The Distance Between Stories
Webb learned to see light before he learned to trust it. Growing up in Houston, his father taught him that a thing worth having was a thing you could reach out and touch. "Long distance," his father would say, wiping grease from his hands, "is just a slow way of saying goodbye." That line became a prayer. Then a prophecy. Then a tombstone over every relationship Webb had ever tried to stretch across a zip code. His marriage ended the way marriages in Houston end, slowly, then all at once. She wanted presence. He gave paychecks. She left with the dog and a note that said, "You were always half here." After that, Webb packed his cameras into a battered Pelican case and told himself a new story: I am a man who stays put. It felt like wisdom. It felt like safety. It was neither. It was a cage with a view. Then he met Janine. Not in Houston. Of course not. At a wedding in Austin he'd almost skipped. She was a curator from the Virgin Islands who had migrated...