| I personally like the scout party or the break through the enemy one, but I would really need it to be presented like she's doing it because she has extra skills, not that she's just being slighted from battle for being a girl. You need to write it from the standpoint of "Okay, let's see, I need this, this, and this done, I know, she has this skill, I'll have her doing this! She'll be way more useful there than in the battle!" instead of "Alright, girl, got to get her out of battle, she can't fight, must get her out of battle." You have to present her as being sent on the verry special mission because she has skills better than the average foot soldier, not that she lacks anything. Because if she didn't even have the skills to be in battle, why would they send her on a potentianally more dangerous mission? Not to mention, going behind enemy lines can mean capture and possibly torture, they'd have to know she was strong enough to not give important stuff away. So you have to write her with such skills that when they say, "Okay, we're sending you here," they reader sees that as natural and fitting her character, not random and heavy-handed. And if it turns out this girl's not cut out for this mission (she may not be), then I would just let her fight. There's nothing saying your characters have to act like perfect Biblical people all the time. From what you've said, this girl is going to want to be in the action, and people are going to see she's capable. So just let her in. To be blunt, if I was reading your book and she was shoved to the sidelines or made to nurse, I would be mad. It would seem cheap to me, like you were saying "Alright, hey, thanks for the good times, nice of you to drop by and be pretty awesome, but now let the big leagers take over."
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 You cannot live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all.-JK Rowling
 "Hawkeye, this guy knocks out Jeeps!"-Trapper
 
 
 
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