They mocked the quiet old man in the diner — until three generals walked

Then the bell above the door rang, and everything in that diner changed. Three men in full dress uniform walked in, ribbons and stars catching the afternoon light, and behind them a woman in a dark suit carrying a folded flag in a wooden case. The manager straightened his tie, put on his brightest smile, and hurried forward to offer them the best table by the window. They walked straight past him. They walked straight past the laughing businessmen. They stopped in front of my little corner booth, and all three of them came to attention and saluted me. Colonel Walter Hayes, sir, the tallest one said, his voice cracking, we have been looking for you for a very long time. The diner went silent. The manager froze with a menu in his hand. The woman stepped forward and knelt beside me, opened the wooden case, and showed me the Medal of Honor citation my commanding officer had written for me almost fifty years ago, a citation that had been lost in a fire and only just recovered. She told me that the twelve men I pulled out of that burning transport in 1971 had spent their whole lives trying to find the quiet farm boy who saved them, and that their children and grandchildren were waiting outside in a bus, because today was the day they finally got to say thank you. I looked down at Eleanor’s blue thread on my sleeve. I told her, out loud this time, that I was not alone after all. The manager tried to apologize. One of the generals simply turned to him and said, this man’s coffee is on the United States of America, for the rest of his life. Then they helped me to my feet, and one by one, twelve grown men walked into that diner and hugged the grandfather they had been searching for.

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