The evening gate at Philadelphia buzzed with the kind of tired impatience that only shows up after six o’clock.
The flight to Boston was twenty minutes behind, and that small delay had cracked open the illusion of order airlines tried so hard to maintain. The intercom kept spitting out boarding instructions that no one followed. People assigned to later groups clustered right up against the lane anyway, gripping phones and passports like they were bargaining chips. A few travelers argued quietly with gate agents. Others stared at the departure screen as if a hard enough glare could make the numbers change.
The air smelled like burnt airport coffee, cinnamon pretzels, and the faint metallic chill that always seemed to leak out of the jetway. Somewhere nearby a toddler cried without pause. A businessman laughed too loudly into a headset. A tired couple shared a single set of earbuds, leaning shoulder-to-shoulder in practiced silence.Near the wide window facing the runway stood a tall man in U.S. Army OCP camouflage, still and composed, the way a person looks when they have trained themselves not to take up more space than necessary. He was early thirties, close-cropped hair, eyes that didn’t dart but tracked calmly, as if he was counting details without making a show of it.
Staff Sergeant Michael Sullivan had learned that uniformed travel came with a strange kind of visibility. Some people offered smiles that felt sincere. Others avoided eye contact entirely. Some thanked him. Some acted as if the uniform were a costume, a prop for attention.Catherine smiled, slipping her phone into her pocket as she walked on, lighter than she’d been in a long time—not because she had less to carry, but because she was finally carrying the right things.