Light bounces from an endless layer of impeccable snow. Fresh shoots of spring are hidden beneath it. Our new trees line the fence, scrawny and barren. I miss the green patches, the newborn blades of crocuses, daffodils, and tulips. The first snow of winter brings a calm after a hot and chirpy summer, but this snow is different, lonely.
Hana screams from the living room, the scream that says, “I’m hurt.” It’s loud, but not a desperate cry, just one that begs for attention. It nears, her feet tapping down the hallway with a bowlegged, penguin gait. I wait for her to come to me. Her eyelids are narrowed in rounded hills of baby agony, her nose flattening into her anguished wrinkles, and her mouth pulling into a wide gaping frown. I launch her into my arms. Her cries taper into sniffs, her pain forgotten in Mommy’s arms.
A telltale aroma reaches my less than sensitive nose. I lay her onto the changing table, taking care of business as usual. Cadence yells from the electric piano, a clatter of plastic accentuating her distaste.
“I hate when headphones don’t work!” The clatter of plastic is presumably the headphones slamming into the music holder.
I wiggle Hana’s chubby legs back into her jeans and send her back on her way. Snowflakes fall in persistent patterns. I debate postponing my already postponed grocery trip, but I just used Hana’s last diaper. I guess when it rains, it pours. Or in this case, it snows.