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Video — Homefront

“Leo,” Frank said. He rubbed his face. “If you’re watching this, I didn’t get the chance to say it in person. So I’m saying it now, on tape, like a coward.” He exhaled. “The war didn’t end when I came home. It came home with me. Your mother… she was the medic who saved my life every single day. And you—” His voice cracked. “You were the reason I stayed. Not out of duty. Out of love.”

The tape felt heavier than plastic and magnetic ribbon should. Leo drove home, made instant coffee, and dug out an old VCR from the basement. The machine whirred to life with a reluctant groan. Homefront Video

Leo’s throat tightened. He leaned closer. “Leo,” Frank said

The answers were mundane, profound, and heartbreaking. Ruth talking about the first time Frank held Leo in the hospital. Grandma mentioning the smell of rain on dry earth. Even little Leo, asked by his father’s off-screen voice, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” So I’m saying it now, on tape, like a coward

It wasn’t a battlefield. It was his mother, Ruth, young and radiant, standing in their old kitchen. The date stamp read: October 12, 1991. Leo was three years old then, a ghost in the next room.

Leo sat in the dark, the VCR’s red light blinking like a heartbeat. He’d spent his whole life believing his father was a ghost in his own home—distant, unreachable. But the tape told a different story. Frank hadn’t been absent. He’d been recording . Collecting the fragments of peace to remind himself what he was fighting for.

The tape ended. Static hissed like rain.