Dave could do thirty-two pull-ups. Clean ones. No one on the base could touch him. So when Private Sarah Jenkins, who was maybe 120 pounds wet, walked up to the bar, we all had a good laugh.
โI got fifty bucks on Dave,โ someone yelled.
Dave just grinned, chalking his hands. โLadies first,โ he said.
Sarah didnโt smile. She just gripped the bar. Her first ten were fast. Her next ten were smooth. At twenty, the laughing stopped. At thirty, guys started taking out their phones. Daveโs grin was gone. At thirty-three, the whole yard was dead quiet. She didnโt stop until she hit forty-five. She dropped to the ground, not even breathing hard.
Later that night, I was walking back to the barracks. I saw her pack near the supply shed, a small black book had fallen out of it. Thinking Iโd return it, I picked it up. It fell open to todayโs date. Her handwriting was small and sharp. It wasnโt a diary. It was a log.
It read: Subject: David R. Objective: Psychological conditioning. Step 1: Public dominance display (Physical). COMPLETE. The public defeat will initiate a dependency response. He will now perceive me as a protector, not a peer. This makes him vulnerable for Step 2: Emotionalโฆ
The last word was cut off. I slammed the book shut. My heart was pounding in my chest. This wasnโt training. This was something else entirely. I slid the book back into the side pocket of her pack and walked away, my mind racing.
What was Step 2? And why Dave? He was arrogant, sure, but he was a good soldier. He had your back when it counted.
The next few days were strange. Dave wasnโt the same. He was quiet, subdued. He stopped his usual bragging in the mess hall. Heโd look over at Sarah sometimes, not with anger, but with a kind of confused respect. Just like her book predicted.
He started seeking her out. Heโd ask her for tips on her pull-up technique. Sheโd offer him advice, her voice calm and even. She was patient with him, which was the opposite of how he treated anyone he thought was weaker than him. I watched from a distance, the words from her logbook echoing in my head.
One evening, I saw Dave by the payphones. He was supposed to be the unshakable one, the rock. But his shoulders were slumped, and his voice was tight with frustration. I couldnโt hear the words, but I could feel the anger and helplessness coming off him in waves. He slammed the phone down and ran a hand over his face, looking utterly defeated.
The next day at morning formation, I saw Sarah approach him. She didnโt mention the phone call. She just fell into step beside him.
โEverything alright, Dave?โ she asked, her voice soft.
He flinched, like he was surprised sheโd noticed. โYeah. Just family stuff.โ
โI get that,โ she said. โMy younger sister used to get into all sorts of trouble. Felt like I was the only one who could pull her back from the edge.โ
Dave stopped walking. He looked at her, really looked at her. โYeah? What did you do?โ
โI tried yelling. I tried ordering her around,โ Sarah said, her eyes fixed on the horizon. โNone of it worked. The only thing that helped was when I stopped trying to be her commander and just listened.โ
I saw a flicker of something in Daveโs eyes. It was the crack in the armor. She had found it. He opened his mouth, then closed it, and just nodded.
That afternoon, I found a way to be near the supply shed again. Her pack was there. I felt like a snake, but I had to know. I pulled out the little black book. I flipped to a new page.
Step 2: Emotional Infiltration. Subject is experiencing external stress (family issues, confirmed brother). This provides an entry point. Strategy: Establish common ground through fabricated personal anecdote (younger sister). Reinforce protector-protรฉgรฉ dynamic by offering guidance, not orders. Objective: Foster emotional dependency.
My blood ran cold. Fabricated. She had lied to him, crafting the perfect story to hook him. This was a level of calculation I couldnโt comprehend. It was predatory.
Over the next week, it was like watching a master puppeteer at work. Dave started confiding in her about his younger brother, who was apparently falling in with a bad crowd back home. Dave felt responsible, helpless. He was used to solving problems with his fists or his strength, and this was a problem he couldnโt punch.
Sarah just listened. Sheโd nod, ask quiet questions, and never tell him what to do. She made him feel heard. I saw the tension leave his shoulders when he was around her. He started to smile again, but it was a different kind of smile. It was less of a challenge and more of a genuine expression.
He was becoming dependent on her counsel. He was seeing her as his only ally in a battle he didnโt know how to fight. Her plan was working perfectly.
I couldnโt stand it anymore. This felt wrong. I had to do something. I had to warn him.
I waited until I saw Sarah leave the barracks alone, heading for the training grounds. I followed her. When we were far enough away from everyone else, I called her name.
โJenkins.โ
She turned, her expression unreadable. She wasnโt surprised to see me.
โCan I help you?โ she asked.
I held my breath and took the plunge. โI know what youโre doing,โ I said, my voice barely a whisper. โThe book. Iโve read your logbook.โ
She didnโt flinch. She didnโt deny it. A long moment passed between us. The only sound was the wind whistling through the chain-link fence.
โAnd what do you think Iโm doing?โ she finally asked.
โYouโre manipulating him,โ I said, gaining confidence. โYouโre playing some kind of sick mind game. That whole story about your sister was a lie. Youโre taking advantage of him when heโs vulnerable.โ
She looked at me, and for the first time, I saw a flicker of emotion in her eyes. It looked like sadness.
โYouโre right about one thing,โ she said quietly. โThe story was a lie. I donโt have a sister.โ
She paused, then continued. โBut I did have a best friend. Her name was Katherine.โ
My anger started to fade, replaced by confusion. โWhat does that have to do with anything?โ
โKatherine was smart, funny, and full of life,โ Sarah said, her voice becoming distant, as if she were speaking of a ghost. โShe started dating a guy a few years ago. He was charismatic, strong, the life of the party. Everyone loved him. He made her feel like she was the only person in the world.โ
She looked straight at me. โHe was also a bully. Not with his fists. With his words. With his confidence. Heโd build her up just to tear her down. Heโd chip away at her self-worth, piece by piece, until she didnโt know who she was without him. He made her feel weak so he could feel strong.โ
A horrible realization began to dawn on me.
โWhen she finally got the courage to leave him,โ Sarah continued, her voice trembling slightly, โshe was a wreck. It took her over a year of therapy to even begin to feel like herself again. He broke her spirit.โ
She took a deep breath. โThat man was Dave.โ
The world seemed to tilt on its axis. I thought back to the Dave I knew, the loud, bragging, always-on-display Dave. The Dave who divided the world into the strong and the weak. It was horribly, terrifyingly plausible.
โI didnโt join the army for the flag,โ Sarah said, her voice now firm and clear. โI joined because I found out he had enlisted. I wasnโt training for combat. I was training for him.โ
โFor revenge?โ I asked, my throat dry.
โNo,โ she said, shaking her head. โRevenge is easy. It wouldnโt fix what he did to Katherine. It wouldnโt stop him from doing it to someone else.โ
She looked over toward the barracks, where I could just make out Daveโs silhouette.
โYou canโt tell a man like Dave that heโs a bully. He wonโt hear it. His ego is a fortress,โ she explained. โYou have to dismantle the fortress first, brick by brick. You have to show him what it feels like to be weak. To be looked down on. That was Step 1.โ
โAnd Step 2?โ I asked.
โYou have to show him what it feels like to be vulnerable,โ she said. โAnd to have someone show you kindness in that moment, not contempt. You have to teach him empathy by making him experience it himself. I needed him to trust me, to depend on me, so he could learn that real strength isnโt about dominance. Itโs about connection.โ
I was speechless. This wasnโt a sick game. It was a rescue mission. A radical, dangerous, and deeply personal form of therapy.
โWhatโs Step 3?โ I finally managed to ask.
โRedemption,โ she said simply. โBut that oneโs up to him. I can only open the door.โ
I didnโt say anything to Dave. I just kept watching. But now, I saw things through a different lens. I saw Sarah guiding him, not manipulating him. I saw her creating a safe space for him to confront his own demons.
A few nights later, I was on late-night duty. I saw them sitting on a bench, talking under the dim yard lights. I was too far away to hear, but the body language told the whole story.
Dave was talking, his hands gesturing, his face a canvas of regret and confusion. Sarah was just listening, a still point in his storm. At one point, I saw his shoulders start to shake. The strongest man on the base was crying. And Sarah just sat there with him, a quiet presence, offering him the dignity of his own grief.
The next morning, Dave was different again. The change was profound. The last remnants of his arrogance were gone, replaced by a quiet humility. He walked with a new lightness, as if a great weight had been lifted.
He went about his duties with a focus I hadnโt seen before. During training, he started helping the newer recruits, the ones who were struggling. He didnโt mock them or show off. He offered them quiet encouragement, the same way Sarah had with him.
About a week later, I saw him by the payphones again. This time, his posture was straight. His voice was low and calm. I heard him say, โNo, you listen to me for a secondโฆ I was wrong. Iโm sorry.โ Then he was quiet for a long time, just listening.
I found Sarah later that day. I didnโt have to say anything. She knew.
โHe called his brother,โ she said, a small, tired smile on her face. โAnd then he called Katherine.โ
She pulled out the little black book. I watched as she flipped to the last entry on Dave.
Step 3: Redemption. Subject has acknowledged his own vulnerability and its reflection in others. He has initiated contact to repair past damages without prompting. Objective: COMPLETE.
She tore the pages about Dave out of the book, ripped them into tiny pieces, and let the wind carry them away. Her mission was over.
Dave never became the loudest man in the room again. He became the most reliable. He found a different kind of strength, one that wasnโt measured in pull-ups, but in his willingness to listen, to admit fault, and to lift others up. He and Sarah were never a couple; they didnโt need to be. They became something deeper: true comrades, bound by a strange and silent understanding.
I learned something powerful from watching them. We all wear armor, thinking it keeps us safe. But sometimes, the strongest thing a person can do is to let someone else help them take it off. True strength isnโt about never falling; itโs about how we treat people when theyโre on the ground, and having the courage to let them help us when weโre the one who has fallen. Itโs about breaking down our own walls to build a bridge to someone else.




