Dad had messaged me, “Don’t you dare show up in that silly costume.” My brother laughed it off. “Come on, it’s Halloween.” Yet the moment I stepped inside, everyone stared at the four silver stars on my shoulders. The chatter stopped cold. A commanding voice rang out, “Admiral on deck!” Dad went ghost-white, and his text felt like the least of my problems…I had barely crossed the threshold of the officers’ club when the room went dead silent. Conversation froze mid-sentence. Someone dropped a plastic cup that clattered across the floor. The overhead lights reflected sharply off the four silver stars pinned to my shoulders—an unmistakable rank I had no business wearing.
Two seconds later, a booming voice erupted from the far corner.
“Admiral on deck!”
A dozen people snapped to attention. And in the middle of them all, my father—retired Navy Captain Arthur McConnell—stood rigid, his jaw slack and the color drained from his face. Five minutes earlier, he had texted me, Don’t you dare wear that ridiculous costume. I could practically see him regretting every uncompromising syllable.
My older brother, Ryan, had merely laughed when I showed him my Halloween plan. “Relax, Maddie,” he’d said. “It’s a costume party. Nobody’s going to mistake you for the Secretary of Defense.”
He was wrong. I should’ve known better—this party wasn’t at some suburban community center. It was hosted at the North Island Naval Air Station by Dad’s old squadron buddies and several active-duty officers. Even though the invitation said Costumes encouraged, the military crowd had a very specific interpretation of that phrase. Most people wore flight suits, old unit shirts, or pilot-themed outfits. Nobody expected anyone to walk in dressed as a four-star admiral.
But the idea had been too funny to resist. After Dad spent the last month lecturing me about professionalism—ever since I’d quit my engineering job without a backup plan—I thought showing up in an over-the-top uniform costume might break the tension between us. A joke, a laugh, something to crack the ice.
Instead, I’d accidentally committed a social detonation.
I raised both hands, palms out. “Uh… please don’t salute me. This is—not real. Not even close.”
No one moved.
My father finally snapped out of his trance. “At ease!” he barked. Shoulders loosened, but eyes stayed locked on me. He marched forward, his voice pitched low and tight. “Madeline, what on earth possessed you to wear that outfit here?”
Ryan appeared behind me, whispering, “Okay, so maybe this was a little much.”
Dad exhaled through his nose like a man trying very hard not to blow up a small building. “Change. Now. Please.”
But the problem was bigger than a costume. I could see it in Dad’s strained expression—this was about everything that had been simmering between us for months.
I had barely crossed the threshold of the officers’ club when the room went dead silent. Conversation froze mid-sentence. Someone dropped a plastic cup that clattered across the floor. The overhead reflected sharply off the four silver stars pinned to my shoulders—an unmistakable rank I had no business wearing.
Two seconds later, a booming voice erupted from the far corner.
“Admiral on deck!”