The Biggest Guy In Our Platoon Collapsed – Then The Medic Dialed His Emergency Contact

We were halfway through the ruck when the guy everyone called โ€œTankโ€ – real name Derrick – just crumpled. One second he was barking at me to โ€œpick up the pace, string bean,โ€ the next he face-planted in the gravel.

โ€œDonโ€™t touch him!โ€ the drill yelled. Medics sprinted in. My heart pounded so hard I could taste metal.

They cut his vest, checked his pulse, started an IV. โ€œWe need his phone,โ€ one medic snapped. โ€œICE number.โ€

Our squad leader shoved over Derrickโ€™s phone. It buzzed with sweat streaks across the screen. The medic lifted it with a gloved hand. The lock screen lit up.

My blood ran cold.

I knew that porch swing. I knew that hoodie. I knew that smile.

Casey had taken that selfie on my front steps last month. Wearing my college hoodie. The same chipped blue paint on the railing. Her hand in his, ring glittering.

โ€œCalling his emergency contact now,โ€ the medic said, thumb hovering. โ€œCasey – โ€˜Bunny.โ€™โ€

My jaw hit the ground. Thatโ€™s what only I called her.

The phone rang, speaker on. A woman picked up, breathless. โ€œHello? Is he okay?โ€ she said, and then she said three words that made my knees buckle as every guy in my platoon stared at me and at that photo.

โ€œIโ€™m his fiancรฉe.โ€

My head buzzed like a hive and the Georgia sun felt like a frying pan on my neck. The medic spoke fast, clinical words about transport and vitals, but all I could hear was that voice I knew better than my own calling herself engaged.

โ€œWho are you people?โ€ Drill Sergeant Rivers barked, more to us than to her, waving us back into a loose formation.

We shuffled, boots crunching in red dirt and gravel. Sweat stung my eyes and made the world go fuzzy.

โ€œMove out, put your rucks back on,โ€ Rivers snapped. โ€œMedics got him. We still got miles to kill.โ€

My hands shook so bad I fumbled with my straps. My battle buddy Morales gave me a quick look and the kind of half-nod that said, later.

I walked the last three miles in a fog with my pack digging a trench in my shoulders. Every time my boots hit, I saw that photo burn into my eyes.

Back in the bay, guys peeled off gear and flopped on bunks like weโ€™d been shot. The air stank of feet and bleach and damp cotton.

โ€œHey String Bean,โ€ Private Willoughby said, then caught the look on my face and shut up for once. โ€œYou good?โ€

I didnโ€™t answer because I didnโ€™t trust my voice. I just sat on my mattress and stared at my calloused hands.

My fingers remembered the text I wanted to send. My brain remembered the rules and the phone lockup and the fact that none of that mattered because her voice had said it already.

Morales kicked my boot lightly. โ€œHey,โ€ he said, low. โ€œWant me to get you some water?โ€

I nodded because it gave me an excuse to look down. I didnโ€™t want to see the pity on their faces.

Derrick came back from the clinic in the late afternoon with his shirt sticking to his skin and a hospital bracelet digging into his wrist. He walked like a man who had lost a fight.

โ€œYou good, Tank?โ€ Rivers asked, for once not yelling.

โ€œHydrated now, Drill Sergeant,โ€ Derrick mumbled. โ€œThey wanna monitor.โ€

The bay went quiet because nobody knew what to say. We all looked at anything but each other.

He sat on the bunk across from me and for a second our eyes met. His were like wet stones, not mean for once, just heavy.

โ€œNice phone background,โ€ Willoughby muttered under his breath near his locker. I saw Riversโ€™ head snap and I watched Willoughby trail off.

โ€œEverybody shut your holes,โ€ Rivers said, and he meant it. โ€œWe ainโ€™t high school.โ€

That night I lay awake listening to the fan cut the hot air into strips. I watched the dark shape of Derrickโ€™s shoulders rise and fall across from me.

It was weird to see him still. He was the guy who never stopped moving, always doing extra push-ups, always getting in your face.

I closed my eyes and saw Casey laughing on my steps with early summer light hitting her hair like honey. I remembered her fingers tugging my hoodie sleeves down and her whisper saying, โ€œI like it oversized.โ€

โ€œBunny,โ€ I had said, and she had kissed me quiet. Now the word felt like a bruise.

Fire guard woke me up at two a.m. and I pulled on my boots without lacing them. The hall light outside the bay made the floor glow a sick yellow.

I sat on a metal chair by the door and tried not to think. That lasted two minutes.

Derrick shuffled out of the bathroom and leaned on the frame like he had bricks in his pockets. He didnโ€™t look at me and I was glad.

A cockroach scuttled along the baseboard, and I watched it disappear under a duffel. Life kept going even when it felt like yours had fallen off a truck.

โ€œAbout earlier,โ€ Derrick said suddenly, voice low. He still didnโ€™t look over, like we were two guys on a bus facing forward. โ€œI didnโ€™t know.โ€

His words hung there like we were both checking if they would break. I swallowed and stared at the shadow his arm made on the wall.

โ€œHow could you not know youโ€™re engaged?โ€ I heard myself say, and it came out more tired than angry. โ€œYou had her as Bunny.โ€

He rubbed his wrist, eyes on some point past the vending machine down the hall. โ€œShe was that before,โ€ he said. โ€œFrom before I shipped last time.โ€

I blinked because I didnโ€™t even know he had shipped before. He was older than me by a couple years, but I had never asked for his story, just wrote him off as all biceps and noise.

โ€œWe split,โ€ he said, and a muscle jumped in his jaw. โ€œI thought for good. Then I got recycled and came back here. She reached out. Said she made a mistake.โ€

I let the chair creak. I wanted to say a dozen things that all sounded like knives.

โ€œWhenโ€™d she reach out?โ€ I asked, because that seemed like the only part that didnโ€™t feel like drowning to think about.

โ€œMonth ago,โ€ he said. โ€œShe showed up. Said she wanted to fix it. That picture wasโ€ฆ she said she missed my folksโ€™ porch. I didnโ€™t know it was your place, man.โ€

โ€œYou were on my steps,โ€ I said, and my voice cracked in the middle like a rotten board. โ€œI was probably on KP when you were there.โ€

He finally turned his head and our eyes met. He didnโ€™t look mean. He looked like a guy holding onto the edge of a roof.

โ€œI didnโ€™t know about you,โ€ he said. โ€œShe just said there was someone, not who.โ€

The fan clicked twice and came back on, and I watched dust float in the light. My stomach did a slow turn.

I didnโ€™t say I believed him. I didnโ€™t say I didnโ€™t.

We sat there like that for a long time listening to someone snore. The quiet made me smaller and bigger at the same time.

โ€œYou still engaged to her?โ€ I asked finally.

He laughed once, a sound with no humor. โ€œThey gave me a form,โ€ he said. โ€œWho to call if I go down. I just wrote the only person I thought would pick up.โ€

Something in me softened, not because he deserved it, but because the edge of my anger felt like it was going to cut me if I kept holding it so tight.

โ€œI called her Bunny too,โ€ I said, surprising myself. โ€œIt wasnโ€™t special.โ€

He nodded and stared at his boots. โ€œGuess not.โ€

When morning came, the bay lit up with voices and metal and orders like always. We were late to chow and the eggs tasted like rubber but we ate them anyway.

Derrick had to go back for more tests in the clinic, so he missed our morning run. He limped off with a medic and a clipboard and didnโ€™t look back.

On the range, my hands took over like they belonged to someone calm. Sight picture, breathe out, squeeze, repeat. The shots thunked into the paper, neat little holes I wanted to crawl into.

โ€œNice grouping,โ€ Morales said, and smiled with half his mouth. โ€œYou want me to punch Willoughby for you later, just for morale?โ€

โ€œSave it,โ€ I said, and he squeezed my shoulder once.

After lunch, Rivers called me to the office and told me to grab Derrickโ€™s bag and bring it to the clinic. โ€œTake a battle,โ€ he said. โ€œNo detours.โ€

I said, โ€œRoger, Drill Sergeant,โ€ and felt my heart lift and sink at the same time. It felt like moving toward a car crash I already saw.

Morales and I walked under the punishing sun to the clinic with our boots eating the asphalt. The trees looked like fake plastic decorations in the glare.

The air inside was cold enough to make my skin sting. We found a waiting room with blue chairs and a silent TV playing an afternoon talk show with captions.

She was there with a styrofoam cup in her hands. She looked up when the door squeaked.

For a second she didnโ€™t make a sound, then her lower lip came out the way it always did when she was trying not to cry. She stood, and her chair scraped.

โ€œNate,โ€ she said, like a question, and it turned me inside out to hear her say my name here. โ€œI wasโ€ฆ I was going to call you.โ€

โ€œSo you could tell me youโ€™re engaged?โ€ I said, too loud, and Morales shifted behind me like he would catch me if I fell. โ€œYou didnโ€™t think the medicโ€™s speakerphone would cover it?โ€

Her face crumpled and then smoothed in a way I had only ever seen on toddlers and liars. She held the cup like it held her up.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t like that,โ€ she said, because people always say that when it is. โ€œHe and Iโ€ฆ before he left last time, we – โ€

โ€œGot engaged,โ€ I said. โ€œI know.โ€

โ€œWe broke up,โ€ she said quickly. โ€œI thought we were done. I swear to you.โ€

โ€œAnd then he came back,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd you put the ring back on.โ€

Her eyes went glassy and bright. She looked at the floor tiles like they had answers printed on them. A nurse rolled a BP cuff down the hall and I could hear it velcro.

โ€œI was scared,โ€ she said, and I believed that part because you could smell fear on people. โ€œYou were leaving and he was here and I didnโ€™t know how to breathe without blowing up both of you.โ€

โ€œSo you blew up both of us,โ€ I said. โ€œNeat.โ€

She reached out like she could fix it by touching my sleeve. โ€œNate,โ€ she said, soft. โ€œPlease.โ€

Morales cleared his throat then, and Casey glanced at him like she was remembering other people were real. โ€œWe should find Derrickโ€™s room,โ€ he said.

We did, and Casey walked in first and fell apart in that quiet, careful way you do when you donโ€™t want to scare the machines. Derrick was propped up with a bandage on his arm and his hospital bracelet flashing when he moved.

When he saw me, he looked down fast. He reached for Caseyโ€™s fingers and she gave them to him like she had written his palm into her hand.

Something in me let go, not like forgiveness, more like a rope when your palms are already burning. I backed up until my shoulders hit the frame.

โ€œYou okay, Tank?โ€ I asked, and it wasnโ€™t for points. It came out like I would have asked anyone that.

He nodded without looking up. โ€œThey say I got an arrhythmia,โ€ he said, voice rough. โ€œThey donโ€™t know if itโ€™s from heat and caffeine or if it was hiding.โ€

โ€œYou going to be okay?โ€ I asked, and I forgot for a second that we were supposed to hate each other.

He shrugged one shoulder. โ€œI keep the monitor on me for a bit,โ€ he said. โ€œThey might recycle me again. They might send me home.โ€

Casey made a small sound like a leak in a tire, and I wanted to hate her for that, but I couldnโ€™t turn it on and off like a switch. I had loved her, and love leaves weird scars even when itโ€™s cut out clean.

Morales touched my elbow. โ€œWe gotta head back, man,โ€ he said, and I nodded.

I looked at Casey then, and something kicked me in the ribs from the inside. It was all the words I wanted to say and all the words I knew would make it worse.

โ€œTake care, Casey,โ€ I said finally, and it felt like I had just pulled out a nail that had been in my hand a long time. โ€œFor real.โ€

Back at the company, Rivers gave me a hard stare and a nod nobody else saw. It wasnโ€™t that he felt sorry for me; it was that he understood that I was still here.

By evening, rumors had changed shape twice, as they always do in a place full of tired men and not enough air. Some said Derrick was faking, others said he had his heart on the wrong side.

I kept my head down and cleaned my rifle until it shined like I wished my life did. Willoughby walked by, opened his mouth, then shut it when he caught Moralesโ€™ eye.

The next day, training moved like a machine that didnโ€™t care who fell under it. We learned to low crawl in gravel and I got rocks stuck in places rocks should not be.

In the chow line, a letter sat on my tray, the paper wrinkled like it had been sweat on. The front had my name in her neat print.

I took it outside because I didnโ€™t want an audience if it was good or bad. The air tasted like oil and cut grass.

โ€œNate,โ€ it started, and my stomach clenched, because she always wrote my name big and round like a balloon. โ€œI am sorry.โ€

She said the words you expect, and also a couple I didnโ€™t. She said she hadnโ€™t been honest with herself first, which is always how the other lies start.

She said her mom had gotten sick in the spring and she had felt like she was drowning and grabbed at the closest pieces of wood. She said she wasnโ€™t choosing now because she didnโ€™t deserve to choose.

โ€œI am going to give the ring back,โ€ she wrote, and the words swam for a second. โ€œTo him. To tell him I need to be alone and fix what I broke in me.โ€

I stood there and watched two smoke trails braid themselves across a hot blue sky. Two Black Hawks cut it open and stitched it back closed.

I folded the letter in half and slid it into my pocket. I did not feel better.

I felt different.

That night, Derrick came back to the bay with a plastic bag of meds and a sheet of instructions. His mouth was a flat line and his shoulders were still mountains, but they had snow on top now.

He climbed onto his bunk and lay there with one arm flung over his face like he had a headache that started last summer. The rest of us tried and failed not to stare.

At lights out, when the noises quieted, he spoke, just once. โ€œShe gave it back,โ€ he said into the dark.

I sat up a little on my elbows, because I thought I had imagined it. โ€œThe ring?โ€ I asked.

โ€œYeah,โ€ he said, and his voice broke like you drop a plate in the sink and try to catch it too late. โ€œSaid she needs to be on her own.โ€

โ€œI got a letter too,โ€ I said, and even though that was a stupid thing to say, it didnโ€™t feel stupid. It felt like saying the truth you both were trying to outrun.

โ€œShe tell you she was on your steps because she got scared to come inside?โ€ he asked, and the line hung there like smoke.

I blinked in the dark. โ€œNo,โ€ I said.

โ€œShe said she walked up and then turned around when she saw your mamaโ€™s potted geraniums,โ€ he said, and his voice was small in a way I didnโ€™t think it could be. โ€œShe said they looked like the ones at her grandmaโ€™s and she couldnโ€™t do it.โ€

The thing about betrayal is you want it to be clean and sharp because then you can be clean and sharp in return. The muddier it gets, the harder it is not to slip.

โ€œWeโ€™re idiots,โ€ I said, and even in the dark I could tell he smiled a little. โ€œBoth of us.โ€

โ€œAmen,โ€ he said, and the word sounded like a curse and a prayer.

The next week, we did night land nav and the woods smelled like damp leaves and old pennies. I liked moving in the dark because nobodyโ€™s face could catch you in a lie.

We had to find points with little red reflectors nailed to trees, and my partnerโ€™s compass broke halfway through. My feet slid in mud and my shins itched with bug bites.

โ€œUse mine,โ€ a voice behind me said, and I flinched because I wasnโ€™t expecting anyone. Derrick held out his own compass like an offering.

I took it and nodded, and we moved together for a while in a weird, quiet truce. He pointed at a low ridge and I veered left and we found our point like we knew what we were doing.

On the way back, we hit a flooded ditch. The water smelled like rust and dead things. I jumped and landed on a submerged root slick as soap.

My ankle went sideways with a sound like someone snapping celery. I went down hard and my breath blew out of me with a noise I never want to hear again.

โ€œHey,โ€ he said, grabbing my arm, real fear in his voice. โ€œYou good? Hey.โ€

Fireflies blinked in the weeds like someone flicking a flashlight. Pain shot up my leg and made my head act like it wanted to float off.

โ€œSprained,โ€ I gasped. โ€œMaybe worse.โ€

He slid under my arm and took most of my weight like it was nothing. He moved slow so I could hop and not scream.

โ€œLeave me,โ€ I said, because thatโ€™s what every movie says. โ€œGo finish.โ€

โ€œShut up,โ€ he said, not unkind. โ€œI ainโ€™t leaving you in a swamp with snakes, man.โ€

We limped like that for maybe a mile until the trees thinned and the gravel path showed up. He didnโ€™t drop me once.

Rivers met us near the light, hand on his belt, eyes sharp. He took in the scene and nodded once like a judge with a gavel.

โ€œIntegrity,โ€ he said, not to us but to the night. โ€œBoth of you, report to sick call in the a.m.โ€

By the time we hit the bay, my ankle was the size of a small grapefruit. Morales helped me onto the bunk and wrapped it with an ace bandage he produced like a magician.

โ€œYou owe me your dessert for a week,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd a story, but not now.โ€

Derrick passed me his extra ice pack and he did it like he was passing salt at dinner. The ordinary motion almost killed me.

The doc said it was a bad sprain, not a break. He wrote โ€œlimited dutyโ€ on my profile and the words felt like a blessing and a punishment.

During the training I missed, Derrick ended up on a bike with a heart monitor beeping steady as a metronome. He came back breathing easier.

โ€œNot congenital,โ€ he said one evening, sounding surprised. โ€œHeat, too much caffeine, not enough electrolytes. Theyโ€™re going to keep an eye on me and keep me a week longer.โ€

โ€œRecycled?โ€ I asked, because that word sticks in your gut when youโ€™re counting the days like pennies.

โ€œYeah,โ€ he said. โ€œBut not sent home.โ€

He said it like he was saying he had been reprieved from a sentence he didnโ€™t know he had. Relief sat on his face like a toddler in a swing, heavy and reckless.

Family Day came, and my mom couldnโ€™t make it because she had thrown her back out at her job at the grocery, and I told her on the phone not to feel bad. The line crackled and she cried anyway.

I stood under the flag with my profile tucked in my pocket and watched other guys hug people with the smell of home still on them. I felt proud and weirdly hollow.

Casey showed up at the edge of the crowd like a ghost whose shoes squeaked. She didnโ€™t come toward me or toward Derrick for a long minute.

I saw her look down at her bare ring finger and I saw her swallow. The look on her face wasnโ€™t tragic; it was real in a way I hadnโ€™t seen on her before.

She walked up to us finally because we were standing together by the picnic tables, like cowards or like smart men, I couldnโ€™t tell which.

โ€œHi,โ€ she said, voice thin but steady. โ€œCan I say something?โ€

Derrick nodded once, and I did too, and she took that like a credit line she didnโ€™t want to use up.

โ€œI lied to both of you,โ€ she said, and her hands shook but she didnโ€™t try to hide it. โ€œI made it about keeping my life from falling apart and I used you like glue.โ€

Nobody moved for a beat, and then a kid yelled for a hot dog and the world reminded us it was still happening. I could smell mustard and cut grass and sunblock.

โ€œI gave the ring back,โ€ she said softly. โ€œIโ€™m going to school in the fall. I took a night job at the diner. Iโ€™m moving in with my aunt to take care of Mom.โ€

She looked at me then the way you look at a door you regret walking through. โ€œI donโ€™t want to be forgiven because I donโ€™t deserve it yet,โ€ she said. โ€œI just want to tell the truth.โ€

I nodded slow, because it felt like the only safe speed. โ€œThank you,โ€ I said, and I wasnโ€™t sure if I meant it for her or for myself.

Derrick rubbed his jaw and stared at a spot on the metal table. โ€œIโ€™m not going to ask you to come back,โ€ he said finally. โ€œIโ€™m going to ask you to be okay.โ€

She let out a breath like she had been holding it since June. โ€œIโ€™m trying,โ€ she said. โ€œI really am.โ€

She turned to leave, then looked back. โ€œYou two,โ€ she said, and there was a little smile there for the first time, not for her, but for us. โ€œDonโ€™t let me be the worst thing that happened to you.โ€

After she walked away, we stood there side by side without speaking for a long time. The sun dropped a little behind the bleachers and made long shadows that reached for us and then missed.

โ€œYou think sheโ€™ll be okay?โ€ I asked, because saying nothing felt like giving it too much power.

โ€œI think sheโ€™ll have to be,โ€ he said, and then he added, โ€œLike us.โ€

Graduation day came like a train you could hear for weeks but still werenโ€™t ready for when it pulled in. The band played and the cadence calls echoed off the buildings like they bounced.

We stood on the field in our uniforms that didnโ€™t smell like soap yet and we felt big in small ways. When they called our company forward, my chest swelled with something that didnโ€™t need a name.

My mom made it with a brace around her waist and tears in her eyes that she wiped on her sleeve. She hugged me so hard my ribs hurt and I didnโ€™t tell her to stop.

โ€œProud of you, baby,โ€ she said into my shoulder, and I didnโ€™t even care that she called me baby in front of everyone. It felt like armor.

Derrickโ€™s mom was small and fierce with gray in her hair like silver threads. She hugged him and then looked at me and pulled me in, too, like she could see something nobody else could.

โ€œThank you for watching him,โ€ she whispered, and I nodded because I couldnโ€™t talk for a second.

We went to the PX for coffee after, because thatโ€™s what you do when you donโ€™t know what else to do. We sat in cheap chairs and drank from cups that burned our hands.

โ€œWhat now?โ€ I asked him, because the horizon looked like it had a lot of space.

โ€œI got a week here for recycle,โ€ he said. โ€œThen back to where you were.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll catch up,โ€ I said. โ€œYou always do.โ€

He grinned then, the first real grin Iโ€™d seen on him that wasnโ€™t cocky. โ€œBet I beat your run time when I get there,โ€ he said.

โ€œYou wish,โ€ I said, and Morales walked by and made a face like he was going to bet on both of us and take all our money.

On my last night before I shipped to AIT, I sat on my bunk and wrote two letters. One to my mom, to tell her I loved her and that Georgia heat is stupid but survivable.

The other to Casey, not to open anything back up, just to close it right. I told her I hoped school was good and that the diner got better tips on Fridays and that I wouldnโ€™t be mad if I saw her hoodies on someone else someday.

I thanked her for teaching me that a person can love you and still not be ready. I told her that this time, I was going to choose to be ready for myself anyway.

I tucked both letters in the outgoing box and sat with my boots on the floor and my socks inside out and let the fan cut the air into shapes that felt more manageable.

On the way out of the bay to formation, I passed Derrick. He reached a big hand out, and I took it.

โ€œLook out for yourself,โ€ he said, and his voice had that steady thing in it that made you believe him when he said heโ€™d have your back.

โ€œYou too,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd for the next string bean you get stuck with.โ€

He laughed, and it wasnโ€™t sharp this time. โ€œIโ€™ll try not to scare him to death on day one,โ€ he said.

As the bus pulled away, I saw him standing with his hands on his hips watching the road like he was trying to memorize the shape of leaving. I lifted a hand without thinking.

He saw and lifted his, and for once, the nicknames we threw at each other didnโ€™t feel like armor or knives. They felt like names.

Time moved on, like it does even when you want it to take a nap. In AIT, I learned the job I signed up for and found out I was good at the quiet parts.

I liked being the guy who paid attention, who put the right bolt in the right place and made the machine hum. Order in small pieces made my head feel clean.

I called my mom on Sundays and she told me about the lady who always wants her lottery tickets scratched off for her. I laughed and listened to the sound of home in the background.

Weeks later, a letter showed up with a return address I recognized as his momโ€™s street. Inside, on lined paper in block letters, were a couple of lines.

โ€œCaught up,โ€ it said. โ€œBeat your run time by twelve seconds. Cool if I lie and say it was thirty?โ€

I wrote back and told him to make it forty because I was going to beat him anyway at the next station. We were idiots and we knew it.

Months stretched and folded and suddenly it was almost Christmas. I got a postcard from home with a bad drawing of our town square strung with lights that always flickered on the second wreath from the left.

There was a note in different handwriting tucked in with it, and my breath hitched. It was from Caseyโ€™s aunt, who ran the diner and had given me free pie when I took my mom there once.

โ€œSheโ€™s doing better,โ€ it said. โ€œSchool, work, and less drama. She told me to say she hopes youโ€™re well and that she means it. Thought you should know in case the internet gets it wrong.โ€

I folded it neat and tucked it in the back of my locker. It didnโ€™t hurt like it used to. It felt like seeing a road you didnโ€™t take and being glad it was paved anyway.

In spring, two things happened that proved that life doesnโ€™t stick to a list. One, our class headcount got called for a volunteer slot on a joint detail back at Fort Moore.

Two, I ran into Derrick outside the PX again with a new patch on his sleeve and a look in his eye like he had found the part of himself he used to hide. We did push-ups to mess with each other because thatโ€™s how we say hello.

We got coffee and he told me he was thinking about going to Air Assault if his heart check-ups stayed clean. I told him I was trying to get into a course that required people who could pay attention to details better than me.

He told me I should be a medic because I always asked if people were okay, even when they werenโ€™t my people. I laughed and told him no way, I faint at needles.

He didnโ€™t let me lie to myself. โ€œNah,โ€ he said. โ€œYouโ€™d be good at it.โ€

We didnโ€™t talk about Casey because there wasnโ€™t anything to say that would make it better or worse. We talked about stupid movies and our momsโ€™ meatloaf recipes and who had the ugliest boots.

He left with a salute so sloppy it made the cadre across the lot wince, and I left with a feeling in my ribs like a window had been opened. The air came in and it didnโ€™t hurt.

What I learned from all of it had nothing to do with cadence counts or the best way to lace your boots so they donโ€™t blister. It had everything to do with what you do when the ground gives out.

You can clutch at the person next to you and drag them down to keep yourself from slipping. Or you can ask for a hand and let go when you need to.

I learned that some people will hurt you not because they hate you but because they donโ€™t know how to love themselves right yet. It doesnโ€™t make it okay, but it makes it not about you.

I learned that the biggest guy in the room can be carrying the heaviest kind of fear. And I learned that the guy he calls string bean can hold up a part of the world for him just by not walking away.

We graduate from some things without getting a certificate. You donโ€™t get a ribbon when you donโ€™t send the spiteful text or when you bring somebodyโ€™s bag to the clinic you could have dropped in a ditch.

You donโ€™t get a parade when you forgive someone enough to stop making them the story. You just sleep better.

If youโ€™re reading this and sticking with something that hurts but makes you better, keep going. If youโ€™re the one who made the mess, clean it up and donโ€™t make it again.

Somewhere down the line, you might find yourself standing under a sky so blue it hurts, with your boots tied right and your heart beat steady, and realize you didnโ€™t lose anything worth keeping. And if you did lose it, maybe you finally have both hands free to carry whatโ€™s yours.