I sat down with grandmother oak there on a blanket she had woven of clovers and sweet violets where the fat bees cobble about. She wrapped me in her scented boughs and gently held all parts of me – the flesh, the brittle fragments, the embers, the salt water and the bone – with soft and steady breaths she blew the shadows from my shoulders and asked only in return of me that I might be with her a while and, in ancient, long-forgotten psalms, that she might sing me home.