There's a stillness in the after, a sort of grace in accomplishment. You wake early, lighter, out of dreams of moving. Your cousin says maybe she was wrong and spring was the answer all along, somehow her illness faded with the coming of sunlight. You relish her relief. Across the river, a darkness has rolled in that the seasons cannot excise. Across the ocean, a war bellows, a tale as old as time.
Somehow, we live our little lives in the immense tornado of the big picture. People have children in the middle of war, people fall in love in the middle of collapse. They call to say he proposed on the other side of the world and their joy is so simple, when nothing else is.
You feel yourself returning to the world. To life. You know May waits around the corner, for once you believe it will come. Everything is falling apart, except it isn't. Not everything.
The four-leaf clovers are just about to sprout.
