A Thousand Letters(59)
* * *
We walk through the winter,
And the cold is bitter
The days of spring and life gone
The quiet deafening, a fog with no edges
But still we hold hands: it vanquishes our fear.
* * *
And when our walk is done,
The miles behind us,
A trail of footprints
Converging, parting;
When we look behind us
At all that has passed,
The ones we love,
What we leave behind,
What we cherish,
Is what makes our lives
Worth living.
Wade
Elliot didn't meet my eyes again, only folded up her paper and walked off the stage with her head down, though I willed her to look up, waiting for her to sit next to me so I could hold her, take her pain and press it against mine until they were the same. But as my fingertips tingled, imagining themselves against her skin, she kept walking, passing me by to sit in the pew behind me.
My body went rigid, every muscle tense from my jaw to my thighs, leaving my lungs empty. A professor from Columbia made his way to the podium to read an Emerson poem, my eyes on my father's coffin, more alone than I'd ever been in my life.
She didn't want me, didn't even want to be near me. I'd broken her, just as I feared, and now … now …
Nothing made sense. Not the things I wanted. Not the things I'd lost. Not the moment I found myself in or the moments to come. Not my uniform, scratching at my neck like a noose, and not the hard pew under me where hundreds of people had sat, saying goodbye to someone they loved for the last time.
I could feel the letter in the inside pocket of my jacket, resting against the backs of the medals I didn't feel like I'd earned pinned to my chest. That paper reminded me that I had one job left to do before I could find peace for a moment. And I needed peace before I succumbed to the war inside of me.
"Catch the Wind" was sung as my sisters sobbed silently beside me, but nothing could reach me through the veil. And when the song was through, it was my turn. I stood, walking up to the podium, keeping my eyes down as I teetered on the precipice of my anguish.
I cleared my throat, pressing my palms against the surface on either side of the letter I'd written to my father.
"This piece of paper sat on my desk, blank and mocking me for days before I was able to write a single word. It was empty, and I'd been tasked to fill it with an explanation of what he meant to me, what he meant to everyone he knew. A description of his accomplishments and platitudes about how he lived.
"To say he lived would have been untrue. He didn't just live — he breathed life.
"I could have talked about his years at Columbia and the influence he had there. I could have told you about the books of poetry he wrote, or about his love of words or gifts as an orator. I could have told you how he liked his eggs or took his coffee, or which of his sweaters was his favorite, or how he always slept on one side of the bed, as if my mother were still sleeping next to him. But that wasn't who he was.
"How could I answer that question? How could I put into words who he was and what he meant? Because that story is different for every one of us. Each of you sitting before me knows in your own way what he meant to you, and that's why you're all here.
"Maybe it was because he supported you — it was one of his favorite things to do. He believed in all of us, an unflinching hope that we would all see our potential realized. Maybe he taught you things that you'd have otherwise never known. I know that for me, that was true. He taught me how to tie my shoes and how to read. He taught me how to love unconditionally and how to forgive, though those lessons were lost on me later in life, when they mattered the most. But even in the end, he taught me grace and compassion, even tried to teach me how to grieve him. Of everyone, he knew how impossible that task was, but he believed in me even then.
"In grieving, he asked us to celebrate him. He asked us to remember him. He asked us to live because in living, we would honor him. I am not his only legacy. His legacy will live on forever in every heart and every mind in this room. So live, and live well. Take all of the things that he taught you and keep him alive too."
I finally looked up, and my eyes found her as they always did.
Emotion bent her brows, her lips hidden behind her handkerchief, her eyes pinched closed, the line of her long lashes against her cheek visible from even afar. But that wasn't what clamped my throat closed. It wasn't what set my pulse galloping or the heat climbing up my neck as tears from my words burned my eyes.
It was Jack's arm around her, her body curled into his side, his face, which didn't hold sorrow but something else, something sinister as he watched me watch them with defiance flickering behind his eyes.
She'd given herself to me, but it hadn't changed anything. We were here again, in purgatory for eternity.
I scooped up my letter after a split second of shock. But I couldn't sit down, couldn't stop moving. Jeannie held Sadie, nodding at me once as I passed — she'd take care of them, because I couldn't.
I rushed down the stairs and out the side door, not knowing what I was doing, not knowing where I would go. I only knew I couldn't stay there. It was too much. My father in a box made of oak and satin. My sisters crying, dressed in black. Elliot lost, lost to me as she ever was. Me, lost to myself.