Of Season — Buy Daffodils Out

When he walked into the hospice room, the sterile smell of antiseptic was overwhelmed by the sudden, aggressive fragrance of spring. Clara, propped up against pillows that seemed to swallow her small frame, opened her eyes.

"They don't just grow on command," Mara said softly, but she wasn't dismissing him. She reached under the counter and pulled out a heavy, leather-bound ledger. "There’s a grower in a hothouse three towns over. He’s a fanatic. Keeps bulbs in a deep-freeze to trick them into thinking winter has passed, then wakes them up with artificial UV and timed misting." "Can you call him?" buy daffodils out of season

"I know the season," he said, clutching his coat collar. "But I need them today. For my wife. It’s her birthday, and she... she doesn't have until spring." When he walked into the hospice room, the

Mara stopped trimming the eucalyptus. She looked at the shop—filled with the deep reds of autumn mums, the dried browns of decorative wheat, and the waxy greens of winter berries. Daffodils were a memory of April, a burst of reckless yellow that had no business in a world turning gray. She reached under the counter and pulled out

"Elias," she whispered, her hand reaching out to catch a stem. "It’s too early."

When he walked into the hospice room, the sterile smell of antiseptic was overwhelmed by the sudden, aggressive fragrance of spring. Clara, propped up against pillows that seemed to swallow her small frame, opened her eyes.

"They don't just grow on command," Mara said softly, but she wasn't dismissing him. She reached under the counter and pulled out a heavy, leather-bound ledger. "There’s a grower in a hothouse three towns over. He’s a fanatic. Keeps bulbs in a deep-freeze to trick them into thinking winter has passed, then wakes them up with artificial UV and timed misting." "Can you call him?"

"I know the season," he said, clutching his coat collar. "But I need them today. For my wife. It’s her birthday, and she... she doesn't have until spring."

Mara stopped trimming the eucalyptus. She looked at the shop—filled with the deep reds of autumn mums, the dried browns of decorative wheat, and the waxy greens of winter berries. Daffodils were a memory of April, a burst of reckless yellow that had no business in a world turning gray.

"Elias," she whispered, her hand reaching out to catch a stem. "It’s too early."