The “Paper Soldier” Seal That Made My Brother’s Officer Go Pale-heuh

I remained the family’s “paper soldier” until my brother’s superior officer pointed at the seal and asked, “Is that the SEAL commander?” Dad froze.

For years, that was all I had been allowed to be.

Not Evelyn, who had come home with her hands shaking and her sleep ruined.

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Not Evelyn, who could still remember the sound of the last radio call before the line went dead.

Not Evelyn, who kept a small black-and-silver command seal on a chain beneath her blouse because some honours were too heavy to wear where people could stare at them.

To my family, I was simply the clerk.

The nervous one.

The one who filled in forms, came home early, and let Mason stand in every photograph.

By the time my parents’ anniversary banquet came round, the story had been repeated so often that even I could hear it before anyone said it.

Mason was the hero.

Mason was the son who mattered.

Mason was the one whose service gave Dad something to boast about in a full room.

I was there to smile, keep quiet, and make the family look complete.

The banquet hall was too warm, all polished cutlery, stiff white tablecloths, and flowers arranged so neatly they looked afraid to move.

Rain tapped at the high windows, and guests came in brushing damp from their coats, lowering their voices as if the evening had already become important.

Mum had fussed with the seating plan for weeks.

Dad had practised his speech in the mirror, pausing at all the places where people were meant to clap.

Mason had walked through the room like a man arriving at his own unveiling.

His commendation sat at the centre of the small stage, framed and angled beneath the lights.

Everyone had seen it when they came in.

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