The sun hung low, casting streaks of blood-orange across the sky. Captain Jason Miller stepped off the bus, boots scuffed from ten years of war, heart heavy with memories of a home he hadn’t seen in a decade.
He had imagined this moment countless times—the white picket fence, the garden his mother tended, the porch where laughter once echoed. But what greeted him instead was decay: cracked driveway, weeds bursting through concrete, shattered windows, doors crooked on rusted hinges.
And there, in the front yard, was a fresh grave.
Jason froze. The simple wooden cross read: “Miller”—his family. Ten years away, and now only this remained.
He fell to his knees, trembling, brushing his fingertips against the cross, whispering every name, every memory. The wind rustled through the weeds, and the old house groaned behind him, a hollow echo of a life that would never return.
Hours passed. The sun dipped below the horizon. The house was empty, the yard overgrown, and yet the weight of absence pressed heavier than any battlefield he had survived.
Ten years fighting abroad, and he had lost the war at home.
Finally, Jason rose, dirt-streaked and weary, casting one last glance at the grave, and walked away, carrying with him the ghosts of a home that would never be alive again.