At twelve, she walked into the flower shop with empty pockets and a breaking heart, convinced that beauty was something meant for other people’s dead, not her own mother’s. Caught with stolen petals in her hands, she braced for punishment. Instead, the florist met her desperation with tenderness, offering not just a bouquet, but a standing invitation: every Sunday, fresh flowers for a grave and a grieving child. Love, it seemed, could be arranged gently, wrapped in paper, and handed over without a price tag.
A decade later, she returned as a bride, carrying a life her younger self could never have imagined. The florist didn’t recognize the woman she’d helped build, petal by petal, year after year. But when the truth surfaced, so did tears. The wedding bouquet became more than decoration; it was a full-circle offering. Some kindnesses end at the counter. Others follow you to the altar, and all the way back to the grave.