A Soldier Came Home To Find His Mother Locked Away By His Wife-mdue - Chainityai

A Soldier Came Home To Find His Mother Locked Away By His Wife-mdue

The first thing Liam heard when he stepped out of the rideshare was his wife telling Mrs. Higgins that his mother had lost her mind.

The second thing he heard was his mother’s fist pounding from the other side of a locked bedroom door.

The July heat rose from the driveway in pale waves.

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His duffel bag strap cut into his shoulder.

Somewhere down the street, a lawn mower growled over the sound of sprinklers ticking against dry grass, and for one strange second, Liam thought the whole neighborhood sounded exactly the way it had before he left.

Then his mother screamed his name.

“Liam! Please don’t leave me shut in here.”

Sixteen hours earlier, he had been sitting on a military transport with cold air blowing down the back of his neck, thinking about coffee.

Not fancy coffee.

Just the kind his mother made too strong, the kind that sat in the old pot until it tasted almost burned.

He had thought about her peach cobbler, too, the one she made with extra cinnamon because she claimed no dessert had ever been ruined by a little more cinnamon.

And he had thought about Clara.

He had imagined his wife running down the porch steps, laughing before she reached him, throwing both arms around his neck the way she did when they were first married.

That was the version of home he carried across oceans.

Warm coffee.

Sweet peaches.

His mother’s voice in the kitchen.

His wife’s arms around him.

Instead, Clara stood on their front porch in a flawless white dress, her hair smooth, her smile tender, one hand resting lightly against the porch rail as if she had been waiting to be photographed.

Mrs. Higgins stood near the mailbox with her gardening gloves still on.

“She gets so disoriented,” Clara was saying in that careful voice people use when they want to sound exhausted but noble. “Sometimes she hurts herself. We’re looking into professional care options now.”

Liam stopped beside the rideshare and looked up.

The second-floor curtain moved.

Not much.

Just enough.

Clara saw him looking and came down the steps fast, though not fast enough to look messy.

“Liam,” she breathed.

She wrapped her arms around him, and for half a second he let his face rest near her hair.

Her perfume was too sweet.

It was the one she wore when they went to weddings, funerals, and other places where she wanted strangers to remember how composed she looked.

He hugged her back.

Then he asked, quietly, “Why is Mom’s bedroom door locked?”

Her body changed before her face did.

Her shoulders tightened.

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