Pjk - Dear Cousin Bill And Ted

The first time I saw you two together—arguably the only time I expected the sun to set politely at the edge of ordinary life and let something stranger and wilder take over—was on a Tuesday that smelled like gasoline and jasmine. Bill wore a jacket that had been stitched from stories: faded concert tees, a patch of a cartoon we’d all forgotten, and a map of a city that no longer existed. Ted had a grin that bent light; you could tell it was dangerous if you believed in such things, but more often it felt like salvation.

Bill traced the word with a finger that shook slightly. "It wants us to be here. To finish every small mercy we've been avoiding. To talk to people we've been pretending we have time to ignore. To forgive the ones who left and the ones who stayed." Dear Cousin Bill And Ted Pjk

"What does 'here' want?" you asked, not rhetorically but as if asking the temperature. The first time I saw you two together—arguably

"Follow," Ted said. "It’s an invitation or a dare. Same thing, really." Bill traced the word with a finger that shook slightly

The closer we came to the end of the list, the stranger our errands grew. We were asked to retrieve a childhood promise that was kept in a pocket of a coat donated thirty years earlier, to return a letter that had never found its postage, to trade a single second of silence for a lifetime of laughter. The tasks were small and enormous at once, like picking up marbles rolled under the couch of the world.

With seeds and apologies and a smile, [Your Cousin]