Seasons In Spring Portable Access
“Hello,” said a voice.
In the small valley town of Everbell, spring didn’t arrive gradually. It arrived with a pop . seasons in spring
Primrose looked up. An old woman was sitting on a mossy log, her lap full of wild onion sprouts. She wore a coat made of stitched-together burlap sacks, and her hair was the color of last autumn’s leaves. “Hello,” said a voice
That night, a soft rain fell—the kind that smells like hope. And deep underground, a thousand roots drank, stretched, and whispered to one another: Primrose looked up
She followed a path of melting frost into the woods behind her house. There, she found the creek, which had been a silent strip of ice just yesterday. Now it was chattering, spilling over rocks, carrying tiny green leaves that had fallen from somewhere upstream. Primrose knelt down and dipped a finger in. Cold—but not the bone-cold of winter. A bright, sharp cold, like biting into a green apple.
Primrose decided to investigate. She put on her mud boots—the ones with the frog on the toe—and stepped outside. The world was noisy in a way it hadn’t been for months. Bees the size of grapes fumbled out of a hollow log, drunk on their first pollen of the year. A robin argued with a squirrel over a twig that would become a nest. Even the fence posts seemed straighter, as if the earth had stretched its back.
“Can I help?” Primrose asked.