Brayden wasn’t done. He snatched the small folded flag pin off the man’s lapel, held it up like a bug, and dropped it into a half-empty glass of red wine on the nearest table. “Oops,” he said. “Guess your little country pin needed a bath.” The veteran didn’t move. He just stared at the glass. My hands were shaking so hard the water on my tray was sloshing. A woman at table nine opened her mouth, then closed it. A man in a suit suddenly became very interested in his phone. Nobody helped. Brayden leaned in close and whispered something I couldn’t hear, and the old man’s jaw tightened, but he only nodded once and turned toward the door. He was almost at the exit when we heard the engines. Three black SUVs came up the curb so fast the valet jumped back. Doors opened in perfect unison. Men and women in sharp dark uniforms, chests full of ribbons I didn’t recognize, formed two clean lines from the curb to our front door. A four-star general — I later learned his rank from the news — walked straight past Brayden without looking at him, stopped in front of the old man, and snapped into the crispest salute I have ever seen in my life. “Sir. The convoy is ready. The President is waiting on your call.” Brayden’s face went the color of cold oatmeal. The old man slowly reached into the wineglass, fished out his flag pin, wiped it on a napkin, and pinned it carefully back over his heart. Then, for the first time, he looked at Brayden. “Son,” he said gently, “the reservation under ‘Medal of Honor Ceremony, 1900 hours’ — that was mine.” He tipped an invisible hat to me, the shaking waitress, and walked out between two rows of saluting soldiers. Brayden was still standing there, holding a menu, when the health inspector’s car pulled up behind the last SUV. Turns out the general had made one other phone call on the ride over.
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