Nothing but Trouble
for the vice chief?”
    Taken aback, Thatcher said, “Of course.” He’d had no inkling of the vice chief’s personal interest in Brannon or the project.
    Quickly, General Henry Powhatan Clarke came on the line. “What did the colonel decide, Stuart?” he asked.
    “I believe Colonel Brannon would rather remain in her current position, sir.”
    “What makes you say that?” Clarke asked.
    “She seems quite satisfied here, General.”
    Henry Powhatan Clarke knew better. As a four-star general recently installed as the vice chief of staff, he’d checked up on Sara Brannon without her knowledge. She’d been one of the best young officers to serve under him in Korea, winning the prestigious Distinguished Service Medal and a meritorious field promotion to her present rank. Under Thatcher, a man who should never have been allowed to pin a star on his collar, she was languishing, not being used to her full abilities.
    “Did she turn down the assignment?” Clarke asked.
    “Not in so many words.”
    “What exactly did she say?”
    “She asked if she could take the TDY assignment after completing her leave. I told her it was unlikely.”
    “Did you, now? Well, you tell her I want her bright eyed and bushy tailed when she reports to the training branch after her leave is over.”
    “Yes, sir.”
    “Where in the hell did you get this notion she had to start the job immediately?”
    “I believe that’s what your aide told me, General,” Thatcher replied.
    “Negative, Thatcher. My aide made the call to you from my office, and he said no such thing.”
    “I must have misunderstood, General.”
    “Indeed you did,” Clarke snapped. “When does Colonel Brannon start her leave?”
    “In about two or three weeks, sir.”
    “Very well. Before she departs, make sure you’ve done her efficiency rating and forward a copy of it to me immediately. Understood?”
    “Yes, sir.”
    “And let Colonel Brannon know ASAP that she’s good to go as the team leader of the TDY assignment.”
    The line went dead before Thatcher could respond. His hands were sticky with sweat. He dropped the receiver in the cradle, rubbed a hand through his buzz-cut hair, stared at the palm print on the desktop, wiped it dry with his shirtsleeve, and let the reality sink in that he’d screwed up big time with the new vice chief.
    Sara eased to a stop in the driveway of the Aurora Heights cottage, killed the engine, and sat behind the wheel, trying to purge the last of her negative feelings about her meeting with General Thatcher before she went inside. She didn’t want to start the weekend with Kerney ranting and raving about her boss.
    She gazed at the small brick house with its pitched shingled roof, gabled second-story windows, and formal pilasters that bracketed the front entrance. She loved the house, loved the man and boy who waited for her inside, loved the fact that Kerney had bought it for her and Patrick. It was the first true home she’d lived in since the day she entered West Point.
    Inside, she called out to Kerney and Patrick and got no response. On the kitchen stove a pot of spaghetti sauce simmered, one of Kerney’s specialties he frequently fixed when he came to Arlington. She walked to the small enclosed back porch, heard the sound of Patrick’s laughter, and looked out through the screen door to see father and son playing baseball. Patrick stood with a small plastic bat on his shoulder, watching Kerney chase down a large rubber ball that rolled across the lawn.
    “Home run!” Patrick said.
    “Home run,” Kerney echoed, returning with the ball. He lobbed it underhand to Patrick, who swung and missed.
    The last of Sara’s snit about the meeting with Thatcher washed away as she watched her husband and son at play for another minute, before stepping to the bedroom to change out of her uniform. Last night, anticipating Kerney’s arrival, she’d shaved her legs and taken a long soak in the tub. She dressed in a pair of shorts

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