Seeing Through Glass
- Dustin Parker
- Feb 24
- 2 min read
by: Rachel Parker

On Tuesday, eight-year-old Lucy ate lunch with her father on the twentieth floor of the glass building where he worked with numbers all day. She brought her sketchbook, and while he typed on his computer, she drew roses climbing up the windows.
"They don't grow this high up," her father said without looking away from his screen, the same way he said unicorns weren't real and her mother wasn't coming back.
But Lucy had seen things grown-ups couldn't. Like how sometimes her mother's face appeared in puddles after rain, or how the pigeons outside spoke to each other in whispers when no one was listening.
So when the first real rose appeared, pressing against the glass like a small red hand, Lucy wasn't surprised. Her father didn't notice, too busy with his spreadsheets, but by Wednesday there were three blooms, and on Thursday, a whole vine had spiraled past their window.
The other people in the building began to whisper. The roses shouldn't be possible, they said. Something must be wrong with the foundation. But Lucy knew better. She'd seen her mother in a dream, planting seeds in the sky.
By Friday, roses covered the entire building, their perfume seeping through sealed windows. Lucy's father finally looked up from his computer. "Impossible," he whispered, but Lucy saw his hands trembling as he touched the glass.
That night, she found a rose petal in his pocket while doing laundry. He'd kept it, she knew, the way he'd kept her mother's hairbrush on his dresser, holding onto beautiful things that shouldn't exist, but somehow did anyway.



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