When I entered high school, there was a war going on. Every night the local paper printed the addresses of soldiers who wanted to get mail. I wrote to every name on the list, and used my babysitting money to send them small gifts.
In most cases, I only sent one letter or package, but one Marine and I became close friends. We wrote sporadically, then weekly, and finally almost daily. I sent him a photograph, which he taped inside his helmet. He told people I was his girlfriend, though we both knew I would never be that. He was twenty-one and serving a second tour; I was fifteen and had never been away from my home or parents for more than a week.
He told me things that people who knew and loved him could not bear to hear. I related the small stories that arose in the life of a bookish high schooler, and he seemed to draw comfort from their dailiness. We shared jokes, and filled sheets of pale blue airmail stationery with the lyrics of songs that we loved. I can still remember sitting at the kitchen table as I transcribed the words to "Blowin in the Wind." When he wrote back to say that the song had come on the radio as he read my letter, I learned the meaning of serendipity.
He believed the war was for a "just cause." I was already participating in local protests,
but our differeing viewpoints never effected our friendship.
My father was drinking coffee in the kitchen and I was in my bedroom getting ready for school when my grandfather came in with the paper. The screen door slammed behind him.
"Patry's friend is on the front page--" he announced. "Killed in action."
Even now, I can hear the sound of the door that door slamming, a kind of punctuation mark to my grandfather's statement. I can feel the claustrophobia of my tiny bedroom with the roses on the wallpaper, and see my open bureau before me, my shirts piled in neat stacks. The one on top was as pink as those wallpaper roses.
The mail from that distant country was sometimes slow and unreliable. My friend had been dead for six months when the last letter arrived. I kept it for many years, but eventually, during one of life's transitions, it was lost.
No matter. I not only remember every word, I remember how they looked on the page. Small, and slanted downward, all huddled at the top, the rest of the paper filled with emptiness. An odd phrase, I suppose, but the only way I can describe it.
The letter was totally unlike any I had received from him before. There was no date or salutation, no stories or song lyrics, no noting the number of days till he'd be home. Just a question:
Did you ever think that maybe you were just a figment of your own imagination?
It was so many years ago now. My grandfather is dead-- my father, who jumped up from the kitchen table when he heard the news--dead, too. And the room with the pink flowered wallpaper where I spent my childhood is a kingdom I can never re-enter, except through memory.
Only the question--cryptic, strangely prescient, and still utterly mysterious-- remains.
You do not need to leave your room. Remain sitting at your table and listen. Do not even listen, simply wait, be quiet, still and solitary. The world will freely offer itself to you to be unmasked, it has no choice, it will roll in ecstasy at your feet. --FRANZ KAFKA
Saturday, May 26, 2007
THE LAST LETTER: A Short True Story
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47 comments:
A letter from the grave.
My brother was there, came back. Sort of. My other brother dodged, lived, and stayed away.
Very powerful, particularly for Memorial Day weekend. Thanks for coming back, Patry
This is one of your life's stories, Patry. It is for these powerful, heartfelt remembrances that I return and send others. Thank you for sharing.
It's good to see you posting again.
Sometimes hearts break anew just for remembering. A stunning Memorial Day tribute, Patry.
I love your short true stories...This one was captivating, as always...what a question! It inspires such wonder in me.
Love,
D.
zhoen: So much sorrow from that time.
So much that remains unresolved, unanswered and unanswerable.
amishlaw: Thank YOU for coming back to my much neglected blog. It was really a comment from Swirly on my blogger's block post that inspired me to write a little. First one word, then another...
gary: Your comment means a lot. This is not a story I tell often, but I felt the need to do so now.
robin: Yes, they do. I was surprised how painful this was to write after so many years...
Delia: Wonder is a good word for it. Love to you, too.
Oh Patry, what a lovely, haunting piece.
Wonderful!
Glad to see you blogging again
xo
J
Thank you!
Oh Patry! How I want to hug you right now...
What a timely, powerful and poignant post. Thank you for reminding us what this weekend is about.(((hugs)))
thank you for this. for writing. for writing so beautifully.
reading you is just so wonderful. a little gift I give myself.
jordan: Thank you! Now if I can just get a little consistency going...
blossom: How lovely to see a new "face." Thank you for the comment.
tinker: It may have been a virtual hug, but I felt the warmth anyway...
irene: Thank you for continuing to read my often fallow blog, and for your wonderful, kind words.
I just discovered you blog today and must say your story floored me. A sobering tribute to all of those who have made the ultimate sacrifice.
Another gem for your collection, Patry. Hugs from Denver. K.
Our memorial day is in November---an easier time for accepting the horrible yet wonderful truth of so many stories related to war.
This was a very moving piece, Patry. It may be a bit perverse of me, but your friend's last letter reminded me of an Ambrose Bierce Devil's Dictionary definition:
CARTESIAN, adj. Relating to Descartes, a famous philosopher, author
of the celebrated dictum, Cogito ergo sum -- whereby he was pleased
to suppose he demonstrated the reality of human existence. The dictum
might be improved, however, thus: Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum --
"I think that I think, therefore I think that I am;" as close an
approach to certainty as any philosopher has yet made.
Bierce, a veteran of the "Bloody Ninth" Indiana Regiment, may well have had the same thoughts as your friend, but lived to restate them in his sardonic way.
Wow!! really great!!
Travis: It's not a story I often tell, but today seemed like the time.
Thanks for stopping by.
K: Hugs much appreciated--and as always,returned.
Lorna: So very true. The memories might feel less dissonant in a colder, greyer month.
Steve: Ambrose Bierce always had the power to give me chills, but never more so than here.
Hey r: We must have cross posted. Always on the same wavelength, aren't we? Thank you--
Wow, Patry. This is one of those stories where I have been made to feel so much, and that has me so filled with words and thoughts and ideas, that I cannot speak them all --- and instead, only cry a bit.
I think of all soldiers --- all "boyfriends" --- lost too early, too senselessly, and now can almost feel their absence from our world because of your story. Thank you for writing it out for us.
a story of innocence
tragedy
and so much more
thank you so much
kg: Such a vast and uneradicated absence for so many families, girlfriends, friends. Thank you for feeling it with me.
floots: One particular poem you wrote actually reminded me of that time and this person.
I did not know that you had your Memorial Day at this time of year (Ours is November 11). Thanks for this, a poignant story.
"Where have all the Flowers Gone?"
This makes my heart ache. My youngest brother spent most of a year in Iraq, a war so different and the same as Vietnam. Today is his birthday and I'm grateful that I could call and sing Happy Birthday to him this morning.
Thank you for sharing this story. It's so important that we hear about the horrific ripples of war.
My first reaction was that somehow he knew.
This story is yet another example why you are such a special and great writer; even from a young age have you participated in life well beyond those rose-patterned walls.
Thank you for telling this sad and poignant story.
That was a powerful story.
Avus: I'd almost forgotten that song...sadly appropos.
Dierdre: I'm SO glad you got to sing to your brother today. Your happiness sends out its own kind of ripples.
Kirsten: A strange thing happened as a result of writing this post. I've always thought he DIDN'T know, that the mysterious words and form of the letter was a dark coincidence.
But after seeing this post, someone emailed me to say that the soldiers were usually aware when they were going on a particularly dangerous mission. Since he was an officer, that would have been even more likely in his case.
I now suspect that he was probably in the middle of the mission that took his life, and that perhaps someone else mailed the letter for him--which would partially explain the long delay.
It seems obvious to me now--which makes me wonder if I resisted knowing it all these years. How strange the human mind can be...
Thinking of him sitting down to write those terse words, wondering-- or doubting--that he would live to post them, brings on a fresh wave of sorrow. Maybe that's why it took me so long to face it.
Jack: Thank you!
(o)
Great story! I had lots of friends who died over there and your story resonated with me.
This weekend I was thinking about people who've been gone for so many years that many or all of the people who knew them are gone too. I wondered if there comes a time when there are no memories left. You've shared this intimate story and kept the memory of this young man alive within each of us. Not just an anonymous soldier, but a kid who loved Bob Dylan and could tell all of his friends that the pretty dark haired teenager he carried was his girlfriend. I'll remember this story and him always.
It's a beautiful story, and well executed. And I don't think we can be figments of our own imagination... but maybe of someone else's?
Powerful story.
I heard some things on NPR on Memorial Day that brought me to tears. This story belongs among them.
You lived through it so I can imagine how it must feel to not know everything. A coincidence sees my latest post on my blog actually tug at me for not knowing some other details of the central character . . . and incidentally it is about war . . .again!
Dale: Your O is always appreciated.
Fred: It always seems that we have much in common.
Lisa: Thank you. One of the most compelling reasons to write is to save the very real and individual people we've known from anonymity.
curmudgeon: Maybe it should be next week's existential question?
Pearl: Thank you.
Marilyn: I wish I'd heard that...
Anil P.: Thank you; I'll definitely check out your post.
You had me right there with you all the way - in your inimitable style - as usual Patry.Simply Marvellous Writing.
A beautiful story. Thanks for sharing (and for posting my picture).
I served in Viet Nam, and wrote lots of letters home. My former father-in-law, Judge Grady Leland Crawford, now deceased, saved one for me that I had written to him. I still keep it. The war didn't cost me my life, or permanently maim me. It was a large factor in ending my marriage.
Thanks for your post.
I was gonna email you, having just read your book, but the link on your website didn't work. I just wanted to share a couple of thoughts with you directly (as opposed to publicly).
Chiefbiscuit: Thank you!
Gerry: I'd love to hear more about that letter. And of course, I'm curious about your thoughts on the book. You can email me at patryfrancis@comcast.net.
zachstern: Thanks for visiting, and for your wonderful photo. It added a lot.
What a beautiful sad story, that raises so many questions.
debra: The questions have been with me for a long time, but strangely, through writing about it, I feel as if I got closer to the answers.
I've just begun exploring your words. This piece connected with me on several levels...
I got a note from my father two days after his death - eerie.
While I never wrote to soldiers for some reason or another I had a prison pen pal when I was young and naive. Somewhere in a closet I still have a packet of those letters and a few photographs...
Back in the days before blogs, before e-mail, hell, before personal computers those correspondances with a stranger many miles away somehow gave a pocket of magic to both of us.
I wonder what ever happened to my convict pen pal.
belladonna: What an interesting comment. I had never thought that the impulse to connect with soldiers across the world--or to prisonners, whose lives must have felt equally remote--was a cousin to blogging. But of course, you're right.
"A pocket of magic"--yes, that's exactly what it is.
Such a heartfelt story. I remember those days of Vietnam well. In junior high we all got metal "POW-MIA" bracelets and scoured the papers daily to see if our soldier had been found. To this day, I still have the bracelet and to my knowlege he was never found. I'm sure you made a huge difference in this mans' life, as well as others you corresponded with. I find his line very haunting.
^^ nice blog!! ^@^
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