The Quiet Consultant Whose Hidden Star Froze A Submarine Base-kimochi

Captain Bradley Knox laughed before Dr. Emma Callahan had even cleared the gate.

The laugh was not loud enough to be reckless.

It was worse than that.

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It was casual.

The kind of laugh a man uses when he believes the world has already agreed with him.

It was 6:18 a.m. at Naval Submarine Base New London, and the Connecticut morning had not warmed up yet.

Fog sat low over the Thames River.

Diesel carts moved along wet pavement, their tires hissing through thin puddles.

A paper coffee cup steamed in the hand of a sailor hurrying between brick buildings, and somewhere near the guard shack, the rope on the flagpole snapped against metal every few seconds.

The American flag above them was bright even in the gray morning.

Emma Callahan stepped out of a black government sedan wearing a gray blazer, black flats, and a visitor badge clipped where anyone could see it.

She carried one leather folder under her arm.

She had no aide.

No escort.

No public affairs officer.

No polite introduction from Washington to make the morning easier for everyone.

That was why Knox misread her.

That was also why she had come that way.

“Ma’am,” he called, loud enough for the sentries and the six Navy SEALs near the training van to hear, “the museum tour entrance is three blocks back.”

One of the younger guards stared at the concrete like the pavement had suddenly become interesting.

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