I didn’t shout. I didn’t stand up. I set my burned hand flat on the table, pulled out my phone, and made one short call. Tyler smirked and told the cook to start the timer on how long before “GI Grandpa” cried. Four minutes later, the front windows lit up blue and white — not police, but three matte-black SUVs rolling into the gravel lot in perfect line. The diner door opened and a woman in a crisp Army dress uniform walked in first, followed by two officers with enough ribbons to redecorate the ceiling. Behind them came a tall man in a dark suit carrying a folded flag case and a framed citation. The woman scanned the room once, locked eyes on me, and snapped a salute so sharp it cracked the air. “Master Sergeant,” she said, “the Secretary sends his regrets he couldn’t present this in person.” Tyler’s smirk melted. He tried to laugh, tried to say it was a joke, tried to grab the check back off the counter. The officer beside her turned slowly and asked him to repeat, on the record, what he’d just poured on a decorated combat medic who’d pulled nineteen wounded soldiers out of a collapsed building in 2007. Tyler’s mouth opened and nothing came out. The waitress who’d frozen earlier was already crying and apologizing. A trucker in the corner stood up and quietly saluted. Then the tall man in the suit stepped forward, opened the citation, and began reading my name along with a title Tyler clearly recognized — because the color drained from his face the second he heard which building in Washington I’d been asked to advise at next week. He started stammering that he didn’t know, he didn’t know. I finally stood, pulled a napkin over my burned wrist, and told him the uniform was never the costume. His attitude was.
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