The old Greyhound bus rumbled along the endless stretch of highway. Through the smudged window, Ethan watched the mountains roll by, fading into the misty horizon. His backpack rested on his knees — inside were a few bags of homemade cookies, some herbal tea his mother packed, and a pair of worn flip-flops his sister Lena used to love. Simple gifts, but from the heart.
He hadn’t seen Lena in more than three years.
She had married far away — to a man from a small town in Alabama, nearly 700 miles from their hometown in Iowa. The day she left, the whole family cried. Their parents were getting older, and Ethan had just graduated. He stood by the gate that morning, watching the car carrying his sister disappear behind the cornfields, feeling like a part of their home went with her.
At first, Lena called often. She’d send money for their mom’s medicine, remind Ethan to eat well and rest. But as the months passed, the calls grew fewer — then stopped altogether.
Every night, their mother would sigh, staring at the silent phone.
“I wonder how Lena’s doing down there… She hasn’t called in so long.”
Those words hit Ethan like a knife. One morning, without telling anyone, he packed a few things, took a few days off work, and boarded the first bus heading south. He wanted to surprise her — maybe she’d laugh, maybe cry. Maybe she’d be happy again.
After more than twenty hours on the road, he finally reached a quiet, dusty little town in Alabama. The air smelled faintly of pine and gasoline. He asked around for a long time until someone pointed him toward a small, weathered house at the edge of town. Its paint was peeling, the roof sagged slightly, and the porch light flickered.
Ethan’s heart pounded as he knocked.
No answer. He called out again. After a pause, the door creaked open — and there she was.
Lena.
But not the same sister he remembered.
She looked thinner, her skin pale, eyes hollow. The woman who once laughed so easily now stood before him like a shadow of herself.
“Ethan?” she gasped, covering her mouth. “Oh my God… is it really you? You came all this way?”
He could only nod, his throat tight.
Inside, the house was dim. The walls were cracked, a fan rattled weakly in the corner, and the kitchen smelled faintly of mildew. There was no sign of anyone else living there.
“Where’s James?” Ethan finally asked, his voice low.
She gave a weak smile.
“He… works out of town. Been gone a while.”
Her voice trembled. When she poured him a glass of water, Ethan noticed her hands — thin, shaking, and bruised around the wrist.
He gently reached over, his voice barely a whisper.
“Lena… what’s going on?”
Her eyes filled with tears. For a moment she tried to hold them back, but then they fell — warm, quiet, unstoppable.
“He changed,” she murmured. “After his business failed… he started drinking, gambling. He yells a lot. I stayed for our son, but… our boy’s living with his grandparents now. It’s just me here. I didn’t tell Mom. I couldn’t.”
Ethan’s fists clenched until his nails dug into his palms. He remembered the sister who used to walk him to school in the rain, who gave him the last piece of fried chicken at dinner. And now here she was — alone, worn down, and hurting.
“Why don’t you come home?” he choked.
“And tell Mom I couldn’t keep my marriage together?” Lena whispered. “She’s so fragile now. I just… I just keep hoping he’ll change someday.”
Her voice broke. That trembling smile on her face hurt more than anything Ethan had ever seen.
That evening, Ethan stayed. He fixed the leaky roof, cleaned the kitchen, and made dinner from what little food she had. The sound of their laughter — awkward at first — slowly filled the house again. For the first time in years, it felt like home.
Later that night, they sat on the porch, listening to the soft drizzle tapping the tin roof. Ethan reached into his backpack and pulled out the pair of flip-flops.
“Mom sent these,” he said, smiling. “Said you always loved wearing them.”
Lena let out a shaky laugh as tears rolled down her cheeks.
“Of course she’d remember something like that…”
“Come home, Lena,” Ethan pleaded. “You don’t have to fight this alone. I’ll tell Mom everything — she’ll understand.”
Lena stared out into the night, her eyes reflecting the dim porch light.
“Maybe… after I sort a few things out,” she whispered. “Maybe this Christmas, I’ll come home.”
The words were soft, almost lost in the rain — but they carried a weight that settled deep in Ethan’s chest.
The next morning, Lena packed him a small bag with cookies and boiled eggs. She hugged him tight at the bus stop. As the bus pulled away, Ethan saw her standing by the gate, her thin frame silhouetted against the gray sky, waving until she disappeared from view.
When he reached home, their mother asked eagerly,
“How’s your sister doing, son?”
Ethan smiled faintly.
“She’s doing great, Mom. Really great.”
His voice cracked just a little. His mother didn’t notice.
Three months later, just before Christmas, Ethan was helping her decorate the small family altar when he heard the sound of a motorbike outside.
He looked up — and froze.
Lena stood at the gate, a travel bag in one hand. She looked thinner, but her eyes were clearer, calmer.
“I’m home,” she said simply, tears already spilling down her face. “I found a job nearby. I’ll stay. I’ll take care of Mom.”
Ethan hugged her tight, his own tears falling freely.
That long journey — those 700 miles of worry, silence, and pain — had not been in vain. It brought his sister home.
Because no matter how far life takes you, there’s always a place — and people — waiting for you to come back.
And that cold December afternoon, inside their small wooden house, laughter once again echoed — a sound Ethan thought he’d never hear again.
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