The airport. I wasn’t flying. I was filling out paperwork for a rental car. The woman behind the counter claimed she would upgrade me to a Super-Duper-Grade vehicle for only twenty-nine bucks.
I agreed.
So she pressed further. For another fifty big ones, she offered to upgrade me to the Ultra Super-Duper-Grade Platinum rental.
No can do. I’m allergic to platinum.
Then.
I heard applause from the other side of the terminal. It was loud. There was cheering. Whistling. Hollering. I turned to look—so did everyone else. It sounded like the Second Coming of Elvis.
On an escalator were men and women in camouflage and boots, carrying backpacks.
They waved to those hollering.
The first man off the stairs walked to a woman with a toddler on her hip. He dropped his bag and group-hugged them.
More young men and more young women in uniform rolled down the electric stairs.
A tall black woman in uniform. She set her bags down. Two boys came
running—no older than three or four. They sprinted, full force, and knocked her over.
Next: a man. Broad shoulders and a strong walk. He made a beeline for an older woman. He stooped to let her kiss his forehead. She did more than kiss him. She almost broke his neck.
The clapping started to fizzle. But each new pair of desert boots earned at least a few shouts.
Even some strangers in the airport joined the cheering. Take, for instance, this redheaded stranger.
The woman from the rental company came from behind her desk and stood with me. The rest of the airport had returned o business as usual.
Not me and my new platinum-rental friend. We watched the reunions. Some were tearful. Others…