The Man by the Gate Knew What the Red Light Remembered

Part I — The Wrong Gate

The old man was sitting against the concrete wall when Colonel Kevin Bennett found him, one boot unlaced, gray beard tangled, both hands folded over a canvas pouch like it was the last thing in the world that still knew his name.

The base was already under lockdown.

Two guards stood near the restricted entrance. A line of visitors waited behind temporary barriers for the dedication ceremony scheduled that morning. Beyond the gate, the new training wing gleamed with polished glass and fresh flags.

And there, beneath all that order, sat the old man.

Colonel Bennett stopped in front of him.

His uniform looked cut from discipline itself. His boots held a shine. His posture made younger men straighten without thinking. On his chest, clipped beside his ribbons, a small red emergency beacon blinked once every few seconds.

The old man watched that light.

Not Bennett’s face.

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