The morning of the big Parade of Patience had finally arrived, and Pockets bounced out of bed like toast popping from a toaster. His overalls—patched and a little too big—swung as he raced to the window. The town square was already buzzing with preparations. He threw on his tall, striped hat and rushed out the door, a grin spread across his face. The banner hanging high above the square read: “Parade begins at noon.” He glanced at the clock. “But it’s only eight!”
His toes wanted to tap-tap-tap the hours away, but then he remembered something Nana often said as she worked in her garden, tending to each plant with care: “Patience is not just waiting; it’s how you behave while you wait.” Pockets paused and smiled. If he had to wait, he could make waiting wonderful.
From one pocket, he pulled a tiny pair of scissors. There, by the fountain, a sparrow fluttered frantically, its tiny foot tangled in a loop of twine. “Easy now,” Pockets whispered, crouching low. His heart thudded as he watched the bird struggle. He waited, his breath slow, until the bird calmed. Gently, he snipped the twine, and the sparrow sprang free with a grateful chirp, soaring high into the sky.
Across the square, Mira’s kite tail had torn. Pockets found a bright orange patch and a ribbon in his pocket. He knelt, took a slow breath, and carefully mended the tail. “Thank you!” Mira beamed as her kite danced back into the wind, flying high with the promise of more adventures.
The bakery bell jingled. Mr. Knead, the baker, had dropped a tray of warm rolls. A line was forming, and everyone looked anxious about the parade snacks. Pockets did not rush. He waited his turn, then gently picked up the rolls. He wiped them clean with a napkin and smiled. “No rush,” he told the baker. “Good things taste better when we take our time.” His smile grew wider as he realized how much he enjoyed the slow, steady rhythm of patience. Mr. Knead chuckled and handed him a cinnamon swirl as a reward for his quiet patience.
By the bandstand, a drummer’s jacket was missing a button. From a tiny tin, Pockets produced a spare button and a needle. He sat with the drummer on the sunny steps, stitching slowly and neatly. “Hold still,” he said, “and we’ll be marching in no time.” The drummer nodded and learned Pockets’s favorite waiting trick: in for four, out for four, like waves on the shore.
As the clock ticked, Pockets found more ways to fill the hours with kindness. He shared a marble with a shy toddler. He tied a bow on a puppy’s loose collar. He gave a paper boat to a boy staring at the fountain and waited with him to see it sail, not pushing, not hurrying—just watching the ripples carry it along.
From his smallest pocket, Pockets pulled a seed and a tiny clay cup. He scooped a pinch of soil from a planter, tucked the seed in, and gave it a sip from his water bottle. He set it in a patch of sun. “It won’t sprout today,” he told a curious passerby, “and that’s okay. Some things grow best when we give them time.”
Each person Pockets helped pinned a little paper clock on his overalls—a thank-you for patient kindness. By noon, his patched overalls jingled softly like parade bells, a reminder that patience wasn’t just about time—it was about making time for others.
At last, the town clock chimed noon. Drums rumbled, flutes trilled, and the mayor raised his hat. “Before we begin,” he called, “one boy has shown us what patience looks like.” The bandleader stepped forward with a shiny baton shaped like a clock hand. “Pockets,” she said, “Would you lead us?”
Pockets swallowed a happy lump in his throat and took the baton, his heart full. He didn’t dash. He didn’t dart. He set a steady, kind pace, one that even the tiniest feet could follow. The parade flowed behind him—dancers, drummers, kites, and smiles—moving together like a slow, beautiful song.
When the music faded and the cheers quieted, Nana hugged him tightly. “What did you learn today, my dear?”
Pockets looked at the tiny seed in its clay cup, now warmed by the sun, and at the little paper clocks pinned to his overalls. “That patience isn’t doing nothing while you wait,” he said. “It’s doing something good, even if it takes time to grow.”