By May, the wisteria was doing what first-year wisteria always does—almost nothing above ground and everything below. Its thin stem clung to the south wall like a hesitant promise, a suggestion that perhaps, in the right time, beauty would emerge. To the casual eye, it looked like a failure, a plant that had given up before starting, but Dante knew better.He crouched beside the wall as he had so many times before, his hand hovering just above the soil, feeling the cool density of it. He had crouched like this in February, back when the plant was still in its nursery pot, protected and small. He closed his eyes for a moment, imagining the network of roots threading themselves inch by inch into the earth, patient and deliberate. When he pressed lightly, he could feel the slight give of the soil where it had been amended with grit, the way he had prepared it for proper drainage. He imagined the roots wrapping themselves around pebbles, finding pockets of air, claiming their home below w
Read more