When the Admiral Slapped the Worst Recruit, the Room Finally Broke-tantan

Worst student in line.

That was what they called Riley Carter before they called her anything else.

At North Harbor Academy, names had a way of turning into verdicts.

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The fast ones became prospects.

The loud ones became leaders.

The polished ones became examples.

Riley became the last one.

Last on the morning run across the granite paths when the Maine wind came off the water so hard it made breathing feel like swallowing ice.

Last on the rope drills when the line burned through her palms and left red welts that reopened the next morning.

Last on shooting scores, where her hands stayed too tight and her instructors wrote the same note twice in one week.

Needs discipline.

Needs confidence.

Needs improvement.

After 127 days, the comments stopped sounding like instruction and started sounding like a sentence.

Riley knew what people saw when they looked at her.

Curved shoulders.

Tired eyes.

A uniform that seemed to sit on her like an accusation.

She was not built like the strongest recruits.

She was not loud enough to hide her weakness behind swagger.

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