You blew in the door
on a leafy breeze,
a purple treasure
in your fist.
“Mom, these are for you.
Put them in water.
I think they’re thirsty.”
You tumbled back outside,
coattail flapping,
boots too large and clomping.
I grabbed
my own coat
to follow in your wake.
Why toil
in the confines
of this
furnished cage?
I could be
outside,
with you,
braving the wind,
scuffling in the leaves,
finding gifts of indigo
by the woodland edge.
Time is running out.
Soon,
there will no longer be
a little girl
with purple treasure
in her fist.