Faithful Service

Part I — Bronze Memory

Daniel Mercer stopped walking when he saw the statue.

It stood at the center of the memorial lawn, bronze darkened by old rain, a soldier kneeling before a German shepherd with both hands cupping the dog’s face. Their foreheads nearly touched. The posture was so exact that Daniel felt his chest tighten before he could stop it. For one second the neat Kentucky morning vanished, and mud came back. Heat came back. The smell of wet canvas came back.

Under the statue, cut into the stone, were two words:

Faithful Service

He stared at them too long.

Around him, people moved in respectful ceremony clothes—veterans in blazers, active-duty handlers in dress uniform, spouses holding programs, children too young to understand why adults lowered their voices near memorials. Somewhere to his left, a speaker tested a microphone. Somewhere behind him, a dog barked once and was hushed.

Daniel kept his face still. He had spent fifty years learning how.

“Mr. Mercer?”

Similar Posts

  • The Names She Carried

    Part I — The Patch Platoon Sergeant Cole Mercer pointed at the empty square of Velcro on Mara Voss’s chest like it was a crime scene. “Where is it?” The drill hall went still. Forty soldiers stood in formation under the dull white lights, boots aligned, shoulders squared, eyes forward except for the ones pretending…

  • The Gate They Sealed

    Part I — The Ceremony of Silence Mara Vale tasted blood before she tasted fear. It ran warm from the split inside her lip, down the corner of her mouth, and settled in a thin red line along her chin. Three companies of soldiers stood across from her on the parade ground, their boots aligned,…

  • The Wind Was Hers

    Part I — The Miss The third shot missed by less than a handspan, but the whole firing line reacted like Private Jonah Ellis had dropped his rifle and run. Dust kicked up beyond the steel target, pale and dry against the desert berm. The circular plate swung in the distance without ringing. For one…

  • The Mud on His Boot

    Part I — The Cloth Commander Mara Voss was on her knees when the room decided she was weak. The tile beneath her was sticky with spilled beer and dust. A plastic tray sat beside her hip. In her right hand, she held a white canteen cloth already stained brown at the edges. In front…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *