The Salute At Her Grandfather's Funeral That Silenced Her Father-ruby - Chainityai

The Salute At Her Grandfather’s Funeral That Silenced Her Father-ruby

The first thing my father said to me at my grandfather’s funeral was, “Still pretending the Army needs another doctor?”

He did not lower his voice.

Richard Carter never lowered his voice when embarrassment could be useful.

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He said it in the reception room of the Army Navy Country Club, under chandeliers that made the whole place look cleaner than it felt.

Rainwater darkened the shoulders of black coats.

Bourbon glasses caught little squares of light.

The air smelled like wet wool, lemon polish, expensive cologne, and shrimp cocktail that had been sitting too long under silver lids.

My grandfather, General Raymond Carter, had been in the ground less than an hour.

I was still standing with his memorial program tucked beneath my arm.

My dress uniform was damp at the shoulders.

My gloves were folded in one hand.

My leave papers were inside them, stamped and approved through the Army medical chain three days earlier.

Every document on me said I had been granted permission to be there.

Every face in that room suggested otherwise.

“Hello, Dad,” I said.

He looked me over the way he used to inspect a crooked tie before church.

Only this time, there was nothing fatherly in it.

His eyes stopped on my ribbons.

Then they dropped to the medical corps insignia at my collar.

Then his mouth turned into the same thin smile I had learned to survive when I was fourteen.

“The family doctor finally came home,” he said. “Should we all line up for aspirin?”

A defense contractor near him laughed into his glass.

It was a small laugh, the kind men use when they are not sure whether cruelty is safe yet.

My younger brother Daniel did not have that problem.

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