The text burned in my palm. I should have deleted it. Instead, I stared at it for a full minute, not in shock, but clarity. This is who he is, and this is who I’ve become.
The doors opened. As I stepped forward, heels sharp against polished wood, the SEALs — every last one of them — rose to their feet in perfect sync, and someone shouted, “Admiral on deck.” The chapel echoed with the sound of 200 decorated warriors snapping to attention, uniformed, upright, unshaken. My throat tightened — not from sadness, from honor. My father wasn’t here, but my family was.
You probably want to know what led to that moment — to me walking down the aisle, not in white lace, but in a uniform soaked with history, memory, and sacrifice. So, let me take you back.
I was born into the military, not by enlistment but by blood. My father believed in duty above everything. Discipline, honor, obedience. Those were his commandments. And in his eyes, only sons were supposed to carry that flag forward. When I was ten, he took me to an Army–Navy game at the stadium — not to enjoy it, to show me what I’d never be. He said it while standing next to me: “You’ll never wear those colors, kid. Leave the uniform to men who can handle it.” I didn’t cry. I never did. Instead, I listened, watched, remembered.