Work Text:
Robinson Township, PA. Summer 2005 : The house already has his things in it. The question is whether it still has him.
The dishwasher finishes its cycle at 11:47 pm.
You stand in the middle of the kitchen barefoot, staring at the condensation on the cabinets—rich cherrywood, sealed to shine even when there’s nothing left to polish. You didn’t need to run the dishwasher tonight. There were only two glasses in the sink. You just needed the sound.
You reach for a towel and open the dishwasher, the steam curling into your face like breath. You dry the glasses. Slowly. Ritualistically. As if there's nothing else to do with your hands.
The house isn’t new. It never was. But it’s yours. Yours and his. The ours that only happens when two people commit to staying in the same place long enough to leave marks.
There’s a burn on the countertop from your first try at pork chops. A dent in the hallway from the time he kicked the wall at 2 a.m. and told you he couldn’t remember why. Three wine bottles above the fridge. Two of them are empty. One is unopened and dusty. You’d been saving it. You forget what for. The mirror by the front door is tilted. The throw blanket on the couch is too heavy for summer. The air conditioner makes that sound again—the one he said he’d fix when he got back.
That was four months ago.
You sleep in his t-shirts now. You tell yourself it’s because they’re soft. Not because they still smell like him, faintly—like desert wind, bar soap and the inside of his truck.
Your Motorola sits on the kitchen counter, charging. You watch the red backlight flicker off and on—old cord, half-broken port. It buzzes once.
Text message.
You don’t need to check who it’s from.
u still cleanin?
You don't answer.
Because yes, you’re still cleaning. And because you know what the next text will say.
Two minutes later:
better not b bleachin again u tryin to dissolve the whole damn house?
You flip the phone open and close it again without typing anything. T9 is too slow for what you're feeling. It was always too slow.
You press the phone to your ear, and call her. She picks up immediately. Doesn’t say hello.
“So what’s your plan?” Dana’s voice is rough from smoke, too many double shifts, and the hour. “Feed him? Fuck him? Pretend everything’s normal?”
You lean your head back against the cherry cabinet, eyes on the ceiling fan spinning slow. "I don’t have a plan."
"Bullshit," she exhales. You hear the click of a lighter in the background. "You’ve been bleaching countertops like you’re prepping for a damn magazine shoot."
“I didn’t bleach anything,” you say. “Just wiped it. Twice.”
“Mhm.”
The house smells like Warm Vanilla Sugar from Bath & Body Works and chemical lemon. You don’t smell it anymore. It just smells like trying too hard.
“He called yesterday,” you say, fingers playing with the fraying towel edge. “Said it was hot. Said the AC on the base broke again.”
“What else?”
“He asked if the door still creaks when you open it too slow.”
Dana pauses. You can picture her now—sitting on the steps behind PTMC, cigarette tucked between two fingers, leaning her head against the brick.
“What’d you tell him?”
“I said yeah. He said, ‘Good.’”
You hear her inhale.
“That’s how they know it’s real. Men like him, they come back looking for the things that didn’t change. That noise? That’s proof.”
“I fixed the porch light too,” you murmur. “But I didn’t tell him.”
“Good. Let him see something’s different. Let him wonder what else might be.”
You look at the boots by the front door. You moved them there earlier. The left one is scuffed—he caught it on the stairwell last winter when you argued about the electric bill. You didn’t have the money. He didn’t have the patience.
“I put out his mug.”
“The ugly one?”
“The World’s Okayest Cook.”
Dana groans. “Christ. That man loves a tacky cup.”
You smile. Just for a second. Then it fades.
“I don’t know what to say to him when he walks in.”
“You don’t have to say anything,” she replies. “Just be standing where he left you.”
“What if I’m different?”
“You are.”
You hold the phone tighter.
“What if he is?”
There’s a long silence.
“Then you meet him where he is,” Dana says finally. “You stop trying to rewind, and you let yourself watch the part that comes next.”
The light above the sink buzzes softly.
“I made his side of the bed,” you whisper. “Put his shirt on the pillow. Like muscle memory.”
“Don’t romanticize absence, kid. You’re not living in a Nicholas Sparks novel.”
You laugh—barely. “It feels like I am.”
"Only difference is your man’s got better arms and worse manners."
You stare at the candle. It’s almost out. The wax has swallowed the wick. The flame is a stubby blue whisper.
“You think he’ll come back like he left?”
“No,” Dana says. No hesitation. “But you’re not the same either."
“I don’t want him to flinch when he sees me.”
“He won’t. He’ll flinch when he sees the world kept moving without him.”
You fold the towel tighter.
“He’s only here six days.”
“Then make them real. Don’t waste them trying to make him comfortable. Let him be wrecked.”
“I’m scared.”
“Of what?”
“That I won’t know how to hold him without breaking.”
Dana sighs. “Kid. If love doesn’t break you at least a little, you’re doing it wrong.”
You close your eyes.
“I should let you get back to work. Thanks for picking up.”
“Always.”
She hesitates.
“You want me to come over?”
“No.”
“You sure?”
“Yeah.”
“You bleach anything else, I’m revoking your nurse’s license and mailing you boxed wine in retaliation.”
You laugh, for real this time. It cracks through you.
“Night, Dana.”
“Night, sweetheart.”
The phone beeps once. Call ended.
You set it back down on the counter. The charging light flickers. The cord sags loose again.
You met Dana three years ago. First week on nights at PTMC. You were twenty-three, barely out of nursing school, teeth clenched through your first trauma code. A car crash. A twelve-year-old. You froze when the girl coded. Couldn’t remember how to hold the Ambu bag. Couldn’t remember your name.
Dana moved your hands. Didn’t say a word.
Later that night, she found you alone in the stairwell with your head down and your badge still clipped to your scrub pocket. She leaned against the railing, and said:
“I’ve watched grown men piss themselves in that room. You didn’t.”
That was the closest she ever got to a compliment. You never forgot it.
Since then, she’s been a fixture. She doesn’t do small talk. Doesn’t do hugs. But she’ll hand you a chart the second a doctor disrespects you. She calls you kid when she means you did good. And when Jack shipped out last winter, she didn’t say she was sorry. She just started texting you around midnight every night, like clockwork.
Sometimes it was just:
u eat
Other times:
he call
And once:
ur stronger than u think but dumber than u know. pick one to fix.
You never responded. Not right away. But you always read them twice.
You leave your phone on the counter and walk through the living room. The rug is that deep olive shade that was trendy in 2003 and never stopped being a little ugly. There’s a brass tray on the ottoman holding three remotes you haven’t used in days. You walk past them and adjust the blanket even though no one’s been sitting there.
You light a second candle. The one in the hallway by the photo frames. Jack hates that one—calls it the “mall candle,” says it smells like the fitting room at a Bebe store.
You light it anyway. It means he’ll have something to complain about when he walks through the door.
In the bedroom, the sheets are too tight on the mattress. You re-made the bed this morning. Again. The hospital corners are habit now. You pull back the comforter and slide into the space where his body would be.
The ceiling fan ticks.
You stare at the shadow on the ceiling where the paint is uneven. You wonder if he’ll notice. He always does. Even the things that don’t matter.
Downstairs, the air conditioner cycles off. The house exhales with you.
You whisper into the quiet, “Don’t be a stranger.”
No one answers. But you imagine him on the plane anyway—hands folded, jaw locked, not sleeping.
You wonder if he misses this place. If he misses you in it.
Tomorrow, you’ll see his Army duffle by the door again—boots slouched beside it like he never left.
But tonight, it’s just the echo of him. And the house, waiting with you.
DAY ONE – THE KITCHEN
Feeding him is the first lie you tell yourself. Robinson Township, PA — July 2005, 7:23 a.m.
You’d cracked the eggs before you even heard the front door open.
Maybe twenty minutes before. Maybe thirty. You’d laid out the skillet. You’d sliced the bread. You’d turned the heat to medium and just stood there—still, blinking slow—until the oil popped and the pan hissed too loud.
And then he was there.
Not with a knock. Not with a shout.
Just the sound of the door opening, slowly, the scrape of the lock disengaging, and that familiar thud of boots—his boots—on the too-smooth floor you refinished last February. The sound echoed up into your chest before you even turned around.
He didn’t call your name. He didn’t drop his bag like he used to. He just stepped inside the kitchen like it hadn’t been four months since he last stood in it, like no time at all had passed, like memory could be picked up and worn like a jacket.
He was wearing military fatigue pants—heavy-duty, olive-drab, pockets down the legs, creased like they’d been folded too long. A black t-shirt clung to him, sleeves rolled to the shoulder. His dog tags flashed once, then vanished beneath the collar. He smelled like recycled air, sand, and something sharp and chemical—maybe jet fuel. His eyes moved slowly: the red walls first. Then the island. Then the boots you’d nudged closer to the mat by the door. Then you.
You opened your mouth to say something. But all that came out was,
“Shower still leaks.”
It wasn’t a question. It wasn’t even a sentence. Just something to push into the silence.
He looked at you for a beat, unreadable.
“Good,” he said.
That was it.
Now, it’s 7:43 a.m.
The eggs are starting to cool by the time he comes back downstairs.
You’d scrambled them soft the way he used to like them. Butter, not oil. Black pepper and nothing else. Toast in the pan with too much margarine. The coffee’s been sitting in the pot for twenty minutes, burned just enough to taste like the night before. You’ve filled two plates, not because you think he’ll eat—just because not doing it felt worse.
He comes in barefoot, damp curls at the base of his neck, pants slung low on his hips. One of his old t-shirts—Army green, threadbare, stretched at the collar—clings to him like it’s afraid he’ll take it off again. He walks like someone who hasn’t taken a real step in weeks.
You don’t say anything at first. Neither does he.
He pauses near the kitchen island, eyes scanning the plate, the coffee, the candle still flickering beside the microwave—vanilla sugar, old, nearly spent. He doesn’t comment on the smell.
“I made breakfast,” you say, like it isn’t obvious.
Jack nods, but doesn’t sit.
You pull the second stool out. “You can’t just stand there.”
“I can.”
“Then I can throw it all in the trash.”
That gets a flicker from him—a half-smile that doesn’t reach his eyes.
He slides onto the stool, one hand curling around the edge of the counter like he’s bracing for something that might hit him.
You set the fork down beside his plate. He doesn’t pick it up.
“Looks good,” he says.
You pour him a cup of coffee. No milk. One sugar. The way he used to take it.
“I wasn’t sure you’d want it.”
Jack stares at the mug. “I haven’t stopped wanting it.”
He takes a sip. His jaw twitches. It’s too strong.
“Sorry,” you say, already reaching for the pot. “I should’ve made a new—”
“No. It’s good.” His voice is low. Final. He keeps drinking.
He picks up his fork. Cuts the eggs in half. Doesn’t eat them.
You sit across from him, elbows on the counter, your own plate untouched.
“How’s the water pressure?” you ask.
Jack chews a corner of toast. “Low.”
You watch him try to swallow the toast. He chews for too long. Washes it down with coffee.
You want to ask if he’s sleeping. If he still wakes up from dreams that don’t belong to this time zone. If his hands stop shaking long enough to write letters he never sends.
Instead, you ask, “You want jam?”
Jack looks up. Finally.
“Do I look like someone who wants jam?”
You smile. “A little.”
“Jesus,” he mutters, then shakes his head. “You haven’t changed at all.”
“No,” you say. “But I’ve gotten quieter.”
Jack puts the fork down. Rubs his hands on his thighs. His knuckles are cracked. He’s been picking at the skin again.
“I almost forgot what this place looked like,” he says. “I thought I’d walk in and feel something.”
“You don’t?”
“I feel... like I’m visiting someone who wears my face.”
You both go still.
The candle gutter-flames.
You say nothing. There’s nothing to say.
“I thought maybe I’d walk in and smell you,” he adds, voice quieter now. “But it smells like sugar and bleach.”
You look away. “I’ve been cleaning.”
“Why?”
You shrug. “Because everything felt dirty without you in it.”
That lands.
Jack shifts in his seat like he wants to say something back. But he doesn’t. Instead, he lifts the mug again and drinks until it’s empty.
You reach for the eggs, meaning to take his plate, but he covers it with one hand.
“Don’t clear it,” he says.
“You’re done.”
“I’m not ready for it to be gone.”
You sit back.
Jack doesn’t look at you. His hand stays on the plate.
The food’s cold now. The coffee pot’s off. The sun through the window is too bright for the both of you.
You both stay there a while, not eating, not talking, just observing a plate neither of you wanted.
“You’re here now,” you say. “That’s all I wanted.”
Jack swallows. You hear it more than see it. He blinks once.
“Is it enough?” he asks.
You pause.
You want to say yes.
You want to say I love you.
You want to say don’t go again.
Instead, you answer the way you always do when you’re afraid of telling the truth too early.
“I’ll let you know.”
DAY TWO – THE BATHROOM
The water doesn’t run hot. But he doesn’t stop scrubbing. Robinson Township, PA — July 2005, 5:06 a.m.
The sound wakes you before the light does.
Not an alarm. Not the soft whine of the AC unit kicking on. Not birdsong.
Just water.
A slow, constant stream—unnatural in the way only middle-of-the-night plumbing is. Too purposeful to be a leak. Too still to be a shower. It’s the kind of sound that pulls memory to the surface before consciousness catches up.
You blink into the dim morning, cold air settled low on the carpet, and reach instinctively for the other side of the bed.
His side is cold.
The sheets are undisturbed.
You sit up slowly. The clock reads 5:06 in cheap red digits that never dim. The ceiling fan above you ticks once—unbalanced again—and you stare at the sliver of light under the hallway door.
You pull your sweatshirt over your tank top, press bare feet to the carpet, and follow the water sound down the hall.
The door to the bathroom is cracked open half an inch.
You hesitate.
Then you push it open.
Jack is hunched over the sink like he’s prepping for field surgery.
Barefoot. Boxers. A damp grey undershirt clinging to his ribs. His dog tags are swinging faintly, brushing the ceramic bowl. One of his knees is braced against the cabinet beneath him like he’s holding pressure somewhere.
His hands are under the water. Not resting. Scrubbing.
The bar of soap—yellow, waxy, no scent—is ground between his palms. Hard. Fast. Like if he just goes hard enough, long enough, it’ll come off. Whatever it is.
You stay in the doorway. You don’t speak.
The mirror is fully fogged over except for the bottom third, which is smudged clean from the swing of his elbow. You can see his mouth reflected—tight. His chin—unshaven. His eyes—not there.
He hasn’t heard you.
Or maybe he has, and he’s ignoring it.
Either way, he doesn’t stop.
The sink is half-full now, the drain slow. You watch suds and skin particles spiral together in faint gray water.
Then, suddenly—he drops the soap.
It hits the porcelain with a sickening clack.
He makes a sharp noise in his throat and grabs the basin with both hands, breathing heavy, like he might throw up. His head drops between his shoulders. The dog tags knock against the sink.
You take one slow step forward.
Then another.
The tile is cold. There’s mildew in the grout near the baseboard you always meant to scrub.
You cross to him. Carefully.
“Jack,” you say, softly. “Hey.”
He doesn’t look up.
“I’m fine,” he mutters, but his voice is shredded. His fingers flex against the ceramic. “Just needed to wash up.”
You take another step. You see his hands now—red, rubbed raw at the knuckles, half-pruned from too much water. Not washed—scoured.
You look at the towel rack. One bar is bent. The hand towel is floral, too pink. A gift from your mom last Christmas. He hated it.
You reach for it anyway. Hold it out.
He doesn’t take it.
His eyes are bloodshot. Not from crying—from not sleeping. From rubbing. From dust. From whatever he saw in the tent, on the cot, on the ground, in the sand, behind someone’s teeth. You don’t know. He’ll never tell you all of it.
But he meets your gaze.
“I don’t feel clean.”
You lift your hand, slowly—like you’re approaching an animal that might bolt—and press your palm over his.
“It's okay”
His voice drops to almost nothing. “It's not.”
The faucet still runs—thin, faltering—like even the house doesn’t know how to stop. Jack speaks again.
“There was a kid. We found him—twelve, maybe. Half his stomach was gone. His arm too. He kept trying to sit up. I told him he’d be okay. I said—”
His voice breaks off, caught in his throat.
You don’t interrupt.
Jack drags the heel of his hand across his eye.
“I told him he’d see his mom. I didn’t know if his mom was alive. I just needed him to stay down long enough for me to close the wound.”
Silence.
“I was elbows deep. And he was still saying ‘okay, okay’ over and over like—like he was trying to help me.”
He stares at the water.
“I haven’t told anyone that.”
You squeeze his hand. You don’t say thank you. That would make it smaller.
“I should’ve been faster,” he whispers. “That’s the thing. I wasn’t fast enough.”
You shake your head.
“Jack.”
“I had blood in my teeth. I smelled it in my hair. I kept thinking—if I can just get my hands clean…”
You gently turn off the faucet.
The sink gurgles. The water stills.
Then you take the towel—the ugly pink one—and press it gently into his hands.
“They’re clean.”
“They don’t feel it.”
“Then I’ll keep telling you until they do.”
Jack holds the towel like it’s a wound dressing.
His hands shake. Yours don’t.
Not this time.
You don’t speak as you lead him downstairs.
He follows. Not because he’s ready. Not because he wants to. Because there’s nothing else to do.
The kitchen light is off. You don’t turn it on.
The dim grey of early morning is enough. You’ve lived here long enough to know where the corners are, even when your eyes are wet. Even when his boots—still by the door—remind you that he hasn’t really unpacked. That he might not.
Jack lowers himself into the nearest kitchen chair like his body isn’t quite calibrated to this furniture anymore. It creaks. He doesn’t react.
His hands are wrapped in the floral towel. Still.
You move quietly, like sudden noise might undo everything.
You pour coffee. The same pot from last night, reheated on the burner. Bitter. Burned. Familiar.
He doesn’t look at you when you set it down.
You say, “It’s hot.”
He says nothing.
You sit across from him. You don’t touch your own mug. Your hands are too warm already from holding his.
After a long time, he drinks.
One sip. Then another. Like his throat still hasn’t forgiven him for what he said upstairs.
You stare at the tile. You only just notice the floor’s still damp near the fridge. The ice maker leaks again.
The silence grows legs.
Jack clears his throat. Swallows something that isn’t coffee.
Then says, “You want to know the worst part?”
You look up.
“There’s a piece of me that misses it.”
He doesn’t look at you. He stares down at the table like it might open up and swallow the words.
“I miss the certainty,” he says. “I miss knowing exactly what to do. Where to stand. When to grab the gauze. Who needed me most.”
You nod. Slowly.
“You still know how to do that.”
He finally meets your eyes. “But it’s different here.”
You tilt your head. “Because no one’s dying?”
“Because no one’s listening.”
You open your mouth. Then close it again.
Because he’s right.
Jack rubs his eyes with the heel of his hand. Winces like he forgot how raw his skin was. The towel slips off his lap. You lean down to pick it up, fold it, and place it beside his mug.
“I didn’t mean to say any of that,” he says.
“I know.”
“You were supposed to get a version of me that could handle this.”
You lean forward, arms crossed over the table.
“I didn’t want a version. I wanted you.”
Jack’s fingers curl around the mug. He looks like he’s trying to grip it hard enough to keep from shaking.
“You don’t get to fix me,” he says. It’s not cruel. It’s not sharp. It’s a line he’s rehearsed. Probably in silence. Probably at night.
You don’t flinch.
“I wasn’t trying to.”
“Then what are you doing?”
“Letting you fall apart. And staying.”
That breaks something. Not all the way. But enough.
Jack pushes the mug toward the center of the table like he’s done with it. Like it’s too hot, or too honest.
Then he sinks back in the chair, palms flat to the edge.
His eyes trace the room—cabinets, sink, toaster, stove. You. Slowly. Like he’s trying to remember what each thing used to mean.
“Last time I sat at this table,” he says, “we were fighting about laundry.”
You smile, just a little. “You said I folded your shirts like a civilian.”
“You said I was lucky I even had clean shirts.”
“I said that?”
“Yeah.”
“I was right.”
He huffs a breath. Almost a laugh. It disappears.
You reach out. Not far. Just far enough that your fingers brush the edge of his.
“I don’t want you to be fine,” you say.
“I don’t want to be this.”
“Okay.”
“I just need a minute.”
“You can have as long as you want.”
The house creaks around you like it’s heard every version of this conversation.
Outside, the sun finally cuts over the roofline, pushing light in through the side window above the sink.
It lands across Jack’s shoulders.
He doesn’t move.
But for the first time in hours, he looks warm.
7:08 pm. The sidewalk doesn’t feel any narrower. But he walks like it might betray him.
The sun’s still out, but softer now. Late-day light, the kind that washes everything in the gold of almost evening.
You suggested a walk without meaning to. Just said, “Do you want to get out of the house?” and he nodded like it was a mercy. Like he’d been waiting for the walls to stop humming since the moment he stepped through the door.
He doesn’t ask where you’re going.
He just follows.
Jack doesn’t walk beside you at first. He walks behind, about half a pace. Not enough to make it weird. Just enough to feel like he’s tracking, not joining. You don’t push it.
The neighborhood hasn’t changed much since he left.
Cracked sidewalks. Kids’ chalk drawings half-faded on the curb. A recycling bin knocked over and not yet fixed. Someone grilling a few houses down—probably burgers. The smell hangs in the air like memory.
Your feet find the rhythm first. You’ve taken this walk a hundred times. It used to be your way to clear your head when he was gone—loop around the block, pass the blue house with the overgrown hydrangeas, cut through the alley where the pavement turns to gravel, come home when the porch light flickers.
Today, you walk slower.
Jack’s boots sound heavier than they should on the concrete. Like he’s used to dirt again. Like sidewalks don’t make sense to him anymore.
At the corner, you stop.
There’s a curb here—chipped, worn smooth at the edges. Jack used to park his truck here. He’d sit on the edge of the bed with his legs swinging, elbows braced behind him, watching the sky like it might start telling the truth.
You glance toward the space without meaning to.
Jack follows your gaze. Then says, “That spot still oil-stained?”
You nod.
“I checked last month. The outline’s still there.”
He breathes out, almost a laugh.
“That truck never stopped leaking.”
“You never stopped defending it.”
“She got me through two duty stations and your father’s wrath.”
You smile. “He said it looked like it belonged in a scrapyard.”
Jack shrugs. “It did.”
He doesn’t say what else happened in that truck. The nights when you climbed in beside him just to get away from the noise. The way he kept spare socks and granola bars in the glovebox like he was always half-deployed already.
You remember. He doesn’t have to say it.
You cross the street together now. Closer. His shoulder brushes yours on the corner, and for a second, he stops.
Right at the driveway of the blue house. The one with the busted birdbath and the plastic lawn chairs.
He looks down at the sidewalk like something might be there.
Then he says, “This is where I told you I didn’t want you to wait.”
You turn to face him.
“You said, ‘Don’t wait up.’ Not ‘Don’t wait.’”
Jack swallows. “Did I?”
You nod. “I wrote it down. In a notebook. Dumb things you said before you left.”
His mouth twitches. “How long was the list?”
“Longer than it should’ve been.”
He doesn’t laugh, but his eyes flick up. “You were mad.”
“I was scared.”
He nods.
And then: “I was too.”
That lands between you like it’s never been said before.
Because it hasn’t.
Jack exhales. Long. Slow.
Then he takes a half-step closer, eyes still on the sidewalk.
“Can I tell you something?”
“Yeah.”
“I didn’t think I’d make it back here. Not once.”
You blink.
“I thought about it,” he says, “but it never felt real. This. You. The sidewalk. The mailbox with the duct tape on the hinge. I thought I’d either die or disappear somewhere in between.”
You look down. At the exact spot his boot toe is nudging.
“You didn’t.”
“I know.”
“But I think part of you stayed behind anyway.”
Jack reaches up—slowly—and touches the side of your face. Not like he’s claiming you. Like he’s asking if you’re still real.
You lean into it.
Just barely.
He says, “Thank you.”
You say, “For what?”
“For being part of the part that stayed.”
You don’t respond.
You don’t have to.
Because you already know you’re walking side-by-side with a man who doesn’t believe he deserves this sidewalk, this sky, this chance. And you’re the only thing grounding him to it.
As you round the corner toward the house, you realize your steps are in sync now. His shoulder brushes yours again. This time, it lingers.
Not like contact.
Like remembrance.
Like maybe this is how it started the first time.
And how it might start again.
DAY THREE — THE BEDROOM
No one sleeps. But something breaks open. Robinson Township, PA — July 2005, 2:11 a.m.
The bed is too big.
You bought it together at Value City Furniture two summers ago, back when you thought buying things together meant something permanent. Something like safety. Something like a future.
It had looked romantic in the showroom. The wrought iron headboard, black and arched, advertised as “rustic elegance.” Jack rolled his eyes at the tagline, said the frame looked like a Civil War relic, but you caught him testing the edge with his boot anyway. Just to see if it could hold weight.
It squeaked the first night you slept in it. It still squeaks now.
Jack lies on top of the covers, arms crossed over his chest like he’s waiting for a command. His pants are creased, like they came off the floor. He hasn’t changed shirts since yesterday. You’re not sure he’s changed at all.
He doesn’t close his eyes. He just stares at the ceiling like there might be a sniper’s silhouette etched in the drywall.
You lie on your side, curled into the corner of the mattress, spine curved in on itself. Your knees pulled up like they might anchor you. You’re wearing the sleep shorts with the little ribbon on the waistband—the pair you bought during a clearance sale at Ross. You wore them the night before he deployed.
You remember standing in the hallway while he packed. The overhead light was yellow and humming, and you asked, “Should I bring you to the airport?”
He didn’t answer. Just zipped his bag.
You bought those shorts for him. He doesn’t notice them now.
At 2:57 am, you hear the floorboards creak.
Jack moves like someone trying not to make sound, but the house was built in 1961, and it remembers everything. Every board groans. The door clicks open, then closed. The stairs whisper.
You wait a few minutes.
Then you get up.
At 3:03, you find him in the kitchen.
The lights are off. The only glow comes from the microwave clock and the open fridge door.
He’s standing by the counter, drinking straight from the coffee pot. No mug. No ceremony. The pot’s heavy in his hand, the glass sweating cold from the fridge shelf. He winces when he swallows—the burn of something that’s meant to be hot but never got there.
You don’t say anything at first. Just lean against the doorway in your ribboned shorts and the tank top you wore to bed, arms folded. He notices you. Not with surprise. Just… resignation.
“Sorry,” he says, blinking like the light might change. “I didn’t mean to wake you.”
“You didn’t,” you say, and it’s true.
He sets the pot down, grabs a mug from the cabinet. The red one with peeling white letters that say “HOT STUFF.” You’d stolen it from a diner on Route 30 during a road trip that neither of you ever really talk about anymore.
You watch him hold it in both hands. You’re not sure if it’s a joke or a relic. He pours the cold coffee into it anyway.
“You remember that dog across the street?” he asks.
His voice is quieter now. Lower. Like the room has ears.
You tilt your head. “The one that used to bark every night?”
“Yeah.”
You nod once. “They moved two months ago.”
Jack doesn’t react. Not really. He nods back, slowly. His eyes stay trained on the window.
But you can tell—he’s still listening for it.
That dog used to be a warning.
Every night, it barked once before the porch light on your neighbor’s house turned on. Once before the sound of someone’s car pulled up. Once before the late-shift newspaper delivery.
It let Jack rest. Because if the dog wasn’t barking, there was nothing wrong.
Now, there’s nothing.
The silence is louder.
He exhales. Braces his hands on the counter. You step into the room, bare feet on cold tile. You don’t ask what he’s doing. You already know.
You reach past him to grab a second mug. Yours says Pittsburgh’s #1 Radiology Tech, even though you’re not a tech. Jack bought it as a joke your first year working.
He watches as you pour a little into your cup. Then he says, quietly, “I thought the bed would help.”
“What part?”
“The frame. The mattress. The idea of it.”
You sip. “And?”
“I laid there and waited for my heart rate to drop.”
“Did it?”
Jack shakes his head. “I laid there and counted shadows.”
You lean against the counter next to him.
He doesn’t move away.
“I don’t know how to sleep here anymore,” he says. “But I can’t sleep anywhere else.”
You glance at him. He looks tired—not in the face, not in the skin, but in the bones. His body is upright because it doesn’t remember how to rest. His hands are braced like he’s waiting to be called up. His mouth is a straight line.
You both stay in the kitchen, side by side, watching the space where the dog used to bark.
The silence is awful. But it's not empty.
It’s loaded.
The coffee’s cold.
The mug is warm.
The night keeps going.
And the bed?
It’s still upstairs. Still too big.
Still squeaking into the silence.
Waiting.
DAY FOUR – THE BASEMENT
Where the laundry runs too hot. Robinson Township, PA — July 2005, 1:34 p.m.
The dryer’s on its third cycle.
You didn’t mean to restart it. Your hands just did it. Automatically. Like the sound mattered more than the clothes inside. Like the tumbling noise was preferable to the silence in your chest.
The laundry room is suffocating. A concrete box with no insulation, barely enough ceiling for Jack to stand straight. A narrow block window lets in sunlight through cobwebs. Dust dances in it, but nothing else moves.
You’re barefoot, standing on the painted concrete, folding a pile of clothes you don’t remember washing.
T-shirts. Socks. A hoodie that still smells like wind. His fatigue jacket—the one that’s been draped over the back of the kitchen chair since the night he got home. It’s damp from the wash. You shouldn’t have washed it.
You tell yourself it needed it. You tell yourself that’s what home is.
You tell yourself he won’t notice.
Then you reach into the basket and pull it out—a plain, sand-colored combat shirt. Short sleeves. Tag nearly faded. The collar stiff. There’s a small puncture at the shoulder seam, the fabric there worn thin. The cotton feels heavier than it should. Like it held too much sun. Or too much blood.
You lift it gently. You don’t fold it.
You just stare.
Your fingers curl into the fabric. It’s still warm from the dryer.
Behind you, the door creaks.
You go still.
You don’t have to turn around to know it’s him. You can tell by the cadence—three steps too fast for a man not in a hurry. Heavy on the heel. Controlled on the descent. Like he’s been pacing the top of the stairs for minutes before deciding to come down.
When you finally do turn, he’s already halfway across the room.
And his eyes are on the shirt.
He stops like he hit something invisible.
You don’t say anything.
The dryer clicks and spins behind you.
Jack steps forward—deliberate, not loud—and holds out his hand.
You hand him the shirt.
He takes it quickly. Not rough. But not gently either. Like you’d handed him something flammable. Like it might disappear if he didn’t grip it tight.
His voice is low. Distant.
“Don’t wash these.”
You blink. “What?”
“They’re not dirty.”
Your mouth opens. Then closes.
Jack’s holding the shirt against his chest, knuckles white. His breathing is too controlled. Eyes wide but unreadable.
“I—I just thought—” you try. “You left it on the chair.”
“It wasn’t dirty,” he says again. This time louder. Not angry. Just breaking.
The basement hums.
You step closer. “Jack—”
He cuts you off without looking up.
“I wore this when Elliot died.”
Silence.
Jack’s hands tighten.
“There was nothing left of him but his legs and a boot. I packed what I could into my bag because I thought—I thought maybe his mother would want something. A sock. A photo. Anything. But we never got a body bag. So I folded my own shirt. Folded it clean. And kept it.”
He swallows. Hard.
“I’ve been carrying it for weeks.”
You want to say I didn’t know. You want to say I’m sorry.
But you don’t. You don’t interrupt him.
“It smells like diesel and antiseptic and the last hour of that day,” he says. “And I know that sounds fucked up, but that’s how I know it’s mine.”
You feel your chest cave in.
He still won’t look at you.
“I came home and I couldn’t sleep unless it was near me. Just in the room. On the chair. Something. It—”
Jack presses the shirt to his face. Not to smell it.
To stop himself.
His voice drops. Breaks.
“It was the only thing that didn’t forget me.”
You cross the rest of the room slowly. Step by step. Like any wrong movement might make him retreat.
He doesn’t move away when you reach him.
You lift your hand and rest it on his forearm, just above the place where his fingers are clenched in the fabric.
“I didn’t mean to erase anything.”
Jack shakes his head. His voice is a whisper. “You didn’t. I just—I didn’t know it would hit me like this.”
He finally looks at you.
His eyes are bloodshot. Still holding back. But this time, you can see the grief there.
You reach up. Brush his damp temple with your thumb.
Jack lets the shirt fall to his side.
His hand finds yours.
You both stand in the too-hot basement for a long time. The dryer clicks. The smell of cotton softener and heat fills the space. Jack exhales, long and quiet, and leans into you—not like surrender, but like memory finally letting him bend.
And the shirt?
It stays in his hand.
Unfolded.
Still his.
3:58 pm. You didn’t mean to come here. The hospital’s not where people go to breathe, but the parking lot knows your car. Your badge still opens the back entrance. And Dana? Dana never stopped answering your texts.
So you park where you always used to, next to the yellow-striped curb with the half-broken wheelchair sign. The air smells like brake fluid and hot metal and something floral that might be coming from the retirement home next door.
Dana’s already out there, standing under the overhang near the loading zone. Her scrubs are dark gray, faded at the collar. She’s got her ID clipped to her waistband and her lighter in one hand.
“You look like shit,” she says as you walk up.
“Thanks.”
“I meant that fondly.”
You lean against the wall beside her, arms crossed, heat still clinging to your shirt. You didn’t even change. You realize your hands still smell like dryer sheets and dust.
Dana lights her cigarette. Exhales smoke in the opposite direction, not out of politeness—just force of habit.
“How is he?” she says, not looking at you.
You shrug.
Dana snorts. “I’m not the press, kid. Don’t shrug me.”
You stare out at the edge of the parking lot. The wind lifts your hair, then drops it again. You don’t answer right away.
Then you say, “I washed one of his shirts.”
Dana raises her eyebrows. Waits.
“It—meant something to him. I didn’t know. He lost someone. He folded that shirt and carried it back like it was a body bag. And I washed it like it was laundry.”
Dana doesn’t speak. Just flicks ash from her cigarette with one practiced gesture.
“He didn’t yell,” you add. “He didn’t even get mad. He just looked like I’d taken something he didn’t have a backup of.”
Dana inhales again. Her voice is rough when she says, “That’s because you did.”
You look at her.
She exhales smoke slowly. Her eyes are on the street, but her voice stays with you.
“That’s the thing no one tells you about grief, or trauma, or whatever the hell you wanna name it. Half the time, it’s stored in the dumbest shit. Coffee mugs. Baseball caps. T-shirts that still smell like dirt and diesel. You think you’re doing something kind—putting it back in order—but to them, it’s erasure.”
You nod. Quiet.
“I don’t want to fix him,” you say.
Dana cuts her eyes at you. “Bullshit.”
You flinch.
“You want him whole,” she continues. “And I get it. But he’s not. And he won’t be. So either you love what made it back, or you keep waiting for someone who didn’t.”
The words land like bricks.
You breathe through your nose.
“I do love what made it back.”
Dana’s voice softens, just a little. “Good. Then start showing up for him—not the version you built in your head while he was gone.”
Silence again.
The sun slants gold across the top of the ambulance bay awning. Someone inside slams a door. You both ignore it.
“I miss who I was when he left,” you say after a long minute. “Back then I still had answers.”
Dana nods. “Now you’ve got questions.”
“Yeah.”
“You’ll live.”
You huff a breath.
Dana stubs out the cigarette on the cement with the toe of her shoe. She doesn’t look at you when she says:
“He’s lucky you’re still here.”
You blink. “That’s not something you say.”
“I didn’t say it for you. I said it because it’s true.”
You let your head rest back against the wall.
The sun dips lower. Somewhere inside, someone yells for a gurney. Dana doesn’t move.
Then she adds, quieter, “I’m around. If you need someone to call next time you try to launder someone’s soul.”
You laugh—sharp, real.
“Thanks.”
Dana flicks her lighter once before pocketing it. “Now get out of here before someone hands you a chart.”
4:46 pm. The house is quiet when you get back. Not still—just quiet. The kind that feels occupied, but not lived in. The TV isn’t on. No fan running. No clatter from the kitchen. Just the sound of your key in the lock, the door shutting behind you, and the faintest creak from the upstairs floorboards as the house settles around a man who hasn’t moved in hours.
You toe off your shoes, still holding the weight of Dana’s voice in your shoulders.
You walk upstairs.
The bedroom door is open a few inches. Just like he left it the night he got back.
You push it gently.
Jack is sitting on the edge of the bed. Elbows on his knees, fingers steepled in front of his mouth. He looks like he’s praying, but you know better.
He’s not praying.
He’s just trying to stay in his body.
The bedside light is on. The one with the too-warm bulb you used to complain about. It casts a golden pool across the blanket but doesn’t touch his face. He doesn’t turn toward you. But he knows you’re there.
You step inside.
He doesn’t speak.
You sit beside him. Not close enough to touch. Just close enough to feel the heat radiating from him like tension.
You don’t speak for a long time.
Then, quietly, “You’re still in the same clothes.”
Jack lets out a breath—something like a laugh, but it’s dry. Empty.
“I was gonna change.”
“I figured.”
His shoulders move, just barely.
“I came home,” he says, “but this won’t come off.”
He gestures down at himself. At the shirt. At the pants. At the version of him that hasn’t known softness in months.
You nod.
Then, carefully, you reach for the hem of his shirt. Your fingers brush the fabric. He doesn’t flinch. But he goes still.
You say, “Let me.”
He nods once.
You move slowly.
You slide your hands under the bottom of the shirt, just enough to lift it over his hips, then ribs, then shoulders. He leans forward as you ease it over his head.
It smells like sweat. Soap. Something older—metallic and dry. You fold it and set it beside you on the bed like it’s breakable.
He stays hunched over.
His back is scarred in ways you hadn’t seen yet. New calluses. Old burns. A dark bruise under his left shoulder blade, the kind that comes from armor worn too long or walls leaned against for too many hours.
You move to the belt.
Your fingers are careful. You don’t tug. You just unclip the buckle, slide the leather loose, and let the weight of it ease through the loops like a breath being released. His hands rest on his thighs. Still.
The pants slide down stiffly—heavy from wear, creased with memory. You pull them down to his ankles. He steps out of them wordlessly.
You fold them too.
Now he’s in boxers and socks. That’s all.
You kneel in front of him. Palms to his knees.
His eyes finally meet yours.
And for a moment, there’s no field medic, no trauma code, no silence. Just Jack. The man who came home. The man who’s still learning how to let someone see him like this.
You say, “Lie back.”
He hesitates.
You say it again. “Just rest.”
He exhales. Then does.
He lowers himself onto the bed, arms still too stiff, like he doesn’t quite know where to put them. You tug the blanket up over his legs. His chest is bare, rising steady, but you can still see the tension under the surface.
You crawl in beside him, fully clothed, facing him.
His eyes are open. Searching.
You reach out, lay a hand on his sternum.
Warm. Solid. Human.
Jack says, “I didn’t think I’d let anyone do that.”
You say, “You didn’t. You let me.”
His throat works. Then he whispers:
“Don’t leave.”
You tighten your hand against his chest.
“I won’t.”
And for the first time since he came home, he believes you.
DAY FIVE — THE KITCHEN
Where he reaches first. Robinson Township, PA — July 2005, 9:17 a.m.
You wake to the smell of something burning.
Not smoke. Just bread taken too far. A crisp edge curling up in the toaster tray, sugar from the crust turning dark and acrid. You blink into the morning light, still bleary, your legs tangled in the sheets.
Jack isn’t in the bed.
But the blankets are still warm where he was.
You sit up.
You don’t panic.
In the kitchen, he’s standing in front of the toaster, shirtless, barefoot, and blinking at the smoke like he forgot the world had timers. His dog tags are still on. You don’t think he ever took them off.
He hears you step in and glances up.
“Morning,” he says.
His voice is raspy but present. Grounded.
You nod. “You made toast.”
“I made charcoal,” he corrects. “The toaster’s got a vendetta.”
You walk over. He waves a dish towel in front of the fire alarm that didn’t go off. His eyes flick toward you, once, then away again.
You pull open a cabinet. Grab a plate. Set it on the counter between you both.
Jack says, “I was trying to let you sleep.”
“You did.”
“You came running.”
“I smelled crime.”
He huffs a laugh, then reaches down and pries the toast out with his fingers. Winces as it singes him.
You move before you think—grab his wrist. “Let me.”
He lets go.
You throw the toast away.
Jack leans back against the counter. Dog tags swinging once, then stilling against his sternum. His body is loose in a way it hasn’t been all week. Still tall. Still lean. But not braced.
You look at him. Really look.
He looks back.
Then—quietly, like it’s nothing—he reaches out.
Fingers brush your hip.
A light touch. Groundless. Unscripted. But his.
You blink.
He says, “Just wanted to see if you were real.”
You step closer.
“I am.”
He nods. Swallows.
“Okay.”
You don’t kiss.
You don’t touch again.
But you stand across from each other in the middle of the too-bright kitchen with the broken toaster and the lemon cleaner still clinging to the tile.
And for once?
He doesn't try to leave the room.
4:23 pm. It happens mid-afternoon.
Not in a moment you expect.
You’re on the floor in the living room, head resting against the couch cushion, legs stretched out, ankles crossed. The TV is on but muted. One of those daytime true crime shows where the reenactments are always too dramatic. You’re not watching it.
Jack’s on the couch behind you, feet up, one arm slung across his chest. He’s not asleep. He’s just still, in that strange, too-conscious way you’ve come to recognize. The kind of stillness that says: I’m here. But not for long.
The room smells like furniture polish and warm laundry. There’s a breeze through the cracked window that lifts the edge of the curtain but doesn’t move it enough to matter.
Your voice breaks the silence.
“You remember when the power went out for two days last winter?”
Jack grunts. “You cried over the last Pop-Tart.”
“I did not.”
“You rationed it like you were in a bunker.”
“You refused to use the candles.”
“I hate vanilla.”
“They were unscented.”
Jack shrugs.
You smile to yourself. “We kept the fridge cold with a bag of snow in a Tupperware container.”
Jack glances down at you. “You slept on the floor, too.”
You turn your face toward him, cheek pressing into the cushion.
“There was more heat near the vent,” you say. “And I didn’t want to move too far from the outlet in case the power came back.”
“You were curled up like a cat,” he murmurs. “I was on the couch.”
“I know,” you say. “I didn’t want to be left.”
Jack doesn’t respond.
But you feel it—the shift. The widening quiet. Not uncomfortable. Just heavy. Full.
You sit up slowly, turn toward him, and fold your legs beneath you, facing him.
He looks at you. And for a second—just one—his hand twitches like he might reach for your face.
But he doesn’t.
You say, “I keep thinking about what happens after this.”
Jack’s eyes stay on yours. His body stills again.
“What happens when the sixth day ends,” you continue. “What it means when the last thing you leave behind is a used towel and a folded shirt on the end of the bed.”
He opens his mouth. Closes it. His throat works.
You shake your head, softly. “I know it’s not fair.”
“No,” he says quietly. “It is.”
You wait.
Then he says it:
“I’ve been thinking about it too.”
The air in the room thickens.
You don’t move.
He sits forward.
Hands on his knees. Shoulders hunched. Dog tags swinging once, then still.
“You want to ask me not to go,” he says.
You nod.
“But you won’t,” he finishes.
You shake your head. “No.”
He lets out a breath. It’s shaky.
“You’d be the first.”
You blink. “What?”
“You’d be the first person to ever ask.”
You whisper, “Would you stay if I did?”
Jack doesn’t answer.
Instead, he leans forward—closer. Eyes fixed on yours.
And for a breathless moment, it feels like something might break open.
But then?
He blinks.
And leans back
Your eyes sting.
Because you both know what he’s doing.
Because you let him do it.
Because he’s still leaving.
8:43 pm. You were just putting away socks.
That’s all.
You were folding laundry from the basket you forgot in the dryer, and you were doing it without thinking—half-watching the muted news loop on Channel 11, half-counting how many days until you’d have to start buying groceries again.
Jack’s upstairs. Said he was going to shave.
You didn’t ask why now—why suddenly, after days of letting the stubble grow in, he’d decided tonight was the time.
You didn’t mention the faint scent of aftershave on him this morning, either. The same one he always uses. Clean. Sharp. Familiar. Even though you hadn’t seen him so much as look at a razor in four days.
You’re just putting away socks.
You open his nightstand drawer to make space—maybe for the shirt he left folded on the bed, maybe for something else. You haven’t organized it since before he left. You’ve let him keep it messy.
Inside: gum, receipts, a scratch-off ticket with no winner, a pen with no cap, and something folded.
It’s yellow legal pad paper. Soft at the edges.
Folded twice.
Not shoved in.
Not careless.
Tucked.
You hesitate.
You unfold it.
You read the first line.
And the second.
And suddenly it’s not the laundry that’s hot anymore.
It’s your face. Your throat. Your chest. Like the words are burning straight through you.
You sit down on the bed without realizing you’ve moved.
You read the whole thing.
I’m not leaving a note. That’s not what this is. This is just… something I need to write down so it stops choking me when I try to look at her. So I can leave without taking all of it in my throat. I was never supposed to stay this long. I knew the six days would stretch me, but I didn’t expect her to make them feel like the only real time I’ve had since I left the first time. She folds towels like the world isn’t ending. She hums when she’s trying not to cry. She asked if I’d stay, and the worst part is—I wanted to say yes. But I knew I wouldn’t. Staying means breaking every part of me that still runs toward sirens. Staying means taking off the uniform and not knowing what’s underneath. Staying means telling her that I don’t know how to live in a house where the lights aren’t always on. I’m going to leave while she’s sleeping. Like I never really got back. Like I was just passing through. She’ll be okay. She’s always been better at being alone than I have. I won’t leave this for her to find. She doesn’t need more wreckage. I’m just writing it down so I remember I meant it.
You fold it back with shaking hands.
Your chest feels hollow. Your mouth tastes like copper. The room is loud, suddenly—the fan, the TV, the fridge kicking on, pipes groaning somewhere in the walls—everything pressing in at once.
He wasn’t going to tell you.
Not even a goodbye.
He was going to wait for you to fall asleep tomorrow morning, when the sixth day was up, and he was going to walk out the door without a word.
Without this.
Without anything.
And now?
You know.
And he doesn’t know that you know.
DAY SIX — THE PORCH
Where he thinks he’s being brave. And you let him. Robinson Township, PA — July 2005, 6:38 a.m.
You were awake all night.
Not pacing. Not crying.
Just awake.
The letter still folded the way he left it, tucked back into the drawer you never should’ve opened. You didn’t put it on the pillow. You didn’t confront him. You were careful to tuck the corners the way he does. Military-style. Precise.
Because if he was going to ghost you, you’d meet him with the same clean symmetry he used to disappear from war zones.
You brewed the coffee at six. Toast in the toaster, just enough to make the kitchen smell like routine. You wiped down the counters. You opened the front door.
The porch is cold. Dew-soaked. Quiet.
You sit on the top step with your mug and wait for him.
Not because you’re hoping he’ll change his mind.
But because he thinks you don’t know. And you need to see how well he lies.
He comes down at 6:44 am.
Hair damp. Bag already packed. Boots laced.
He smells like bar soap and fabric softener. And the distance between you is already miles wide.
He steps onto the porch like a man who thinks he’s making a clean exit.
You don’t look up right away.
He sits beside you, carefully. Like he’s trying not to wake a sleeping animal.
You sip your coffee.
“Sleep okay?” you ask.
He shrugs. “Didn’t sleep much.”
You nod like you didn’t already know that.
“Flight’s at eight?”
“Yeah.”
You glance over. “You packed light.”
He doesn’t catch the shift in your voice. He never was good at reading the tension when it was quiet.
He says, “Didn’t want to leave too much here.”
And there it is.
Not want to leave too much.
Like this was a staging ground, not a home.
You nod.
The silence stretches.
He’s waiting for a clean break. You’re waiting for him to break. Neither of you get what you want.
At 6:56, he stands.
You follow.
The front door is open behind you.
The duffel sits by the couch.
He looks at you for a long moment.
And then—he reaches out, cups your jaw the same way he did that first night he came home. Thumb at your temple. Fingers light at your neck. He tilts your face up.
And kisses you.
Soft. Warm. Final.
You let him.
You kiss him back.
Because he doesn’t know you know. Because you want this one last thing. Because you love him and you hate him and you’ll never forget this.
When he pulls back, he doesn’t meet your eyes.
He says, “I’ll call when I land.”
You nod.
You say, “Safe flight.”
He leaves.
Just like he wrote.
No look back.
No guilt.
No pause.
You close the door behind him with shaking hands.
You don’t cry.
Not yet.
You just stand in the kitchen with your coffee and the toast that burned a little.
And when the sound of his engine fades down the block—that’s when it hits.
Not because he left.
But because he meant to leave like you never mattered. And you let him kiss you anyway.

pistilwhip Tue 20 May 2025 06:51PM UTC
Comment Actions
allinourprivatetraps Wed 21 May 2025 09:28AM UTC
Comment Actions
vemofra Mon 26 May 2025 04:27AM UTC
Comment Actions
Ladyumbrella Sun 24 Aug 2025 09:15AM UTC
Comment Actions
skullidle Mon 06 Oct 2025 08:48PM UTC
Comment Actions