I did not try to be dramatic about my efforts because I just showed up every single day with the intention of being the most prepared person in the room. The academy rewarded those of us who were steady and consistent rather than those who tried to burn bright and faded away by the second year.
I studied navigation and leadership theory with a discipline that most of my peers found exhausting because my father had taught me that character is built in the margin between being adequate and being excellent. When I graduated in 2012, my father pinned my first set of bars on my uniform and told me that I already knew exactly what to do.
My first assignment was in naval intelligence for the Pacific Fleet and I quickly learned that the most important work was often the most invisible. By 2016, I was a lieutenant and my career was moving at a pace that few people outside of my chain of command could truly understand.
That was the year I met Preston Thorne at a reception in San Diego where he was introduced by a mutual colleague who spoke highly of his service in surface warfare. He was thirty-one years old and came from a wealthy family in Scarsdale who had never spent a single day thinking about military life.
Preston was charming and had an easy way about him that suggested he had never struggled for anything, but he was genuinely interested in my career before he asked me anything personal. We spent the next two years navigating different time zones and deployment schedules while building a trust that I had not felt since my childhood.
When he proposed in 2018, I called my father first and then I called Sybil Thorne to share the news as a gesture of respect. She responded with a warmth that I would eventually realize was a carefully crafted performance designed to last only as long as the phone call.
When I first met Sybil at her estate in Scarsdale, I brought a beautiful bouquet of flowers and offered a genuine smile because I wanted to build a real relationship with her. She accepted the flowers but spent the rest of the evening asking intrusive questions about my family finances and whether I planned to quit my government job once we were married.