The Weight of Clouds
The clouds came low that afternoon, not angry exactly, but heavy with some old thought the sky could no longer carry alone. She stood in the garden between the rows of tomatoes and marigolds, her bare feet pressed into the dark earth still warm from morning sun, and watched them gather. They looked softer than stones, or the quilts folded in cedar chests, yet she felt certain they weighed more than anything she had ever known. Maybe more than the wheelbarrow her father pushed. Perhaps more than the sacks of soil stacked by the shed. Heavier even than sadness, though she did not yet have the right measurements for that . The beans climbed their poles in silence. Bees moved lazily from bloom to bloom as though unconcerned with what hung overhead. But she kept thinking the clouds must grow tired from carrying all that grayness. She imagined them straining above the town, swollen with rain and unspoken things, trying not to let go too soon. The garden seemed to understand. The ...