The Day Virginia Brought the Brown Case to the Desert

Part I — The Beginner Tables

The young instructor smiled at Virginia like she had wandered into the wrong part of her own life.

“Ma’am,” he said, one hand raised in that careful way people used when they wanted to sound kind while moving someone aside, “this lane is for the long-distance challenge. The beginner tables are down by registration.”

Behind him, two men in faded green shirts looked over from the shade of a canopy. One of them smirked. The other pretended not to.

Virginia Collins stood with both hands on an old brown rifle case, the leather cracked at the corners and darkened where years of palms had carried it. Her silver hair was tucked under a black cap. Her denim jacket was too warm for the Arizona morning, but she kept it buttoned anyway.

She looked at the instructor’s name tag.

Daniel.

He was maybe thirty-two. Clean sunglasses. Tan tactical shirt. Radio clipped to his shoulder. The kind of man who believed that if he said something calmly, it became respectful.

Virginia did not move her case.

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