The old man can no longer drive this whole trip himself, starting predawn without stop to make his brother’s place by lunch. His wife leaves late, drives slow, takes breaks. But she gives him the last mile, so he might seem again, on arrival, something of what he was before.
Lynn Kozlowski’s writing has appeared in such places as The Quarterly, The Malahat Review, pif magazine, Poetry Breakfast, and failbetter.com. He has a volume of short pieces, Historical Markers.
I like this. This is a great micro with lasting resonance.
Poignant and lovely.
Great little story on aging!
It does seem to appeal to that demographic. Thanks.
Beautiful.
Love this story’s last sentence :)
I liked this one, being a short-distance driver now.
The words depend on each other so well!
It’s like a kind-of-longer Haiku.
Wonderful, thought provoking and touching. Congratulations, Lynn.