Miranda of Milton Town
Everyone in Milton Town knew Miranda was a little bit crazy. They said it over garden fences and almond milk lattes, with a sigh that was equal parts of pity and exasperation. While her peers climbed corporate ladders, curated five-year plans, and fretted over interest rates, Miranda danced. She danced while waiting for the bus, a soft sway that made commuters clutch their briefcases tighter. She danced through the grocery aisles, a gentle two-step between the kale and the canned soups, her basket filled with whatever looked bright that day. Her life, to the calibrated eyes of Milton Town, was a series of irresponsible choices and baffling non-sequiturs. She left a stable marketing job to paint murals for the local school. She planned a picnic and laughed with genuine delight when a thunderstorm soaked the sandwiches, declaring the rain a better seasoning than salt. When her heart was broken, she didn’t rage or strategize a rebound; she bought a single, ridiculous orchid and learn...