Brother,
Im writing to tell you Im dropping out of college; I havent told anyone. Im twitching, Michael. The hunger came back a few weeks ago, and Im not sure it ever left. Regardless, its crying now, and I need to go. I need to keep moving on. Im leaving for Chicago tomorrow. My train takes off in the afternoon, and when I get there, Ill leave again. I want to go somewhere new, Michael. I want to go somewhere I have never seen before.
Now, I know you have to be worried, but dont, Brother, dont you be afraid. Ill write to you wherever I go. I wont leave a return address, so dont try to follow me. You cant, Michael, youre too smart. Your place is here among these people; and mine is out there. Youre meant for your books; Im meant for my trees. I want to roar from the woods with a pen mightier than Henry Davids. I want to feel what the giants have felt. And so Im headed for infinite train tracks, and by God almighty, Ill take them under water if theyll go!
I am free, Brother. I am free, and I hope some day soon you find the happiness that completes your own freedom. Good luck, Michael. I will always love you.
Calvin.
Brother,
Im sorry I havent written for so long. Ive been working out here, Michael. Ive found myself a house in the woods of western Washington. A family is letting me stay here in exchange for taking care of their home while they travel. The fish in these creeks are outstanding if you cook them over fire. Oh, I wish you could see all of this, Brother. You would feel it, Michael. You would be part of the wind and the trees just like I am
but its just too selfish of me.
Michael, if you can, tell Mother I love her; tell her not to worry about me; and Michael, please write to me, and tell me about your life. Youre graduating high school this year, right? Is there a woman in your life? Ill leave an address for you to write to. Im dying to hear from you.
I love you, Michael, and I hope you know that.
Calvin.
Brother,
I got your letter today. Im so glad to hear youre doing well. Missouri State is a great school, and I hope it fits you better than it fit me. You seem so smart, Michael, and I think youre going great places. Im excited to hear about Arienette, and I hope you two are doing well. I hope I can meet her some day. Tell her I say hello.
Right now Im on a train headed a little farther east. A man in Colorado said the freest hed ever felt was working on a farm. A man from Kansas said hed always felt the same, and he said hell let me stay with him and his family and let me work his fields.
Thats all I really have to say for now, Brother, so Ill have to write you soon.
Calvin.
Brother,
I got here in Valley Center, Kansas, yesterday. I arrived in Wichita and walked here to this farm. The sun seems to shine so much brighter here. The family Im living with is so nice. His name is Karl, and he has such a wonderful family. His daughter is especially beautiful. Her hair is gold like the suns reflection in the wheat field. Her features glow soft against the grain, and she wears the prettiest summer dresses. Shes so much like me, Michael. She lies in the fields staring into the ocean of clouds. Her name is Laura, and she seems perfect to me.
Karls wife Sara makes the most excellent food. (Dont you dare tell Mother). Its funny how until youve worked in a field you never really realize how wonderful everything tastes. I was really hungry for the first time in my life.
After dinner I washed up, and I went to my room and I read. Its a book called Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, who was named for the great Ralph Waldo Emerson. Its an interesting book. I recommend it. Just as I was falling asleep though, Laura came into my room, and sat beside my bed where I was lying. She smiled at me, resting her head on my shoulder.
Where are you from, Calvin? she asked me.
I feel my home is train, and my family is everyone on it at the time. I was born in Columbus, Ohio, and really, I lived my whole life there with my Brother, Michael, and my parents, I explained.
So, why are you so far from home, Calvin?
Well, Laura, Ive been traveling. I like to move around and stretch my limbs. I like the feeling that I can go anywhere and be anyone at any time.
Are you unhappy?
No, and Ive wondered the very same thing, Laura. Im never unhappy. In fact Im always happy where I am. Theres beauty floating through everything in this world. And every place Ive ever been has shown me who I am, I said, sitting a little more upright. I meet the most beautiful people. I lifted her chin up. I see the most beautiful things.
So, why would you leave? she asked, seeming even more curious as she took my hand.
Because no one place is best or best for me. Of the so many places Ive been, each is better than the last, because its the next. Ideally, Id love to live everywhere in my life, and just before I die, return home. See, its like reading books. The more of them you read, the more you see into the world. The more things you learn, the better you understand. If I stayed in one place, well thatd be like reading just one book. And no wise man only ever read one book. Honestly, Ive never felt more at home than I am on the tracks, I said, squeezing her hand.
She seemed surprised with me, and she told me she had always wanted to see the ocean and the city. So, I promised her that when I was twitching again, Id take her to New York. She threw herself around me, kissing my cheek.
She went off to bed after that.
Brother, she seems young; shes nineteen. But I am only twenty-four myself. She has some discovering, some exploring to do; and Michael, I think I can help her. I think shes like me, Michael; I think she has the twitch.
Calvin.
Brother,
Were finally leaving for New York. Her parents seemed to object almost more to my going than her own. It makes me afraid, Michael, because I think maybe she only feels the twitch, because she cant see the home in her life; and thats a scary place to be. Its an illogical place, and I am afraid shell be consumed by it; but I dont say anything. I dont say anything, because Im selfish and because I want her for myself.
Were on the train now, and shes resting quietly on me. She breathes gently and innocently. I am afraid for her, Brother, but I think I can take care of her.
Calvin.
Brother,
Life in the city has been amazing. I almost cant believe Im saying it, but I no longer believe my home is road, Michael. I think I love her. She is my home, Brother. This could be happiness and my freedom.
Were living in the city of course. We stay in this romantic little one-room loft. Laura learned to cook from her mother, and now shes teaching me. Weve both gotten jobs. We may not stay here forever, Michael, but I believe that my traveling days may be done.
Wish me luck.
Calvin.
Brother,
Laura and I have bought a house in upstate Maine, Michael, and you see I have a return address. Id like for you to write to me. I want to know everything thats happened in your life.
Hows Arienette? College? Tell me absolutely everything, Michael. Id love to hear from you; and if I dont write often, know that everything is perfect in my life. Know that I love a woman more than Ive ever loved anything except for you. I do love you, Brother; and I always have.
Calvin.
Brother,
Two years in, and its happening, Michael. I need to go again. I have the twitch in my bones, and its shaking my life apart. I cant go on living with my Laura, but, Michael, I do love her. I just need to go. I need to satiate the trembling within me; and I know its wrong, but I have to go.
I have to go.
Calvin.
What happened next, I remember very well; I was sitting at my desk when it happened.
The phone rang, and my mothers voice shook. I stayed silent and unsurprised, just as I had when his first letter arrived. He was dead; my brother, Calvin, was dead.
For the rest of that day, two thoughts played in my head.
The first was that his death was appropriate, because even from beyond the grave Calvin could hurt my mother.
The second was surprise. Surprise at the knowledge of his death. Calvin was always so careful to make sure we never knew where he would be going next. It was Laura who found him drowned in the river just a mile away from their home.
She never asked questions, and I admired that strength in her. My whole life I wondered why Calvin had left us. Laura said she felt peace, knowing that he would never have the compulsion, or the need to leave again. She said hed finally found what hed always gone looking for.
When I asked her what that was, she laughed.
When youre ready, youll understand, she told me.
Calvin was right. She was just like him.
Almost a week later, I was sitting at his funeral. I looked on in silence as they lowered an empty box into the ground. It was his last wish that he be buried in the dirt without a casket like Thoreau before him. He would decompose and become part of everything, settling nowhere and everywhere.
It was my mothers idea to have him buried in effigy. And I convinced Laura to let her do it.
And as they lowered the casket, I swore I watched my mothers lips turn in a smile as the weight of worry was lifted from her shoulders. Her son was home, and this time, he was going to stay.
I was sitting alone in that bench, facing the sea. As all the memories rushed in and floated away with the tide. I looked to the shore and saw my wife, Arienette and our son playing together in the water. I smiled and walked to them.
They smiled back at me as I stood there with the last thing my brother left me. It was a small river rock, a skipping stone. He left it in a manila envelope with a note that said: Happiness completes freedom.
I shifted the small rock in my hand, feeling it so warm from my palm. I spent so much time trying to understand that I could never really understand; but now I thoughtI believedI understood my brother. It was when I didnt think, that I understood him best. I walked over to my wife and child, and I kneeled. I kissed him first and then my wife. I stood up, and I threw the rock into the ocean. It kissed the surface of the navy blue water, and it flew on to the next place, skipping onward to the next, and to the next. The first leaps were the largest; as they continued they were smaller; and where it stopped, it sank.
And as I watched the rock sink, all my anger and feelings of betrayal were washed away. I understood Calvins struggle, and I knew him better than I had ever known him.
He was a man apart.
His happiness was in the leaps, but his freedom was in the water.
















Critiques
The river stone analogy at the end sent shivers down my spine, the way you describe the stone as 'kissing the surface' really brought home the imagery.
The stone also seems to mirror what happens in his life, how he moves from one town to the next then meets a girl and his next move is smaller and then smaller still as he gets a job and settles down for a bit, until he sinks.
Utterly Beautiful.
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