The General Saw A Trucker’s Wristband And Stopped The Ceremony-eirian

I pulled my old Freightliner into the stadium lot just after nine in the morning.

The engine rattled hard before it died, the way it always did when it had been running too long and asking for mercy.

For a moment, I did not move.

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I sat behind the wheel with both hands resting on the cracked vinyl, watching families stream toward the stadium like the whole world had somewhere better to be.

Mothers carried flowers.

Fathers carried cameras.

Grandparents moved slowly across the lot in Sunday shoes, smiling through the heat and the noise.

The air smelled like diesel, fresh-cut grass, and coffee from the paper cups people had bought on the way in.

Somewhere past the gates, a military band hit a few bright notes, then stopped, then started again.

The sound settled in my chest harder than I expected.

I looked down at the leather wristband wrapped around my right arm.

It was old enough now that most people would have thrown it away.

The brown had gone almost black in places.

The edges were cracked.

The stitching had faded from tan to a dirty gray.

There were places where sweat and rain had changed the shape of it permanently.

To anyone else, it looked like nothing.

To me, it was the last thing a dying man had put in my hand.

I turned my wrist once, then covered the band with my sleeve.

Old habits are not always fear.

Sometimes they are the only way a man can keep walking.

My right knee complained when I climbed down from the cab.

The pain moved up slow and deep, the way it did after long drives or cold weather, though that day was warm enough to make the stadium pavement shimmer.

I had driven twelve hours to get there.

Avery would have been mad if she knew exactly how little I had slept.

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