Happiness Has a Smell
The bread came out of the oven with a sigh, warm and golden. The crust cracked as it cooled, and the air filled with that steady, earthy perfume of flour and fire. He stood at the counter, knife in hand, and for a moment he thought happiness might smell like this—like bread breaking open to show its soft heart.
Outside, the late sun poured through the window and touched the lilacs he’d brought in from the yard. Their sweetness climbed into the room, mixing with the bread, chasing away the long hours of silence. He closed his eyes. Lilacs, bread, the faint musk of worn wood where his hand rested—all of it together made him think the world might not be so hard to love.
Later, when she came in and hung her sweater over the chair, the scent of her hair—rain and wind and the faintest trace of soap—joined the others. He laughed without knowing why. It was only air, passing and vanishing, but in it he found what he needed: proof that happiness could be carried in the breath, in the smallest invisible thing, in the way the world sometimes smelled just right.

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