The Bar Laughed at Her—Until a SEAL K9 Recognized His Commander-Tep

“Wrong bar, princess.”

The words cut through the Coronado bar like a hand across my face.

Beer foam hissed in the sink behind the counter, fryer oil hung heavy in the air, and salt from the bay slipped in every time the front door opened.

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Two Navy SEALs in the corner laughed like they had just put me exactly where I belonged.

Then my brother laughed too.

That was the part that nearly turned me around.

Not the strangers with their buzz cuts, broad shoulders, and the kind of confidence that comes from being admired before you ever speak.

I had worked around that confidence long enough to know it was not the same thing as character.

What hurt was Marco sitting beside me on the barstool, fingers wrapped around his beer, chuckling under his breath like I was some lost little woman who had wandered into a room meant for men.

He did not even look guilty.

He looked away.

I set my menu down slowly.

The bartender glanced over like he expected me to snap back, but I had trained myself a long time ago not to waste energy on people who confused volume with authority.

“Whiskey,” I said. “Neat.”

Marco shifted beside me.

“Samantha,” he muttered, “don’t take it personally.”

That almost made me smile.

People only say that after something personal has already happened.

The bar looked ordinary if you did not know how to read it.

Challenge coins sat behind the counter.

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