The Day the Old Machine Was Asked to Wait Again

Part I — The Man in the Leather Jacket

James crossed the airfield like someone walking into a room where his name had already been spoken badly.

The wind dragged dust across his boots. The sun sat hard over the desert base. Ahead of him, beyond a line of folding chairs and temporary ropes, the old helicopter waited under a clean coat of paint, its restored body shining too brightly for a machine that had once limped home with smoke in its lungs.

A young pilot stepped in front of him before James reached the rope.

“Sir,” the pilot said, one black-gloved hand raised, “you need to step back.”

James stopped.

The pilot wore a green flight suit, dark aviator sunglasses, and the expression of a man used to being obeyed before he had to repeat himself. Behind him, two mechanics looked up from a tool cart. A few younger soldiers watched from the shade of a hangar, amused already, waiting to see what the old man would do.

James put one hand into the pocket of his red-brown leather jacket.

“I’m not here for the crowd,” he said.

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