They Laughed When the Old Veteran Checked the Rifle No One Else Questioned

Chapter 1: The Old Man at the Rifle Table

The rifle made a sound Samuel Carter did not like.

It was not loud. It was not dramatic. It was only the faint dry tick of metal settling against metal when he eased the scoped rifle onto the armory table. To anyone else in the room, it would have disappeared beneath the buzz of the fluorescent lights, the scrape of boots on concrete, the distant clatter of cases being opened down the row.

Samuel heard it anyway.

He kept his left hand on the stock and let the sound finish in his mind before he moved again.

Across the table, Ryan Clark leaned one shoulder against a locker cage and folded his arms. He was young in the way men became young when they knew other people were watching them. Clean uniform. Tight jaw. Fresh confidence. Jerry Miller stood beside him with a tablet in one hand and an expression he tried to hide behind the screen.

Samuel did not look at either one of them.

The rifle lay long and black under the armory lights, the scope mounted high enough to clear gloved hands, the rail screws dark and even, the barrel clean. Someone had wiped it down recently. Too recently, perhaps. Oil shone in the low places where oil did not need to shine.

Samuel took his reading glasses from the cord at his chest and set them on his nose.

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