The morning broke hot and heavy with the kind of oppressive heat that made the air shimmer. It made the landscape look like liquid glass even before the sun cleared the ridgeline. By seven, the temperature was already climbing toward what the weather service cheerfully called "dangerously hot." Riley could feel sweat beading despite the early hour.
She pushed damp strands of hair back from her face as she crossed the dusty yard toward the storage area. She sighed and wiped her hand on her slacks because her clipboard was slick in her grip. The metal felt warm to the touch. Everything did.
Today's ESG checklist stretched before her. It was a familiar ritual. First, she needed to verify thedrum seals in the primary storage yard. Then she’d confirm all protective barriers remained intact after yesterday's freak windstorm. Next, she’d check the secondary containment berms for any signs of structural compromise. It was her usual dance of bureaucratic diligence that kept the international inspectors happy and her father’s insurance premiums manageable.
Routine,she told herself firmly.Just another routine inspection.
But even as she thought it, the word felt hollow. Nothing had felt routine since her father's phone call. Nothing had felt safe since she'd started noticing patterns in those shipping manifests.
She signed in at the safety station. Even her signature was a careful checkmark for the bureaucratic anchor that hung around most companies. The weight of regulation was heavy, and it was her responsibility to make sure it was met. The attendant, Mal, barely glanced up from his newspaper as he handed her a hard hat and safety glasses.
"Hot one today," he observed, already turning back to the sports section.
"Supposed to hit one-fifteen by noon," Rileyreplied, settling the hard hat on and slipping her safety glasses into place.
The familiar movements of the storage yard danced around her as she stepped through the gate. It was almost soothing. The rumble of diesel engines warming up for the day shift, the hiss of hydraulic systems, the rhythmicbeep-beep-beepof vehicles backing up were a routine she knew well. Somewhere in the distance, a radio crackled with dispatched instructions, the words indistinct but seemingly urgent.
She walked past a forklift methodically unloading a stack of fresh drums from an eighteen-wheeler. Each container wore the bright yellow-and-black hazard symbols that had become as familiar to her as traffic signs. The metallic smell of processed ore floated in the air, mixing with diesel exhaust and the sharp chemical smell of industrial solvents.
"Stay clear of the marked lanes!" the forklift operator called over his shoulder without turning around. He was a big man with arms the size of tree trunks.
"I'm fine, thanks," Riley called back. She turned and scanned the yard. But her gaze wasn't focused on drum seals or containment barriers. Becausetoday, something made her look across the yard. Shit.
There, near the far side of the main warehouse, stood a familiar figure, albeit partially hidden.
Mauro Delgado.
He wasn't doing anything obviously suspicious. Just standing with Carlos Mendez, one of the shift supervisors. She narrowed her gaze. Both men held clipboards in their hands, and their heads were bent together, talking. It looked like a perfectly normal discussion.Nothing to see here, folks.But she didn’t like it. She’d never seen Mauro in the yard. Yet there he was, apparently in the kind of mundane conversation that happened a hundred times a day in a facility this size.
But even from fifty yards away, even with half a dozen pieces of heavy machinery between them, Riley felt weirded out with the coincidence. Again, the man had appeared like magic where she was. The hair on her arms prickled.
Mauro's dark eyes found hers across the dusty expanse of the yard, held for a fraction of a second too long, then returned to his conversation with Carlos.Casual. Natural. Except for the way his body remained turned in her direction.
You're being paranoid. She rolled her eyes andforced her attention back to her clipboard.He works here. He has every right to be in the storage yard.But she’d never seen him there before.
But the rational voice in her head was being steadily drowned out by something more basic. Instinct told her the man was following her, watching her, and it screamed louder each time she saw him.
She purposefully turned her focus back to her task with determination. She strode over to the first inspection barrier and crouched. The metal was already hot enough to burn through her khakis if she knelt on it, so she balanced on the balls of her feet, clipboard balanced on one knee as she checked the seal integrity on the nearest drum.
The sun was a merciless weight on her neck and shoulders. Her sweat turned her button-down shirt into a damp second skin. Sweat dripped from her hairline onto the inspection form. In spots, it blurred the blue ink of her pen.
Focus. She pushed her attention from the heat to the work at hand.Seal number 447-A, manufactured date, visual inspection for cracks or degradation ...
The forklift engine behind her rumbled steadily, a mechanical heartbeat that had become white noise. The operator was loading the next pallet, hydraulicswhining as the forks lifted another stack of drums toward the truck bed
She'd just noted a small scratch on the drum's surface—cosmetic damage and well within acceptable parameters—when the movement around her seemed to shift.
It was subtle at first, just a change in the engine's pitch that registered somewhere in her conscious thought. The rumble deepened, became more strained, like a motor working harder than it should. She frowned and turned back toward the unusual sound. A sharp metallicpingcut through the industrial noise like a gunshot.
Riley jerked her gaze up. Her instincts screameddangerbefore her brain had time to process what she was seeing.
The forklift's mast was tilted at an odd angle. On the lift, the massive load of drums swayed precariously. The restraint chains that should have been holding the stack secure hung loose, dangling uselessly from the pallet frame. Riley stood and yelled, “The hydraulic cylinder is extended too far!”
Time entered a freaky slow-motion warp. She could see everything happening in stop motion frames. The operator's face went white as he realized what was happening. His thick hands scrambling forcontrols that were no longer responding properly. The top tier of drums sliding forward. The sound of steel grinding against steel screeched painfully, a dangerous sound that hit a primal fear deep inside her.
The first drum teetered on the edge of the pallet, physics and gravity engaged in their eternal partnership.
Move,her brain screamed.MOVE NOW.