So here it is.
==============
“Rockvill,”
the driver announced as the bus came to a stop.
The name
woke Gavin up from a semi-sleep state. He grabbed his bag from beneath the seat
and walked up to the front of the bus. There was one passenger ahead of him who
got out at the same stop. “Ouch!” Gavin glanced back reproachfully as the closing
door almost caught him. Didn’t the driver see him?
But the grudge
quickly dissolved in the chilly night air. He was back! After so many times when
he thought he’d die, after seeing his buddies falling down one after another, it
was sheer luck to once again step onto the ground where he had grown up. Where
he fell in love with Marianna and got married. He left the road and plunged
into darkness towards his hometown. The bus and the other passenger had both headed
in different directions. The moon was hiding somewhere, a handful of stars hung
above. But he knew the way.
About twenty
minutes later, he was walking past people’s houses, a few of which were dimly
lit. Jeez! He couldn’t believe how much the neighborhood had changed. And look
at the cars parked on the streets! All in different styles over a few years.
Tomorrow, he’d drop by old friends and let them know he’s back. They were going
to throw him parties. A hero … he smiled and shook at the thought.
As his house
came into sight, he suddenly tensed up. Marianna was pregnant when he left home.
He’d soon see his five-year-old son or daughter, for the first time. Involuntarily,
he held his bag up against his chest. There was a gift for his child. A few
months ago he had bought a handmade soldier doll at a farmer’s market in Phuoc
Long.
He stopped
at the front door of the house, puzzled. The living room was full of light, as
if someone were waiting for him. It should’ve passed midnight. The front door
was even half open. Was there something going on?
He sneaked
in. Nobody was in the living room, but there were fruits and cups on the coffee
table. The cabinets were the same set as before, but appeared to be worn and
torn. The leather sofa must be new. A large framed photo hung above a rocky
chair. Gavin moved closer to the photo. It was him, a then twenty-two year old,
with such an innocent smile that he surely was unable to produce anymore. Next
to his picture was …
“Dad,”
someone called at the entrance to the kitchen. Gavin turned aside and saw a
middle-aged man standing there, with a tray of cupcakes in his hands.
Gavin
frowned. Was it someone else’s home now? But the picture …
The guy
walked over, set the tray on the coffee table, and reached out a hand towards
Gavin. “Welcome home. So good to see you again. You are late this year, and for
a while I wondered …”
Gavin was
taken aback. Who was this guy in front of him? Blond curly hair, short. Pointed
and reddish cheeks. Greyish blue eyes. He so much resembled Gavin, albeit being
almost twice older.
The man
sighed and pointed at the sofa. “Sit, dad. Looks like I’ll have to explain it
again.”
“Wait, you
call me …” Gavin thought he had heard it wrong the first time.”
“I’m your
son, Aiden.” The man’s eyes glittered as he sat in a chair opposite the sofa.
Gavin looked
around the house. His heart sank. He suddenly realized what must have happened,
although it was such a ridiculous idea. He sat down, trying to say something,
but his mouth was dry.
“This is
Year 2015. Your 42nd time home after you … you died.”
Gavin sat
like a stone. He dared not to find out if he had a shadow or not.
“Today is my
birthday. You came home every year on my birthday, usually before midnight, and
when the sun rose, you disappeared.”
“Where’s
your mom?” Whether Gavin was alive or not, that was a question he had to ask.
“You saw her
seventeen times. She had breast cancer.”
Gavin
lowered his head. Through the corners of his eyes, he saw that the sofa did not
curve down near where he sat.
“You must
have scared mom the first few times when I was young. She told my aunt, and aunt
came to see you a few times. They decided to keep it a secret; otherwise there’d
be scientists, mystery hunters, government agents. We didn’t want anybody to
disturb our family time.”
Gavin didn’t
know what to say. As he was concerned, he had just left Vietnam as a survivor. Everything
about the battles was so clear in his head. The last time he saw Marianna dated
only six years ago. But now, the “real now”… so he didn’t survive after all?
Well, if what Aiden had said was true, at least he was lucky enough to visit
them.
“One year you
told us, you once made a wish.” Aiden’s voice quivered. “That you’d come home
alive, and you’d be at my birthday every year.”
Now Gavin’s
last doubt had vanished. Yes, about “two years” ago, they went through a tough
battle. When he buried his head in the grass with bombs and bullets flying around,
he made that wish. He had never told anyone about it. The fact that Aiden knew
it proved the whole thing.
“However
this occurred, dad, I took it as a big favor from God. Mom was happy too. She
told me you had never left us. Indeed, we prepared for this day every year, the
day you came home. See, your favorite blueberry muffins, although you won’t be
able to eat them.” Aiden pointed at the tray. “We had to explain it again each
time, but we were happy to do so. I’d tell you what I did in the past year. I
asked your opinion about my college major. Showed you my wedding pictures.”
Tears ran down Aiden’s face.
Gavin nodded
and checked the clock on the wall. “Good … Now tell me what happened with you
last year, and I’d like to see your mother’s pictures.”
“You always
say the same thing, dad.” Smiling, Aiden left for a cabinet and brought back a photo
album. “You can’t turn the pages. I’ll do that for you.”
While
looking at the photos held in Aiden’s hands, Gavin asked, “What else have I
said to you in the past, son?”
“Life is
present, and present is life.”
“I was wise.”
Gavin smiled.
He had no
idea how this happened, nor was he sure how many more times he’d experience it.
A few hours later, he’d vanish again. Would he immediately enter the next “return”
or wait for a year somewhere? Whatever! Time, space, the whole universe was
just an illusion.
It was love
that had made things real.
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Comments highly appreciated! - Fiona