They Tried To Remove The Old Man With The Camera Until A Marine Saw The Photograph

Chapter 1: The Man With The Camera Was Blocking The Front Row

“You can’t stand there, sir.”

James Walker kept his hand over the cracked leather case against his ribs as if the security guard had reached for his heart instead of the strap.

The guard was young enough to call him sir without meaning it. His black jacket still held its pressed shape, his earpiece wire tucked neatly behind one ear. Beyond him, white folding chairs faced the memorial wall in careful rows. A podium stood near the front, draped with a dark cloth. Small flags waited in a bundle beside the base. Families had begun to gather behind the rope line, their voices low, their programs folded in half.

James had not come for the podium.

He had come for the third panel from the left, six rows down, where the morning light touched only part of a name.

The camera hung from his neck on a worn brown strap. It was an old film camera, heavy and black, with silver edges rubbed dull by years of hands. The leather case attached to it had a cracked corner and a brass snap that no longer closed unless James pressed it twice. He pressed it now.

“Sir,” the guard repeated, firmer this time. “This area is restricted until after the ceremony.”

James looked past him.

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