The bus dropped me three blocks away. I ran the last stretch, lungs burning, heart pounding like it was trying to make up for lost years. The street looked mostly the same—same cracked sidewalks, same maple tree leaning over the corner. But as I got closer, the details started to feel wrong.
The porch railing was still there, but the paint was fresher. The flower beds were different. New cars filled the driveway, shiny and unfamiliar, like the house had been claimed by a life I’d never been invited into.
I slowed down.
Still, I walked up the steps.
The door was no longer the dull navy my father had picked because “it hides the dirt.” Now it was an expensive-looking charcoal gray. And where the welcome mat used to be—plain brown, always crooked—there was a fancy one with clean lettering:
HOME SWEET HOME
I knocked anyway.
Not politely.
Not carefully.
I knocked like a son who had been counting down days, like someone who had a right to be there.
The door opened, and the warmth I’d imagined didn’t come rushing out.
Linda stood there.
My stepmother.
Her hair was styled like she’d just come back from a salon. Her blouse looked crisp. And her eyes—those sharp, measured eyes—scanned me from head to toe like I was a problem arriving on schedule.
For one second, I thought she might flinch.
Or soften.