100 Hours Walking Towards The Callary Chapter 1 -
The journey began not with a grand farewell, but with a small betrayal: I locked my front door for the last time and left the key under the mat, as if I might return by dinner. I knew I would not. The suburbs unraveled behind me with embarrassing speed. Lawns gave way to ditches. Ditches gave way to fallow fields. By the third mile, the last gas station had shrunk to a smudge of fluorescent light in the distance, and the only sound was the gravel coughing under my boots.
I had packed lightly: one change of clothes, a canteen, a notebook with no words yet written, and a small brass bell my mother had given me on my tenth birthday. "For when you're lost," she had said. But I was not lost. I was, for the first time in years, precisely where I intended to be: on a road that led away from a life I had built like a house of cards—impressive from a distance, hollow inside. 100 hours walking towards the callary chapter 1
At hour thirty, the sun began its long surrender to the horizon. The sky turned the color of a bruise, and I realized I had not seen another person for twelve hours. No cars. No planes. No distant bark of a dog. Just me, the road, and the growing certainty that the Callary was not a place you reached by walking. It was a place you reached by forgetting the reasons you started. The journey began not with a grand farewell,
The Callary, as the old stories went, was not a town but an echo. Some said it was a monastery without a God. Others claimed it was a library where every book was blank, and the act of reading was actually writing your own ending. My father had mentioned it once, drunk on a Tuesday afternoon, his voice dropping to a whisper as if the walls themselves might report him: "If you ever need to unmake a decision, you walk to the Callary. But you only get one hundred hours to decide what it is you’re undoing." He never went. He stayed, and his decisions calcified into regrets. Lawns gave way to ditches