The Name He Kept Near the Corners Until Everyone Finally Looked

Part I — The Wet Floor

The old man in red coveralls had just warned him the floor was wet when Lieutenant Mark stepped closer, pointed a finger at his chest, and said, “Then move faster.”

The floor buffer hummed under Jack’s hands.

He was seventy-two, gray at the temples, bent slightly in the shoulders, with latex gloves pulled tight over thick fingers. The machine in front of him was old, heavy, and loud enough to make most people raise their voices.

Mark did not need the noise to sound disrespectful.

He had coffee in one hand, a folder under his arm, and the kind of spotless dark uniform that made young officers walk as if the hallway had been built around them. His shoes had a mirror shine. His jaw was clean. His watch flashed when he pointed.

Behind him, cadets slowed.

Two civilian guests looked away.

Jack kept both hands on the buffer handle.

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