For Four Years, My Parents Told Everyone I Was in Prison… – galacy

The porch looked smaller than I remembered.

That was the first thing that went through my mind as Mr. Holloway’s old pickup rolled to a stop at the curb.

Not the fear.

Not the relief.

Not even the ache in my chest from finally seeing the house after four years overseas.

Just the porch.

It was still white, though the paint had peeled along the railings.

The steps still sagged a little in the middle.

The cracked driveway still ran beside it like a scar, widening near the mailbox where my father used to park too close to the edge and pretend he had not done it.

The birdbath was still there too, tilted in the same place beside the walk, chipped on one side, holding a shallow ring of brown leaves.

I had dreamed about that yard on nights when the barracks went quiet and nobody wanted to say out loud how much they missed home.

I had pictured the yellow porch light.

I had pictured my mother in the doorway.

I had pictured my father standing behind her with his jaw tight, acting like he was not emotional, then giving in and pulling me into the kind of hug that made all the years feel smaller.

I had imagined that if I survived deployment and came back in one piece, home would know what to do with me.

Then Mr. Holloway locked the doors.

The click was small, but it landed like a warning.

“Stay inside the truck,” he said quietly.

I turned toward him.

His hands were shaking on the steering wheel.

He was not an easy man to scare.

He had lived across the street from my parents since before I was born, survived a heart attack, buried his wife, and once yelled at a storm because a branch had fallen across his roses.

But now his face had gone gray.

“What happened?” I asked.

He looked toward the house, then toward the side mirror.

“Your mother just called 911,” he said. “She told them an escaped prisoner is standing in her yard.”

For a few seconds, I did not understand the sentence.

I understood every word by itself.

Mother.

Called.

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