Dandelions
They came without asking, the dandelions, pushing up through the thin places in the yard where the grass had given up its argument with the soil. No one planted them. No one claimed them. Still, they arrived each spring with a quiet certainty, yellow heads lifted to the sun as if they had been invited all along. The man noticed them first in the way a man notices small things when the larger ones have gone quiet. He stood at the edge of the yard with his coffee cooling in his hand and watched the field of them gather, bright and unbothered, as though the world had not spent the winter trying to forget how to grow. When he was a boy, he had been told they were weeds, something to pull, something to clear away so better things could take their place. He remembered the tug of them, the stubborn roots holding on longer than seemed fair, the small satisfaction of the pop when they let go. But he also remembered the other part, the part no one warned him about. How the yellow would sof...