The Civilian Shooter They Mocked Carried A Journal That Exposed Them-lequyen994 - Chainityai

The Civilian Shooter They Mocked Carried A Journal That Exposed Them-lequyen994

Lieutenant Garrett Sloan wanted the waiver signed before Kira Blackwood ever touched the firing line.

He dropped it into her open rifle case at Camp Sentinel with two fingers, like the paper itself was too important for her to refuse.

“Sign that your Montana shot was a staged trick, or leave this range as staff.”

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Behind him, eight Navy SEALs watched from the 1,000-yard line, their gear dusty, their faces guarded, their pride already stirred up by the idea of being measured against a civilian.

Kira looked at the waiver.

It said any failed shot would be contractor negligence, and her evaluation could be ended before lunch.

She did not belong.

Kira left the pen untouched.

Her rifle case was matte black and unmarked, custom carbon fiber with worn corners from years in Montana weather.

Inside it rested the rifle Uncle Marcus had helped her finish before cancer took him.

Inside her jacket rested something older and heavier.

Captain Nolan Blackwood’s field journal.

Kira grew up in a remote Montana cabin with Nolan’s older brother, Marcus, learning firewood, tracking, discipline, and the quiet language of distance.

When he died, Kira inherited the cabin, the rifle workbench, and the journal that mentioned Sergeant Major Thaddeus Hargrave forty times.

Hargrave was the man Nolan said had taught him the false wind method in Kuwait, and the man Nolan had asked her to find if he did not come home.

Kira had never looked for him until a Department of Defense liaison called about a grainy Wyoming competition video of a woman in a gray cap making an 1,800-yard shot in ugly crosswind.

Hargrave saw the video once and requested Kira by name.

That was how she ended up in Virginia, standing beside men whose uniforms carried histories she had never earned.

Colonel Renata Sterling introduced her as a civilian baseline.

Sloan heard the word baseline and turned it into an insult.

He stage-whispered that she probably shot cans off fence posts.

Another man laughed.

Dex Callahan, red-haired and quieter than the rest, told them to give her a chance.

Sloan did not.

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