The silence in the Hayes household wasn't the peaceful, restful quiet of a sleeping home; it was a pressurized vacuum. It was the silence of a loaded gun with the safety catch off.
Thomas Hayes sat at the kitchen island, his back as straight as a bayonet. The digital clock on the microwave flickered from 04:59 to 05:00. On cue, he took a sip of black coffee—scalding, bitter, and exactly the way he'd taken it for twenty-two years in the Royal Engineers. It was an anchor. In a world that seemed to be dissolving into soft edges and compromise, the coffee was hard. It was discipline.
Outside the window, the Surrey mist clung to the manicured hedges like a damp shroud, obscuring the neighbor's Georgian townhouse. It was a "Grey" Tuesday. No birds sang. The sky was a flat, oppressive sheet of low cloud that promised rain but refused to break. The only sound in the room was the muted hum of the BBC news ticker scrolling across the television in the corner, a low-frequency drone that Thomas found soothing.
...Looming health crisis in Southeast Asia... officials downplay neurological link... riots in Bangkok outskirts enter third day... travel advisories updated for the region...
Thomas grunted, his thumb tracing the rim of his ceramic mug. "Third world instability," he muttered to the empty kitchen. He didn't believe in global panics. He believed in logistics, chain of command, and the 05:30 morning briefing he used to give his men. Now, his "men" consisted of a wife who spent too much on organic kale and a son who was currently a ghost in his own home.
He looked at the framed photo on the mantelpiece above the Aga. A twelve-year-old Lucas, skin bronzed from the Mediterranean sun, grinning with a swimming trophy held high. That boy was a champion. That boy had discipline. That boy had looked at Thomas with something resembling hero worship.
Thomas looked up at the ceiling, toward Lucas's room on the second floor. The weight in his chest wasn't just disappointment; it was a physical ache, a sense of structural failure. He was an engineer; he knew how to build bridges that didn't collapse. But he couldn't build a bridge to his own son.
He stood up, the legs of his stool scraping against the tile like a glass-cutter. He wore his grey tracksuit, zipped to the chin, ready for his morning run. But first, it was time for the morning wake-up. It was time to inspect the troops
