After Prison, My Father Was Gone—But His Grave Held No Body-heuh

The prison gates shut behind me, and the world did not open the way I had imagined.

It simply carried on.

A bus groaned past the road outside, trailing diesel and rainwater, while I stood there with a thin plastic bag in my hand and three years of my life missing from my own skin.

Image

I had thought freedom would feel loud.

Instead, it felt like cold coffee from a roadside stand, a damp collar against my neck, and the strange humiliation of having nowhere to put my hands.

The bag held almost nothing.

A spare shirt.

Some paperwork.

A little cash.

A card with numbers I had been told to ring if I could not cope.

Nobody had written on the back of it, “What to do when the only person you stayed alive for might not be waiting.”

For three years, I had survived by imagining my father.

Not as a hero.

Not as a saint.

Just as Dad.

Thomas Miller, sitting in his worn old chair, one slipper tucked under the other, reading the paper with his glasses pushed too far down his nose.

He had never been a man for grand speeches.

When things were bad, he put the kettle on.

When I was ashamed, he gave me something practical to do.

When I rang him from inside, voice breaking despite every effort not to let it, he said, “You’re still my son.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *