As the audience settled into their seats at a formal Navy ceremony, one three-star admiral remained standing. When he noticed someone important was missing from the room, his quiet refusal to sit down triggered a moment that left the entire hall stunned.
The industrial dishwashing unit in the subterranean galley of Naval Station Norfolk roared with a rhythmic, mechanical violence that sounded remarkably like the rotors of a dying Bell UH-1 Iroquois helicopter. For Silas Abernathy, that sound was a blanket. It was a chaotic, deafening noise that successfully drowned out the ghosts that tended to gather when the world got too quiet.
