Cadet Aimed A Training Pistol At A Veteran — Then The General Saluted-Teptep

The sound reached me before the boy did.

Boots on a wet park path, striking too hard, too neatly, too sure of themselves.

I had known that sort of walk for most of my life.

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It belongs to people who believe the world has already agreed to move aside.

I was sitting on a bench near the square with a cup of coffee cooling between my hands.

The morning was grey in that British way, with drizzle hanging in the air rather than falling properly, and traffic whispering over wet tarmac beyond the railings.

A red post box stood at the corner.

A woman with a dog was arguing quietly with an umbrella that refused to behave.

It should have been an ordinary morning.

Then a shadow crossed my lap.

‘Look at this relic.’

There were four of them.

West March cadets, young, polished, and painfully proud of the fact.

Their uniforms sat sharply on their shoulders, their boots were clean, and their faces carried the unfinished confidence of boys who had not yet learned the difference between discipline and theatre.

The one in front smiled before anyone else did.

He was tall, square-jawed, and pleased with himself in a way that never improves a man.

One of the others called him Bryce.

‘Probably thinks he’s still fighting the Kaiser,’ Bryce said.

His friends laughed because he had left a space for them to do it.

I looked at my coffee.

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