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This year, the house glowed as always. Anna prepared David’s favorite stew, baked an apple pie, and Ethan wore the reindeer sweater his father had given him last Christmas. The clock struck eleven.

Snow covered the small road leading to the wooden house at the edge of town.
Warm yellow light spilled from the window, glimmering beside a Christmas tree adorned with ribbons and tiny stars. Inside, Anna and her eight-year-old son Ethan were placing the last few gifts beneath the tree.

Every year, on December 24th at exactly 11 p.m., they waited for David—Anna’s husband, Ethan’s father—the man who was only allowed to come home once a year.
He never spoke much about his job. Only said it “had something to do with the government.”
Anna understood and never pressed for details.

Each Christmas Eve, David would return in his dark coat, breath fogging in the cold air.
He always knocked three times on the door—his secret signal. Then came the same warmth: his smile, their tight embrace, the scent of burning wood from the fireplace, and Ethan’s laughter as he opened gifts—sometimes a toy airplane, sometimes new clothes, sometimes cozy socks for both mother and son.
For ten years, that was their tradition.
A brief, shining moment to hold onto through the long, lonely year.


This year, the house glowed as always. Anna prepared David’s favorite stew, baked an apple pie, and Ethan wore the reindeer sweater his father had given him last Christmas.
The clock struck eleven.

The wind howled outside, snow drifted past the porch.
But there was no knock.

Anna smiled faintly at her son.
“Maybe your dad’s stuck in traffic,” she whispered.
Ethan nodded, his eyes fixed on the door.

11:30.
Midnight.
Then 1 a.m.

Still, silence.
The candle on the dinner table burned low, its wax hardening into stillness.

By morning, only the cold light of dawn remained.
Anna set the breakfast table, forcing a calm voice.
“Your dad must’ve had an unexpected assignment,” she said softly. “He’ll write soon.”

But no letter ever came.
She wrote one, then another, and another—none received a reply.
Days turned into weeks, winter melted into summer.


One afternoon in early June, a knock finally echoed through the quiet house.
On the porch stood a U.S. officer, immaculate in his uniform, holding an envelope.

Anna recognized the insignia on his chest—the same unit David once served with.
Her heart pounded.

The man removed his hat and bowed slightly.
“Mrs. Bennett,” he said, “I’m here on behalf of Lieutenant Colonel David Bennett.
He’s currently on a classified mission overseas. He asked me to deliver this letter to you and your son.”

Anna’s hands trembled as she opened it.
David’s handwriting filled the page, steady and familiar:

“My dearest Anna and Ethan,

I couldn’t make it home this Christmas, and maybe not the next.
I’ve been assigned to a mission that will last two years. No contact, no messages.

I know you’ll worry, but please believe that every day, wherever I am,
I keep my promise—to always come home in spirit.

Tell our son that his father works to protect this world,
so children like him can sleep safely beneath the Christmas lights.

I’ll see you again when the first snow of the twelfth winter falls.”

Inside the envelope were two small pairs of socks—one red for Ethan, one white for Anna.

Anna sank to her knees, clutching her son as he read the letter beside her.
“Mama,” Ethan whispered, “what does Dad really do?”
She pulled him close, her voice trembling.
“Your father’s a soldier, sweetheart. A soldier of the United States.”

Outside, the summer wind carried a chill as dusk settled in.
In the corner of the room stood last year’s Christmas tree, still adorned with a small ornament that read, in Ethan’s childish handwriting:
“For Dad — Come Home Safe.”

And the following Christmas Eve, though the door remained silent, Anna and Ethan still placed new socks by the fireplace—
because they believed, as long as snow continued to fall,
White Christmas would bring him home again.

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