We know we aren't fast enough to stop them before they hit their mark.
So we followed them.
One of the bullets led us to the street corner where the man who caught it had crashed his truck. He had found his lost dog and then, together, they found two 16 year olds with a gun. When the boys threatened him he laughed and tried to take the gun. He wasn't able to get the gun, only the bullet and then he drove away, straight into a tree.
We followed one bullet to a grassy hill beside a gas station. We saw the cars on the highway speeding past us like a stampede out of town the same way they did on the day a three year old boy caught the bullet we were following. He had discovered his father's loaded gun under the seat of the car while waiting for his mother and auntie to shop at the quickie mart.
We followed another bullet to a vacant lot. The grass was just high enough to hide the litter. We stopped under a tall tree in what used to be a front yard. One of our group had seen smoke, not from the gun, but from the house fire lit by the man who had first set this bullet's course, then set his home ablaze. His wife caught the bullet and so stayed in the house while it burned. We arrived too late, of course, to stop any of this from happening.
One bullet led us past the house where one of my friends is raising children, and a puppy. We crossed the street and stood on the lot where volunteers are planning a community garden.. We saw the signs of change. The yellow police tape is gone; neon pink tape marks the locations for raised beds. A shed has been erected in the alley where a man named Saul had caught up with some car thieves and the bullet from one of their guns.
And then it began to rain like a mother's tears. Our maps were sodden. We might have lost our way.
Before we gave up we hurried to follow another. It led us to a grove of trees proudly rising out of a well kept lawn sprinkled with tiny daisies, between the elementary school and a little church. One of the women with us explained that she had seen the gun that had shot the bullet we had followed here. She bravely recalled the young man leaning out of a car window, pointing the gun at her while he laughed. As she spoke, I marveled that her mind had finally found a way to wrap around the fact that she hadn't caught that bullet. A week later a teenager had caught that bullet between his shoulder blades as he ran toward the trees for shelter. And now, we had followed the story, followed the bullet. We stood between the very trees that might have saved his life had he reached them in time.
I can't be sure.
But I know that I will continue to follow those I cannot catch. I know I will not ever be fast enough or brave enough to catch them but I will chase them. I sometimes hear them explode like fireworks in the middle of the night. Their sounds punctuate my dreams and when I wake I am filled with a kind of curious gratitude and wonder why. Even if we never find the bullets we chase and even though we hope no one will ever have to catch them, they are caught. They are caught and therein lies the great sadness that sets us on the journey toward answers for the hardest questions about death. I will follow the bullets because the routes they draw invite me into beautiful places of past loss, heroism, rage, courage, resilience. These are things we should follow closely so as not to lose track of them.
Simply beautiful. Thank you Abigail for helping me to see our Good Friday pilgrimage with new eyes.
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