An Admiral Mocked Her at the Range. Then He Saw Her Tattoo.-rosocute

The entire firing range went silent the moment the Admiral saw the tattoo on my wrist.

Before that moment, I was just the woman in the shade with an old rifle case and no visible rank.

At Fort Davidson, that was enough to make certain men feel comfortable underestimating me.

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The Arizona desert had a way of stripping people down to what they really were.

By early afternoon, the air above the range looked almost liquid, trembling over the gravel, the berms, and the steel targets lined up like dull gray coins at impossible distances.

The heat had worked itself into everything.

It baked the rifle benches.

It lifted the smell of gun oil from every case.

It turned the dust into something you could taste against the back of your teeth.

I had arrived at 1300 hours, signed in under civilian access, and handed Range Master Walter Ellis the folder I had been instructed to bring.

He was a careful man.

Not friendly exactly, but careful.

He checked my identification, glanced at the range authorization, then slowed when he saw the DD-214 copy tucked beneath it.

His eyes moved over the redactions.

They always did.

There was a unit line that had been blacked out so thoroughly it looked less like missing information and more like a warning.

Beneath it sat an old qualification card from the Fort Davidson Training Office and a weapons authorization for the M110 sniper rifle.

Ellis looked at the documents for a second too long.

Then he looked at me.

“Lane seven,” he said.

That was all.

I appreciated him for that.

Questions are cheap when someone else has to live with the answers.

I carried my case to the shaded area near the equipment shed and sat cross-legged on the concrete, where the heat still came up through the floor but the sun was not directly burning the back of my neck.

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