A Bruised Colonel Was Thrown Out Before Her Callsign Reached The Base-heuh

Colonel Brett Sorenson did not lower his voice when he ordered me out.

He wanted the room to hear him.

“Get her out of my TOC before I have her arrested.”

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The words cut across the tactical operations centre and landed in the kind of silence that only exists when everyone knows a line has just been crossed.

The room smelled of dust, sweat, burnt coffee, and warm plastic from overworked radios.

A paper cup sat sweating on the map table beside a grease-pencil overlay.

Boots scraped softly over plywood.

Someone near the radio stack stopped speaking in the middle of a sentence.

Forty officers turned towards the doorway and looked at me as though I were an error in the morning schedule.

I stood there in a faded field jacket with no rank showing.

The seams were ground with desert dust.

My cheekbone was bruised, dark enough to draw the eye but not severe enough to make anyone compassionate.

I had slept badly, moved quickly, and entered a room where pride had already been mistaken for command.

To them, I was a woman in the wrong place.

To Sorenson, I was nobody worth identifying.

That was his first mistake.

My name is Colonel Renee Lockheart.

Callsign Hydra 6.

Commander of the Opposing Force at the National Training Centre in the Mojave Desert.

The folder in my hand was not rubbish from a motor pool, and I was not wandering in because I had lost my way.

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