The Half Brother (36 page)

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Authors: Holly Lecraw

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BOOK: The Half Brother
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Salter picked up his heavy gold-banded pen, flipped it slowly between his fingers. “They did, Charlie. And we told them no. That you bore no blame. And that you were too valuable to lose.”

There was a long silence. “Well. Thank you.”

“We said you were an institution. A young one, of course.” We permitted ourselves to smile.

“Adam, that means a lot. It does. But.” I cleared my throat. “I should have known. Maybe on one level I did.”

“We talked about this, Charlie. Are you changing your story?”

“No. But I should have—”

“Brothers aren’t supposed to suspect each other.”

“I don’t know if that’s true.”

“If it’s not,” Adam said, “then I don’t want to live in that world.” He shifted a little, awkwardly. “In the good old days, I would have offered you a drink now,” he said. “I suppose they did some things right in the good old days.”

“Some,” I said.

We let the quiet stretch. And then, together, we stood, and buttoned our jackets. “I’ll hang on to this,” he said, patting his breast pocket, where he had stowed my letter. We shook hands. And that was that.

GOING HOME,
I took the long way. Through Abbottsford, that is, around the square, up and down streets. I didn’t go down Nicky’s dead-end
street, only to turn around again, but I did drive by the Bankhead house, yellow now, shutters mended, tricycle in the driveway—a house belonging to the present, which we were now in, rather than the past.

During my meeting with Salter, the clouds had rolled in; outside of town it was dreary March, the light flat, the patchy snow along the state road gravel gray. The convenience store, the snowmobile place, the gun shop, the organic coffee bar with its groovy lettering.
Charlie, you’ve gone native
. Spring soon. This
was
spring. I’d already seen crocuses in the snow. No use denying them.

I wanted more, though. The near future, that was all I asked—just a week or two, or three. The time when I will be driving home, just like now, and the light, changing so fast, already will be brighter, higher; when I will bump down the long driveway, through the gloom, burst through—there is the house on the hill; and park the car; and go up the steps, the good strong front steps, the solid wood of old trees.

And I walk in the door and through the hall, into the kitchen, and out the back; and leave the door open, the air is mild and dry; and then when I come to the middle of the patio, when I face west, when I am still and no longer feel my own body moving through the air, then I finally hear the birdcalls, gentle but incessant. There are hours left of the day. May is behind me, in my house, I hear her footsteps, she is coming. The early quince, down the hill, is pink orange. And beyond that, green; a breath; a haze on the mountains.

Acknowledgments

Deepest gratitude to Henry Dunow and Jenny Jackson for their enthusiasm, skill, patience, and faith.

Thanks also to Nita Pronovost for her wisdom, and to the teams at both Doubleday and Doubleday Canada, especially Michael Goldsmith, Lauren Hesse, Will Heyward, and Nora Reichard, for their unflagging and expert support.

This book would not have been finished, and certainly would not have been any good, without the insights and deep generosity of Jaime Clarke, Dana Gioia, Susannah Howe, Bill Pierce, Dawn Tripp, Liz Rourke, and Sam Howe Verhovek. Thaddeus Howe provided crucial information about lacrosse. Carter Howe provided comic relief. Atul Gawande and Liz Rourke checked my medical details, and were touchingly concerned about my fictional patient. The legendary Richard Baker, of Noble and Greenough School, allowed me to watch him work and gave me crucial insights into the art and craft of teaching.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the extraordinary teachers who set me on my own path, in particular Kemie Nix, David Purdum, and the late Jane Lauderdale.

I borrowed the lovely phrase “the air of elsewhere” from
Russell Brand, writing about the late Amy Winehouse; and the notion of not seeing but looking from John Berger, via James Wood.

My brief quotations from the
Duino Elegies
are A. Poulin Jr.’s translation, which is my favorite.

My husband, Peter, is the foundation of it all.

This book is dedicated to my parents, Rupert and Virginia LeCraw, and my brother, Andrew—first, best, and most beloved teachers.

A Note About the Author

Holly LeCraw is the author of
The Swimming Pool
. Her work has appeared in
The Millions, Post Road
, and various anthologies, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. A native of Atlanta, she now lives outside Boston with her family.

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