Soldier Came Home To His Wife’s Fear — Then Found The Bruises-heuh

Ethan Rivers had imagined the return so many times that, by the time he reached the front door, it felt almost like a memory.

Brooke would hear his key in the lock.

She would shout his name before the door had properly opened.

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She would run down the narrow hallway, bare feet on the floorboards, and throw her arms around him with that reckless joy she used to save for railway platforms, birthdays, and Sunday mornings when the rain trapped them inside.

For six months, that picture had kept him steady.

Through heat, noise, dust, and nights when sleep came in short, brutal pieces, Ethan had carried the thought of his wife like a match cupped in his hands.

He came home with a commendation medal buried in his duffel bag, dried mud on his boots, and a heart so full of hope that it made him feel young and foolish.

The house looked almost unchanged.

A damp umbrella leaned beside the front step.

Coats crowded the hallway hooks.

Somewhere in the kitchen, the electric kettle clicked off.

That ordinary sound nearly undid him.

He pushed the door open and called, “Brooke?”

No footsteps came.

No cry of surprise.

No body running into his arms.

He found her in the kitchen by the sink, standing with her back close to the cupboards, as though she needed the units behind her to stay upright.

She wore an oversized jumper he did not recognise, soft grey, too large at the wrists, with sleeves pulled down over her hands.

Her hair had been pinned up carelessly, strands falling near her face.

A mug of tea sat beside the washing-up bowl, untouched and going cold.

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