Humiliated At Her Father’s Jubilee, She Returned Wearing Two Stars-heuh

I never intended to take the spotlight at my father’s Diamond Jubilee.

That was the honest truth.

I had gone there hoping to be quiet, polite, and forgettable.

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For one evening, I wanted to stand at the edge of the room, drink something tasteless, smile when required, and leave before anyone decided I needed correcting.

But some humiliations do not ask for tears.

Some humiliations ask for an answer.

The Grand Dominion Country Club had been dressed for my father as if it were hosting a state occasion rather than a sixtieth birthday.

Chandeliers burned above the ballroom, bright and hard, throwing light over polished glasses, cream tablecloths, and rows of guests who had arrived ready to admire Victor Ross.

There were flowers everywhere, too many flowers, and a gold banner above the stage celebrating him by name and by rank.

Lieutenant Colonel Ross.

A Legacy of Command.

He would have chosen those words himself.

I knew that without being told.

My father had always believed command was the highest form of love, provided he was the one giving it.

He crossed the ballroom in his old Mess Dress uniform, holding a drink, laughing loudly enough to make sure every table noticed him.

The uniform was tight across his middle now, but he wore it with the confidence of a man who thought memory outranked reality.

People greeted him warmly.

Some meant it.

Some simply understood the rules of a room like that.

You smiled at the man being honoured.

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