The Quiet Transfer At Kessler Wasn’t Who The Recruits Thought-kieutrinhgroupp

By the time the Black Talon case opened in the Kessler supply yard, the laughter had already done its damage.

Not because Nina Vasquez looked hurt.

She did not.

That was the part nobody knew how to handle.

A person could answer mockery with anger, and the room would know where to put her.

A person could answer with shame, and the room would know it had won.

Nina answered with stillness, and stillness is hard to humiliate because it gives nothing back.

The morning had started with dust, heat, and a supply counter that smelled faintly of canvas, gun oil, and old coffee.

Kessler Training Facility sat high in the desert, where the wind never behaved the way young shooters wanted it to behave.

It slipped along the ground, dropped from the cliffs, curled around the range barriers, and made confident people look foolish.

That was why Kessler existed.

It punished assumptions.

The recruits just had not understood that the lesson could begin before anyone fired a round.

Nina arrived in scuffed boots, a faded olive jacket, and a canvas bag with worn straps.

There was no clean insignia on her chest.

There was no visible rank.

There was no careful little performance that told strangers what they were supposed to think of her.

Only the faint shadow of a patch that had once been removed from the left breast of her jacket remained, pale against the fabric like a memory that refused to wash out.

Sergeant Kowalski noticed all of it.

He was young enough to enjoy authority and old enough inside Kessler to know how much a laugh could cost somebody in front of a line.

When Nina set her transfer orders on the counter, he let the pause stretch.

The recruits behind her felt it and leaned into it.

“Help you?” he asked.

Nina said she had a transfer assignment.

Then she requested the Obsidian Viper.

For a moment, the words seemed to hit the room and hang there.

Then Kowalski laughed.

He repeated the name louder so everyone could hear it.

He made it sound like a toy, a rumor, something a bored person would invent after reading too many classified-message threads online.

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