Stepfather Broke Into My Navy Flat At 2 A.M.—Then My Signal Went Out-Teptep

At 2:00 a.m., my stepfather kicked down the door to my Navy flat and beat me so badly I could barely stand.

What he didn’t know was that before I lost consciousness, I managed to send one military distress signal—and by sunrise, the entire country would know his name.

My name is Lieutenant Ava Reynolds, and I used to think distance could become a kind of lock.

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I thought a new address could do what childhood never managed.

I thought a base gate, a lease, a deadbolt, and a phone charged beside my bed might finally put Richard Lawson in the past.

For three years, that belief worked well enough to let me sleep.

Not deeply.

Not without checking the door twice.

But sleep all the same.

My flat was small, practical, and almost painfully tidy, the sort of place you keep neat because order feels like proof that you are no longer living under someone else’s temper.

My Navy ID hung by the keys.

My dress uniform was pressed and waiting on the wardrobe door.

A mug I had forgotten to wash sat in the sink, tea dried dark along the rim.

The electric kettle rested beneath the cupboard, silent for once.

Outside, the night had that damp, close feeling it gets after rain, when the pavement holds the weather and the hallway smells faintly of wet coats and floor cleaner.

Nothing about it should have felt dangerous.

That was the trick of quiet nights.

They made you forget how quickly a door could become a battlefield.

At exactly 2:00 a.m., something hit my front door hard enough to shake the frame.

I woke before I understood why.

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