They Turned Away The Old Man In The Worn Brown Coat From The Center Bearing His Name

Chapter 1: The Invitation Softened From Being Read Too Often

William Mercer stood in his kitchen with his hand on the light switch, staring at the invitation he had almost left behind.

The envelope lay on the table beside the wooden box, both of them exactly where Margaret had placed them in his mind every morning since her death, though her hands had not touched that table in eight months. The invitation had once been stiff and cream-colored, the kind of paper chosen by committees that believed thickness could make a promise official. Now its edges were soft from being opened, folded, opened again, and held too long.

Outside the window, rain tapped against the glass. Across town, people were already arriving beneath the bright new lights of the Mercer Veterans Recovery Center.

William had put on his old brown coat because it was closest to the door. One button was missing near the collar. Margaret had once threatened to replace all of them just to make the coat stop looking ashamed of itself. He had told her the coat had survived worse criticism than hers. She had laughed, then fixed only the loose button at the sleeve, because she knew some battles were not worth winning.

Now the sleeve button remained, tight and dark, the only one that still looked new.

He touched the invitation but did not pick it up.

The ceremony would begin at seven. The ribbon would be stretched across the auditorium entrance. Officials would stand under the lights. Donors would shake hands in front of cameras. Someone would speak too long about vision. Someone else would say sacrifice with the soft voice people used when they had not had to make one.

William turned toward the sink, where one cup sat upside down on a towel. He had washed it that morning, though it had not been dirty. Since Margaret died, he had discovered that a man could fill a day with small unnecessary tasks and still feel time staring at him.

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