The Young Officer Tried To Remove The Old Man From The Podium, Then Saw His Face In The Memorial Photo

Chapter 1: The Old Man With The Folded White Map

The security aide at the hangar door looked at Edward Clark’s invitation, then at Edward’s coat, then back at the invitation as if one of them had to be lying.

Behind the aide, the military hangar had been polished into ceremony. Rows of folding chairs faced a wooden podium. American flags stood in careful formation beneath the high steel beams. A large banner near the stage read RIDGE 17 MEMORIAL OBSERVANCE, its blue letters sharp enough to be seen from the parking lot. Uniformed soldiers moved between the rows with clipboards, straightening programs and checking name cards. Their shoes clicked against the concrete with the neat impatience of people who had been told the schedule mattered.

Edward stood just outside the threshold, one hand resting on the head of his cane, the other holding a folded white paper against his chest.

It was not really paper. Not anymore.

The creases had softened with age. The corners had yellowed despite the careful way he kept it wrapped. To anyone passing quickly, it looked like a wrinkled handout or an old man’s misplaced note. Edward knew what it had once been before time, sweat, rain, and ash had reduced it to something fragile enough to tear if handled badly.

A field map.

A piece of ground.

A decision that had never stopped returning to him.

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