The admiral’s eyes, sharp and intelligent, swept the room for a fraction of a second before locking onto the small tableau at the center of it all. He ignored the salutes, ignored the commander, ignored everyone.
His gaze was fixed on the old man in the tweed jacket and the seal who was holding him. He began to walk forward. His steps were measured, silent on the polished floor.
He moved with an unhurried purpose that was more intimidating than any charge. The base commander and Master Chief Thorne fell in behind him like a Ptorian guard. The entire population of the Messaul held its collective breath.
The admiral stopped directly in front of George’s table. His eyes went from George’s calm face to Miller’s hand on George’s arm. Miller’s grip, which had seemed so powerful moments before, now looked like a desecration.
The admiral’s gaze was like a physical weight, and Miller felt a beat of cold sweat trace a path down his spine. He finally belatedly let go of George’s arm as if it were a hot coal.
Then the admiral did something that shattered the reality of everyone watching. He squared his shoulders, brought his heels together with an audible click, and raised his hand to his brow in the sharpest, most respectful salute Miller had ever witnessed.
It was a gesture of profound difference, an offering of respect from a three-star flag officer to a stooped anonymous old man. Mr. Stanton, the admiral’s voice was clear, ringing with a respect that bordered on reverence.
It is an honor, sir. I apologize for this disturbance. We had you on the visitor manifest for the memorial dedication, but my aid didn’t inform me you had arrived. Please forgive the lapse.
The entire hall was a frozen diarama of disbelief. Mr. Stanton. Sir, the titles coming from an admiral seemed to defy the laws of military physics. Miller
’s face, which had been flushed with anger, was now the color of ash.
His bravado had completely disintegrated, replaced by a cold, creeping dread. The admiral lowered his salute, but kept his eyes on George. He then turned his head slightly, his voice rising to address the silent, captivated room.
For those of you who do not know, the admiral began his tone now that of a lecturer at the Naval War College. It would be a good idea for you to remember the man you see before you.
This is George Stanton. In 1943, as a 20-year-old Navy combat demolition unit specialist, a frogman, the grandfather of the SEALs, he and his team were deployed to the Luzon Strait.
Their mission was to disable Japanese listening posts on a series of fortified islands. It was cenamed Operation Nightfall. The admiral paused, letting the weight of his words sink in. Miller’s eyes were wide with a terror that was existential.
He wasn’t just in trouble. He had committed a sin he didn’t even know existed. Operation Nightfall was a complete disaster. The admiral continued, his voice low and somber, compromised from the start.
Of the 12 men inserted, 11 were killed in the first hour. Only one survived. For 72 hours, he evaded capture on an island crawling with enemy patrols. He not only survived, he completed the mission alone.
He disabled all three listening posts using improvised explosives and his knife. When the extraction team finally found him, he was subsisting on roots and rainwater and had taken out 17 enemy combatants without firing a single shot.
For his actions, he was awarded the Medal of Honor. They called him the Ghost of Luzon. A collective soft gasp went through the room. The Medal of Honor, the highest, most sacred award.
It was a name spoken in hushed tones, a symbol of almost superhuman valor. And this quiet old man who had been mocked for a cheap pin was one of its recipients.
The pin on his lapel, the admiral said, his eyes, now boring directly into Miller, who looked like he might collapse, is the original unofficial insignia for his unit. It was given to him by his team leader who died in his arms on that beach.
It is not a trinket, the admiral turned back to George, his expression softening. George, again, I am so sorry. The base commander finally stepped forward, his eyes burning holes in Petty Officer Miller.
Leave a Reply