They Mocked Her Old Rifle—Then 216 Civilians Lost Every Signal-myhoa

They laughed when Ava Carter brought the old Winchester into the armory.

Not the kind of laugh that comes from surprise.

Not the kind that fades on its own.

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It was the kind men use when they want the whole room to know who belongs and who does not.

Sergeant Dale Whitmore started it.

He was leaning against a steel ammunition crate in Meridian Tactical Group’s concrete-walled staging armory, arms folded, gum in his jaw, acting as if the fluorescent lights overhead and the route map on the wall had all been placed there for him.

The bay door behind them rattled in the cold mountain wind.

Ava unzipped her faded canvas bag and set the rifle on the table.

The old Winchester landed with a soft wooden thud.

Whitmore’s mouth opened into a smile before he even spoke.

“Is that a Winchester?” he asked.

A few heads turned.

Ava did not answer.

“A bolt-action Winchester?” Whitmore said, raising his voice so the med kit team, the comms specialist, and the other guards could hear him. “What is that thing, from 1940-something?”

Some of the men laughed.

Not all of them.

Enough.

The rifle did look out of place on that table.

Everything around it was new, black, hard-edged, and expensive.

Thermal optics sat in foam cases.

Encrypted radio units blinked beside spare batteries.

Ceramic armor plates were stacked in neat rows.

Drone controllers rested beside tablets loaded with digital maps of Hartwell Pass.

Ava’s Winchester had a dark honey-colored stock, worn smooth where hands had held it for years.

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