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“He Just Wanted the Chicken Nuggets”

“He Just Wanted the Chicken Nuggets”

When my husband came back from deployment, I thought life would snap back to normal.
We’d eat dinners together again. We’d take Eli to the park like before.
We’d laugh, like nothing had changed.

But it doesn’t work like that.

He came home different — quieter, older, eyes a little lost when the fireworks went off on the Fourth of July.
And Eli… well, our three-year-old son had grown up in those two years. To him, “Daddy” was almost a story — a man in pictures, a voice in bedtime videos.

So when my husband finally came home, Eli hid behind me the way shy kids do with strangers.
It broke him. It broke both of us.

Weeks passed. We tried to rebuild the small rituals that used to glue us together. But Eli refused bedtime hugs, refused car rides, refused to say “Daddy.”
My husband didn’t push. He just smiled and said, “He’ll remember when he’s ready.”

Then one morning, out of nowhere, Eli said:

“Daddy, can we have Nugget Night again?”

I froze. Nugget Night — that was their thing before deployment.
Every Friday, the two of them would eat chicken nuggets on the couch, ketchup on the coffee table, cartoons playing too loud. It was messy and perfect.

My husband’s face softened. “Sure, buddy. This Friday.”

But Friday came, and something else happened instead.


It was supposed to be a celebration dinner — my husband’s “Welcome Home” arranged by the base, at some fancy restaurant downtown.
I told Eli he’d get to wear his tiny bow tie, that there’d be cake and balloons.

We got there early. Everything looked too clean, too quiet. Polished silverware. Dim lights. The kind of place that doesn’t feel like home.

Eli squirmed in his seat. “Can I have nuggets?”
I laughed. “They don’t have nuggets here, baby. They have steak.”
“I don’t want steak,” he said, frowning. “I want Daddy’s nuggets.”

A few people smiled politely. Some waiters smirked.
My husband reached across the table, his hand trembling slightly — old habit from the tremors he got overseas.

“Hey, champ. We’ll have Nugget Night soon, okay?”

Eli crossed his arms, tears forming.

“But Daddy always made them before he went away. He said we’d have them when he came back.”

And right there, in that too-bright restaurant, my husband’s eyes glistened.
He stood up suddenly. “Let’s go,” he said.

“What? But the dinner—”
“Forget the dinner. Let’s get nuggets.”

So we left. People stared. I didn’t care.


We drove until we found a McDonald’s drive-thru.
Eli sat in his car seat, humming a song he used to sing with his dad — something about a yellow truck and sunshine.

My husband ordered three boxes of nuggets.
We parked in an empty lot, the golden arches glowing above us like a streetlight halo.

He handed Eli a box. “Here you go, buddy. The real deal.”

Eli smiled for the first time that night.
He picked up a nugget, looked at it carefully, then reached into his pocket and pulled out something folded.

A napkin.

My husband frowned. “Where’d you get that?”
Eli said softly, “It was in my toy box. You left it for me.”

I leaned closer. The napkin was old, yellowed, the ink faded but still legible.
It said:

“For Nugget Night, when Daddy can’t be there. Eat some for me.”
— Love, Dad.

Tears filled my eyes. My husband’s lips trembled. “I don’t even remember writing that,” he whispered.

Eli took a bite, ketchup dripping down his fingers. “You came back, Daddy. So now we can eat together.”

He fell asleep before finishing the box, his little hand still clutching that napkin.


For weeks after that night, Nugget Night became a ritual again.
Every Friday. No matter what.
No phones, no work calls, just us — ketchup stains, laughter, the smell of fries.

Slowly, Eli started calling him “Daddy” again.
He’d reach for his hand when crossing the street. He’d crawl into his lap during cartoons.
We thought we’d made it through.

Then one night, I woke up to the sound of the TV still on.
My husband wasn’t in bed.
I found him on the couch, staring at a photo of him and Eli from before deployment.

“I can’t sleep,” he murmured. “Sometimes it still feels like I’m over there.”
I hugged him, said the usual things — You’re safe now. You’re home. We’re okay.
He nodded, but his eyes stayed on the photo.


The next morning, he was gone.

At first, I thought he’d gone for a run. But when I found the folded note on the kitchen table, my knees gave out.

“If you’re reading this, I just need a little time to breathe. Don’t worry about me. Tell Eli I love him. Tell him Nugget Night never ends — it just moves to the stars.”

They found his truck two towns over, by the old lake.
He had gone quietly, peacefully, the way he’d lived after the war — silently carrying everything he never said.


Months passed.
Eli still asked for nuggets every Friday.
He’d set one extra box on the table. “For Daddy,” he’d whisper.

One evening, as I cleaned up, I found something under his pillow — another folded napkin.
Same handwriting, same ink. But I hadn’t written it, and it wasn’t the old one.

It said:

“Hey, buddy. Daddy’s still here. Every Friday. Every bite.”

I never told him I found it.
Maybe it was something Eli wrote himself. Maybe it wasn’t.
I like to believe my husband kept his promise — that Nugget Night really did move to the stars.

So every Friday, when Eli laughs with ketchup on his cheek and I feel that familiar warmth in the air,
I look up, smile, and whisper,

“Dinner’s ready, love.”

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