its last bitter inch.

At 12:17 PM, Lieutenant Sofia Ramirez sat alone by the window in faded denim and a plain gray hoodie, eating slowly from a metal tray.

She looked exactly how she was supposed to look.

Tired.

Unimportant.

Civilian.

The hoodie was gray enough to disappear into the room.

The jeans were ordinary.

Her hair was pulled back without effort, and her face had the guarded calm of someone used to being underestimated before she even spoke.

That was not an accident.

Three days earlier, Sofia had sat in a secure office while an NCIS supervisor slid a thin incident summary across the table.

There were no dramatic words in it.

Official paperwork rarely sounds like pain.

It said things like conduct concern, informal complaint, reassignment request, witness unavailable, and no further action recommended.

But Sofia had learned a long time ago that clean language could hide dirty rooms.

Staff Sergeant Cole Mercer had built himself a reputation that never appeared plainly in one file.

It showed up in pieces.

A young woman transferred out of his section after six weeks.

Another stopped eating in the main cafeteria.

A third wrote two pages of a statement and then refused to sign it.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *