Lincoln Highway moved more like a dance than a road It drifted like the wind corroded the earth to guide me home. The colors of the coming autumn careened down, painting the asphalt canvas below.
I had left Latrobe less than an hour ago but crossed into a distant world where the overgrown homes of old remained among the ancient trees breathing and watching me.
Weathered red paint running down dilapidated barns like wax melting from a candle's wick. So star spangled Americana it would not do it justice to refer to it as just the sticks.
There was something profound happening; the "American Dream" was dying here and I was to bear witness as the shinning city on the hill fell into the metaphorical sea.
Spellbound in this catastrophe, my ego still finds a way to make it all about me. I could not help but wonder if Andy would remember our talk about technology; if Eamon and Bridgette would forget us three walking hand in hand through the wood and down the tracks, battling back the inebriation in the cold, hard black of a September night. If these moments meant anything to anyone but me.
My eyes locked on the horizon line that rested atop a mountain peak. I thought about how I left you, left you three words short of having me complete. And I'd be lying if I didn't say I contemplated running back to you to speak what went unsaid because home is not a place but a thought in one's head.
You were home but I kept on driving past the bones of a dying dream letting my dreams die a little too quietly inside of me.