He passed them down before he died, and I keep them in a shadow box on our wall. My stepdaughter recently asked if she could take them for a school project. I told her no—they’re irreplaceable.
Today, I noticed the box was open. The medals were gone.
I turned to my husband. He looked guilty. “She just wanted to show her class,” he mumbled. “It’s not a big deal.”
Then my phone rang.
It was her school.
She had traded them. For stickers.
I hung up. My hands were shaking.
I turned back to my husband.
And then I lost it.
“Not a big deal? My father EARNED those medals. They are the only things I have left of him. How could you let her take them?”
His expression hardened, like he was trying to downplay the situation. “She’s just a kid. She didn’t understand their value.”
“She understood enough to trade them,” I shot back. “She knew she was doing something she wasn’t supposed to do. And YOU let her.”
I didn’t wait for his response. I grabbed my car keys and headed straight to the school. My heart pounded the entire drive. I tried to calm myself down, but the thought of those medals—my father’s medals—being tossed around like cheap trinkets made me feel sick.
At the school, the principal greeted me at the front office, her face full of concern.
“Jenna,” I said, keeping my tone firm but not yelling, “who did you give them to?”
She shifted uncomfortably. “I… I don’t know. I think a few kids?”
“A few kids?” My stomach dropped. This was worse than I thought. “Jenna, this is serious. These medals are irreplaceable. You need to think. Who did you give them to?”
She bit her lip, then finally muttered, “I traded one to Ethan. And… I think Lily took one? And maybe Jordan?”