The Elderly Veteran With The Cafeteria Tray Refused To Explain The Logbook He Mocked

Chapter 1: The Logbook Beside Her Paper Cup

Tyler Green’s hand came down beside Barbara Hall’s tray before she had taken her first bite.

The paper cup trembled once. Not much. Just enough for the pale coffee inside to touch the rim and settle back. Barbara put two fingers around the cup, not to drink from it, but to steady it, the same way she had steadied soup bowls on rolling carts years ago when the dining hall floor had been slick from boots and rain.

The room did not go silent all at once. It changed by degrees. Forks slowed against trays. A chair scraped and stopped halfway back. Two young soldiers at the next table looked over, then looked down, then looked over again.

Tyler leaned across the end of her table in his camouflage uniform, shoulders squared, jaw tight, one palm still planted near her tray. His other hand pointed at the worn black logbook beside her napkin.

“Ma’am,” he said, though there was no respect in the word, “I asked you what this is.”

Barbara looked first at his hand. Clean nails. Strong wrist. Newer watch than regulation required. Then she looked at his face.

“It’s a book,” she said.

A faint smirk moved across his mouth. Behind him, Deborah Wright stood with a clipboard pressed to her chest. She had the dining facility keys clipped to her belt and the expression of someone who had been interrupted in the middle of something already going wrong.

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