Less than a week later, things got downright strange.
I was sitting in my darkened living room when I saw the first signal.
Three short.
Three long. Three short.
Morse code. S.O.S.
My pulse spiked in a way that’s not healthy at my age.
I stood, my joints popping like dry kindling, and moved to the glass. The street was quiet.
There were no signs of danger except the rhythmic pulsing of the flashlight.
The next morning, the house was a picture of suburban order. Sarah watered the petunias; David left in a crisp, pressed shirt; Leo slung his backpack over his shoulder and climbed into the car without a word.
What did it mean?
I figured the boy had just been messing around.
But it happened again the next night. And the night after.
Now, it was starting to look like a bad prank.
On the fourth night, I reached for my lamp and flicked the switch once: a single, sharp shutter-click of light.
The window across the street went dark instantly.
Two days later, I intercepted Leo at the mailboxes.
“Son, I don’t know what kind of jokes you think you’re pulling, but that signal is serious.
It can save lives. Don’t use it for nothing.”
Leo didn’t look embarrassed. His eyes had an old, weary stability to them.
He walked away then, and I watched him go.
I didn’t know what to make of it.
For the next few nights, the signals stopped. I was relieved at first, but then right before I went to bed on Monday, I saw the lights flashing from that window again.
It wasn’t S.O.S. this time.
I grabbed a notepad and a pen, my mind automatically translating the rhythm.
WE. NEED. YOUR.
HELP. COME. INTO.
THE. HOUSE.
The message repeated several times, then the light stayed off.
A bad feeling settled in the pit of my stomach. Back in Vietnam, that feeling had saved my life more than once.
I grabbed my cane and stepped into the cool night air.
I planned to fabricate some kind of excuse for disturbing the family so late at night, but as my boots hit their lawn, I knew something was wrong.
Their front door was unlatched and standing wide open.
I moved closer, and that’s when I heard a loud sound from inside the house, a heavy, hollow thud.
Then the shouting started.
I entered the house.
I moved into the living room.
A side table lay on its side, its drawer spilled open.
David stood in the center of the rug, his face red, his chest heaving.
“I am not letting you throw this away! I have built a path for you.
I have sacrificed every weekend for ten years so you wouldn’t have to scrounge!”
Leo stood across from him, his knuckles white as he clenched his hands into fists.
“I’m not throwing it away!” Leo’s voice was raw. “I’m choosing a different life!
Why is that a betrayal?”
They noticed me then.
David’s eyes didn’t “widen”; they narrowed.
“Your door was standing open,” I said, planting my cane firmly. “I heard the furniture go over.
I thought you had a domestic intruder.”
“We’re fine,” David said, smoothing his tie. “It’s a family disagreement. Please, we’ll handle it.”
“Sorry, but I can’t do that.
Leo sent for me, David. He’s been signaling for days.”
The room went still.
David turned to his son, his expression a mix of bewilderment and a deep, stinging hurt.
“You’ve been broadcasting our business to the street? To the neighbor?”
Leo didn’t flinch. “Every time I try to talk to you, you just narrate over me.
I needed someone to see that I’m actually here.”
“What is there to see?” David’s voice rose again. “A father trying to give his son a future? I’ve got the college applications ready.
I’ve talked to the dean at the business school. You have the grades to be anything you want!”
“I want to be an EMT,” Leo said.
“An EMT?” David repeated. “You want to drive an ambulance for peanuts?
You want to spend your nights kneeling in the dirt with total strangers?”
“You are capable of so much more,” David shot back. “If it’s medicine you’re interested in, then become a doctor, a surgeon. You could have a life that commands respect.
Something stable.”
“Stable isn’t the same thing as meaningful, Dad,” Leo said.
David sat heavily on the arm of a chair and laughed bitterly.
“Meaning won’t pay rent, buy groceries, or pay the utility bill.” He looked at his hands, which were rough and calloused despite the pressed shirts. “I worked construction after I graduated because my father couldn’t keep the lights on.”
“I’m not—”
“I swore to myself,” David raised his voice to speak over Leo, “that my son would never have to feel that kind of weight.”
“I’m not scared of the weight,” Leo said. “And I’m not ungrateful.
But I don’t want to wake up at 50 and realize I spent my life doing something I hate just because it was safe.”
I shifted my weight, my knee giving a sharp, dry protest.
“In the service, the men people remembered the most weren’t the ones with the medals. They were the medics.
It takes a special kind of steel to be the person who kneels beside a stranger on the worst day of their life and tells them it’s going to be okay.”
Leo’s gaze was fixed on me, his jaw set.
“That’s not the same thing,” David said, though the edge was gone from his tone.
“No,” I agreed. “It isn’t war, but it is service. You raised a boy who wants to be the one people look for when things go bad.
Most fathers would find a way to be proud of that.”
That was the final straw.
David looked around the room at the overturned table, at me, and finally at his son. He looked at the boy as if he were seeing him without the filter of his own expectations for the first time in years.
“I’m not trying to crush you, Leo,” David said finally.
“I’m really not. I’m just trying to shield you from the struggle.”
The air in the room changed then.
I moved toward the door.
“Pressure can build strength, David, but if you don’t know when to let off the gas, it just makes dust. You’ve got a good man standing right in front of you. Don’t break him.”
***
A week later, Leo knocked on my door.
He looked different — less guarded, his shoulders level.
“Dad said I could ask you about first aid,” he said, shifting his weight. “Since you’ve seen the real thing. He said…
he said you might have some insights.”
I invited him in.
We didn’t talk about being heroes. We talked about the basics: how to keep your hands steady when someone else is losing their mind, and how to breathe through the adrenaline.
Sometimes, I’d see David waving from across the street while he worked in the yard.
He wasn’t disapproving anymore; he just looked like a man who was finally learning to listen to the silence.
One night, before I turned in, I glanced out my window.
The light in Leo’s room flickered.
I sat down and watched.
THANK. YOU.
I reached over and flicked my lamp once.
Message received.
I climbed under the covers and fell asleep with a smile on my face. It felt good to know I was making a difference again.
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