They Thought the Old Man in the Olive Cap Had Wandered Onto the Parade Ground

Chapter 1: The Old Cap at Gate Three

The gate guard looked at Donald Walker’s invitation, then at Donald’s face, then down at the invitation again as if the paper had made a mistake.

Behind the guard station, beyond the chain-link fence and the clipped grass, the parade ground was already waking. A line of white chairs stood under the morning sun. Flags moved in a light wind. Somewhere out of sight, a band tested one brass note and let it hang in the air before cutting it short.

Donald kept both hands on his old olive cap.

He had not worn the cap in years. The brim had gone soft where his thumb had held it too many times. The cloth had faded unevenly, darker around the inside band, paler at the crown. The uniform beneath his light jacket had been brushed, pressed, and brushed again the night before, though no amount of care could make it belong to this decade. Its color was old Army green, plain and quiet among the bright formal uniforms moving beyond the gate.

The guard shifted his weight. “Sir, I’m not seeing you on the access list.”

Donald nodded once, as if this were a weather report.

“I have this,” he said.

The guard had already seen the invitation, but Donald held it out again. The paper trembled only at the corner. He tightened his fingers until it stopped.

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