Her Father Mocked Her Air Force Job. Then A SEAL Heard Her Call Sign-Ginny

I remember the exact sound Daniel Rourke’s glass made when it hit the table.

It did not break.

It landed with a hard, hollow knock against the polished wood, bounced once, rolled against a serving spoon, and tipped onto its side.

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Amber liquor spread in a thin ribbon between the roast beef platter and my father’s birthday cards.

Forty people stopped talking at almost the same time.

One second earlier, my father had been laughing at me.

The next, a retired Navy SEAL looked at me as if someone dead had spoken from the far end of the table.

My father, Martin Bennett, had rented a lodge outside Colorado Springs for his seventieth birthday.

It was exactly the kind of place he loved.

High cedar beams.

Polished floors.

Yellow string lights hanging from the rafters.

A fireplace big enough to make the room feel expensive, even though nobody had lit it because the evening was still too warm.

The whole lodge smelled like roasted beef, candle wax, pine cleaner, and the cinnamon candles my sister Melissa had arranged along the windowsills.

Near the entrance, she had set up a little veterans’ charity table with donation cards, framed photos from Dad’s committee events, and a small American flag standing in a mason jar.

Dad liked that table.

It made him look generous before he even opened his mouth.

I arrived at 6:47 p.m., almost an hour late, with my rolling bag in one hand and a flight delay alert still sitting on my phone from Virginia.

I had changed in an airport restroom because there had not been time to go anywhere else.

My blouse still had a crease from the suitcase.

My hair had been pinned neatly that morning and was now hanging on by habit and two bobby pins.

My older brother, Grant, met me near the coat rack.

He wore a gray suit with no tie, the kind of outfit that said he had left a downtown office early but wanted everyone to believe he did that sort of thing all the time.

“Claire,” he said, pulling me into a one-arm hug. “I was starting to think you’d bail.”

“My flight was delayed.”

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