Two Thieves Opened Her Bag and Found the Medal History Buried-eirian

The bus station at midnight smelled like burnt coffee, rainwater, and the kind of exhaustion that seemed to seep into the walls after every last decent person had gone home.

Ellie Chun sat in the last row of plastic seats with her backpack pressed between her feet and her late husband’s rain jacket hanging from her shoulders.

It was too large on her.

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It had always been too large on her.

But she wore it anyway because some grief did not ask to be healed.

Some grief only asked to be carried.

The jacket was dark green, frayed at one cuff, and lined with a faded plaid fabric that still smelled faintly of cedar soap when the air turned damp.

Her husband, Daniel Chun, had worn it on winter mornings when he walked to the mailbox before breakfast.

He had worn it when they moved into their first rented apartment.

He had worn it the night they lost the baby they never spoke about afterward except in the gentlest possible fragments.

He had worn it on the last morning he left the house with the blue velvet pouch sealed in his inner pocket.

Ellie had not known then that a thing so small could become heavier than a house.

The departures board clicked and flashed over the empty terminal.

Seattle. Delayed.

Eugene. Boarding soon.

Spokane. On time.

Portland had already happened, though Ellie kept looking at the board as if the word might rearrange itself into something that had gone better.

The interview had lasted 11 minutes.

That was how long it took a young hiring manager in a glass-walled office to decide she did not belong there.

He had folded his hands on the desk, softened his mouth into the shape of kindness, and told her they were looking for someone who better fit the company’s energy.

Ellie had nodded.

She had thanked him sincerely.

She had taken the visitor badge off her coat and placed it on the reception desk.

Then she had walked 14 blocks in the wrong direction before realizing the bus station was behind her.

By then rain had soaked the ends of her hair.

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