All his life Luke had been the troublemaker. He started shit, caused chaos, and generally created problems if there were any that needing causing. Sam was the reasonable one who tried to smooth things over. That’s why the pot always threatened to boil over when he was with Charlie and circumstances found them without his brother. She knew exactly how to press his buttons. Like when she’d worn his work shirt downstairs after the whole goat incident. She hadn’t even said anything and it fucking sent him.
If she gave him an inch, he’d pull all twelve feet out of the measuring tape.
“I apologize, darling,” he drawled, unable to keep his finger out of the wound. “I won’t call you that again.” Admitting that it’d just come out and he couldn’t help it seemed like the worse option somehow. But Luke liked that it got her fired up. He liked it a lot. It was a hell of a lot better than watching her ghost move around the dusty house. The real Charlie was in there somewhere still, and he was going to find her.
Letters.
Anger flashed across his features. She’d seen the stupid envelopes. Of course. He braced his hands on the island and used the edge to help him get up. The lightheaded feeling still lingered, covering the part of his brain that told him to leave it. He’d scared her and she was hurt, so she was pushing back. A calm, reasonable man would’ve explained what the letters were – and also explained why he couldn’t give them to her.
He grabbed his bag, put it on the counter, and pulled at the zippers and straps with rough fingers. German cigarettes and Syrian banknotes fell out while he rummaged for a piece of paper addressed to Montana. When Luke found the right envelope, he fought the urge to crumple it and stuff it into the garbage disposal, but the part of him that suddenly needed her to know what was in it – that part won. And it shouldn’t have.
“It’s for you,” he said with a fake cheer, almost as if it were a birthday present. “I wrote it. I write them every time I leave, in case I don’t come back. And because – ” Oh, he was on it now. He dared her to stop him. He absolutely, truly dared her. “ – you were one talented surgeon away from getting this two months ago, you deserve to know what’s in it.”
Luke’s eyes held hers as he stuffed an index finger under the flap and ripped it open. It was two pieces of a notebook paper with his tight, blocky handwriting. A picture was with it. Lake Michigan, three years ago. He had on sunglasses and no shirt, his arm around her shoulder while she laughed and tried to push him away. Luke remembered calling Sam, saying that his leave was just approved, and his brother said that they were actually getting ready for vacation – to book a ticket, to come out and meet them. All that fishing they tried to do and caught nothing. Beers and sunburns on a boat. Surely there wasn’t a weekend in any other August where he’d laughed more.
The corner of the picture had a rusty line, from when he kept it paperclipped to the bunk springs above him, with the other photos from the things he liked about Montana. He’d taken that one out to put it in the letter because over the last year, it made this hard burning feeling grow in his chest when he looked at it before he tried to sleep.
He gave Charlie the picture and started to read.
“Dear Charlie,
I’m sixty kilometers from Aleppo, and if it gets any hotter, you’ll be getting this letter sooner rather than later because I’ll have died of heat stroke. However it happened, I’m sorry. I’m sorry that you were right about how I wasn’t going to come back. I feel more at home out here than I ever have in the States, and I know that hurt you. I will always be sorry for that.
But it’s going to be okay because you have that home. The place you’re building with Sam is beautiful, and you’re going to have everything you ever wanted. You’re going to raise those kids right. They’re going to be smart, empathetic, and independent. I won’t be there to teach them the quietest way to sneak back into the house after curfew, but just so you know, it’s through the basement window.
When you say things out loud, or you write them down, it makes your feelings true. I’ve never told you certain things because it’s not my place. But I don’t really want to be dead without you knowing that you’re not making it up. You know what I’m talking about. When you stare out at the trees with that burning feeling, wondering if you’re a horrible person for wanting someone else. I know because I feel it too, all the time, even when I’m way out here. I fell in love with you years ago. I couldn’t tell you when or why. It just happened.
You can’t control who you love, but you can control what you do about it. I never would have said or done anything. Not on my fucking life. I respect you and Sam too much to threaten what you have together. He can give you everything you want. Please, just let him.
Do me a favor and always remember to take care of the broken things. The damaged, lost, and forgotten things. You were always so good at that, like you were with me.
Love,
Luke”
He neatly folded the letter back up and handed it her. Someone must’ve had taken the air from the room because Luke felt like he was thousands of feet in the sky with no foundation. He never meant to turn the screws, to make her feel bad. That wasn’t why he read everything aloud. It was because if this was going to work, she needed to know where he was at. She needed to trust him.
His words were soft when he finally said something that wasn’t already written down. “I can’t move time backwards or forwards. I don’t know if I can go overseas again, if I’ll pass the physical. Even if I passed, I don’t know if I could leave. All this.”
If I could leave you.
If she gave him an inch, he’d pull all twelve feet out of the measuring tape.
“I apologize, darling,” he drawled, unable to keep his finger out of the wound. “I won’t call you that again.” Admitting that it’d just come out and he couldn’t help it seemed like the worse option somehow. But Luke liked that it got her fired up. He liked it a lot. It was a hell of a lot better than watching her ghost move around the dusty house. The real Charlie was in there somewhere still, and he was going to find her.
Letters.
Anger flashed across his features. She’d seen the stupid envelopes. Of course. He braced his hands on the island and used the edge to help him get up. The lightheaded feeling still lingered, covering the part of his brain that told him to leave it. He’d scared her and she was hurt, so she was pushing back. A calm, reasonable man would’ve explained what the letters were – and also explained why he couldn’t give them to her.
He grabbed his bag, put it on the counter, and pulled at the zippers and straps with rough fingers. German cigarettes and Syrian banknotes fell out while he rummaged for a piece of paper addressed to Montana. When Luke found the right envelope, he fought the urge to crumple it and stuff it into the garbage disposal, but the part of him that suddenly needed her to know what was in it – that part won. And it shouldn’t have.
“It’s for you,” he said with a fake cheer, almost as if it were a birthday present. “I wrote it. I write them every time I leave, in case I don’t come back. And because – ” Oh, he was on it now. He dared her to stop him. He absolutely, truly dared her. “ – you were one talented surgeon away from getting this two months ago, you deserve to know what’s in it.”
Luke’s eyes held hers as he stuffed an index finger under the flap and ripped it open. It was two pieces of a notebook paper with his tight, blocky handwriting. A picture was with it. Lake Michigan, three years ago. He had on sunglasses and no shirt, his arm around her shoulder while she laughed and tried to push him away. Luke remembered calling Sam, saying that his leave was just approved, and his brother said that they were actually getting ready for vacation – to book a ticket, to come out and meet them. All that fishing they tried to do and caught nothing. Beers and sunburns on a boat. Surely there wasn’t a weekend in any other August where he’d laughed more.
The corner of the picture had a rusty line, from when he kept it paperclipped to the bunk springs above him, with the other photos from the things he liked about Montana. He’d taken that one out to put it in the letter because over the last year, it made this hard burning feeling grow in his chest when he looked at it before he tried to sleep.
He gave Charlie the picture and started to read.
“Dear Charlie,
I’m sixty kilometers from Aleppo, and if it gets any hotter, you’ll be getting this letter sooner rather than later because I’ll have died of heat stroke. However it happened, I’m sorry. I’m sorry that you were right about how I wasn’t going to come back. I feel more at home out here than I ever have in the States, and I know that hurt you. I will always be sorry for that.
But it’s going to be okay because you have that home. The place you’re building with Sam is beautiful, and you’re going to have everything you ever wanted. You’re going to raise those kids right. They’re going to be smart, empathetic, and independent. I won’t be there to teach them the quietest way to sneak back into the house after curfew, but just so you know, it’s through the basement window.
When you say things out loud, or you write them down, it makes your feelings true. I’ve never told you certain things because it’s not my place. But I don’t really want to be dead without you knowing that you’re not making it up. You know what I’m talking about. When you stare out at the trees with that burning feeling, wondering if you’re a horrible person for wanting someone else. I know because I feel it too, all the time, even when I’m way out here. I fell in love with you years ago. I couldn’t tell you when or why. It just happened.
You can’t control who you love, but you can control what you do about it. I never would have said or done anything. Not on my fucking life. I respect you and Sam too much to threaten what you have together. He can give you everything you want. Please, just let him.
Do me a favor and always remember to take care of the broken things. The damaged, lost, and forgotten things. You were always so good at that, like you were with me.
Love,
Luke”
He neatly folded the letter back up and handed it her. Someone must’ve had taken the air from the room because Luke felt like he was thousands of feet in the sky with no foundation. He never meant to turn the screws, to make her feel bad. That wasn’t why he read everything aloud. It was because if this was going to work, she needed to know where he was at. She needed to trust him.
His words were soft when he finally said something that wasn’t already written down. “I can’t move time backwards or forwards. I don’t know if I can go overseas again, if I’ll pass the physical. Even if I passed, I don’t know if I could leave. All this.”
If I could leave you.