They Told The Old Veteran To Stand In The Back Until His Name Stopped The Room

Chapter 1: The Empty Card In The Front Row

The chair in the front row had no name.

Stephen Walker saw it before anyone else did, a small white tent card set between two polished brass chair arms, its folded face turned toward the aisle with nothing printed on it. All around it, the other cards stood in straight ceremonial lines: Daniel Roberts. Nicole Green. Gold Star Families. Seated Veterans. Local Officials. Every name and title had its place. Every place had been measured, printed, checked, and corrected.

Except his.

Stephen stopped with one hand on the back of the chair, not gripping it, only resting his fingers there as if asking the wood whether it belonged to him. The hall was already filling. Boots struck the polished floor in clean, clipped sounds. Volunteers crossed between rows carrying programs. Families murmured near the side walls. At the far end, beneath a row of folded flags, the color guard waited without moving.

He had arrived early so there would be no trouble.

That had been the plan.

Catherine had offered to walk in with him, but he had asked her to park the car and take her time. He had told her he wanted a minute. Not a dramatic minute. Not a moment in front of anyone. Just enough time to find the right chair, sit down, and make his breathing behave before the room became too loud.

The medal made that harder.

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