Where the Wildflowers Remember: Chapter One: Coming Home
The town looked exactly the same.
That was the first thing Elara Quinn noticed as the bus rolled down Maplewood's main street the same faded green awning over Miller's Bakery, the same cracked sidewalk tiles she used to skip over as a child, the same hand-painted welcome sign that read: "Maplewood Where Life Slows Down and Stays Awhile."
She used to hate that sign.
Now, pressing her forehead against the cool bus window, she thought it might be the most beautiful thing she had ever read.
The bus hissed to a stop at the corner of Birch and Elm no actual bus station in Maplewood, never had been and Elara gathered her two bags, her tote of books, and the careful, rehearsed composure she had been practicing for the last four hours of the ride.
You're fine, she told herself. You're just going home.
Except home hadn't felt like home in seven years. And the version of herself who had left wild-haired, wide-eyed, convinced that somewhere beyond Maplewood something magnificent was waiting barely felt like her anymore either.
The door wheezed open. She stepped out into warm June air.
It smelled like cut grass and honeysuckle and something sweet drifting from the bakery. Elara stood on the sidewalk with her bags at her feet and simply breathed.
Okay, she thought. Okay.
Her childhood home sat at the end of Clover Lane, a narrow road that curved gently like it had nowhere urgent to be. Her mother had left the key under the ceramic frog by the porch steps the same hiding spot since 1998, a security risk her mother cheerfully refused to acknowledge.
The house was quiet. Her mother was visiting Aunt Cecile in Portland for the week, which Elara had secretly been grateful for. She loved her mother deeply. She just wasn't ready for the softness in her eyes yet that particular look that said I knew the city would do this to you without ever saying a word.
She needed one week of silence first. One week of herself.
She dragged her bags up the porch steps and found the frog, found the key, and let herself in.
The house exhaled around her. Lemon polish and old wood and the faint ghost of her mother's lavender candles. Elara set her bags down in the hallway and stood very still, letting the familiarity settle over her like something warm and slightly too tight.
Her old bedroom was exactly as she had left it floral curtains, the bookshelf crammed three layers deep, the tiny desk by the window where she used to write in journals she never let anyone read. She sat on the edge of the bed and looked at her hands in her lap.
You made it, she thought. That's enough for today.
She didn't mean to go outside again that evening.
She had fully intended to unpack, make tea, find something quiet to watch, and sleep for approximately eleven hours. That had been the plan. A good, sensible, healing plan.
But the evening light turned gold around seven o'clock and came slanting through the kitchen window in that particular Maplewood way thick and unhurried, like it had all the time in the world and before she had made any conscious decision, Elara found herself stepping out through the back door with bare feet and a cardigan pulled around her shoulders.
The backyard opened onto a narrow strip of meadow that hadn't been developed since she was a child. Wildflowers grew there in cheerful, unbothered disorder clover and Queen Anne's lace and small purple things she had never learned the names of. She used to spend entire summers in that meadow. Reading. Daydreaming. Talking for hours with the boy from three houses down who had the serious brown eyes and the habit of listening like every word you said actually mattered.
She stopped that thought firmly before it could finish forming.
She walked to the edge of the meadow and sat in the grass, pulling her knees to her chest, watching the fireflies begin their slow, blinking rise from the clover.The city had not had fireflies.
The city had had so many things noise and light and motion and possibility and she had chased all of it, hands outstretched, and somewhere in the middle of the chasing she had simply lost the thread of herself. Lost it so gradually she hadn't even noticed until one morning she woke up in her apartment and looked in the mirror and didn't feel particularly acquainted with the person looking back.So she had come home.It wasn't defeat, she had decided on the bus. It was navigation. A correction of course.
She was still deciding if she believed that.She heard the back gate of the house three doors down open and close with its familiar wooden clap.She didn't turn around.She didn't need to. She knew that gate. She had run through it a thousand times as a girl, had pushed it open without knocking because in those days she hadn't needed to knock she had simply belonged there.
Footsteps in the grass. Slow. Then stopping.
A long pause.
And then, in a voice that was deeper than she remembered but carried the same unhurried quiet, a voice that wrapped around her like something she had spent seven years trying to forget: