The Young Soldier Dumped His Tray at the Old Cafeteria Woman’s Feet, Then Saw the Scar Under Her Glove

Chapter 1: The Tray Fell Before the Room Went Quiet

The meatloaf hit the floor first, sliding between Karen Wilson’s black shoes in a brown smear of gravy before the cup bounced once and rolled under the serving counter.

For one second, the mess hall kept moving.

Trays scraped. Plastic forks clicked against plates. Steam pushed from the hot line in white bursts. Somewhere near the drink station, a soldier laughed too loudly at something that had nothing to do with her.

Then the rest of the tray came down.

Green beans scattered across the tile. A roll split open against the leg of the sneeze guard. The metal tray clattered flat at Karen’s feet, loud enough to cut through every conversation in the room.

The young soldier standing in front of her did not bend to pick it up.

He kept one hand loose at his side and the other curled near his belt, as if the mess on the floor were something she had placed there for him. His face was flushed from the lunch rush heat and from being watched. The name tape on his uniform read ANDERSON. Karen had seen him come through twice that week with a line of younger soldiers behind him, his chin lifted, his voice always a little sharper when they were close enough to hear.

“Maybe if you people moved faster,” he said, “my squad wouldn’t be standing here waiting on cold food.”

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