A Colonel’s Brother Called Her Medals Fake—Then The File Opened-mdue - Chainityai

A Colonel’s Brother Called Her Medals Fake—Then The File Opened-mdue

“Those medals are fake,” Ethan Carter said, and he said it like he wanted the words to bruise me.

The courtroom was too quiet after that.

Rain tapped the courthouse windows in steady gray lines, and the overhead lights made a tired buzzing sound above the benches.

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I could smell wet wool coats from the gallery, floor polish from the aisle, and burnt coffee drifting in from the vending machine by the hallway.

My brother stood beside his attorney in a navy suit that looked bought for this exact performance.

His hair was perfect.

His tie was perfect.

His expression was the same one he used when we were children and he had broken something, hidden the pieces, and waited for our parents to ask me why I was upset.

Behind him, our parents held hands.

My mother had a tissue pressed into her palm.

My father sat upright, jaw tight, eyes forward.

They looked proud.

Not proud of me, the daughter who had served twenty-three years in uniform.

Proud of Ethan, the son who had finally found a way to make my service look like a costume.

Judge Harold Whitaker leaned forward from the bench.

“Mr. Carter,” he said, “you will address the court, not the gallery.”

“Yes, Your Honor,” Ethan said softly.

That was Ethan’s gift.

He could throw a knife and then lower his eyes like the victim.

I sat alone at the defense table with a black folder in front of me and both hands folded on top of it.

There was no husband beside me.

No family behind me.

No chorus of people whispering that I had earned the right to be believed.

There was just me, Rebecca Carter, forty-five years old, colonel in the United States Army, younger sister of the favorite son.

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