At A San Diego Beach, My Scars Became A Public Trial In Uniform-kieutrinh

San Diego heat does not ask permission before it gets under your skin.

That afternoon, it came off the sand in waves, hard and white and bright enough to make every umbrella look sharper than it should have.

The private section near La Jolla Shores had been rented under the Reed family name, which meant nothing was supposed to look accidental.

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The umbrellas matched.

The caterer’s coolers were lined up by height.

The reservation clipboard had a neat black clip at the top, and the young woman checking names kept sliding her finger down the list like she was afraid of missing someone important.

I stood at the edge of the shade line in long sleeves.

The shirt was pale blue, thin enough for summer but high enough at the collar to do what I needed it to do.

I had pulled the sleeves down over my wrists before leaving the house, and I had checked the mirror twice to make sure nothing showed when I moved.

It was 95°F by a little after one in the afternoon, according to the weather alert that had flashed across my phone while I was still sitting in the driveway, breathing through the part of me that always wanted to turn around.

The ocean smelled like salt and sunscreen.

The folding tables smelled like shrimp trays, cut citrus, and money pretending not to be money.

My father was already there when I arrived.

Colonel Richard Reed, retired, stood near the water with his feet planted the way he always stood when men younger than him were listening.

He had traded the uniform for a linen shirt, but he still looked inspected.

Straight back.

Clean shave.

Watch lined exactly on his wrist.

A young lieutenant stood in front of him with a plastic cup of iced tea and the slightly anxious expression of a man trying to laugh at the right places.

Two more Navy officers lingered nearby, their white uniforms almost painfully bright against the sand.

Dad was talking about standards.

He loved that word.

Standards had raised us.

Standards had paid for private lessons, good schools, polished shoes, and the kind of family photos where no one touched each other unless the photographer arranged it.

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