A Lieutenant Broke His Cane. Then One General Asked One Question-Quieen - Chainityai

A Lieutenant Broke His Cane. Then One General Asked One Question-Quieen

The crack of the cane echoed through the Fourteenth Precinct louder than any door slam ever could.

It was sharp, dry, and final.

For a second, nobody in the lobby seemed to understand what they had heard.

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Then everyone looked down.

Caleb Mercer sat on the marble floor with his left leg twisted awkwardly beside him and the shattered halves of his cherrywood cane resting across his lap.

The lobby smelled like old coffee, copier toner, sweat-damp uniforms, and the kind of summer heat that pressed against the windows even when the air conditioning kept humming.

Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead.

A phone rang twice behind the reception desk and stopped.

The tired woman at the records window tightened both hands around the paperwork she had been carrying.

Two rookie officers stood near the front counter as if their shoes had been glued to the floor.

A patrol officer had one hand near his radio and the other hanging uselessly at his side.

Nobody moved.

That was the part Caleb would remember later.

Not the pain in his hip, though that pain was immediate and ugly.

Not the hot pulse in his shoulder where it had slammed against the stone column.

Not even the cane, though it had belonged to him for twelve years and had held more of his weight than any person in that room had.

He would remember the silence.

Silence has weight when a room knows right from wrong and still waits to see who is safe enough to say it.

Lieutenant Ryan Cole stood over him with his polished shoes inches from the broken wood.

At thirty-eight, Cole had built himself into a perfect picture of authority.

His uniform was spotless.

His brass buttons shined.

His collar sat flat.

His ribbons were arranged with the care of a man who believed presentation could cover rot.

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