Arkhaven logo

An Ordinary Day panel 1

John Foster moved through the factory floor with the certainty of a man who had walked the same path most of his life. The rhythmic percussion of the CNC machines—his machines—created a symphony of industry that pleased him more than any concert hall performance ever could. At precisely seven thirty-five, as he did every morning, he began his inspection.


"Morning, Hector," John said, pausing at the first station. "That batch of brake rotors coming along?"


Hector Ramirez looked up from the control panel, his experienced eyes never fully leaving the surface grinder. "Running smooth, Mr. Foster. We'll hit the two hundred mark by noon."


John nodded, noting the precision of the cut. Details mattered in racing components—a half-a-thousandth variance could mean life or death at 180 miles per hour. He moved methodically down the line, exchanging brief words with each operator, checking their work with the eyes of an engineer who had built this business from a garage operation to a supplier for a dozen international racing teams.


In the wheel department, Danny was hunched over the vertical wheel lathe, his posture mirroring John's own at that age. The boy had his mother's coloring—the MacGregor sandy hair and fair complexion—but the set of his jaw was pure Foster determination.


"Looking good," John said, examining the freshly turned aluminum wheel. "What's the weight coming in at?"


Danny straightened, wiping his hands on his shop apron. "Eight pounds, four ounces. Two ounces lighter than last year's model."


"Those two ounces might be the difference between first and second at Circuit of the Americas.” John allowed himself a small smile of pride. The boy had an instinct for the work, something that couldn't be taught.


"Dad, I've been thinking about that Italian order," Danny said, lowering his voice. "Their specs are off. If we machine to what they sent us, those wheels will vibrate above 160."


John raised an eyebrow. "You checked the calculations?"


"Three times. I think someone transposed numbers in their stress analysis."


"Good catch. Draft an email to their engineering team. Attach your calculations. Copy me." John clasped his son's shoulder briefly. "This is exactly why I want you running this place someday."


The forging department was running hot—literally and figuratively. Heat shimmered above the presses that shaped aluminum into raw wheel forms. Mike Donovan, production manager for fifteen years, approached with a clipboard and the familiar crease between his eyebrows that signaled problems.


"Chicago's delayed again," Mike said without preamble. "Third time this month. Says there's material shortages, but I'm hearing they've taken on some automotive contracts."


John frowned. "We've got that order for the Suzuki team due next month."


"I've got calls in to the Houston shop," Mike replied. "They can't match Chicago's pricing, but they'll deliver on time."


"Make the switch. I'd rather take a five percent cost increase than miss a deadline."


Mike nodded, making a note. "Supply chain isn't what it used to be, that's for sure."


"Nothing is," John replied, a hint of weariness in his voice that he quickly masked. "How's the new alloy performing?"


"Early results look promising. More tensile strength without added weight."


"Good. Keep me posted."


The engineering department was quiet by comparison, four young engineers gazing intently at their CAD workstations. Teresa Chen, his head engineer, approached with a tablet displaying a new brake caliper design.


"The computational fluid dynamics simulation shows a thirty percent improvement in heat dissipation," she explained, swiping through colorful thermal models. "But we'll need to invest in new tooling to get these tolerances."


"Cost estimate?"


"About eighty thousand for the initial setup. We'd recoup it after the first four hundred units."


John studied the design. "Do it. This could be our edge next season."


"I thought you might say that," Teresa smiled, already making notes. "I've drafted the purchase orders. They're in your inbox for approval."


In Quality Assurance, John spent fifteen minutes reviewing test results on a new composite brake pad designed to perform better under extreme heat. The department head, Vernon Williams, had been with him since the beginning, one of his father's old friends who'd taken a chance on a young engineer's dream.


"These are solid numbers, Vern," John said, handing back the report. "When can we move to production?"


"Two weeks of environmental testing left. These need to perform in Sepang humidity and Qatar heat."


"Keep me posted."

Finally, he watched the shipping crew carefully packing finished wheels in custom-molded foam before the sealed crates began their journey to race teams around the world. Logistics manager Patty Hernandez walked alongside him, clipboard in hand.


"DHL's promising delivery to the Malaysian team by Thursday," she said.


"Good. Their race is the week after next. I don't want excuses about equipment delays."


"We've never let them down yet," Patty reminded him with quiet confidence.


"And we won't start now," John agreed.


By nine fifteen, he arrived at his office—spartan except for the framed photographs of his family and the scale models of motorcycles that had won using Foster components. Sarah, his administrative assistant of twelve years, handed him a stack of messages and his schedule for the day.


"Your lunch with Chris is confirmed for noon at Marcel's," she said. "And Marissa called. Wanted me to remind you about Anthony's call tonight—something about contracts.”


John glanced at the clock. Downtown traffic was always unpredictable at lunch hour. "Thanks, Sarah. I'm just going to finish the quarterly projections before I head out."


"Coffee's fresh," she added, nodding toward the pot in the corner of his office.


"You're a lifesaver," John said, meaning it.


He settled behind his desk, scrolling through emails while drinking coffee from the mug Marissa had given him fifteen years ago. "World's Okayest Engineer," it read—a joke between them about his relentless pursuit of perfection. John smiled at the memory of that Christmas morning, the boys still young enough to wake at dawn, Marissa's laugh when he'd unwrapped it.


At ten thirty, his second son Elijah called. Unlike Anthony, who scheduled his calls with military precision, Eli called whenever a thought struck him.


"Dad, have you considered the tax implications of that expansion we discussed?" Eli launched in without greeting, typical of his focused approach to everything.


"Hello to you too, son," John replied, leaning back in his chair.


"Sorry. Hi. But seriously, I've been running the numbers. If we time the equipment purchases right, we could save nearly a hundred thousand in taxes.”


John shifted the conversation to reconciliations and depreciation schedules, letting his son's accountant enthusiasm wash over him. He'd never fully understood Eli's passion for tax code, but he respected it. Each of his sons had found their own path—Anthony to law, Eli to accounting, and Danny, perhaps most surprisingly, back to the family business.


After the call, John returned to the quarterly projections. The numbers told a story of steady growth despite economic headwinds. Foster Precision Components had weathered three recessions in its twenty plus year history, each time emerging stronger. John had built something that would outlast him—a legacy for his sons and their children after them.


At eleven twenty, John shut down his computer and grabbed his jacket. "I'll be back around two," he told Sarah.


"Drive carefully, Mr. Foster," she replied automatically, already turning back to her computer screen.

Copyright


Prophet to the Remnant novel


This book or parts thereof may not be reproduced in any form, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means without prior written permission.


Copyright © 2025 Nibmeister


All rights reserved

Prophet to the Remnant series cover
An Ordinary Day episode cover
450 views0 likes
0 comments

Prophet to the Remnant

Created by
author avatar
Nibmeister
Jesus Christ sends a resurrected Prophet to Christendom and gives him a year and a day to deliver a message and a warning to the remnants of the faithful.
,
List icon
Comment icon
Prev icon
Next icon
Fullscreen icon