The Motor Pool Salute That Exposed A Dangerous Lie-Quieen - Chainityai

The Motor Pool Salute That Exposed A Dangerous Lie-Quieen

The first sound Captain Nora Whitaker noticed in Bay Three was not an engine.

That was the problem.

A healthy motor pool had its own weather.

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Metal rang against metal.

Radios murmured under open hoods.

Somebody complained about heat, somebody else laughed, and somewhere a diesel engine coughed awake like it had been dragged out of sleep.

This place had heat, grease, concrete, and silence.

The silence told Nora more than any briefing had.

She stood near a line of mud-streaked JLTVs with a black inspection tablet tucked against her hip, her field jacket open over a plain inspection polo.

No visible rank.

No name tape.

No warning.

That had been the point of driving in from Quantico without letting the motor pool dress itself up first.

The North Carolina sun pressed down through the open bay doors and bounced off the concrete until every vehicle looked like it was sitting in a shimmer.

A red hazardous-material cabinet stood against the wall with its lock missing.

Three windshields carried chalk marks that did not match the maintenance board.

A stack of sealed brake assemblies sat under a tarp in heat they should not have been left in.

One JLTV had its hood closed even though the maintenance tag still hung from the steering wheel.

Nora did not touch anything.

She did not need to.

The room was already speaking.

Master Sergeant Wade Harlan saw her a few seconds later.

He was broad in the way some men make themselves broad, using shoulders and volume as if they could fill the space before anyone else had a right to enter it.

His blouse had a faded coffee stain near the chest.

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