A thin stand of oak treesย obscures the cornfields that stretch out to the horizon. The landscape changes, but nothing else. Big interstates like this one make the country into a single place: McDonaldโs, BP, Wendyโs. I know I should probably hate that about interstates and yearn for the halcyon days of yore, back when you could be drenched in local color at every turnโ but whatever. I like this. I like the consistency. I like that I can drive fifteen hours from home without the world changing too much. Lacey double-belts me down in the wayback. โYou need the rest,โ she says. โYouโve been through a lot.โ Itโs amazing that no one has yet blamed me for not being more proactive in the battle against the cow.
As I trail off, I hear them making one another laughโnot the words exactly, but the cadence, the rising and falling pitches of banter. I like just listening, just loafing on the grass. And I decide that if we get there on time but donโt find her, thatโs what weโll do: weโll drive around the Catskills and find a place to sit around and hang out, loafing on the grass, talking, telling jokes. Maybe the sure knowledge that she is alive makes all of that possible againโeven if I never see proof of it. I can almost imagine a happiness without her, the ability to let her go, to feel our roots are connected even if I never see that leaf of grass again.