The Old Woman Poured Coffee In A Red Apron, Then The Colonel Read Her Name Aloud

Chapter 1: The Woman With The Coffee Pot

The coffee pot was almost too heavy for Christine Carter’s left hand, but she refused to switch it to the right.

Her right hand had begun trembling before dawn.

Not badly. Not enough that anyone else would notice if she kept moving. But enough for her to know. Enough for her to wrap both hands around the steering wheel in the parking lot and wait until the small shake settled beneath her skin.

Now, inside the newly polished dining hall, she held the stainless-steel pot the way she had held field cups, folders, radios, briefing papers, condolence letters, and the edge of a hospital bed when there was nothing left to say. Carefully. Quietly. Without asking the hand to do more than it could.

Steam rose from the spout. The smell of coffee spread through the long room, dark and bitter and familiar.

The place had changed.

New floor. New ceiling lights. New windows along the east wall. Fresh paint covered the old cracks where rainwater once came through in thin brown lines. The serving counter had been rebuilt with smooth metal rails and glass sneeze guards. The old clock was gone. The old noise was gone too, or maybe Christine only remembered it louder: boots scraping, trays sliding, young voices calling across tables, someone laughing too hard because shipping out made every joke sound like it mattered.

She paused near the center aisle.

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