A Soldier Came Home to a Feverish Baby and a Family Lie-mdue - Chainityai

A Soldier Came Home to a Feverish Baby and a Family Lie-mdue

The first thing Lucas heard when he unlocked his front door was not welcome-home laughter.

It was his newborn son crying from the nursery.

The sound was thin and exhausted, the kind of cry that had already lost its strength.

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After eight months on deployment, Lucas had imagined this moment so many times that the picture had become almost painful.

He had imagined dropping his duffel in the hallway, pulling Sophia into his arms, and holding Leo for the first time without a phone screen between them.

He had imagined the smell of clean baby lotion, warm laundry, and coffee left too long in the pot.

Instead, the house smelled like spoiled formula, closed windows, and stale heat.

His duffel slipped from his shoulder and hit the hardwood floor with a hard crack.

Then his mother’s voice carried from the nursery.

“Leave him,” Eleanor said. “If you keep picking him up, he’ll never learn.”

Lucas did not move for half a second.

Deployment had taught him what danger felt like before it had a name.

The body knew first.

The air was too still.

The pauses between Leo’s cries were too long.

The baby monitor on the hallway shelf was dark, even though Sophia had been obsessive about keeping it plugged in.

Lucas stepped forward, one hand still curled around the strap of his bag.

He had come home early, but not carelessly.

For six weeks, he had been preparing for the possibility that the worst thing waiting for him at home was not loneliness.

It was proof.

The nursery door was half open.

Inside, Sophia sat on the floor beside the crib.

For one moment, Lucas’s brain refused to understand what his eyes were seeing.

Then the details landed.

One of Sophia’s eyes was swollen nearly shut.

Dark purple bruises wrapped around both arms.

Her hair was damp against her temples, her lips were dry, and her hand kept sliding off the crib rail because she was shaking too badly to hold on.

“Sophia?”

Her head lifted.

Fear flashed across her face first.

It was fast, practiced, automatic.

Then she recognized him.

“Lucas…”

His name came out like a breath someone had been saving.

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