Chapter 3

The aftermath of the shooting range disaster left me hollow. I sat alone in the barracks, staring at the wall as other cadets whispered and pointed in my direction. My zero score had become the latest ammunition for Jake and Melissa's campaign against me.

I didn't notice them slip away that evening. The barracks were quiet, most cadets either at study hall or in the common room. Jake and Melissa moved like shadows, their footsteps silent against the polished floor.

"Is everyone gone?" Melissa whispered, peering around the corner of the empty locker room.

Jake nodded, his eyes gleaming with malice. "Torres left his dog tags in his locker. He never takes them out."

They moved quickly, with practiced precision that suggested this wasn't their first time pulling a stunt like this. Jake's fingers worked the combination lock with surprising ease.

"How do you know his combination?" Melissa asked, keeping watch by the door.

"He's not exactly subtle about it," Jake replied, the lock clicking open. "He uses his birthday. Idiot."

Ryan's dog tags gleamed in the dim light as Jake lifted them from the locker. They were sacred to every cadet—the one thing you never misplaced or borrowed.

"This'll seal her fate," Jake said, his voice barely audible. "After that shooting performance, they'll have no choice but to believe she's gone rogue."

Melissa's smile was cold as winter. "Where should we put them?"

"Somewhere obvious but not too obvious," Jake replied, thinking for a moment. "Her footlocker. Make it look like she hid them there."

They moved to my section of the barracks, confident that no one would question two senior cadets. My footlocker stood at the end of my bed, secured with a small padlock.

"This might take a minute," Jake muttered, working on the lock.

Melissa kept watch, her nerves clearly more frayed than Jake's. "Hurry up. Someone could come back any minute."

The lock finally gave way with a soft click. Jake lifted the lid carefully, scanning the contents.

"Perfect," he said. "Look at all this chaos. No one will question why she'd hide something here."

He placed Ryan's dog tags deep inside, beneath a tangle of socks and training gear. Then he carefully arranged the scene to look undisturbed.

"Let's go," he said, closing the locker and reattaching the padlock. "By morning, our problem will be solved."

---

I woke to chaos.

Instructors stormed through the barracks, their faces grim. Behind them came Colonel Harrison Blake himself—the academy's head disciplinary officer.

"Everyone remain at attention!" he barked. "There's been a serious violation of academy policy."

My stomach dropped as I noticed Ryan Torres standing near the instructors, his face pale with worry.

"Someone has reported stolen property," Colonel Blake continued. "Until we find it, no one leaves."

The search began immediately. Instructors moved through the barracks with military precision, checking every locker and footlocker. I stood frozen as they approached mine.

"Open it," ordered a stern-faced instructor.

With trembling hands, I unlocked my footlocker. The instructor flipped through my belongings, his expression unchanging until—

"Sir," he called out, holding up a pair of gleaming dog tags. "Found them."

Colonel Blake's eyes narrowed as he approached. "These belong to Cadet Torres. Explain yourself, Lawrence."

"I—I don't know how they got there," I stammered, my mind racing. "I've never seen those before!"

Across the room, Jake stepped forward. "Sir, I saw her acting suspiciously yesterday. Hanging around the locker room when everyone else was at training."

"I saw it too," Melissa added, her voice dripping with false concern. "She was definitely up to something."

"That's a lie!" I protested, but my voice sounded weak even to my own ears.

Colonel Blake's face hardened. "Enough. Lawrence, you're suspended pending a formal disciplinary hearing. Until then, you're confined to barracks when not assigned punishment duty."

---

"Since you've shown such disregard for academy property," Colonel Blake announced the next morning, "you'll spend the next week cleaning the obstacle course mud pits."

The other cadets watched with barely concealed satisfaction as I was led to the sprawling obstacle course. The mud pits were notorious—filthy, deep, and exhausting to clean.

"Start with the first pit," the instructor ordered, handing me a shovel and bucket. "By hand, Cadet. No mechanical assistance."

As the other cadets continued their training around me, I sank knee-deep into the mud, the weight of betrayal pressing down harder than any physical burden.

Jake walked past, his arm around Melissa's waist. "Better you than me," he said with a smirk.

I gripped the shovel tighter, fighting back tears of rage and frustration. Somewhere beneath the mud and humiliation, a spark of defiance began to burn.

They thought they'd broken me. They were wrong.

Chapter 4

The mud clung to my skin like a second layer, cold and viscous. Four hours into cleaning the obstacle course pits, and my arms trembled with each scoop of the shovel. Sweat mingled with dirt on my face, creating rivulets that stung my eyes. I'd never felt so exhausted—or so utterly alone.

"Just a little more," I whispered to myself, hefting another bucket of mud. My uniform, once crisp and proud, now hung in tatters around me, soaked through with filthy water.

The other cadets had long since finished their training, leaving me to this humiliating task in solitude. The sun was beginning to set, casting long shadows across the obstacle course. Soon, darkness would provide the only cover for my shame.

I stumbled slightly as I reached the edge of the pit, my foot catching on a root. The bucket tilted, sending a wave of mud cascading down my front. I gasped, the cold shock of it stealing my breath.

"Careful there, Lawrence."

Jake's voice sliced through the quiet evening air. I looked up to see him and Melissa approaching, their silhouettes stark against the twilight sky. They weren't in uniform—they'd changed into their free-time clothes, looking fresh and clean while I wallowed in filth.

"What a mess," Melissa observed, her voice dripping with false concern. "Need help?"

I straightened my spine, refusing to show how much their presence hurt. "I'm fine."

"Clearly," Jake snorted, exchanging a glance with Melissa.

I turned away, focusing on climbing out of the pit. My legs shook with the effort, muscles screaming in protest. Just a few more steps and I'd be on solid ground again. I could salvage what remained of my dignity.

"Actually," Jake said casually, "I think you dropped something."

I paused, looking back instinctively. Before I could react, his boot connected with my chest—a vicious kick that sent me flying backward.

The world spun as I crashed into the deepest part of the mud pit. Water and muck closed over my head, filling my nose and mouth. I thrashed wildly, fighting to surface as the weight of the mud threatened to pull me under.

When I finally broke through, gasping and choking, Jake was standing at the edge of the pit, his expression one of mock surprise.

"Whoops," he said. "Didn't see you there."

Melissa laughed—a high, tinkling sound that cut through me like glass. "Oh, Luna. You look absolutely pathetic."

I spat mud from my mouth, my vision blurred with water and rage. "Why are you doing this?"

"Because you never deserved to be here," Melissa said, her voice suddenly sharp. "A spoiled little rich girl playing soldier. Did you really think you belonged?"

"This academy is for warriors," Jake added, his tone cold. "Not for pampered princesses whose daddies buy their way in."

"You think your money makes you special?" Melissa leaned closer, her eyes gleaming with malice. "Out here, it just makes you a target."

They stood together, united against me—the boy I'd loved and the girl I'd trusted. In that moment, I realized how completely I'd been fooled.

"You're nothing without your daddy's name," Jake said, turning away. "And soon everyone will know it."

They walked away, leaving me sinking deeper into the mud pit—both literally and figuratively. The darkness was closing in, and with it, my last hope of salvaging my future.

I waited until they were gone before dragging myself from the pit. Every movement was agony, every breath a struggle against despair. The academy grounds were quiet now, most cadets in their barracks for evening meal.

Moving like a ghost, I slipped toward the communications tent. The guard was distracted, arguing with another cadet about training schedules. I seized my chance, ducking inside while they were preoccupied.

The tent smelled of electronics and dust. Rows of secure phones lined the walls, each one monitored and logged. But I didn't care anymore. I needed help—real help.

With trembling fingers, I dialed the number I knew by heart.

"Lawrence Industries," came the familiar voice of my father's assistant.

"I need to speak to my father," I whispered, my voice cracking. "Please. It's urgent."

There was a pause, then: "Luna? Is that you?"

"Yes," I choked out, tears finally breaking through my carefully constructed walls. "I need him. Please."

The phone rustled as it changed hands, and then—

"Luna?" My father's voice, deep and commanding, filled my ear. "What's wrong?"

"Everything," I whispered, sinking to my knees in the dim light of the communications tent. "Dad, they're going to kick me out. They're going to destroy me."

I heard him inhale sharply—a sound I recognized from boardroom negotiations and political battles. It was the sound of Adam Lawrence preparing to move mountains.

"Tell me everything," he said, his voice deadly calm. "And don't leave anything out."

Chapter 5

I sat in the communications tent, phone pressed to my ear, mud still dripping from my clothes onto the dusty floor. My father's voice was steady, but I could hear the undercurrent of fury beneath his controlled tone.

"I'm coming to get you," he said. "This ends now."

Relief flooded through me. Finally, someone was on my side. "Thank you, Dad. I just—I don't know how to fight this anymore."

A pause. I heard him take a deep breath.

"Luna," he said, his voice shifting to something more formal, "there's something I need to tell you. Something I should have told you before."

A chill ran down my spine. "What is it?"

"Your future has been... secured. I've arranged a strategic alliance for you—a marriage."

The world tilted sideways. "What century is this? You arranged a marriage? Without telling me?"

"It was for your protection," he insisted. "The Lawrence family needs strong alliances, especially with the military elite."

I gripped the phone tighter. "Who?"

"Kieran Stephens."

The name hit me like a physical blow. Kieran Stephens. Son of the Armed Forces Supreme Commander. The man whose family practically ran the military industrial complex.

"You've bound me to Kieran Stephens?" I whispered, disbelief making my voice crack.

"And he's already at the academy," my father added. "As the elite tactical commander overseeing your training division."

---

The next morning, Colonel Blake's office door opened without warning. I was still in my mud-stained uniform, having been summoned there at dawn.

"Commander Stephens," Colonel Blake stood immediately, his posture rigid with respect. "We weren't expecting you."

Kieran Stephens strode in, his presence filling the room. Tall, broad-shouldered, with eyes that missed nothing. He wore his dress uniform, every medal and insignia perfectly placed.

"I'm taking Cadet Lawrence's file," he said, his voice carrying the natural authority of someone born to command. "There are... irregularities that need investigation."

Colonel Blake hesitated only briefly before handing over my thick disciplinary folder. "Of course, sir."

I watched, stunned, as Kieran flipped through the pages with practiced efficiency. His brow furrowed as he scanned the witness statements, the timeline of events.

"This is poorly constructed," he said finally, looking up at Colonel Blake. "The witness statements contradict each other. The timeline doesn't add up."

"Sir?"

"Look at this." Kieran's finger traced the page. "Cadet Martin claims to have seen Lawrence near the locker room at 1900 hours. But according to the training logs, he was in a mandatory session until 1930."

Colonel Blake blinked. "I... hadn't noticed that."

"Convenient that the sabotage happened during the one window when no surveillance cameras were active," Kieran added, his voice dry.

---

"Sit down, Cadet Lawrence."

Kieran's office was sparse but elegant—a reflection of the man himself. I perched on the edge of the chair across from his desk, unsure what to expect.

"You're not in trouble," he said, noticing my nervousness. "I want to hear your side of what happened."

"My side?" I repeated, surprised by his tone. It wasn't accusatory or cold.

"Yes." He leaned forward slightly. "I find it difficult to believe that a cadet with your academic record would suddenly become a thief and saboteur."

Something in his eyes made my breath catch—a warmth that contradicted his stern military bearing.

"They planned it," I said, the words tumbling out. "Jake and Melissa. They've been working together all along."

Kieran nodded slowly. "Tell me everything."

As I spoke, recounting every painful detail, I watched his expression change. The military commander gave way to something else—something fiercely protective.

When I finished, he was quiet for a long moment.

"No one deserves what they did to you," he said finally. "Least of all you."

The simple statement hit me harder than I expected. After days of humiliation and isolation, being defended—being believed—felt like oxygen after drowning.

---

"I'll find the evidence," Kieran said later that night, his voice low and determined as we stood in the dimly lit surveillance room.

I'd been shocked when he'd asked me to meet him here after hours. More shocked still by the bank of monitors displaying feeds from across the academy.

"How?" I asked, watching him work.

"Drone surveillance." His fingers moved efficiently across the keyboard. "The academy has a classified network for training assessment. Every inch of the grounds is covered."

"But that's... classified," I whispered.

Kieran's eyes met mine, something dangerous flickering in their depths. "Some things are worth breaking protocol for."

He pulled up footage from the day of the shooting exam, his face illuminated by the blue glow of the screens.

"Here," he said suddenly, freezing a frame. "Watch this."

The screen showed Jake and Melissa near my rifle, their movements quick and furtive.

"They thought they were outside the camera's range," Kieran said, his voice tight with controlled anger. "But they weren't."

As we watched the footage together, something shifted between us—something electric and unexpected. His hand brushed mine as he rewound the tape, and neither of us pulled away.

"They'll pay for what they did to you," he promised, his eyes never leaving mine.

In that moment, with the soft glow of monitors illuminating his face and the warmth of his hand against mine, I realized that my arranged fiancé might be the most dangerous—and most captivating—man I'd ever met.

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