A Ballroom Mocked Her Service Until A Four-Star General Saluted-iwachan

The driveway to Magnolia Oaks curved under old live oaks that had been there long enough to watch families become proud, cruel, rich, forgiven, and forgotten.

Spanish moss hung from the branches like gray lace.

The air smelled like jasmine, river water, cut grass, and perfume that probably cost more than my first month of rent.

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I slowed the rental SUV beside the valet stand and let the engine idle for a breath too long.

Inside the estate, music drifted through the open doors, soft and polished.

String instruments have a way of making money sound gentle.

The invitation on my phone said the ceremony had ended at 6:00 p.m. and the reception began at 6:30.

The clock on the dash read 6:18.

Early enough to be polite.

Late enough to avoid the family photos.

On the passenger seat beside me was a black garment bag folded once at the waist.

Inside it, beneath a simple black dress jacket I did not need, was my uniform.

Pressed.

Inspected.

Medals aligned in the correct order.

Name tape clean.

Shoes shined.

Not because I wanted attention.

Not because I wanted to make my brother’s wedding about me.

Because after twenty years in uniform, some habits move deeper than preference.

You check exits.

You know where the nearest cover is.

You keep your papers in order.

You bring the uniform because the day you decide you will not need it is often the day someone makes you wish you had.

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