They Called Him a Thief Until the Court Officer Recognized the Medal He Wouldn’t Surrender

Chapter 1: The Judge Told Him to Put the Medal Down

“Put the medal in the tray, Mr. Nelson.”

Samuel kept both hands closed around it.

The evidence tray waited on the clerk’s table, gray plastic beneath fluorescent light. It was the kind used for wallets, keys, pocketknives, anything a person might carry into a courtroom and be required to surrender. The medal did not belong among those things.

Judge Andrew White leaned forward above the wood-paneled bench.

“Mr. Nelson, I have asked you twice.”

Samuel heard the impatience behind the words. He also heard papers turning in the rows behind him, shoes shifting on the tile, the faint breath of people relieved that someone else’s trouble had delayed their own.

His gray jacket pinched across the shoulders. He had bought it nineteen years earlier for a funeral and worn it only when a room required a man to look respectable before it decided whether he was.

The medal rested against his palms. Its red-and-yellow ribbon had faded unevenly. Near the clasp, several crooked stitches crossed the fabric, too large and too tight, pulling one edge higher than the other.

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