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She had attended dozens of graduations over the years, seen thousands of faces blur together, but something in the stands caught her attention—not a movement, not a sound, but a detail that tugged at a memory she had spent years keeping carefully sealed. Her eyes narrowed slightly as she leaned forward, gaze locking onto a faded tattoo barely visible beneath the rolled sleeve of a janitor sitting alone in the back row.
It was crude. Old. Hand-inked.
And unmistakable.
Admiral Caldwell’s breath hitched, just for a second, before discipline smoothed her expression, though her fingers curled tightly against the armrest. She leaned toward the man beside her, Senior Chief Marcus Vance, her voice low and urgent.
“Marcus,” she murmured, “look at his arm.”
“That can’t be,” he whispered. “That mark hasn’t existed since—”
Before he could finish, Evan Rowan’s name echoed across the parade ground.
Michael rose halfway from his seat, then stopped, lowering himself back down, hands tightening together as if physically holding himself in place.
Protocol shattered quietly.
The movement rippled through the crowd like static. Conversations stalled. Heads turned. No one understood why a senior enlisted leader would abandon position during a formal ceremony, least of all why he was walking directly toward a man dressed like maintenance staff.
Michael looked up just as Vance stopped in front of him.
The years fell away.
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