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It was the porch light of his father’s house. It was weak, struggling against the fog, but it was there. As he crested the final hill, the smell of woodsmoke cut through the salt air. The tension in his shoulders, which he hadn't even realized he was carrying, finally broke.
"Elias? That you?" his father called from the kitchen, the clink of a teapot settling the last of his nerves.
He was inside. The shadows were back to being just shadows. He was home. Coming Home in the Dark
He knew this road. He’d walked it a thousand times as a boy, yet in the dark, the familiar became alien. The old oak tree at the bend wasn't a landmark anymore; it was a many-limbed giant reaching out through the mist. The rhythmic shush of the waves below sounded like heavy breathing.
He had missed the last bus from the station, leaving him with a three-mile trek up the winding coastal road. Usually, the moon provided a silver guide, but tonight, a thick Atlantic fog had rolled in, swallowing the cliffs and the sea. The world had shrunk to the five-foot circle of light thrown by his dying phone flashlight. It was the porch light of his father’s house
Every snap of a twig made his heart kick against his ribs. He found himself walking faster, his breath hitching. It’s just the woods, he told himself. It’s just the wind. But the dark has a way of peeling back the layers of adulthood, leaving behind the shivering child who still believes in what hides under the bed. Then, he saw it—a soft, amber pulse in the distance.
The gravel crunched under Elias’s boots, a sound that felt far too loud in the suffocating silence of the valley. The tension in his shoulders, which he hadn't
He reached the heavy oak door and didn't bother to knock. He stepped inside, the sudden warmth of the hallway pressing against his cold cheeks like a hand.