The March Loyalists, led by old Farmer Kell, insisted that without March’s fierce winds and sudden showers, the soil would never wake. “We sweep away the frost,” Kell boomed, “and stir the sleeping seeds!”

They learned that spring isn’t a single month. It’s a story told in three chapters—each one incomplete without the others.

Verna raised her hand, and the air shimmered. The villagers saw a vision: March, wild and muddy, prying open the frozen earth. April, soft and patient, coaxing each bud to unfurl. And May, radiant and generous, spreading a feast of color and scent.

Then the May Marvellers, with young Theo as their voice, shook their heads. “You’re both rushing. May is the month of full bloom—the strawberries, the warm sun, the meadows thick with clover. Without May, spring would be a promise never kept.”

The bickering grew so loud that the Spirit of Spring, a gentle creature named Verna who shimmered like dew on a petal, appeared in the village square.

The villagers fell silent. Then Lila stepped forward and took Farmer Kell’s hand. Theo offered a basket of first strawberries to both of them. And from that day on, Glimmerdale held a Month of Springs festival—not to choose a winner, but to honor the rhythm: first the stirring, then the growing, then the blooming.

The April Admirers, guided by the gardener Lila, laughed. “March just makes a mess! April brings the real magic—the cherry blossoms, the returning songbirds, the gentle rains that fill the streams.”

“March is the door,” Verna said. “April is the hallway. May is the room where spring celebrates. Without the door, you cannot enter. Without the hallway, you cannot reach the room. Without the room, the journey has no purpose.”