Raven In The Crosshairs

“MAJOR GENERAL ORDERED ME TO STATE MY NAME – THEN HE SAW THE TATTOO

โ€œState your name.โ€

I didnโ€™t look up. The cloth kept moving. Oil lines shimmered across the bolt like veins. Arizona heat pressed my shoulders flat.

Boots crunched behind me. More than one pair. Heavy. Sure of themselves.

โ€œLook at me when a superior officer is speaking.โ€

I clicked the carrier home and finally breathed. โ€œSir, if you donโ€™t know my nameโ€ฆ you shouldnโ€™t be standing on my range.โ€

Silence hit hard. Somebody huffed a laugh. Another muttered.

I stood. Not fast. Just enough.

Major General Blackwell blocked the sun. Ribbons, steel jaw, eyes like cold glass. Five officers behind him. One lieutenant wearing that academy smirk.

โ€œYour range?โ€ the General asked.

I kept my gaze steady. No defiance. No apology. โ€œYour lane three is off. Wind variance is wrong. Scope tables are outdated. Your shooters are compensating by point-three mils. Youโ€™ll miss when it matters.โ€

A flicker of doubt behind him. A glance toward the tower. The smirk sharpened.

โ€œAnd who are you to be correcting my installation?โ€ the General said, voice like a blade.

I straightened. The tank pulled across my back.

He saw it.

The raven in the crosshairs. Coordinates etched through the wings. Ink the color of old gunmetal. And right beneath it –

Everything around us stopped.

Color drained out of his face. His mouth parted like the air had left him for good. He didnโ€™t blink.

โ€œSir?โ€ the lieutenant tried, softer now.

Nothing.

My heart thudded once, hard. Heat became noise. The world narrowed to the way his eyes wouldnโ€™t leave the ink.

He knew. Not my face. Not my file. The mark.

He swallowed, jaw unhinging, something human breaking through all that brass.

When he finally spoke, he didnโ€™t ask my name – he used one no one on this base should know.

โ€œRook,โ€ he said, like a prayer he wasnโ€™t sure he should say out loud.

The lieutenantโ€™s smirk cracked. The officers behind him shifted their boots.

I didnโ€™t move. I couldnโ€™t, for a second. Old air filled my lungs and made my chest hurt.

โ€œRange cold,โ€ Blackwell said, not looking away from me.

A hand signal went up from one of the majors. The towerโ€™s light turned red. Shooters in the pits lowered their rifles and looked around.

โ€œEverybody else, go find shade,โ€ Blackwell said. โ€œWeโ€™re done here until I say otherwise.โ€

The lieutenant started to speak, then swallowed it. The others backed off, slow and curious. They said nothing. They looked a lot.

When it was just us and the heat and the wind, Blackwell took one step closer.

โ€œItโ€™s really you,โ€ he said, quiet like a field church.

โ€œNever said it wasnโ€™t,โ€ I said.

โ€œI read the report,โ€ he said. โ€œBurial at sea. Effects returned. Citation drafted.โ€

โ€œPaper burns easy,โ€ I said. โ€œBodies donโ€™t.โ€

He looked at the ink again. The ravenโ€™s wings cut across my shoulder blade and bit into my spine. The coordinates ran down rib to rib, numbers like little scars.

His eyes touched the tiny letters under it.

The date. The valley. The night the radios died.

โ€œWhy are you here,โ€ he said, and it wasnโ€™t sharp anymore. It was tired.

โ€œBecause lane three is off,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd because ghosts donโ€™t like sloppy math.โ€

He almost laughed. It came out as a breath that never turned into sound.

โ€œYou canโ€™t be here,โ€ he said. โ€œNot under that name. Not on my line.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m a contractor,โ€ I said. โ€œBadge says โ€˜Tech Fourโ€™. Plaque on the office says โ€˜Sage Desert Trainingโ€™. Your S-3 signed it. Iโ€™m inside your wire because you asked for help two weeks ago.โ€

He blinked once, and I got to watch the calculation catch up with memory.

โ€œI sent that request to an anonymous inbox,โ€ he said. โ€œThe one that called itself Wren.โ€

โ€œThat inbox belongs to me,โ€ I said. โ€œI changed the locks on the tower door yesterday. Your people didnโ€™t notice.โ€

He looked past me at the lane. He stared at the little flags that never moved when they should have.

โ€œLane three is off,โ€ he echoed.

โ€œBy point-three mils,โ€ I said.

He worked his jaw like he was chewing on gravel. Then he did something I hadnโ€™t expected.

He offered me his water.

I took it. I sipped, and the dust on my tongue turned to sludge.

We stood like that for a minute, two long shadows on hot earth and ghosts between us.

โ€œYou didnโ€™t die in that valley,โ€ he said.

โ€œNot for lack of trying,โ€ I said.

โ€œI signed things,โ€ he said. โ€œI told people you did. I stood next to a flag and said words.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ I said. โ€œI watched the clip. You looked good. Stiff. Honest.โ€

He winced at that. It wasnโ€™t a joke. It was a truth that tasted like blood.

โ€œI needed you gone,โ€ he said.

โ€œEverybody did,โ€ I said. โ€œSome because they cared. Some because I was a problem. Some because it was clean.โ€

He nodded once, like a man taking a hit he knew was coming.

โ€œWhat do you want, Rook,โ€ he said. โ€œIf youโ€™re here to bury me, do it fast. Iโ€™ve got a battalion on the hook and a timetable that doesnโ€™t forgive.โ€

โ€œI want your lane fixed,โ€ I said. โ€œI want your shooters to stop cheating without knowing theyโ€™re cheating. I want you to see what happens if they donโ€™t.โ€

He looked back at the tower. He knew range safety. He knew angles. He knew a ricochet can travel farther than a lie.

He turned his head toward the building where the lieutenant with the smirk had vanished.

โ€œKersey,โ€ he said, like the word itself had a taste.

โ€œThat oneโ€™s been swapping tables from a civilian app and calling it doctrine,โ€ I said. โ€œHeโ€™s got a photocopy from 2009 tacked to a corkboard and three new scopes still in boxes because the vendor took him golfing.โ€

Blackwellโ€™s mouth twisted. It wasnโ€™t a smile.

โ€œYou have proof,โ€ he said.

โ€œI have groups,โ€ I said. โ€œI have wind logs. I have screenshots. I have the receipt for the wrong steel on lanes two and three.โ€

He didnโ€™t ask me how I had any of that. He knew the answer.

โ€œYou came back from the dead to fix a range,โ€ he said.

โ€œI came back to fix myself,โ€ I said. โ€œThe range is the part I know how to touch.โ€

He stood very still. Then he nodded.

โ€œShow me,โ€ he said.

We walked lane to lane. He watched. He didnโ€™t try to be the loudest voice in the sand. He let me talk.

I set the flags where the wind wanted them, not where the paint thought they belonged. I changed the angle on the steel until the sun glared off it clean.

I typed new numbers into an old tablet with a cracked screen. I printed tables that matched the rounds they actually shot, not the ones they thought they could afford.

I brought a shooter up from the ready line. He looked nervous. He watched my hands more than he watched the target.

โ€œYou trust your zero,โ€ I told him.

โ€œYes, sir,โ€ he said to me, and then looked terrified that heโ€™d said it to the wrong man.

โ€œIโ€™m not a sir,โ€ I said. โ€œIโ€™m a guy who has missed more than you ever will. Shoot on my call.โ€

Blackwell stood back with his hands behind him. He watched the little details. He always had.

The shooter took a breath. He lined up. The wind peeled sweat off our faces.

โ€œSend,โ€ I said, and the crack snapped the air in half.

The steel chimed. It wasnโ€™t a lucky hit. It was in the paint, where math and nerves shook hands.

Blackwell watched the splash. He looked at me like the story heโ€™d read about me and the story he was watching now were two sides of the same coin.

โ€œKersey,โ€ he said again, and there was granite in it now.

I nodded toward the tower.

โ€œHeโ€™ll tell you budgets,โ€ I said. โ€œHeโ€™ll tell you timelines. Heโ€™ll use a lot of big words that donโ€™t get mud on their boots. Heโ€™ll mention compliance more than heโ€™ll mention skill.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s not my problem for long,โ€ Blackwell said.

That was the general talking. The man inside the bars was still back at a valley with a dead radio and no moon.

โ€œYou were the one who drew the raven,โ€ he said, eyes on the ink. โ€œBack then. In chalk on the side of the truck. I remember.โ€

โ€œYou told me it looked like a crow fell into a blender,โ€ I said.

He laughed for real then. It hurt us both, but in a good way.

The heat pressed down harder. The tower door opened. Lieutenant Kersey came down the steps with a clipboard and the face of a man who had been practicing denial for years.

โ€œSir,โ€ he said. โ€œWe really canโ€™t shut down training on such short notice. We have a schedule – โ€

โ€œWalk with me,โ€ Blackwell said.

Kersey looked at me like I was a grease stain.

โ€œI donโ€™t believe weโ€™ve been introduced,โ€ he said, using the kind of tone you practiced in a mirror.

โ€œThis is the consultant you recommended,โ€ Blackwell said. โ€œYou know. The one weโ€™re paying to fix the mistakes you said we didnโ€™t have.โ€

Kersey blinked like people do when their ladder gets pulled away.

โ€œI didnโ€™tโ€”โ€ he started.

โ€œSave it,โ€ Blackwell said. โ€œLane three is off and I can smell it. The steel is wrong on two and three and I can feel it. The logs are a fiction and I can read.โ€

Kersey looked at the table with the printed sheets. He looked at the flags that moved. He looked at the steel that had a new shine to it.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been within standards,โ€ he said, weak.

โ€œWhose standards,โ€ I said.

โ€œIndustry,โ€ he said.

โ€œWe are not an industry,โ€ Blackwell said, and his voice rolled like thunder across dry ground. โ€œWe are the ones people call when their world explodes.โ€

Kersey wilted like a plant left on a windowsill too long.

โ€œSir, the vendor assured usโ€”โ€ he tried.

โ€œThe vendor will explain it to the inspector general,โ€ Blackwell said.

Kerseyโ€™s eyes widened at those two letters. It meant the uniforms from the big building would ask hard questions with pens that never ran out.

I watched his shoulders go down. I saw the lie that had been chewing a hole in him for months. He wasnโ€™t evil. He was small. He was scared. He had cheated himself first and all of us after.

โ€œI can fix it,โ€ he said. โ€œI can stay late andโ€”โ€

โ€œYou will write me a full account,โ€ Blackwell said. โ€œEvery decision you made. Every pressure you felt. Every shortcut you took. You will hand it to me by eighteen hundred. You will not touch a rifle until we are done here.โ€

Kersey swallowed. He looked at me like I had thrown a rope. He didnโ€™t know how to tie it.

He left again, smaller.

Blackwell and I stayed in the heat until the sun got bored of watching us.

We worked. We dragged sandbags. We pulled new cable. We recalibrated scopes with care that bordered on love.

By the time shadows got long, the line had lost its lazy aim and stood straight.

Blackwell leaned on a post and looked out over the dirt like it was the ocean.

โ€œYou didnโ€™t ask me why I said your name,โ€ he said.

โ€œI donโ€™t need to,โ€ I said.

โ€œYou deserve to hear it,โ€ he said. โ€œYou deserve to hear what that word means to me.โ€

I didnโ€™t tell him I already knew. The night teaches you what words cost.

โ€œWe were pinned in that wadi,โ€ he said. โ€œFour vehicles and a truck with a gun that sounded like a god with a cough. I was a lieutenant colonel then. I thought my rank could stop bullets. I was wrong.โ€

โ€œYou ducked like a man with a brain,โ€ I said.

โ€œI leaned into a wheel well and tasted rubber,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd then that gun stopped. Not for long. Just for a breath. Long enough for us to crawl out and be smaller targets.โ€

He looked at the raven on my back as if it might fly.

โ€œI looked up,โ€ he said. โ€œI saw a shimmer on a ridge. And I knew the math it took to hit what had been trying to kill my boys from that far. I knew the cost of being the one who pulled the trigger. I knew the name of the ghost on that ridge even if I hadnโ€™t met him yet.โ€

He took a breath like he was diving.

โ€œRook,โ€ he said. โ€œThe one who goes first to find the lines. The one who babysits the king so the others can play. I never forgot.โ€

He looked older when he said it. Not weaker. More real.

โ€œThen why bury me,โ€ I asked.

โ€œBecause I lost good men that night who never got buried right,โ€ he said. โ€œBecause you disappeared into a file and I got told you were a problem with a pulse. Because the house wanted the story to end where it didnโ€™t ask any more questions.โ€

โ€œWhat did you want,โ€ I said.

โ€œI wanted to put the pieces somewhere I couldnโ€™t break them anymore,โ€ he said. โ€œI wanted to pretend I could stop hurting people by being small.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t do small,โ€ I said.

โ€œYouโ€™d be surprised,โ€ he said.

We let that sit for a minute.

A truck rattled up with cases of new steel. The driver hopped out and looked at our faces and decided he didnโ€™t exist.

We signed for the delivery without words.

We were bolting a fresh plate to lane two when a crack snapped the sky to glass.

It wasnโ€™t our lane. It wasnโ€™t anyoneโ€™s lane.

It was a private from a unit on the far side of the berm who had decided to clear his weapon without clearing his head.

The round hit the old plate we hadnโ€™t replaced yet and threw back a kiss of metal that wasnโ€™t supposed to fly.

A kid yelped. He dropped his hand and blood came out strange, bright and thin and fast.

We were moving before the echo made a home.

Blackwellโ€™s voice stole air from the world.

โ€œMedic!โ€ he bellowed, and the desert shook.

I wrapped my belt around the kidโ€™s forearm where the blood pumped. I twisted a wrench into the leather and wound until he stopped leaking like a punctured radiator.

The kid tried to say he was fine. He wasnโ€™t.

โ€œHold this,โ€ I told him. โ€œLook at me. Breathe and count from fifty to one.โ€

He said fifty-four twice.

Blackwell knelt in dust that had never seen a generalโ€™s knee. He put a hand on the kidโ€™s neck and talked about baseball like he played it every weekend.

The medic came like a storm and left like a plan, and the kid got smaller on the back of the cart until his boots were all I could see.

We stood up, slow like old men.

Blackwell looked at the plate. He looked at the hole that shouldnโ€™t have made that happen.

โ€œYou said the steel was wrong,โ€ he said.

โ€œItโ€™s too hard,โ€ I said. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t drink the impact. It splinters and throws it back.โ€

He closed his eyes like a man trying to rewind time with his face.

โ€œClose it,โ€ he said. โ€œAll of it. Until you and I both say itโ€™s right. Iโ€™ll take the heat.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll get more than heat,โ€ I said.

โ€œGood,โ€ he said. โ€œMaybe Iโ€™ll burn clean.โ€

We shut it down for a week.

The calls started on day one. The ones with stars on their shoulders and signatures that could settle land. They wanted to know why a general had closed their toy.

Blackwell took them, every one.

He said words like safety and standard and liability. He said words like dead kid and family and my fault.

He never said my name. He never said my call sign. He kept that part in his pocket like a coin he wasnโ€™t ready to spend.

Kersey showed up to my little office with red eyes and a stack of paper. He put it on the desk like a confession.

โ€œI wrote it,โ€ he said.

โ€œAll of it,โ€ I said.

โ€œI didnโ€™t sleep,โ€ he said.

โ€œGood,โ€ I said, and I didnโ€™t mean it like a barb. I meant it like a cure.

He sat in the chair and looked at his hands.

โ€œMy dad taught math at a high school,โ€ he said, out of nowhere. โ€œHe used to say there were only two ways to cheat. One was to look at someone elseโ€™s paper. The other was to pretend you understood your own.โ€

โ€œWhat would he say now,โ€ I asked.

โ€œHeโ€™d tell me to show my work,โ€ he said.

โ€œThen show it,โ€ I said.

He handed me a flash drive like it weighed pounds.

โ€œIโ€™ll be out of a job,โ€ he said.

โ€œYou might be out of this job,โ€ I said. โ€œBut if you do this right, youโ€™ll still have your name when it matters.โ€

He nodded. He looked like a kid who had taken the bike apart and was now holding screws he didnโ€™t recognize.

We worked late. We coded the plates. We tallied the rounds. We wrote the math on a whiteboard and never erased the parts that hurt.

Blackwell came by at midnight with coffee that tasted like melted tires. He read every page and signed every line.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to court a lot of trouble,โ€ he said.

โ€œIt was already courting you,โ€ I said. โ€œYou just didnโ€™t RSVP.โ€

He smirked at that. He left tired and straighter.

The inspector general team rolled in three days later. They asked questions like drills. They took notes like gravity.

They found the steel contracts. They found the invoices that said AR500 and delivered cheaper sheet. They found the vendor who went golfing with Kersey and the sergeant major who had put his brother-in-law on the supplier list.

They found rot that looked like paperwork until a kid bled on the dirt.

They wrote reports. They made phone calls. They left with boxes.

There were tears. There were resignations. There was one pair of handcuffs.

There was also a meeting where Blackwell stood in front of a hundred tired faces and told them the truth like it was a door he could open for them.

โ€œWe messed up,โ€ he said. โ€œNo one is dying because I donโ€™t like an email out of D.C. Theyโ€™re dying because we let small lies become big ones. That ends now.โ€

He didnโ€™t look at me when he said it. He didnโ€™t have to.

When the dust settled, Kersey was moved. He kept his pay for now and lost his pride for a while. He started learning from a staff sergeant with a nose for wind and a heart like a metronome.

He came to me a week later with a question, not an excuse.

โ€œHow do you feel the wind on your face and trust a number,โ€ he asked.

โ€œYou donโ€™t,โ€ I said. โ€œYou let your face tell your number where to start. Then you let the steel tell you where to finish.โ€

He nodded like that was the first clean thing heโ€™d heard in a year.

Blackwell asked me to stay for a month. He called it a consultancy. I called it penance.

We rebuilt more than lanes.

We rebuilt habits.

We told kids to slow down. We told leaders to stop pretending.

We put a chalkboard in the tower where the new tables lived. We wrote next to them the names of the people who had learned the hard way why numbers matter.

We didnโ€™t glorify. We remembered.

At night, I went back to the off-base room with the broken fridge and the shower that hissed like a snake. I cleaned my rifle even though I hadnโ€™t fired it.

I wrote letters Iโ€™d never send.

One was to a woman named Miriam I had never met who lived a long way from a valley that still bent my dreams. She had written me once a year to a box that never wrote back.

Her letters were about her little girl and a garden and a pie she made on Sundays. They were about a man with my call sign who had kept them, one night, when a road was no longer friendly.

I had saved her letter the way you save a life.

I had come here because I couldnโ€™t throw it away.

On the fourth Sunday, Blackwell asked me to go for a drive.

We left the wire without a convoy. We drove west until the land went flat and the air got thinner.

He pulled off down a dirt track and killed the engine by a pile of rocks that didnโ€™t look like an accident.

He got out and didnโ€™t put on his hat. He looked around like he was checking an old promise.

โ€œI come here when itโ€™s bad,โ€ he said. โ€œNo one else does. Itโ€™s not on any map.โ€

โ€œWhat happened here,โ€ I asked.

โ€œMy daughter learned to shoot here,โ€ he said. โ€œWhen she was twelve. She put three rounds in a paper plate and looked at me like Iโ€™d given her the moon.โ€

He didnโ€™t cry. He talked plain.

โ€œShe was eighteen when she took my truck out with a boy who didnโ€™t know a red light from a dare,โ€ he said. โ€œShe died quiet. He died loud. None of it made any sense.โ€

I looked at the pile of rocks. I understood. You mark the world so it can hold what you canโ€™t.

โ€œI wanted to quit after that,โ€ he said. โ€œI wanted to go home and get small and make bread and mow a lawn.โ€

โ€œAnd you didnโ€™t,โ€ I said.

โ€œI stayed and tried to do less harm,โ€ he said. โ€œSometimes I did the opposite.โ€

He took a folded paper from his pocket. He handed it to me like it had burned him every day.

โ€œI wrote this ten years late,โ€ he said. โ€œTo you. To someone with a name I buried with good intentions.โ€

I read it.

It was short. Not because he didnโ€™t have words. Because the ones he wrote were the right ones.

He said he was sorry.

He said I had saved him and he had hurt me.

He said he was tired of being a story people used and ready to be a man again.

I folded the letter half as many times as he had.

โ€œI donโ€™t need this,โ€ I said. โ€œNot for me.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t,โ€ he said. โ€œBut I do.โ€

I gave it back.

We stood in the kind of quiet you only find in places that have listened more than theyโ€™ve spoken.

โ€œRook,โ€ he said after a while. โ€œWhat does the tattoo mean to you now.โ€

I looked at the raven. I looked at the numbers.

โ€œIt used to be an anchor,โ€ I said. โ€œThen it was a map. Lately itโ€™s just a thing my skin remembers.โ€

โ€œAnd the letters under it,โ€ he asked. โ€œThe date.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s the night I stopped pretending I was a ghost,โ€ I said. โ€œThe night I picked a fight with my own story and lost in a way that saved me.โ€

He nodded. He knew a thing about losing the right way.

We drove back with the windows down and the dust in our teeth like a new sin.

The month became six weeks. The range got quiet and honest.

The kids with shaky hands stopped biting their lips and started listening.

The staff sergeants with sixteen years started smiling like they meant it again.

Kersey passed a recert with an eighty-nine and didnโ€™t cheat to get there.

Blackwell put a plaque in the tower. It had no names on it. Just a promise.

We will do it right or we will not do it.

He asked me, on the day I signed my last invoice, if I wanted a job.

Full time. Official. Back in the world I had slipped out of like a bad dream.

โ€œI canโ€™t,โ€ I said. โ€œI canโ€™t belong to walls again.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t have to,โ€ he said. โ€œYou can belong to people.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s heavier,โ€ I said.

โ€œYeah,โ€ he said, and he smiled like a man whoโ€™d started lifting late and wasnโ€™t done.

I told him no, and it wasnโ€™t a lie dressed like a yes. It was a no that included coffee and calls and a chair in the back of any class I wanted.

He gave me a coin. It wasnโ€™t fancy. It had a raven scratched into it with the tip of a knife.

He pressed it into my hand like I was someone who could carry it.

On my last morning, I walked the line before anyone came.

The sun came up slow and kind.

I put my palm on lane three and felt the cool that hides under heat if you wake up early enough.

I said names under my breath. I said sorry only when it fit.

I left a little paper under the chalkboard.

It said two things.

Wind counts. People do too.

I went to the little post office on the edge of town where the woman behind the glass chews gum like it owes her money.

I mailed a letter to Miriam.

It said thank you for the letters you sent to a name that didnโ€™t answer.

It said I am not him and I am also not not him.

It said I hope the pie still tastes like a Sunday.

It said take care of your little girl with the good laugh.

It said a man with a different scar reads your words when the night wonโ€™t stand still.

I signed it with my real name, the one on the card the DMV gave back to me when I stopped running.

Calder Haines.

It didnโ€™t feel wrong in my hand.

Two months later, I got a postcard with a picture of a lighthouse and a kidโ€™s handwriting that said you write funny but my mom says itโ€™s nice, and it made something in my chest stop biting.

Blackwell called once a week after that. Not always for work.

Sometimes to talk about baseball.

Sometimes to talk about a kid who had finally learned to call his shot.

Sometimes to just breathe into a phone with a man who used to be a ghost.

We didnโ€™t fix the world. We fixed a line in a desert and a habit inside two men.

It was enough for a while.

I took a job three towns over teaching people who donโ€™t have to shoot how to breathe better when theyโ€™re scared.

We did a lot of counting to one.

I got a dog that doesnโ€™t like fireworks and loves beef jerky.

I learned that healing doesnโ€™t happen when someone tells you to get over it. It happens when you stand in the same place as your hurt and let someone decent stand there with you.

I drove back to the range once in the fall when the heat had run off somewhere else.

The plaque was still there. The chalkboard was still honest.

Kersey waved at me like a man who had decided to be hard on himself in the right way.

Blackwell hugged me with one arm and didnโ€™t apologize for it.

We drank gas station coffee and pretended it tasted good.

He told me he had started a scholarship in his daughterโ€™s name for kids who wanted to learn how not to lie to themselves with numbers.

It fit him.

The base made a few people mad with how strict it got. They left. The ones who stayed were the ones you wanted next to you when the sky fell.

On my way out, I took one last look at the raven in the crosshairs in the mirror of my truck.

It looked back at me like a thing that had done its job.

I smiled at it like you do at a friend you can finally let go of a little.

Driving east, the road went straight for a long time and then found a hill to pretend was a mountain.

My hands felt light on the wheel.

Hereโ€™s the thing I learned standing under a sun that wants to burn everything youโ€™re not careful with.

You donโ€™t get to fix the past. You get to name it and hold it and let it turn you into someone you wish your younger self could have met.

You donโ€™t get to outrun who you were. You get to walk beside it until you both remember how to breathe.

Sometimes justice is a courtroom and a report. Sometimes itโ€™s a general on his knees in the dirt making a vow he keeps.

Sometimes forgiveness is not letting a man off the hook. Itโ€™s handing him a better one and telling him to fish for something worth eating.

And sometimes the most dangerous ranges are the ones inside your head.

Do the work. Fix the lanes. Tell the truth even when it shakes.

If this story found you at the right time, let it ride shotgun with you a while and, if it helps, let somebody else read it too.