Go Back Home -

He stepped out, and the crunch of gravel under his boots felt like a physical memory. It was the same sound he’d made running toward the school bus, and the same sound he’d made when he loaded his trunk and swore he’d never look back. "You’re late," a voice called from the porch.

His mother sat in the wicker chair that had been "ailing" since the nineties. She didn't look like a woman who had just survived a health scare; she looked like a permanent fixture of the landscape.

Below is a story draft titled exploring these themes. The Gravel Path Home Go Back Home

"There's always a project," she replied, though her smile was tender. "But the house doesn't care about projects. It just waits."

"I had to finish a project," Elias said, the city-excuse tasting thin in the country air. He stepped out, and the crunch of gravel

That night, Elias sat on the porch. The "Go Back Home" he had feared wasn't a retreat or a sign of failure. It was a recalibration. He realized that while he had been busy "writing his story" in the city, the ink for it had been mixed right here.

The engine of Elias’s sedan ticked in the humid silence of the driveway. He hadn’t been back to this stretch of dirt road in twelve years. To him, home had become a series of glass-walled offices and studio apartments, places where the air was filtered and the history was only as deep as last year’s lease. His mother sat in the wicker chair that

Inside, the scent hit him—a mixture of floor wax, old paper, and the faint, lingering spice of cinnamon. It was a smell that bypassed his brain and went straight to his chest. He looked at the heights marked in pencil on the kitchen doorframe. He was still the tallest, but standing there, he felt like the boy at the bottom of the list again.