The BBQ Punch That Exposed a Marine Cousin’s Biggest Lie-tantan

I had worn stars on my shoulders for exactly eleven days when my cousin Tyler tried to start a fight beside Uncle Ray’s smoker.

Not in uniform.

Not on a base.

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Not in front of a formation where somebody would have known what those stars meant before he opened his mouth.

I was standing in a backyard in Briar Creek, Georgia, wearing old boots, faded jeans, and a gray University of Georgia T-shirt with barbecue smoke caught in the cotton.

The heat sat low over the grass.

The smoker hissed every time Uncle Ray lifted the lid.

Country music kept skipping every few minutes because the Bluetooth speaker on the cooler was too far from somebody’s phone.

My wife, Ellen, had warned me before we got out of the car.

“You ready?” she asked.

“For ribs?” I said. “Always.”

“For Tyler.”

I looked across the yard and saw him near the smoker before I could pretend I had not.

Tyler Wade Mercer had one beer in his hand and six relatives watching him perform.

He was thirty-four, seven years younger than me, and built like a man who had never learned the difference between strength and volume.

His black T-shirt was tight across his chest.

His Marine Corps tattoo ran down his right forearm.

His hair was clipped high and tight.

He looked like a recruiting poster that had been left too long in the sun and started taking itself personally.

The thing was, Tyler had served.

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