The Empty Chair at the Navy Ceremony Hid a Thirty-One-Year Lie-Cherry - Chainityai

The Empty Chair at the Navy Ceremony Hid a Thirty-One-Year Lie-Cherry

The empty chair was the first thing Vice Admiral Thomas Harlan saw.

Not the podium.

Not the flags snapping hard in the salt wind.

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Not the brass band waiting near the water with trumpets lifted and polished enough to flash in the morning light.

The chair.

Or rather, the place where the chair should have been.

Naval Station Norfolk had dressed the pier for a morning of respect.

Rows of white folding chairs faced the water.

A blue canopy covered the stage.

The United States Navy seal had been bolted to the front of the podium, polished so brightly that it caught the sun every time someone moved past it.

Sailors in dress whites stood in neat lines along the walkway, and families held ceremony programs with both hands the way people hold something they have been told is important.

By 9:00 a.m., the air smelled like salt, brass polish, hot coffee, and fresh printer ink.

Claire Briggs stood beside the refreshment table with a cardboard box in her arms and tried to make herself breathe normally.

She was thirty-two, dressed in a navy-blue dress and low heels, with a visitor badge clipped to her waist.

Her hair was tied back, but the wind kept pulling loose strands across her cheek.

Every time that happened, she shifted the box against her ribs and refused to let herself reach for her phone again.

She had already taken pictures.

The missing chair.

The program page.

The clipboard.

The front row.

The place where her grandfather’s name should have been.

At 8:17 a.m., Claire had signed through Gate 5 with her driver’s license, Sam’s veteran card, and the printed visitor authorization from Captain Warren Pike’s office.

At 8:31 a.m., a young petty officer had directed them behind Building 14 instead of toward the guest parking near the pier.

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