He Came Home After 5 Years and Found His Family Hidden Behind His Mansion-eirian

I came home from Saudi Arabia after five years because my contract ended earlier than expected.

I did not tell anyone.

Not my mother, Gertrude.

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Not my sister, Prudence.

Not even my wife, Sarah.

I wanted the kind of homecoming men dream about when they are lying awake in a bunk bed thousands of miles from home, listening to ceiling fans push hot air around a room that still smells like sweat and dust.

I wanted to see Sarah’s face before she had time to prepare it.

I wanted Jamie to run toward me without anybody coaching him.

For five years, I had lived inside labor, heat, and distance.

Saudi Arabia gave me work, and work gave me money, but neither gave me rest.

The heat was not just weather there.

It was a pressure.

It pressed through my shirt, through my gloves, through the thin cloth wrapped around my neck when we worked around steel and concrete until the horizon shimmered.

Some days the soles of my boots felt soft from the ground beneath them.

Some nights my palms pulsed so hard I had to hold them open because closing my fingers hurt.

I shared cramped housing with men from different countries who all had the same expression after sunset.

Exhausted.

Hungry.

Counting.

One man counted months until his daughter’s surgery.

Another counted bricks for a house he had never stood inside.

I counted transfer receipts.

Every month, I sent $1,800 to my mother, Gertrude.

When I first left, Sarah did not have her own account yet.

Jamie was still tiny then, still reaching for my beard with soft fists when I kissed him goodbye.

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