The Day My Brother Tried To Take Our Father’s House By Force-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Day My Brother Tried To Take Our Father’s House By Force-nhu9999

My name is Captain Linda Morse, and I was thirty-three years old when I learned that a childhood home can become a battlefield without a single stranger stepping inside.

I had seen war before.

I had heard mortar alarms split the dark and felt dust settle in my teeth while everybody waited for the next sound.

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I had wrapped pressure bandages around men who were still joking because fear had nowhere else to go.

I knew the metallic smell of blood on canvas, the dry sting of grit in my eyes, and the awful silence after impact when every person in the room is counting breaths.

But nothing in Afghanistan taught me what to do when the danger wore my brother’s face.

Nothing prepared me for funeral lilies rotting sweetly in the front room of the house where my father had carried me in from the car when I was six years old and too stubborn to admit I was asleep.

Arthur Morse had been in the ground three days.

His house on Washington Avenue still looked like grief had set down its bags and made itself comfortable.

There were aluminum casserole trays stacked across the kitchen counter, each one with blue marker labels curling from steam.

Tuna noodle from Mrs. Calder across the street.

Baked ziti from Dad’s old bowling buddy.

Scalloped potatoes from a woman at church who had hugged me too hard and told me I was brave, though I could not remember her name.

Green bean casserole with canned onions sat on the stove, and I almost smiled because Dad used to pretend he hated those onions while picking the crispy pieces off the top with his fingers.

The coffee in my mug had gone cold twice.

The house smelled like lilies, coffee, lemon oil, and that tired mix of food and sympathy that follows a funeral in every American neighborhood I have ever known.

Outside, a hard spring wind snapped the small flag on the porch rail.

Inside, every familiar sound seemed too loud: the refrigerator hummed, and the old stairs complained.

The oak floor gave that dry little creak near the living-room archway, the one Dad used to say would catch me if I ever tried sneaking downstairs after bedtime.

I stood in the kitchen with my hands wrapped around a mug I was not drinking from and tried to understand how a house could feel overcrowded and empty at the same time.

Then I heard footsteps upstairs.

Damian and Saraphina came down from the guest room like they had already held a meeting without me.

My brother was forty, broad-shouldered, polished in a way that always made strangers trust him too quickly.

He wore a quarter-zip sweater, dark jeans, and the face he used when he wanted to appear reasonable.

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