When the speakers announce the arrival at the station, my heart starts to beat faster. A quick glance back at the seat I had occupied for the last three hours, checking that I have not left anything behind, and I grab my bag, making my way through the small corridor, pushing against others who also try to get off that stupid train.
Once my feet touch the solid ground of the platform, a weigh lifts off my chest. Taking a few steps away from the train and all the people and the noise, I close my eyes and take a deep breath. The cold winter air fills my lungs, making me feel refresh. A gust of wind catches in my coat, pushing it open, making me freeze for a second.
I open my eyes again, and grab my bag. Slowly, I start walking towards the ServicePoint. Before I even know it, my pace quickens. My heart hammering against my ribs, I can barely breathe. People in front of me are blocking my path, causing me to slow down. I don’t want to. I am running out of patience, and very fast at that. Three hours, crammed into a small seat, trapped between a window and two other seats. Forced to hear the pierching screaming of a baby because it didn’t like the trip. The annoying questions of a five-year old. The voice of an old lady, asking questions I didn’t feel like answering. Her ignoring the headphones and my typing away on my laptop, clear signs that I was otherwise occupied.
Frustrated with the people in front of me, I decide to switch platforms. Instead of people slowly crawling in front of me, I now find myself in the middle of running people who are trying to catch their train. Bad idea. Still I push ahead, trying to avoid collisions as best as I can. With a quick glance to my right, I find I have left the biggest crowd behind, and switch back to my original platform. Pulling up to my full height, I look straight ahead, trying to spot someone in the crowd.
When my eyes find him, I relax. My pace quickens again, my arm raising on its own accord. A smile breaks out on my face as I wave, helping him to spot me in the crowd of strangers. The distance melts away with every step I take, one word pounding in my head, repeating over and over again.
Home.
Five meters before he can pull me into his strong arms, a weight rushes into me. Taken by surprise, I let go of my bag. With a loud thud it crashes onto the plattform while I look down, shocked. My arms wrap around the slender shoulders of my brother, and I squeeze my eyes shut for a moment.
Next thing I know, strong arms pull me into an embrace, and I lean into the strong chest of my father. And then he says those two words I have longed to hear since I left the last time.
„Welcome home.“
Finally home, indeed.
THE END