A Colonel, A Casket, And The Airport Call That Froze Gate 4B-Cherry - Chainityai

A Colonel, A Casket, And The Airport Call That Froze Gate 4B-Cherry

Gate 4B did not feel like a place where a man’s patience should have been tested.

It was too ordinary for that.

There were families balancing backpacks and carry-ons, business travelers staring down at phones, a child kicking the wheel of a suitcase, and the smell of burnt coffee drifting from a kiosk down the concourse.

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The clock above the gate read 14:05.

Beyond the glass, under the washed-out afternoon light, the ground crew was preparing to load a flag-draped casket into the aircraft.

I stood at the boarding counter with my orders in my hand and reminded myself that this was not about me.

My name is Colonel Edwin Hall.

Thirty-two years in the United States Army had taught me how to breathe through things other people mistook for surrender.

I had been in Fallujah when the air shook hard enough to rattle teeth.

I had walked ground in Kandahar where every step felt like a question that might kill you.

I had medals I rarely wore, not because I was ashamed of them, but because I knew too many names that belonged on metal more than mine did.

That day, though, I wore my dress blues because Corporal Thomas Miller deserved the full weight of the uniform beside him.

He was being brought home to his mother in Ohio.

I had been assigned as his official escort through authorization from the Secretary of Defense’s office, and the sealed Department of Defense travel documents in my hand were clear.

Escort remains until released to next of kin.

That line had sat in my mind since morning.

It was not administrative language to me.

It was a promise.

The boarding area kept moving around me, but my attention stayed on the tarmac.

A ground worker in a reflective vest touched the edge of the casket with the careful hesitation people show when they suddenly realize the job in front of them is sacred.

The flag lay tight and clean over the case.

Even through the glass, I could see the shape of the folded corners.

I turned back to the counter and placed my military ID on top of the travel authorization.

The woman behind the desk barely looked down.

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