The Soldier Her Parents Called a Criminal Came Home to Sirens-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Soldier Her Parents Called a Criminal Came Home to Sirens-nhu9999

The day I came home, I thought the hardest part would be stepping onto my parents’ porch without crying.

I had practiced it in airports, bus stations, and the cracked vinyl seat of Mr. Holloway’s old pickup.

I had imagined the door opening before I knocked.

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I had imagined my mother pressing both hands to her mouth.

I had imagined my father standing behind her, too proud to cry, but not too proud to pull me into a hug.

For four years, those little pictures were how I survived the long nights overseas.

When the generator noise got too loud, I imagined the quiet of our block.

When dust got into my teeth and boots and sleeping bag, I imagined the smell of cut grass around the old birdbath beside our mailbox.

When I got letters from nobody but Mr. Holloway, I told myself my parents were angry, not gone.

Anger could change.

A locked door felt more permanent.

Mr. Holloway picked me up from the bus station at 3:41 p.m. in a faded pickup that still smelled like cold coffee, motor oil, and the wintergreen gum he chewed when he was nervous.

He hugged me with one arm because the other was braced against the truck like his knees did not fully trust the moment.

“You look just like your graduation picture,” he said.

I laughed because I did not know what else to do.

My uniform was wrinkled from travel.

My boots were scuffed.

My duffel was heavier than it looked, mostly because of the things folded inside it.

Military ID.

Discharge papers.

Copies of deployment orders.

A small folder of letters I had written and never stopped hoping my parents would answer.

Mr. Holloway drove slower than usual once we turned onto my old street.

He had known my family before I was born.

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