Where Good Men Gather
A story about the distance between us, the moments that close it, and the things we pass between our hands when words aren't enough. Thomas had not cried at his best friend's wedding. He had stood at the altar as best man, delivered a toast that made the whole room laugh and then go quiet in the good way, and watched Danny and Claire walk back down the aisle looking like the beginning of something beautiful — and he had felt nothing but warmth and pride. But in the parking lot afterward, sitting in his truck alone for ten minutes before driving to the reception, he cried quietly and then wiped his face and drove. He couldn't have explained it then. He can now. He was grieving the version of friendship that was ending. Not Danny — Danny wasn't going anywhere. But the shape of what they were to each other was changing forever, and Thomas, at thirty-one, had finally grown wise enough to know that some changes don't come back around. The Geography of Growing ...