The ballroom went silent — but not because of me. The double doors at the back opened, and every officer in the room stood at attention so fast it sounded like a rifle shot. Four-Star General Harlan Briggs walked in, followed by three colonels and my old commanding officer. Vanessa froze mid-laugh, still standing on my fingers. “Captain Elias Vance,” the general said, voice carrying to every corner. “Apologies for the delay. Traffic from the Pentagon.” He walked straight past the bride, past Vanessa, and stopped in front of my chair. Then he saluted me. Held it. “Son, on behalf of a grateful nation, I’m here as your escort. The President asked me personally.” He bent down, picked up my father’s letter, brushed it off, and placed it gently in my lap. Vanessa’s face drained of every color. “E-escort? For what?” she stammered. The general turned slowly. “Captain Vance is receiving the Medal of Honor on Monday for pulling nine soldiers out of a burning transport — the same explosion that took his legs. The ceremony will be broadcast live. I came early because he asked if I’d give his sister away in his father’s place today.” Claire burst into tears. Marcus stepped away from Vanessa like she was on fire. “You…you stepped on a Medal of Honor recipient’s hand,” one of the colonels said quietly. Vanessa tried to laugh. “I was joking, Elias, sweetie, you know I—” I finally spoke. “You called my father’s last words a pity speech.” I nodded to my sister. “Claire. It’s your choice. But that woman does not stand next to you today.” Claire looked at Vanessa, then at Marcus. “Get her out.” Security escorted Vanessa past two hundred silent guests, past every soldier still standing at attention, past the wedding photographer who was, thankfully, still recording. The video hit forty million views by Tuesday. Vanessa’s PR firm dropped her Wednesday. And on Monday, when the President placed that ribbon around my neck, my sister was in the front row — holding our father’s letter, finally read aloud, exactly the way he wanted.
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