Observer clearance approved. Report 0600.
The location was Noah’s training base.
The name beneath it was one I had buried six years ago.
Part 2: The Salute
I slept in a motel off the highway where the carpet smelled like cleaner and old rain.
At 4:40 a.m., I was awake before the alarm. I dressed in dark jeans, boots, and a black field jacket. From the hidden pocket of my duffel, I took out a plain gray badge. No name. No seal. Nothing visible unless you knew how to read it.
Most people didn’t.
That was the point.
The base sat beyond a flat stretch of scrubland, perimeter lights glowing through fog. At the gate, a young private scanned my badge twice, frowned, then straightened so fast his cap shifted.
“Ma’am.”
I nodded and drove in.
The training field smelled of diesel, wet canvas, dust, and bitter coffee. I took a seat in the second row of the bleachers, where I could see everything and leave quickly.
Down below, recruits stood in staggered lines.
Noah was easy to find. He had our father’s jaw, our mother’s brown eyes, and the family talent for appearing certain when he was not. But I recognized the tension in his shoulders. He was trying too hard.
Sergeant Price paced before the formation like a storm in boots. I knew him by reputation. Voice like steel. Temper like a match. Integrity sharp enough to cut command itself.
“Formation!” he barked.
Boots struck dirt.
The sound moved through my chest. Some people hear discipline in that rhythm. I hear ghosts.
Noah performed well. Not perfect, but steady. When corrected, he recovered quickly. I felt a small, dangerous warmth in my chest and buried it.
Pride was risky when attached to people who could still disappoint you.
Then Price stopped.
His eyes moved across the bleachers. Over the parents. Over the sleepy admin with a clipboard. Over a contractor with a tablet.
Then they landed on me.
Something in his body changed.
His boots snapped together.
Every recruit froze because Price had frozen.
Then he raised his hand in a perfect salute.
“General.”
He did not shout.
He didn’t need to.
The word crossed the field like lightning.
A rifle clattered to the dirt.
Noah’s.
I stood, returned the salute, and said, “At ease, Sergeant.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Whispers cracked through the formation. Noah stared at me as if a wall had opened into a door.
I sat again and watched the rest of the drills without expression.
Inside, something shifted.
I had built my life around being underestimated. Around sealed records. Around my family’s belief that I had failed.
Now my brother had seen a sergeant salute the sister he thought had quit.
But that was not the worst part.
The worst part was the man standing near the far fence in civilian clothes, pretending to check his phone, with one hand in his jacket pocket.
I did not know his face.
CONTINUE READING…>>
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