Marcus wasn’t done. He stood up, grabbed a dinner roll off his plate, and lobbed it at my chest. “Catch, hero. Pretend it’s a grenade.” The roll bounced off my apron and rolled under a table. His whole section laughed. Denise grabbed my arm hard enough to bruise and started marching me toward the service elevator, whispering that corporate did not need a scene and that if I “had a problem with a paying guest” I could collect my final check on Monday. I remember thinking, calmly, that I had survived worse Tuesdays in Helvand province than this. Then the maitre d’s earpiece crackled. Then it crackled again. Then the front doors of the restaurant opened and eight men in dark suits walked in single file, earpieces coiled, hands folded in front of them, scanning corners. Behind them came a woman in Army dress blues so decorated the shoulder boards looked heavy, followed by a four-star general I recognized from a briefing room in Kandahar. The entire restaurant stood up on instinct. The general’s eyes swept the room once, locked onto me, and softened. “Captain Rivera,” he said, and his voice carried. “We’ve been looking for you for six months. The President would like a word before Friday’s ceremony. Your Medal is engraved and waiting.” Denise’s hand fell off my arm like it had been unplugged. Marcus’s dinner roll was still on the floor by his three-thousand-dollar loafers. His fiancee had gone the color of the tablecloth. The general turned, slowly, and looked at Marcus for a long, silent count of four. Then he looked at Denise. Then he looked back at me and quietly asked if there was anyone in this room I would like him to have a conversation with, on the record, before we left. I picked up my tray. I smiled for the first time in a year. “Sir,” I said, “I think they’re about to introduce themselves.”
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