A Boy’s Breakfast Gift At A Navy Base Uncovered A Bigger Betrayal-heuh

Hudson was awake before the alarm, which should have told me the day mattered more to him than he had admitted.

Most mornings, he had to be coaxed out of bed with three reminders and a promise that his cereal would go soggy if he did not move.

That Thursday, he was already in the kitchen by six o’clock, wearing his favourite blue hoodie and standing beside the table like a boy waiting for inspection.

Image

In front of him was a brown paper bag folded neatly at the top.

Inside were the cinnamon rolls we had made the night before.

They were not pretty in the way shop-bought pastries are pretty.

One was too fat at one end, another had sagged sideways in the tin, and the icing had melted into shiny streams because I had been too impatient to wait for them to cool.

Hudson loved them more because of that.

He said the uneven ones looked homemade, and homemade meant Dad would know we had not simply bought a gift and called it love.

On the counter, the kettle clicked off.

I poured the coffee into Aaron’s travel cup and screwed the lid down twice, because Hudson had already warned me he did not want even one drop to spill.

‘Dad always says officers can’t start the day without coffee,’ he said.

He said it proudly, as though he were carrying a secret rule from his father’s world.

Aaron Calloway had been serving at a naval facility, and lately that world had seemed to need him more than we did.

There were always reasons.

A late meeting.

A change in schedule.

A call he could not miss.

A day that had stretched too long.

At first, I had believed all of them without making a fuss.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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