After Prison, My Stepmother Said Dad Was Dead — Then I Found His Key-heuh

The first morning outside did not feel like freedom.

It felt like damp air, diesel fumes, and the taste of bitter coffee on a tongue that had forgotten choice.

I stood outside the bus station with a plastic carrier bag in one hand and my discharge papers folded inside my jacket, trying to remember how ordinary people moved when no one was counting them.

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For three years, every door had opened only when someone else decided it should.

Every light had gone off at the same hour.

Every footstep behind me had meant rules, not family.

But that morning, all I could think about was my father.

Thomas Vance had been the one person who never let my name turn into a headline in his mouth.

Other people said convicted.

Other people said disgrace.

Dad said son.

He had written when he could.

Short letters, never dramatic, never full of the sort of phrases people use when they want credit for loving you through something ugly.

He wrote about the kettle giving out, the neighbour’s cat sleeping on his shed roof, the way the rain had ruined his tomatoes.

Then, at the bottom, always the same line.

Come home first, Eli. We’ll sort the rest after.

I had lived on that sentence.

When the nights got too loud, I pictured him in his old leather chair with a mug balanced on the arm and his reading glasses halfway down his nose.

When men in the wing talked about having nobody left, I kept quiet because I did not want to tempt fate.

I had Dad.

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