“My sister was handing out first-class tickets at the airport lounge. She laughed and dropped an economy seat into my hand. I stayed quiet until the pilot walked to row 34E and said, “General, ma’am.” The whole cabin went silent.” The VIP lounge at LAX always smells like expensive coffee and quiet money.
People there speak softly like the walls charge extra for loud voices. Polished marble floors, leather chairs that probably cost more than my first car. A bartender in a pressed white shirt pouring champagne before noon.
My family looked like they belong there. That was the funny part. My dad, Arthur, stood near the window holding a glass of whiskey like he owned the airline.
My mom, Evelyn, was telling anyone who would listen that this trip was for her parents’ 40th wedding anniversary in Hawaii. My sister, Chloe, stood in the center of it all, like she was hosting the place. And then there was me.
I was sitting off to the side with a black duffel bag at my feet and a worn military backpack on my shoulder. The backpack had been with me through two deployments and more airports than I could count. It looked exactly like what it was: government issue.
Chloe hated that bag. She said it made the family look poor. Vance walked in a moment later holding his phone like it was a trophy.
My brother-in-law always walked like he was stepping onto a stage. Tall, expensive suit, perfect hair. Defense contractor money does that to a man.
He stopped next to my father and clapped him on the shoulder. Flights are confirmed, he said. First class all the way to Honolulu.
My dad smiled like Christmas had come early. That’s my son-in-law. Chloe slid her hand into Vance’s arm and looked around the lounge like she was accepting an award.
You’re welcome, everyone. No one looked at me. That part wasn’t new.
For 15 years, my job had been the family joke. I worked for the government. That’s how they described it.
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