What I actually found was an empty refrigerator, a faithful dog standing watch near the door, and two children trying to survive on their own.
My daughter looked up at me and softly said, “Mom left, and I’ve been taking care of my little brother.”People expect you to come home loud with relief, grinning for pictures, hugging everyone like the movies taught them you should.
But by the time I stepped off that plane, I felt hollowed out by too many sunrises that looked exactly like the day before.
The thing that kept me steady was ordinary.
Not glory.
I replayed it when sand got into everything.
I replayed it when my boots felt like they weighed more than my body.
I replayed it during the calls that kept cutting in and out, Rachel’s face freezing on the screen while the kids waved too fast and asked when I was coming home.
I believed that picture because I needed to.
A man can survive a lot if he thinks the people he loves are safe.
I pulled into the driveway just after sunset.
The little house looked almost the same from the outside, except the grass was patchy, the porch light flickered, and the mailbox leaned to one side like somebody had bumped it months ago and never cared enough to straighten it.
A small American flag decal Caleb had stuck on the front glass was peeling at one corner.
I remember smiling at that stupid little decal.