My brother-in-law laughed at my “Army tech job”—until his Green Beret friend saw the crest on my watch.-iwachan

Kyle’s question landed so softly that, for a second, nobody understood why the room had gone quiet.

Drew still had that half-laugh on his face, the one he used when he expected everyone else to follow him.

But Kyle wasn’t smiling anymore.

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His eyes stayed on my wrist.

“Were you with Unit 13?” he asked again.

I felt the kitchen shrink around me.

The pendant lights hummed above the island. Somewhere upstairs, one of the kids laughed at a cartoon. The cinnamon candle by the sink kept burning like nothing had changed.

But everything had.

I turned the watch face down against my palm.

“No,” I said.

Kyle looked at me.

Not with doubt.

With recognition.

Drew snorted. “Come on, man. You can’t seriously be buying the act.”

Kyle didn’t even glance at him.

“Vance,” he said, quieter now. “That crest wasn’t sold anywhere.”

Mara’s hand tightened around the dish towel.

I saw it out of the corner of my eye.

That little movement hurt more than I expected.

Because she knew me well enough to know I was lying.

And still, for years, she had let Drew turn my silence into a costume.

I set my coffee on the counter.

The ceramic bottom touched the granite with a small, final sound.

“I did support work,” I said. “That’s all.”

Drew raised his beer toward the room.

“There it is. Support work. That’s what I’ve been saying.”

Kyle turned then.

Slowly.

“Stop talking.”

The words were not loud.

They were not dramatic.

That made them worse.

Drew blinked, caught off guard in his own kitchen.

“Excuse me?”

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