“For exceptional meritorious service… Major General Elena Vance is hereby promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General.”
Sterling pinned the third star onto my collar. He smiled—rare for him.
“Congratulations, Lieutenant General,” he said.
“Thank you, sir.”
The ceremony was small. William was there, looking healthier. He’d requested a transfer to my command.
Good soldier.
After, we walked down the corridor together. “Have you heard?” William asked quietly.
“About?”
“The lawsuit. The Plaza sued Chloe for damages and cancellation fees.
Bankrupted your father.
He had to liquidate everything to pay the settlement. They lost the house.”
I nodded. Felt a distant pang of pity, like remembering a character in a book I’d read long ago.
“And Chloe?”
“Working as a receptionist at a dental office in Jersey,” William said.
“And she’s suing your father for ‘loss of opportunity.’ They’re destroying each other in court.”
“Told you,” I said. “Starving dogs.”
We reached the exit.
Sunlight on the Potomac. “You know,” William said, “my father considers you family now.
You’re coming for Thanksgiving, right?”
“Is that an order?”
“Yes, Ma’am.”
I walked toward my car.
My driver opened the door. As I sat down, I caught my reflection in the window. The scar on my temple was a thin white line now, barely visible under my cap.
My father had called me filthy.
He was right. I was covered in the filth of the battlefield.
Mud under my fingernails, dust in my lungs. But that filth washes off.
It’s the residue of doing work that matters.
Of saving lives. The stain on their souls—the vanity, the greed, the cruelty—that doesn’t wash off. That’s permanent.
An aide ran up just as we were about to leave.
“General! A letter for you.
From a correctional facility. Your sister missed a court date for the assault charge.”
He handed me a cheap white envelope.
The handwriting was jagged, frantic.
Elena Vance scrawled across the front. I took it. Felt the weight of it.
A lifeline thrown by someone drowning in their own choices, hoping to drag me back into the water.
I looked at the shredder by the car door. Didn’t open the letter.
Didn’t hesitate. I dropped it into the slot.
The machine whirred for a second, turning words into confetti.
“Drive,” I said. The car pulled away, leaving the past in the dust where it belonged.

