The Mason Jar
The jar sat on the shelf the way it always had, clear and ordinary, its glass catching whatever light the day offered and holding it without complaint. It had been many things before this keeper of peaches in syrup, of green beans snapped by hand and packed tight, of nails and screws that smelled faintly of rust and work. Now it was empty, or nearly so, save for a thin film of dust and the memory of what it had held. He reached for it without thinking, the way a man reaches for something that has outlived its purpose and, because of that, gained a different kind of weight. Outside, the evening settled in slowly, the light thinning to that soft hour where the world seemed to pause and listen to itself. He carried the jar with him to the porch and set it on the railing. For a while, it did nothing, which is to say it did exactly what it was meant to do. Then, as if remembering, he leaned forward and began to gather what the night was willing to give, first one firefly, then another, each...