“Sit down, sweetheart, this ain’t your fight,” Brant sneered, thumbing toward my booth. He grabbed Dad by the elbow and marched him toward the door, loud enough for the whole place to hear. “Bet you bought that jacket at a thrift store, huh? Real vets don’t beg for eggs.” He shoved a napkin dispenser into Dad’s chest and told him to “go panhandle somewhere with a softer sidewalk.” That’s when the bell over the door jingled. Three men in dark suits stepped in, rain still beading on their shoulders, earpieces coiled behind clean-shaven jaws. Behind them, a tall woman in Army Service Uniform — full dress blues, rows of ribbons stacked like a wall — scanned the room once and locked eyes on my father. Brant’s smile flickered. “Can I — can I help you, ma’am?” She walked straight past him like he was furniture. She stopped in front of Dad, came to attention so sharp the whole diner heard her heels click, and rendered a slow, textbook salute. “Sergeant First Class Delaney. The Secretary is waiting in the car, sir. We’ve been looking for you for eleven months.” Dad’s hand trembled as he returned the salute. She turned her head one inch toward Brant. “You put your hands on a Distinguished Service Cross recipient. On a man whose name is being carved into a monument in Arlington next Sunday.” Brant’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. She slid a folded flag-blue envelope onto the counter — White House seal, gold embossed — and said, quiet as a blade, “He’s the reason you get to be rude in a warm diner, son. Apologize. Slowly. And mean it.” Brant’s knees actually buckled against the hostess stand. The waitresses were crying. I was crying. Dad just squeezed my hand under the table and whispered, “Told you not to make a scene, kiddo.”
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