Spring's First Signs
Morning arrived with a softness it had not carried for months. The air still held winter’s memory, but it had loosened its grip. Somewhere beyond the bare trees a bird tested the morning with a single note, then another answered, as if the world were remembering a language it had nearly forgotten. In the ditch beside the road, water moved again—slow at first, then certain—carrying away the quiet weight of the cold season. The ground began to change in small ways a man might miss if he hurried. The sun lingered a little longer on the fence posts. The wind no longer cut; it only passed through. Beneath the brown grass, something patient had been waiting all along. Shoots pressed upward through the soil, pale and determined, like quiet promises pushing toward the light. Winter did not leave all at once. It stepped back the way old men do, slowly and without announcement. A final frost might visit, a gray morning might return, but the balance had shifted. The earth had turned its fac...