Mass. Son Reborn on Fourth of July

Brother freed from Colombian rebels calls home after 5 years as hostage.

ByABC News
July 7, 2008, 8:13 AM

July 7, 2008— -- For the Howes family of Chatham, Mass., Fourth of July fireworks have never been so spectacular.

Two days after a daring helicopter rescue freed 15 hostages from Colombian rebels, Thomas "Randy" Howes, one of three American contractors held captive for more than five years, called his older brother, 58-year-old Stephen Howes, at the family's home in Chatham, an old fishing town on Cape Cod, where Randy first learned to fly.

Friday's reunion conversation, which took place as the families gathered all across the country to celebrate freedom, timed neatly with Randy Howe's 55th birthday. The military contractor, whose plane went down in the Colombian jungle in early 2003 as he scoured the countryside for cocoa fields and cocaine labs, was born on July 4.

Stephen recounted the birthday call from Randy outside the Chatham home, where their father lived before his recent death. The two also have a middle sister, Sally, who lives in Maine. The house sits directly next door to my parent's cottage, and I introduced myself as both a neighbor and a writer at ABC News.

Stephen described his conversation with Randy as brief, a bit scattered and intense. It was a call he was unsure he would ever receive.

Randy, along with fellow Americans Marc Gonsalves, 36, and Keith Stansell, 43, continues to pace through a reintegration process under the Army's watch in Texas.

Stephen does not know whether Randy plans to return to Cape Cod immediately, or if he will reunite with his wife, a Peruvian native he met in Lima, and his son, who both live in Florida and where the family lived before his life as a hostage began. Photographs released by the Army late last night show Randy sitting with his wife and son during lunch Sunday at the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.

During his call with Stephen, Randy handed the phone to Gonsalves and Stansell so his fellow hostages could greet his older brother who Randy had apparently built up to mythic proportions with tales of Randy's prowess as a master carpenter.

When Randy does return to Chatham, a deep family will be there to greet him. "Welcome Back to the World Randy," a handwritten poster reads in front of the weather-beaten South Chatham Village Hall at the end of his family's quiet road. The South Chatham Community Church hails the good Lord for answering the congregation's prayers and bringing Randy home.