Part 8 — The Private Room
They found me at the reception, moving as a tight pack—wounded and angry.
Ethan led, voice low and poisonous.
“That was quite a performance.”
Aide stepped in smoothly. “Admiral, the private conference room is ready.”
The door closed.
Ethan exploded.
“You lied to us for fifteen years! You let us think you were nothing!”
Then, the real line—the one he couldn’t stop himself from saying:
“I was on the front lines. And you sat in an air-conditioned office playing war games and you get a medal bigger than both of ours combined.”
I let him burn out. Then I poured water, took one slow sip, and spoke like a verdict.
“I didn’t lie,” I said. “I stopped explaining myself to people who already decided they wouldn’t listen.”
I looked at my father.
“Did you ever ask what I actually do?”
At my mother.
“Did you ever ask if I was happy—or just when I’d get married?”
Silence swallowed the room.
My father finally looked at me like he was seeing a stranger… and realizing the stranger was his own failure.
My encrypted phone rang—sharp, unmistakable.
Duty.
I turned toward the door.
“I love you,” I said, because it was true in the complicated way truth often is. “But I will not be dismissed ever again. If you want me in your life, it starts with respect.”
Then I left.
Because some missions are classified.
And some boundaries are not.
Epilogue — Six Months Later
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