KIRA STONE
KIRA STONE
Composer Lyricist Songwriter Playwright Performer

Video | Homefront

Leo’s throat tightened. He leaned closer.

Leo found it in his late father’s attic, wedged between a moth-eaten army jacket and a box of silver stars. His father, a taciturn man named Frank, had never spoken about the war. He’d died three weeks ago, leaving behind silences Leo had spent his whole life trying to fill.

The screen fizzed with static, then resolved. Homefront Video

Leo rewound the tape. Pressed play. Watched his mother laugh again. Watched himself as a child, untouched by grief. Watched his father’s eyes, finally looking at him instead of through him.

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. Leo’s throat tightened

He didn’t cry. Not then. He picked up the phone and called his own daughter, asleep upstairs, to tell her he loved her before the day ended.

Frank’s voice came from behind the camera, low and warm. “Tell him something. For later.” His father, a taciturn man named Frank, had

Outside, the world hummed on, indifferent. But inside that small living room, a man came home at last—not from a war, but from a long, silent exile. And all it took was a dusty tape labeled 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.”

Forty minutes in, the tone shifted. The screen showed a grainy, overexposed backyard. Frank was setting up a tripod. He sat down in a lawn chair, facing the lens directly. He was younger, but his eyes already held the thousand-yard stare Leo remembered from childhood.

“Hey, Frank,” Ruth said, tucking a strand of auburn hair behind her ear. She wasn't looking at the camera; she was looking past it, at her husband behind the lens. “Leo ate a whole apple today. Peel and all. Had to fish the stem out of his hair.” She laughed—a sound Leo hadn’t heard in twenty years. Cancer took her in 2004.