On the Way Home


The rain had let up by the time he turned the corner for home, but the streets still glittered with puddles like dropped coins. His yellow slicker hung heavy on his shoulders, hood bouncing with each step. His shoes were soaked through, but he didn’t care. The puddles were wide and waiting, little worlds of sky and trees turned upside down. He chose the biggest and jumped straight in, water splashing high, laughter escaping before he could stop it.

He knew the way home without thinking—past Mrs. Connelly’s hedge, the crooked mailbox that looked like it had a mouth. But today he made detours, zigzagging from puddle to puddle, skipping where he could, stomping where he shouldn’t. The rain had turned the world into something magical. Each splash a sound from some wild music only kids could hear. In the distance, the clouds pulled apart slowly, like curtains, and a stripe of sunlight ran down the street.

His mother opened the door before he knocked. She didn’t scold him. Not yet. She looked at the water dripping off his coat, the grin he tried to hide, and the streak of mud down his pant leg. She smiled. “Take off your shoes,” she said, and he did, right there on the porch, still glowing from the sky inside the puddles.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Things Are Quiet

She Was Always Sad

One More Trip Around the Sun -- 70 Years, 840 months 3,652 weeks 25,567 days 36,817,200 minutes 2,209,032,000 seconds