Released After 3 Years, He Found His Father Gone And A Key Waiting-Teptep

The morning Eli Vance walked out of prison, freedom did not feel like freedom.

It felt like damp air in his lungs, a plastic bag biting into his fingers, and the sharp smell of diesel drifting across the bus station.

Three years had trained him to expect noise at certain times, doors at certain times, lights out at certain times.

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Outside, the world had no timetable for him.

People moved past with coffees, phones, suitcases, children in school jumpers, ordinary lives tucked under ordinary coats.

Eli stood there with his release paper folded into a corner of his bag and a bus ticket he had bought with hands that would not quite steady.

He should have felt lucky.

He should have felt clean.

But the only thing he could think of was his father.

Thomas Vance had been the shape Eli held on to in the dark.

Not the lawyers.

Not the judge.

Not the friends who stopped answering after the first month.

Dad.

In Eli’s mind, his father was always in the old leather armchair by the sitting-room window, cardigan sleeves pushed up, reading glasses low on his nose, pretending not to wait for the post.

He had written in the beginning.

Small, careful letters, never dramatic.

The kettle’s playing up again.

The back gate still sticks.

Linda says I fuss too much, but you know me.

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