own her face. “Where am I supposed to go? My friends are here! This is humiliating!”
“You can go to the VA,” I said calmly, mirroring my father’s words from three days ago. “Or maybe sleep in your car with your shoes. I hear they’re very comfortable. Great arch support.”
Frank stepped forward, his fists clenched. The alcohol was doing the thinking now. “I will call the police. I will have you removed for fraud!”
“Please do,” I replied, pointing to his phone. “Officer Miller—no relation—is on patrol tonight. He served in my unit. I’m sure he’d love to help you pack.”
The guests were leaving now. Hurrying out the back door, grabbing their coats, murmuring apologies. The party was over.
I turned my chair toward the stairs. “Leo! You ready?”
Footsteps thundered down the stairs. Leo appeared, wearing a backpack that looked bigger than him. He was holding the superhero blanket. He dodged his stunned father and ran to my side, standing at attention next to the wheel of my chair.
“I’m ready, Captain,” Leo said, his voice bra
ve, though his chin wobbled.
Frank looked at Leo, then at me. “You’re taking my son?”
“I’m taking my brother,” I corrected. “Unless you want to explain to Child Protective Services why you tried to make a disabled veteran sleep in the rain while you bought an 85-inch TV?”
Frank deflated. He looked at the luxury he had surrounded himself with, realizing it was all smoke. He had traded his son for stuff, and now the bill was due.
“Get out,” I said to Frank and Chloe.
“Ethan, please,” my mother’s voice came from the hallway. She had finally come downstairs. She looked small, defeated. “We’re family.”
I looked at her. I saw the woman who had stood silently while her husband called me a cripple.
“Family doesn’t leave family on the porch, Mom,” I said softly. “You have one hour to pack your essentials. I’m changing the locks at midnight.”
Frank and Chloe were on the curb forty-five minutes later. They were surrounded by hastily packed trash bags and the expensive TV, which sat precariously on the wet grass. The neighbors were watching from their windows, the blue glow of televisions flickering in the darkness.
Inside, I locked the door. The deadbolt slid home with a satisfying thunk.
I turned to Leo. He was looking at me with wide eyes.
“So,” I said, forcing a brightness into my tone I didn’t quite feel yet. “How about we order pizza and watch whatever you want on that giant TV?”
Leo smiled, a gap-toothed grin. “Even cartoons?”
“Especially cartoons.”
I watched him run into the living room and jump onto the couch. I rolled past the hallway mirror. I caught my reflection. The uniform was perfect. The medals were shiny. But the eyes… the eyes were older than they should have been. I saw a man who had won the war, secured the objective, and neutralized the threat. But I had lost my family to do it.
Six months later.
The smell of bacon and brewing coffee filled the kitchen. Sunlight streamed through the new, widened windows, warming the slate tiles I had installed to make the floor easier to navigate.
The house looked different now. The clutter was gone. The dark, oppressive furniture Frank favored had been replaced with open, airy minimalism. A ramp, tastefully integrated into the landscaping, led up to the front porch.
I was at the stove, flipping pancakes. It took me a while to learn how to cook from the chair, but I had a system now. Everything had a place.
Leo sat at the kitchen table, chewing on a pencil, wrestling with fourth-grade fractions. He looked healthier. He laughed more.
“Hey Ethan,” Leo asked, looking up. “Mom called again. She wants to know if she can come for Thanksgiving.”
I paused, the spatula hovering over the pan.
I remembered the rain. I remembered the door slamming. I remembered the motel room.
Frank and Chloe were living in a two-bedroom apartment across town. Chloe was working as a receptionist, finally paying for her own shoes. Frank was working security at the mall. They were miserable, according to Leo. They blamed me for everything. They hadn’t learned a damn thing.
But Mom… she was trying. She had left Frank a month ago. She was staying with her sister.
“Tell her she’s welcome to visit,” I said finally. “But just her. And tell her the shoe collection stays in the car.”
Leo giggled. “You’re bad.”
“I’m practical.”
The phone rang again. I glanced at the Caller ID. Frank Miller.
He called once a week. Usually to yell. Sometimes to beg for a loan.
I looked at the screen. I didn’t feel anger anymore. I didn’t feel hurt. I felt… nothing. He was just a ghost of a life I used to have.
I let it ring.
“Aren’t you gonna answer?” Leo asked.
“Nope,” I said, sliding a pancake onto his plate. “Breakfast is more important.”
I rolled out to the front porch with my coffee. The morning air was crisp. I looked at the driveway.
A car pulled up slowly. It wasn’t a taxi. It wasn’t family.
It was a silver sedan. The door opened, and a woman stepped out. She walked with a slight limp, favoring her right leg. She wore a simple jacket and jeans, but her posture was military grade.
Sarah. She had been the medic who tourniquetted my leg in the sand. We hadn’t seen each other since the hospital in Germany.
She looked at the house, then at me. She smiled, holding up a bottle of wine.
“I heard you run a pretty exclusive club here,” she joked, her voice raspy and familiar. “Heard you have to be a hero to get past the gate.”
I smiled, feeling a warmth in my chest that had nothing to do with the coffee. I pressed the button on the automatic door opener I’d installed. The front door swung open wide.
“For the right people,” I said, rolling forward to meet her. “Welcome home, Sarah.”
