My Brother Mocked My Radio Name Until His First Sergeant Froze-Aurelle - Chainityai

My Brother Mocked My Radio Name Until His First Sergeant Froze-Aurelle

The band had stopped between songs when my brother decided I should become the entertainment.

I was standing against the back wall of the battalion social with a paper cup of coffee going cold in my hand, doing what I had become very good at doing.

Taking up as little room as possible.

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His infantry battalion and my helicopter squadron had been pushed into the same hall the night before the workup, with string lights, rented speakers, and young Marines trying to look casual around people they wanted to impress.

My brother Cole stood in the middle of them like he had invented the evening.

He was three beers in, loud and easy, carrying the kind of confidence our father had polished into him since boot camp.

When he saw me, he grinned.

I knew that grin.

Cole crossed the floor, caught my wrist, and turned me toward his Marines like he was presenting a prize at a fair.

“Tell them your radio name,” he said.

Someone laughed before I answered because the setup was already the joke.

Cole lifted his beer.

“Come on, Delaney. Tonight you’re the joke, not family.”

The laugh that followed was not enormous, but it was enough.

It brought back every kitchen table where my father had talked about infantry like it was the only real language courage spoke.

I loved my brother.

That was never the problem.

The problem was that my family had spent thirty years loving a smaller version of me, and I had helped them keep her alive.

I had flown combat tours, earned a Distinguished Flying Cross with combat valor, and still learned to leave that version of myself outside my father’s door.

Then I saw the first sergeant near the coffee urn.

He was older than the rest, square and still, with the kind of quiet that senior enlisted Marines earn and never fully put down.

He had been half smiling at Cole’s routine until the words “radio name” changed his face.

Four days earlier, my squadron had received the tasking.

My section would provide close air support for one infantry battalion through the entire workup and the deployment after it.

When I saw the battalion name, I already knew.

Cole’s battalion.

Then I scrolled the roster and saw the company first sergeant.

Gabriel Reyes.

I had never met him, but I knew the name from a ridge thirteen years earlier, from a radio net full of breathing and dust and men trying not to die.

It would have been easy to ask for a swap and spare Cole the discomfort of learning that his sister was not the person he had been taught to dismiss.

I said no, because those Marines were going overseas, and they were getting the best section on the flight line.

That was mine.

So when Cole turned me into a joke four nights later, the air-support tasking document was already in place, and my aircraft would be over his head for the next year whether he valued it or not.

I looked at him.

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