They Laughed at the Commander’s Wife Until Pilots Saluted Her-eirian

The first person who laughed at Captain Evelyn “Eve” Hart that morning was her own husband.

Not loudly.

Not in a way anyone could officially call disrespect.

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It was smaller than that, which somehow made it worse.

Lieutenant Commander Grant Whitaker gave a soft, public little laugh, the kind people use when they want a room to understand that someone they love has become inconvenient.

Eve stood in the doorway of Hangar Three at Naval Air Station Fallon with a paper cup of black coffee in one hand and a visitor badge clipped to her denim jacket.

The coffee had gone bitter on her tongue.

The desert air smelled like jet fuel, hot metal, and dust that had been baked into the concrete since sunrise.

Beyond the open bay doors, Nevada light poured across the tarmac so bright it turned the gray F-35Cs silver at the edges.

Inside, thirty officers sat around a briefing table with mission packets, kneeboards, and the practiced impatience of men and women who believed they were already late to something important.

Eve had not meant to become the center of the room.

She had come because one message had landed on her phone at 06:19 that morning.

It was from an old number she had never deleted.

Three words.

They’re using Falcon.

No greeting.

No explanation.

No signature.

Just enough to pull a name out of the place where she had buried it.

Falcon Six.

Her call sign.

Her old life.

The part of herself she had locked away after the inquiry, after the sealed review, after the night a carrier deck tried to kill her and failed.

Grant did not know all of that.

He knew pieces.

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