My uncle laughed while asking a retired colonel to “save” me with an internship because he thought I was just some failed office worker.-lbsuong

PART 2

The silence inside the ballroom became unbearable.

A moment earlier, crystal glasses clinked softly beneath the golden lights while old officers traded stories about wars they hadn’t fought in decades.

Now nobody moved.

Nobody even breathed.

Colonel James Carter stood rigidly upright before me, his hand still raised in salute.

And my uncle looked like someone had physically punched him in the chest.

Robert Hayes blinked several times.

Có thể là hình ảnh về Phòng Bầu dục

“James…” he laughed awkwardly, trying to recover control of the room. “What the hell are you doing?”

But Colonel Carter never looked away from me.

“Sir,” he said carefully to my uncle, “do you have any idea who your niece actually is?”

Robert scoffed.

“She works intelligence support.”

A few uncertain chuckles rippled through the room.

Nobody sounded confident anymore.

The colonel’s eyes hardened.

“Phoenix One isn’t support.”

Every veteran in earshot went silent again.

Some recognized the name immediately.

Others only recognized the reaction.

Fear.

Respect.

The kind earned by people who operated in places ordinary soldiers never even learned existed.

I lowered my glass slowly.

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