Posts

Dandelions

Image
  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...

The Produce Wagon

Image
He came into the neighborhood with the slow authority of something older than convenience. The truck announced itself before it turned the corner, a cough and rattle of gears, then the sight of it, half pickup, half produce stand, rolling under a little tin roof that shimmered in the heat. Where the bed should have been, there was a wagon of abundance: tomatoes with their red shoulders shining, butterbeans in baskets, peaches bruised soft with sweetness, corn still wearing its pale silk like hair. Hanging near the side was a metal scale that swung lightly when he stopped, and below it, a stack of brown paper bags folded flat and waiting like promises. Beside the vegetables, as if to remind children that commerce was also a kind of magic, sat rows of taffy candy twisted in wax paper, bright as Sunday clothes. He knew how to call out without sounding like he was selling anything at all. His voice carried the way church bells do, plain, familiar, and impossible to ignore. Screen doors ope...

Learning to Ride

Image
  He came home with the day still on him, the faint smell of paper and dust, the knot of his tie loosened but not undone, his coat folded over his arm like something he had carried a long way. The street held its usual quiet, the kind that made small sounds matter: the click of a chain, the soft complaint of training wheels against uneven pavement. She waited there in her jeans and striped pullover, one foot on the ground, the other finding the pedal as if it might slip away. He set his coat aside, not in a hurry, and rolled his sleeves once, then again, as though preparing for something that required patience more than strength. The bicycle was small and certain of itself, the training wheels touching down with a steady, forgiving rhythm. He placed a hand on the back of the seat, not gripping, just there, a promise more than a hold. “Look ahead,” he said, and she did, though her eyes wanted to return to him, to check if he was still there. The street stretched out in front of them...

Feed My Soul

Image
He said it quietly, not as a prayer exactly, but as something close enough to be heard if anyone or anything was listening. Feed my soul. The words did not rise so much as settle, like dust finding its place in the corners of a room long lived in. It had been a day of small weights, voices that asked more than they gave, hours that moved without leaving anything behind. He stood at the edge of evening, where the light thinned, and the world loosened its grip, and he realized hunger was not always of the body. He went outside the way a man returns to something he once trusted. The air carried the faint memory of cut grass and cooling earth. Somewhere, a screen door closed with that soft, familiar complaint, and a dog barked once, then thought better of it. He sat without purpose, hands resting on his knees, and let the quiet come to him instead of chasing it. A breeze moved through the trees, not strong, not certain, just enough to remind the leaves they were still alive. And in that...

The Mason Jar

Image
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...

Spring's First Signs

Image
  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...

An Easter Field Trip

Image
  The buses came early, the way school buses always did, coughing softly in the cool morning while the teachers counted heads and straightened collars. The children from   St. Patrick’s Catholic School   carried paper lunch sacks and the small excitement that came with leaving the classroom behind. Someone whispered that today they were going to   Holy Trinity , the old place where priests studied and nuns prayed, and where the lawns were wide enough for picnics and Easter eggs. The week before Easter always felt a little different, as if the world itself were preparing for something. Holy Trinity sat quiet and patient when they arrived, its buildings older than most of the stories the children knew. The church rose from the grass like a stone promise. The priests spoke softly as they welcomed the students, their voices echoing gently inside the cool sanctuary where light slipped through colored glass and fell in bright patches across the floor. Afterward the childre...