The cabin had been built by his father many years ago, a little before
the turn of the century. It was a wedding gift to his new wife and was
intended to be the place that would provide his future family with the
blessings of home. Tom was born soon after they moved in. They lived
modestly. His father was extremely fortunate to be appointed village
mail carrier, a position he would hold for the rest of his life. Mail was
delivered by horse and buggy back then, and Tom would often sit on
the wagon with his father as he made his rounds. He remembered those
years as living out a perfect idyll.
Tragedy struck when Tom was twelve. His mother, chancing a
short walk to a neighbor's house, lost her way in that treacherous wintry
beauty and soon afterward succumbed to a virulent pneumonia. The
burial, a little way from the cabin, was simple and lightly attended. The
emotional impact on Tom was crushing. But there was more. He soon
began to realize that he would be witnessing not one, but two deaths:
the first, his mother's from a fatal illness; the second, his father's from
depression and dementia.
Tom had always adored his father and, as he grew up, imitated
many of his mannerisms: the way he stood, the speech patterns he
used, the way he laughed. More importantly, Tom knew that he had
absorbed his father's most deeply held values: responsibility, fairness,
truthfulness, loyalty, and honesty. In all these, and in so much more,
he was his father's son.
But it was his mother who had made Tom want to be a writer. It
was she who read him the great poetry and stories of childhood. It was
she who helped him read them back to her. It was her hand that guided
his as he struggled to write the words that had so thrilled him when
she had read them to him. She began to assign him writing problems:
write a story about a father who favored one son over the other; write
a story about a woman who chose fame over love; write a story about
athletic rivalry between two close friends. He wrote the stories, and she
told him they were good, very good. His father, though, always privately
Nuggets 13 and tersely told Tom's mother that writing was not something a "real"
man did.
Several years after his mother died, Tom fulfilled a promise he had
made to her. He sent several of his stories to a number of New York
publishers to be considered for publication. His submissions came back
rejected. His disappointment was deep, and the irony that his rejection
slips were being delivered to him by his father only added to his sense
of shame and failure. After a few additional submissions and rejections,
Tom simply stopped writing. His youthful notion that he could support
himself by selling stories, he now saw, was hopelessly naive. Then, with
unexpected suddenness, his father suffered a fatal stroke. Tom was
now totally alone. The village, in a gesture of sympathy, offered him
his father's job of mail carrier. He accepted. He quickly married and
brought his bride to live with him, just as his father had done with his
own bride so long ago.
Tom awoke with a start, some troubling thought having broken his
sleep. He had had a hard day and was dead tired, but he had to put a
meal together. He took his mail pouch off the table and with difficulty
stepped over and around the scattered debris that covered the cabin's
floor to get to the closet where he hung his mail pouch at the end of the
day. He always looked forward to this ritual. Back when he had accepted
his father's job, he was given his own new letter pouch, but he asked if
he could also keep his father's old one for personal remembrance. He
hung the pouch in the main closet and vowed that for as long as he
lived, he would, at the end of his daily rounds, hang his own letter bag
in that closet next to his father's. This day, he opened the closet door to
hang the two bags side by side and stood stock still. His father's letter
pouch was on the floor, its strap broken. What he had not realized was
that over the years, Murtha had begun using the pouch for storing odds
and ends. The strap had been old and worn to begin with and had now
finally given way. His reaction was instant. The incident turned into a
reminder of his father's death and absence. His eyes teared up. He gently
picked up the pouch and brought it to the kitchen table.
He tipped its contents onto the table: a couple of books, a sewing
box, some knickknacks—all in all quite a bit of weight. With a little
14 Nuggets touch of anger, he remembered how often he had told Murtha not to
use the bag for storage.
He shook the bag one last time to make sure it was empty. He
looked at the broken strap and told himself that he would fix it in
the morning. He was ready to put the bag away when a small piece
of white paper caught his attention. It was the corner of an envelope
that was sticking out of a kind of hidden pocket on the inside of the
bag. He reached into the pocket and removed a letter. It was obviously
something he had missed when he was first given the bag, or maybe it
was something that was not meant to be found.