cnu-“GO CHANGE, YOU LOOK CHEAP,” MY FATHER LAUGHED AFTER MY MOTHER SPLASHED WINE ALL OVER MY DRESS AT HIS DIAMOND JUBILEE—SO I WALKED OUT IN SILENCE, RETURNED WEARING A GENERAL’S MESS UNIFORM, AND STOOD AT THE TOP OF THE BALLROOM STAIRS UNTIL THE MUSIC DIED, THE ROOM FROZE, AND THE MAN WHO SPENT MY WHOLE LIFE CALLING ME A FAILURE STARED AT MY SHOULDERS, WENT WHITE, AND WHISPERED, “WAIT… ARE THOSE TWO STARS?”

My aide, a sharp young Captain named Vargas, knocked on the door.

“Ma’am,” she said, “you have a letter. It’s flagged as personal, but it was sent to the official command address.”

She handed me a thick envelope. I recognized the handwriting immediately. It was my father’s scrawl—heavy, jagged, demanding.

I opened it.

There was no apology inside. No “I’m sorry I treated you like garbage.” No “I’m proud of you.”

Instead, there was a trifold brochure for Patriot’s Rest, an exclusive, high-end military retirement community in Florida. It was the kind of place with private golf courses and medical staff that saluted you.

Attached to the brochure was a handwritten note.

Elena,

They have a waitlist of five years, but they expedite processing for the immediate family members of General Officers. I need a letter of recommendation from you. It needs to be on official letterhead. Your mother hates the stairs in our current house.

Do this for us. Family helps family.

Dad.

I read it twice. The audacity was almost impressive. He still didn’t get it. He thought rank was a magic wand you waved to get better parking spots and country club access. He didn’t understand that rank was a burden. It was earned in blood and sacrifice.

He wanted the General’s signature, but he had treated the daughter like a nuisance.

I picked up my pen.

I didn’t write a letter of recommendation. I took a standard routing slip and clipped it to the brochure. On the slip, I wrote one sentence in red ink.

Applicant does not meet the standards for priority status. Process through normal civilian channels.

I handed the packet back to my aide.

“Ma’am,” she asked, “what do you want me to do with this?”

“Send it to the standard processing center in St. Louis,” I said. “The one for regular veterans. No priority tags.”

“That will take six months just to get opened, Ma’am,” she noted, raising an eyebrow.

“I know,” I said, turning back to my screens. “He has plenty of time. Dismissed.”

Captain Vargas saluted and walked out.

I turned my chair to look out the window at the Potomac River. The sun was setting, casting long shadows over the capital. I was Major General Elena Ross. I had a Corps to run. I didn’t have time for people who only loved the uniform and not the soldier inside it.

My father wanted a salute. He got one. That was the last thing he was ever going to get from me.

Next »
Next »

Leave a Reply

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