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Her Father's Medal, Her Own War

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 678    |    Released on: 17/06/2025

ge of our living room, the silence d

note was crump

ime, it

more insulting than their usual indifference. "No

om.

oken mirror. Wild eyes, tear-streaked face

e I

nning. They were crush

My scholarship was gone. Our home was a disaster zone. Our communit

hem destroy everything Dad and Mom worked

from Mom' s shattered potted plants, the sight of D

Patc

grief and rage

im. For what?

. It solidified something

y at first, picking up br

oset, buried under a pile

old foo

mories he wasn' t ready to face, an

he latches. They were sti

d something else, someth

ress uniform, the deep blue fabric stil

ed the

dal of

the blue ribbon with its white

the lives he saved, the ultimate sacrifice he made

rs. Commendations, notes from his

"sacrifice," "unwaveri

out, but my father. The man who taught me to ride a bike, who told

was for the right reasons. He stood up f

if he saw what wa

ullies win. He wouldn't

d idea began to

police, the city officials, the

a local hero. He was

family, weren't they? The

used to say. A

his family would

razy shot. But it was t

photo of Dad in his uniform from the mantelpiece – one of the f

rgency cash, the money Emily had pains

ase where Dad had been stationed, where

had talked about him

if anyone would unders

ad t

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Her Father's Medal, Her Own War
Her Father's Medal, Her Own War
“My life was finally looking up. The email glowed on my phone: "Congratulations, Sarah Miller!" – a full scholarship to a top university, my ticket out of our small town and a way to honor my parents' memory. My sister, Emily, who' d been my rock running our family diner, Miller' s Plate, since Mom and Dad passed, screamed with joy with me. But our joy shattered when Mark Henderson, the spoiled son of the town's most powerful developer, swaggered into Miller's Plate. He and his thugs brutally assaulted Emily, leaving her broken and our diner in ruins, just because she refused to sell our land. The nightmare deepened at the police station. Chief Williams, clearly in Art Henderson' s pocket, dismissed it as a "mutual altercation" and advised me to take their dirty money. Then, my scholarship was mysteriously rescinded, erasing my future. My home was savagely vandalized, and our beloved cat, Patches, was found dead, a cruel message pinned to his collar: "Next time, it' s you." Every lawyer turned me away, and our once-supportive neighbors, cowed by the Hendersons' influence, looked the other way. I felt utterly crushed, alone against an empire of corruption and violence. My sister lay critical in the ICU, our home was a wreck, and they' d taken everything. What else was left for them to destroy? Amidst the wreckage, I stumbled upon my late Marine father's old footlocker. Inside, I found his Medal of Honor. "Semper Fi," he used to say – Always Faithful. A desperate, impossible hope ignited: if the local system was broken, maybe his military family, General Peterson, could remind them what justice truly meant. I clutched the medal, buying a bus ticket to Camp Lejeune, ready for the fight of my life.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10