She Entered the K9 Cage as a Rookie and Left With His Command-vivian

The first thing I noticed about Outpost Bravo was not the heat.

It was the silence between the men.

Every base has noise, even the classified ones that pretend they have no name and no address.

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Engines idle, radios crackle, boots scrape, steel doors complain, and somewhere a young operator laughs too loudly because fear has to leave the body somehow.

Outpost Bravo had all of that, but under it was a silence I had heard before in ruined places.

It was the silence of people waiting for permission to be cruel.

Captain Gregory Mitchell stood on the landing pad with his arms crossed when my chopper settled into the Nevada dust.

He was tall, square-jawed, and built like a man who had mistaken intimidation for leadership for so long that no one around him bothered to correct it anymore.

Beside him stood Sergeant Brian Reynolds with a leather leash wrapped twice around one fist.

At the end of that leash was Odin, a black and tan German Shepherd heavy enough to make the handler lean against him with his whole body.

Odin saw me before the men did.

His ears cut forward, his nostrils flared, and then he launched hard enough that the leash snapped tight like a cable.

His teeth closed inches from my thigh.

Reynolds jerked him back and laughed the way handlers laugh when they are ashamed of being startled.

Mitchell watched my face.

I gave him nothing.

My orders said logistics and tactical auditor.

My duffel said I had packed light.

My rank said lieutenant, which always invited a certain kind of man to count how many ways he believed he outranked me before I ever opened my mouth.

The truth sat inside a sealed red folder that had arrived two days before me and could not be opened until I entered the facility.

Mitchell had chosen not to wonder why.

“Long flight from Washington?” he asked.

“Long enough,” I said.

He smiled at Reynolds as if I had already failed a test.

The briefing room smelled like burnt coffee and weapons oil.

Mitchell walked us through readiness numbers, bite ratios, breach speeds, and casualty simulations with the crisp confidence of a man reciting a prayer he had stopped believing.

Whenever I asked about handler spacing, he answered with aggression metrics.

Whenever I asked about stress recovery, he answered with force.

Whenever I asked about the dogs, he talked about equipment.

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