Three Marines Cornered The Wrong Woman In A Crowded Neighborhood Bar-tantan

Don’t scream, baby.

You’ll only make it worse.

That was what the man whispered into Halley Reyes’s ear in the back corner of a crowded bar, his breath hot with whiskey, his voice low enough to sound private and loud enough to make sure she understood the point.

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The bar was not empty.

That mattered.

There were men at the pool table, women squeezed into a booth near the restroom hallway, a bartender wiping down the same square of wood over and over, and a television above the bottles showing a game nobody was really watching.

The whole place smelled like fryer oil, old beer, wet floor cleaner, and the burnt edge of coffee that had sat too long in the pot.

A ceiling fan clicked above the tables.

Outside, a pickup truck rolled slowly past the front window, headlights sliding across the room like somebody had swept a flashlight over guilty faces.

Inside, Halley sat with her back against the wall, because people who know how rooms can turn dangerous do not sit with their backs to open space.

She wore civilian clothes.

A plain shirt.

A ball cap pulled low.

No uniform.

No medals.

No reason for four men looking at her to understand who she was unless they were smart enough to notice the way she carried herself.

They were not.

Commander Halley Reyes had finished training earlier that day, the kind of brutal rotation that made younger men look older by sunset and made older leaders remember every injury they had ever ignored.

Rangers had run it.

Marines had pushed through it.

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