The last few miles you fly down a mountainside, each twist as familiar to you as the lines on your skin. 2,300 miles to cross America, and what you'll remember most is how strange the road kill in Missouri. Armadillos and turtles all the way down. In Kentucky you met a friend for a coffee, as though it wasn't the strangest stopover. In Colorado, you drank whiskey with people who flew across the borders just to end up in the same little town as you and the two years you hadn't seen each other no longer existed. The car decides to twist and ache, its alarm ringing out as you walk away from it. You spend countless evenings trying to solve its riddles.
And then suddenly here you are, back at the drawing board. The desert sun is warm on your skin, the evenings long and inviting. All of summer lies ahead and you have everything to win from its promises.
You know it's a gift, you see it clear.
Now is the time to unwrap it.
