And somewhere, just beyond reach, Rory Knox smiled.
From there, the trail led to a commune in West Cork, now a dairy farm. The owner—a woman with silver braids and eyes that had seen too many solstices—remembered Rory staying one autumn. “He was in love,” she said, wiping her hands on her apron. “With a woman who collected sea glass. She left for Prague. He followed a week later, but he took the long way. He always took the long way.” Searching for- Rory Knox in-
Prague offered nothing. A hostel register from 1997 listed a Rory Knox, nationality Irish, reason for visit: to hear the cobblestones . I found a postcard he’d sent to no one, left behind in a used bookshop near the Charles Bridge. On the front, a photograph of the astronomical clock. On the back, in that same slanted handwriting: “Searching for Rory Knox in the spaces between the chimes.” And somewhere, just beyond reach, Rory Knox smiled
The drummer had no address, no phone number, no last name. Just a memory of a boy who wore desert boots in the rain and never seemed to need sleep. “Check the archives,” he said. “He was in the papers once.” “He was in love,” she said, wiping her
I folded the paper, put it in my pocket, and ordered another coffee. Outside, the Atlantic stretched toward a horizon that refused to be reached.
“You’ll find me in the place where the search becomes the destination.”
I sat there for a long time, listening to the mournful Portuguese guitar. And then I understood. I wasn’t searching for Rory Knox. I was learning to be in the same way he had always been. In the present. In the mystery. In the incomplete sentence that never needs an ending.