12. in some sad way, i already know

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"A written statement from the General himself."

You mindlessly nod, eyes unfocused and ears ringing as you sit at the conference table, Laswell at the head with the paper in hand. Her brows are furrowed, and one of her hands rests at her hip as she reads over the paper's contents once more.

Everything feels numb. Like your entire body's been reset, and nothing makes sense – as if your very existence has been muffled.

Price and Ghost sit at the table, too, sharing looks with each other. The Sergeants are out training rookies – and a small, minute part of you is grateful. You don't want them to see you so...

Whatever you are. Numb, cold, unfeeling. Any adjective that fits.

"Shepherd traded her," Price seethes, knuckles whitening on the tight grip he has around his pack of cigars.

"But why?" Laswell asks, exasperated, pacing at the front of the conference room. The overhead beams have been left off, so the frosted window is the only source of light. It allows a soft, gentle glow from the moon to fill the room, and it helps with your racing mind.

"We need to find him," Ghost demands, voice gruff and icy. Thinly veiled anger – you recognise the tone all too well.

"This gives us evidence to push the search further," Laswell cuts in, her footfalls pausing as she searches the scrawled handwriting for something. "And it opens up a new trail. Why did Graves want you? And what did Shepherd deem worthy of trading his star soldier?"

Your leg's bouncing, the soft tap tap tap of your foot against the linoleum floor sounding more like a ticking time bomb than anything.

When you look up from the table, your eyes instantly clash with a pair of dark brown. Ghost.

He's watching you – something hidden behind his gaze that you can't unpack. Not now, at least, with your mind racing at a million thoughts per hour. With your body feeling as sensitive as a live wire. Every breath feels manual, a feat in and of itself.

You break your eye contact with him suddenly, weary, looking to the window instead. The moon isn't so complicated; doesn't hold so many layers of darkness, both in colour and soul.

There's nothing like the feeling of moonlight against your skin, the brush of nightly breezes against your chilled skin.

"Sweetheart –" Your attention instantly goes to Price, whose hands are clasped on the table, gaze heavy where it sits on you, "Do you know anything at all that could help us. Any leads."

You go to open your mouth, but everything feels wrong, your stomach sinking and hands trembling and vision going blurry.

Without any thought, or reason, you abruptly stand, slightly shaky on your feet. You swallow, once, a difficult movement against your barren throat. Scratchy and harsh.

"I – I'm sorry, I need a moment," you manage to mutter out, taking a step back in a shadow of defence.

Brows furrow, a question's asked – you don't hear, don't see, because all you can do is turn and bolt out of the room, shouldering the door open and heading down the hospital light-white corridor, the white burning your vision.

Your eyes sting with unshed tears, your chest heaving, the echoing sound of your boots against the floor a distant soundtrack.

"Fuck," you mutter, palms coming up to rub harshly at your face as you slow, unsure. You just need space, a moment to yourself, a place to break apart with no one as your witness.

𝗙𝗢𝗥𝗘𝗩𝗘𝗥 𝗪𝗜𝗡𝗧𝗘𝗥 / call of duty x readerWhere stories live. Discover now