an's Departure
rs of
ration of tires rolling over pavement and neon lights glinting off glass. W
ng with his late mother. "Hale & Vine" stood in delicate letters above the entrance-still unmarred by t
ms had v
f. Ethan remained rigid for what seemed like forever, his hands buried deep in his coat pockets, hi
n of him. Hollowed. Removed. Detac
head, gentle but firm. "You can't grow w
reason that h
no people on the streets at this time, just the blue pre-dawn light seeping into the streets like a mist. T
ime. In it, there was a handwritten letter from his grandmother. The last letter she e
ead
ed your footsteps back, and the
d in years. But
her. Not just
r
ose among deadlines, coffee shops, and the
dens and words and the way that stor
n front of him in huge, soft clouds of gold and lilac. The road grew tighter, curled a
the smell of childhoods outlined on fences and whispered around creeks. He rolled down the w
it was: Th
ven in the harsh, early spring. Lavender swayed like poetry in motio
The house was just as he remembered it-whitewashed, the shutters slightly askew, the porch swing
ill s
cent of cedar an
ned pages like untamed vines. She wrote with the window ajar, assuring that the w
knows where it lef
he diary re
st with her own cherished poetry, then maybe the ones he might try to write. The ones he'd never have the time to write i
w and across the field where
gi
woman
halo. She looked out over the valley as if she belonged. As if the land spoke to her. She did not lo
seen her
it be.
d. Brought the
his way, Ethan could have sworn
na
o
ili
r been turned und