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

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

I came home from deployment thinking I would step into the kind of reunion people record on their phones.

I thought there would be food on the stove, my mother’s arms around my neck, and Vanessa smiling in the doorway like the months apart had taught us both how much home mattered.

Instead, the first thing I heard when I climbed out of the rideshare in my own driveway was my wife telling the neighbors my mother was losing her mind.

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“She’s getting worse,” Vanessa said softly.

Her voice carried across the yard with that careful sadness people trust too quickly.

“She forgets things. She gets scared. The doctors think the dementia is progressing fast.”

Mrs. Harris from next door nodded with both hands folded over her chest.

Mr. Cole stood near our mailbox with his ball cap in his hands, looking at the house the way people look at a funeral home.

The June air in Columbus was thick and bright.

Heat rose off the driveway.

The strap of my duffel bag dug into my shoulder, and my uniform shirt stuck to my back.

For one second, I stood there trying to make the scene fit inside my head.

Then something slammed upstairs.

BANG.

BANG.

BANG.

“Ethan!” my mother screamed.

Every person in the yard went still.

“Please! Don’t leave me in here!”

I looked up at the second floor.

One curtain shifted.

Then it went still again.

Vanessa reached me before I could move.

She threw her arms around my neck and pressed her cheek against mine.

“I’m so happy you’re home,” she whispered.

She smelled like vanilla lotion and lemon cleaner.

Her hands were cold against the back of my neck.

I hugged her back because Mrs. Harris was watching, because Mr. Cole was watching, and because the Army teaches you not to react just because your blood is moving faster than your brain.

Then I looked past her at the upstairs window.

“Why is Mom’s bedroom locked?”

Vanessa’s face changed for less than a second.

A flash of panic.

There and gone.

Then she gave me the same sad smile she had been giving the neighbors.

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