Kaleidoscope Eyes, Pt. 02 by Flavian
Copyright © 2020 by Flavian
PART 2
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Any references to sex by characters in this story involve ONLY persons 18 years of age or older. Warning! There is reference to Non-Consensual sex—if that is not to your liking, then feel free to pass on this story; I will understand. Also, there are some mild racial references that are not necessarily PC, but, unfortunately, reflect attitudes that still exist in rural Virginia.
Kudos to blackrandl1958 and her crew, including Qhml1, Stev2244, DFWBeast, Laptopwriter, HDK, Girlinthemoon, and SleeperyJim, for giving my initial draft of this story a thorough review
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and a very-well-deserved slicing-and-dicing. Thanks to all of you; but especially Randi for inviting me along on this adventure and for being honest with me. She really insists on trying to make me a better writer and I appreciate it. ~ Flavian.
****
"I know I am just your mother, but shouldn't you at least pay attention when your boss is speaking to you?" Althea—Mom—asked me.
She always wanted me to call her 'Althea' in the business setting, but I still had to think about it for half a second each time in order to get the titles straight, depending on the circumstances and the presence of others.
"Sorry, Mom," I said as I put my fork down. She had really set up a delightful meal: lobster at the Freemason Abbey Restaurant in downtown Norfolk.
"I just had something happen today that sort of put me back on my ass..." At a frown from her, I corrected, "I mean, my backside." I kicked myself internally at that moment. I had decided not to tell her anything about today... or about her already potentially being a grandma... or anything. After my blunder, I realized that her curiosity would be piqued.
"Oh?" she asked. "And what would have had such an impact on you?" Even though she was the head of a major Defense contractor operation, she was still a mother and wanted to know all about—and protect—her baby, if possible.
Well, I wanted to protect her, too, even if just from the disappointment of hearing of the possibility of having a major addition to her life and then finding out that the news was not factual—or permissible—in the first place. I couldn't do that to her. So, I did not lie, but I dissembled in a way to deflect her from the potential hurt.
"That proposal that we bid on at Little Creek Amphibious Base?" I said, truthfully, but actually as a non sequitur, "It looks as if we will be going up against BAE. We may have to push for a partnership and sub to them."
She sighed and then, taking the bait, began to strategize off the top of her head as to how we should approach that bid. I think that she intuited that I was only partly paying attention, because she stopped and put her fork down after a few minutes of talking about contracting strategies.
"What is it, Russ?" she asked. "Are you having second thoughts about doing this type of work?"
I sighed and smiled before answering. "No, Mom. It just seems as if there are a lot of pieces to the puzzle that have to fit into place just right, and at the right time, in order for this type of work to succeed. But..." I waved my hand around slightly, "you have definitely got a good foothold, and an excellent reputation in this area. So, our company should continue to do well; provided we are honest, timely, and we keep our ears open to go for new opportunities or to learn as early as possible about different directions that the Department of Defense is leaning, based on the politics and on Congressional pressure.
"Plus, believe me; two turns in the Sandbox were enough. Even though I was just an aircraft mechanic, we still had our moments of adrenaline-rushing panic. Like the two mortar attacks, and then, when we had those Green-on-Blue attacks inside the wire just over a year ago." Afghan nationals, who we had thought were friendly, would turn on our guys and open fire without warning sometimes, having been secretly radicalized. That type of insider threat was just major scary!
"And then that one scary mission that I got Hey-You-ed for on my first tour... you know, saving those guys in that convoy..." I had never told her the details of that one, beyond meeting Sandy Crawford during that effort, and I hoped that I would never have to. She would be plenty upset if she knew.
"Nope! I'd had enough, and when they asked me to Re-Up; even offering me a bonus, I was glad to get out and come to work for you and Dad. And the pay and benefits here really suit me, too, along with being more the master of my own time, now," I concluded.
"And master of your own facial hair?" she asked with a teasing smile. Mom had always preferred me clean-shaven. She did not approve of my goatee and mustache.
"Yes, Mom, even that," I said back to her with a grin. I knew that this would just be a phase, and that I would eventually shave them off, perhaps within the next few weeks.
As we left the restaurant, Mom headed to her car and, as I turned toward mine, I said, "I am staying at Dad's in Williamsburg tonight; then, it is off to see Sandy tomorrow at Fort Eustis."
"Say hello to your dad; and also say hello to Sandy for me," she said, turning back and giving me a kiss on the cheek. "And tell him not to be a stranger."
"I will, Mom." I looked at my watch, figured that the traffic clog at the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel would be down just to a minor slowdown, and headed out toward my dad's place.
****
The next morning, I was sitting in bleachers next to a pool on Fort Eustis, just south of Williamsburg, now part of the Joint Base Langley-Eustis complex that included Langley Air Force Base about twenty miles away.
"This is just so unique. This doesn't happen anywhere else that I am aware of, at least not here in the U.S.," said Sandy Crawford. He and I in were in our civilian suits, along with Major Tim Dawson in his Army Combat Uniform and black Army beret with his MP brassard, as we all sat in the gallery. Together, we watched the change of command ceremony for the 569th Engineer Dive Detachment.
What was so unique was the venue. They actually read the orders over a loud speaker to the crowd, and over the speakers inside the dive helmets of the ceremony's participants; the guidon bearer, the First Sergeant, a dive-qualified senior officer, and the outgoing and incoming Detachment Commanders.
Yep! They did it all underwater at the unit's dive pool. After all, these were the Army's specialists in salvage diving, and they had to show off their capabilities in a spectacular way.
"Yeah, this is so cool!" responded Major Tim Dawson, the same Military Police Corps officer whom Sandy and I had rescued in Afghanistan. He was now the Deputy Provost Marshal for the post. "Hey, what are we doing for lunch, you guys?"
"Well," I said with a smile as I brought out by corporate AMEX card and flashed it. "I thought that we would dine with the Colonel. And I will pay." They all chuckled and we left after the ceremony.
Over lunch at Colonel Sanders' Kentucky Fried Chicken place just off post, we spent about a half hour just catching up.
Tim was doing well, having made Major since we had seen him in the Sandbox years before; but he felt that he was probably going to pull the pin right at the twenty-year mark. He wanted to be young enough to be considered for employment with the BATF, or the DEA; or maybe even the FBI, after he retired from the Army. Who knew?
Sandy was also enjoying himself working for my mom (and me now, I guess) ever since a jump injury had gotten him bounced from military flying and, by his choice, from the Army as a whole, by an overly zealous military flight surgeon. I never had seen the logic of making aviators also be jump qualified, myself, but Special Operations units all had their mystique and traditions to uphold.
Sandy now oversaw the contract that we were part of on Fort Eustis, subbing to Lockheed-Martin, for training young Fifteen-Romeo helicopter fixers—yep, just like I had been until earlier in the year.
The difference was that Sandy had managed to keep his security clearance up to snuff, and also helped with training the Soldiers who maintained the Boeing-Hughes MH-6M Little Bird, the light helicopter of choice for our old unit, the Night Stalkers. The secure hangar at Felker Army Airfield here at Fort Eustis had two of the non-attack, troop-carrier variants for use in training the young Soldiers who would be maintaining them back at Campbell and when deployed.
"So, Russ," said Tim to me, changing the subject, "what has been going on in your life since you got out and went into contract work?"
I gave them the basic rundown; how I had survived two turns in 'The Dirt' and did not want anything more to do with that business, directly. I also told him that I eventually wanted to settle down, marry well, and have a passel of kids. At this point, I paused as the image of dimples and multi-colored eyes suddenly came to mind. I must have zoned out for a noticeable time.