The Pentagon's Fury
. Or maybe i
humiliation. The grit of the ashes was
protest. My reflection in the shattered glass of a picture fra
Smashed furniture, torn photos, the stench of s
s, was an old wooden footlocker. It had belonged to my father. It wa
I undid the latches.
bons studded with white stars. The Medal of Honor. One was my father's, awarded posthumou
ed American flags. The burial fla
irl, lost in a sea of uniforms. A tall, kind-faced man, my father's best friend, had knelt down in
motion. "The United States Army does not forget its own. If you ever, ever need
years. It seemed like a lifetime ago, a chi
rk. At the Pentagon. I'd seen his
The legal system had failed me. The city had aban
ates Army does no
represented a different kind of law, a different k
the foo
, one I had hoped to put the ashes in before... before. I carefully, reverently, began to gat
oken cookie jar. I didn't even bother
the footlocker in one hand and the small urn