The Tattoo That Made a Delta Force Commander Go Pale-mdue - Chainityai

The Tattoo That Made a Delta Force Commander Go Pale-mdue

I watched a battle-hardened Delta Force commander go pale because of a tattoo hidden beneath my sleeve.

Seconds earlier, my mother had tried to push me out of a family photo in front of more than sixty guests.

She did it with a smile.

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That was always how she did the worst things.

My name is Emma Bennett, and in my family, I was not the daughter people bragged about.

I was the one they called when chairs had to be moved, ice had to be bought, boxes had to be carried, or somebody needed to stand quietly in the background and not ask for anything.

My younger brother, Jake, had always been the center of the room.

Captain Jake Bennett.

West Point graduate.

Decorated officer.

My parents’ favorite story.

Every family has a language, even when nobody admits they are speaking one.

In ours, Jake meant pride.

Emma meant help.

The welcome-home celebration was held at my parents’ house in Arlington, Virginia, on a warm evening that smelled like grilled steak, clipped grass, and the expensive floral candles my mother liked to burn whenever guests were coming.

String lights crossed the backyard from the porch to the old oak tree.

Servers moved between catered tables with trays of shrimp, steak bites, and little square desserts nobody could eat without dropping crumbs.

Military officers, contractors, neighbors, and old Army friends stood in clusters, laughing under the lights.

There were more than sixty people there.

My mother had counted twice.

She wanted the party to look effortless, which meant she had been working me since ten that morning.

By 7:30 p.m., my feet hurt inside my flats, my hair had started slipping out of its clip, and the inside of my right wrist was raw from hauling bags of ice out of the garage freezer.

I had refilled the tea urn.

I had carried plates from the kitchen.

I had found extra napkins in the laundry room because my mother did not like paper towels near catered food.

I had smiled when people said, “You must be so proud of your brother.”

I was proud of him once.

That was the part people never understood.

When we were little, Jake used to crawl into my bed during thunderstorms because he hated the sound of rain hitting the windows.

I would make up stories until he fell asleep.

I taught him how to ride a bike in the driveway after our father lost patience and went inside.

I signed his cast in blue marker when he broke his wrist at twelve.

I sat through every one of his football games in high school, even when he stopped looking into the bleachers for me.

The distance did not happen all at once.

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