Colonel O’Neal stood when I entered, a reflex of courtesy that most officers maintain in social settings. He shook my hand. His grip was firm and professional. His eyes lingered on my face for half a second longer than polite. I saw something flicker behind his expression. Recognition maybe, or the beginning of it, but he didn’t say anything. He just said, “Nice to meet you, ma’am,” and sat back down.
I said, “Likewise, sir.”
And I moved to the kitchen to help my mother with the rolls.
Dinner was served at 6:00. Amanda had outdone herself. The table was set with cloth napkins my mother only used for company, the good china with the blue trim, and candleholders that still had the Target price sticker on the bottom. She seated Colonel O’Neal at the head of the table opposite my father, the position of honor. Jake sat to O’Neal’s right. Amanda sat next to Jake. I was at the far end between Uncle Ray and Toby.
The first hour was fine. Turkey was carved. Plates were loaded. Gravy was passed. Jake told a story about a training exercise that involved a 12-mile ruck march in full kit through North Carolina mud in October. Everyone at the table was engaged. Uncle Ray asked how much the pack weighed. Toby said he couldn’t run 12 miles without a pack. My mother winced at the thought of all that laundry.
Colonel O’Neal smiled politely but didn’t add to the story. He ate quietly, complimented the turkey and the stuffing, and asked my father about his service years. My father lit up. He loved talking to officers, especially ones who took the time to ask about supply chains and logistics. They discussed inventory management during Desert Storm while Amanda refilled wine glasses and looked satisfied that her table was functioning like a proper military dinner.
Nobody asked me about my work. That was normal. I’d trained my family not to ask. Really, every time someone brought it up, I gave the same flat answer.
“Busy. Same old.”
The conversation would move on within seconds. I’d become wallpaper at my own family’s dinner table. And most of the time, I was genuinely fine with it. The less they asked, the less I had to deflect.
Tonight, I was too tired to care about being invisible. I just wanted to eat my turkey and go home.