Active Duty - Hunter And Bailey -gay- - Checked 〈2026〉

Bailey didn’t move. He just watched. Hunter felt the weight of that gaze—not a supervisor checking on a subordinate, but something older. Something that had survived two deployments, a dozen near-misses, and one night in a FOB barracks when the mortar alarm had turned into something else entirely.

The hangar bay was a cathedral of shadows and steel, smelling of jet fuel, hydraulic fluid, and the metallic tang of a Texas night bleeding into dawn. Hunter was on his back, wedged under the fuselage of a C-130, a headlamp cutting a white beam across the belly of the beast. His checklist was smeared with grease, the ‘CHECKED’ box for the port landing gear still empty.

Checked In

Bailey stood. A ghost of a smile—the one Hunter had only seen twice before, once in a supply closet during a tornado warning, once in a hotel room on a three-day pass—flickered across his face.

“Bailey,” Hunter said.

“It’s checked,” Hunter said. “Now get off my flight line before someone sees you caring.”

Hunter stared at it. His throat tightened. This was the part the manuals didn’t cover. The part that didn’t go into the official log. The part where two enlisted men, both gay, both active duty, both terrified of a ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ world that had technically ended but never really left, had to decide if the thing between them was just deployment pressure or something that survived a C-130 flight into a combat zone. Active Duty - Hunter And Bailey -Gay- - Checked

Then he handed the pen back.