I folded the letter and placed it in my desk drawer, right next to my medals. I took the old threatening letter—the one about dying alone—and tore it into confetti.
The poison was gone.
A year later, a young recruit knocked on my office door. She was brilliant, fierce, and crying.
“Commander Flores? My family… they disowned me for enlisting. I’m getting married at the base chapel next week. I don’t have anyone to walk me down the aisle.”
I looked at her. I saw myself.
“Specialist,” I said, standing up. “It would be my absolute honor.”
The following Saturday, I stood in the vestibule of the chapel. The sun streamed through the stained glass. But this time, the pews weren’t empty. My team was there. David was there. And I wasn’t alone.
I offered my arm to the young bride.
“Ready, soldier?” I asked.
“Ready, Ma’am.”
We walked down the aisle together. I finally understood the pain of the last year. The empty seats at my wedding, the dollar bill, the police confrontation—it hadn’t been a curse. It had been training. It had forged me into the person who could stand here, right now, for her.
Sometimes, the only way to heal your own wound is to become the person you once needed.
“Thank you for showing up,” she whispered to me at the altar.
I smiled, looking at David in the front row. “Always.”
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