Brandon leaned in close enough that I could smell his espresso breath. “Do everyone a favor. Limp back out the way you came, and next time, try applying somewhere that matches your skill set. I hear the gas station on Fifth is hiring.” He straightened his tie and turned to the small crowd of interns gathering by the coffee bar, playing to his audience. “This is why we do in-person screenings, people. Saves us from wasting a real interview slot.” I bent down slowly, picked the crumpled resume out of the ashtray, and smoothed it against my thigh. I didn’t say a word. I just nodded once, turned, and walked toward the revolving door. That’s when the lobby went quiet in a different way. Three black SUVs slid up onto the curb outside, hazards flashing. Six men in dark suits stepped out in perfect formation and held the doors. A four-star general in full dress uniform walked into the lobby, followed by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs and two members of the Kellerman board of directors. The general stopped directly in front of me, snapped to attention, and saluted. “Colonel Hayes. The car is ready to take you to the Pentagon ceremony, sir. The President is waiting.” Brandon’s coffee cup slipped from his hand and shattered on the marble. The color drained out of his face in real time. The board chairman, an old man I’d served under in Kandahar in 2009, walked past Brandon like he was furniture. He took my crumpled resume out of my hand, looked at it, then looked at his nephew. “Brandon. My office. Now.” He turned back to me with wet eyes. “Colonel, I am so deeply sorry. The analyst position was never the offer. I wanted you on the board. I’ve been trying to reach you for six months.” Brandon opened his mouth. Nothing came out. The receptionist was already crying. I finally spoke, quiet enough that only Brandon could hear. “Real men close deals, son. Not doors.”
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