The Old Man In The Red Jacket Spilled Nothing But Their Shame

Chapter 1: The Hand On The Red Jacket

The young soldier’s hand closed on Donald Martin’s red jacket before Donald could set down his fork.

The grip came hard and high, just below the collarbone, folding the old leather into a fistful of red creases. Donald felt the pull through his shirt, through his thin chest, through the small chain that rested against his skin. The cafeteria tray bumped against his wrist. The orange drink shivered in its plastic cup.

“Sir, you need to stand up,” the soldier said.

Donald looked first at the hand.

It was a young hand, clean and strong, the knuckles pale from the force of the grip. There was a small nick near the thumb, maybe from a doorframe, maybe from a rifle rack, maybe from a careless morning. Donald noticed things like that before he noticed anger. He had learned, a long time ago, that anger was usually late to arrive. Hands arrived first.

“I’m eating,” Donald said.

His voice came out quieter than he intended. Around him, forks slowed. Trays stopped sliding. The long military cafeteria, loud a moment earlier with lunch noise and chair legs and young men laughing too hard at nothing, seemed to draw in around his table.

The soldier leaned closer. His name tape read WHITE.

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