We were ordered to stay between the two, acting as a shield for twelve American operators who were sitting ducks. For ten grueling days, I sat in the dark of the Combat Information Center, making the calls that kept us in the way without starting a war.

Three times, the Admiral on the flagship suggested we pull back to a safer distance, and three times I sent back data proving why we had to hold. I was a Lieutenant telling a two-star Admiral that I wasn’t moving my ship an inch.

We held that line until the tow ship arrived, and those twelve operators got home because we refused to flinch. The Navy awarded me a commendation in private, but the call sign “Iron Ten” spread through the fleet like wildfire.

Two years later, we were all gathered for Cooper’s commissioning dinner at a high-end club near the base in Virginia. The room was packed with colonels, majors, and Navy captains who all knew the legends of the Pacific fleet.

Garrett was in rare form, boasting about his son being a “real warrior” while taking shots at the Navy guests. He looked toward me at the end of the table and smirked, “Even the girls are trying to play soldier these days, but we all know ladies don’t get call signs.”

The laughter from his immediate circle died instantly when I set my fork down with a loud clink. “Iron Ten,” I said, my voice carrying the same weight it did when I commanded the Halsey’s weapons systems.

A Navy Commander named Julian Vance, who had been on the Admiral’s staff during the Halsey standoff, dropped his napkin in shock. He stood up slowly, followed by two other captains and a Marine colonel who had read the classified reports.

One by one, every officer who knew the truth stood up in a wave of silence that felt heavier than an anchor. Cooper, who had studied my tactical maneuvers in his officer training, was the first of the younger generation to stand, looking at me with pure reverence.

Garrett sat there, red-faced and confused, as the room essentially turned its back on his ignorance. Commander Vance looked at me and said, “It is an honor to finally meet the officer who held the line when everyone else wanted to fold.”