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At a sunny playground with swings and slides, tiny Zozo hovers overhead, accidentally showering rain while amazed children sprint toward nearby doors. Puddles sparkle in bright afternoon light.
Zozo was the smallest cloud in the whole sky. He had lavender eyes and a wobbly shape. The other clouds floated gracefully, making perfect sunny days. But Zozo? He leaked. Drip, drop, splash! Rain fell from him when he didn't mean it to. At the playground below, children ran inside, soaking wet. 'Oh no!' Zozo cried. 'I'm so sorry!' But nobody heard him up in the sky. He floated away, feeling smaller than ever.
In a sunlit park, Zozo drizzles rain onto a picnic table holding a birthday cake with extinguished seven candles, while the birthday girl in a party hat cries beside drooping balloons. Families gasp under the clear sky.
The next day, Zozo tried very hard to stay dry. He floated over a park where children wore party hats and held balloons. A birthday cake sat on a picnic table with seven bright candles. Zozo smiled at the happy scene. Then suddenly β€” SPLASH! Rain poured from him, soaking the cake and putting out all the candles. The birthday girl burst into tears. Zozo's heart broke. 'I didn't mean to!' he whispered sadly.
Over a bright meadow dotted with blankets and sandwich baskets, Zozo releases an unwanted downpour that soaks laughing families mid-bite. Late-morning sunlight filters through the rain, turning drops into silver beads.
Zozo decided to float very, very far from everyone. Maybe if he stayed away, he couldn't hurt anyone. But as he drifted, he spotted a cheerful picnic below. Families sat on blankets, eating sandwiches and laughing. It looked so nice that Zozo stopped to watch. And then it happened again. Rain dumped from his fluffy body, drenching everyone and everything. The families packed up quickly, frowning at the sky. Zozo felt absolutely terrible.
At the silent edge of the pale twilight sky, Zozo curls into a tiny ball, one tear-raindrop slipping from his fluff and falling toward distant clouds below. Fading evening light paints him soft lavender and blue.
'I'm broken,' Zozo said to himself. 'I can't do anything right.' He floated higher and higher, away from towns and parks and people. Soon he reached the very edge of the sky, where almost nobody ever went. It was quiet there. Empty. Lonely. But at least he couldn't ruin anyone's day. Zozo curled up into the smallest ball he could make. A single raindrop fell from his eye. He didn't even try to stop it.
High above a quiet hillside with a lone gnarled tree, Zozo lingers, watching the slow afternoon sun while other distant clouds play far away. Golden light bathes his drooping lavender eyes and the empty grass below.
Zozo stayed at the edge of the sky for hours. Below him was a quiet hillside with just one old tree. No playgrounds. No birthday parties. No picnics to ruin. 'This is better,' Zozo told himself, though it didn't feel better at all. His lavender eyes drooped sadly. He watched the sun move slowly across the sky. The other clouds floated by in the distance, laughing and playing games. But Zozo stayed hidden, all alone.
Beneath the old hillside tree at late afternoon, Lila sits on the grass hugging her knees and crying, while Zozo hovers cautiously overhead, small raindrops trembling at his edge. Warm sunset light streaks through branches, illuminating both sorrowful faces.
Then Zozo noticed something. Under the old tree sat a little girl with medium blonde hair. Her name was Lila, and she was crying. Big tears rolled down her cheeks as she hugged her knees. Zozo felt his rain starting again, but this time he didn't try to float away. Something about Lila seemed familiar. She looked as lonely as he felt. Slowly, gently, Zozo drifted a bit closer. Maybe he wasn't the only one who felt broken.
Under the same tree in soft early evening, Lila looks up wiping her cheeks as Zozo lowers himself to her eye level, lavender eyes wide with worry. Dim orange sky backlights their tentative connection, grass still damp from his drizzle.
Lila looked up and saw the small cloud hovering nearby. 'Are you crying too?' she asked, wiping her eyes. Zozo was surprised she could tell. 'I... I can't help it,' he admitted quietly. 'I always rain when I shouldn't.' Lila sniffled. 'Everyone says I'm a crybaby because I cry a lot. They don't understand.' Zozo floated a little lower. 'I don't understand why I rain either. It just happens.' For the first time all day, neither of them felt quite so alone.
At dusk beneath rustling leaves, Lila sits cross-legged beside the tree, palms open, peacefully catching the light rain that falls from Zozo settled just above her shoulder height. Soft violet twilight surrounds the quiet pair, making droplets shimmer.
Lila patted the grass beside her. 'You can stay here if you want. I won't mind if you rain.' Zozo's lavender eyes brightened just a little. 'Really? You're not upset?' Lila shook her head. 'I'm already sad anyway. Your rain won't make it worse.' So Zozo settled near the tree, and together they sat in comfortable silence. A few raindrops fell, but Lila didn't run away. She just let them fall on her hands. 'Your rain is actually kind of nice,' she said softly.
Near the hillside tree in late afternoon, radiant Gran Cloud glides in, silver body rimmed with golden light, addressing tiny Zozo while Lila watches wide-eyed from the grass. Sunbeams pierce through Gran Cloud’s glow, creating luminous halos around all three.
Suddenly, a big silver cloud drifted toward them, glowing like gold in the afternoon light. 'Hello, little storm,' the cloud said warmly. Zozo gasped. It was Gran Cloud, the oldest and wisest cloud in the sky. 'I've been watching you, Zozo,' Gran Cloud continued. Her brown eyes twinkled kindly. 'You think your rain is a mistake, but you're wrong.' Lila looked up in wonder. Zozo could barely speak. 'Wrong? But I ruin everything!' Gran Cloud smiled gently.
Still beneath the tree, Gran Cloud leans closer, brown eyes twinkling as she explains the purpose of rain; Zozo hovers attentively and Lila kneels nearby, listening with awe. Late-day light casts long shadows over moist grass and nearby puddles.
'Every rainstorm has a purpose,' Gran Cloud explained. 'Remember that playground you rained on? The grass was dying of thirst. You saved it. That birthday party? The garden needed water desperately. And that picnic? You filled the creek where fish were struggling to survive.' Zozo's eyes grew wide. 'Really? I helped?' Gran Cloud nodded. 'Rain is never a mistake, little storm. It's a gift. You just needed to learn when to give it.' Lila squeezed Zozo's fluffy edge. 'That's beautiful,' she whispered.
Under a soft pink sky, Gran Cloud faces Lila gently, one glowing edge touching the girl's shoulder while Zozo observes hopeful just above them. Fading evening light reflects in Lila’s teary eyes and Gran Cloud’s golden aura.
Gran Cloud turned to Lila. 'And you, sweet child, your tears are gifts too. When you cry, you show others it's okay to feel. You make sad people feel less alone.' Lila blinked in surprise. 'But everyone says crying is bad.' Gran Cloud shook her head. 'Crying is honest. It's brave. Just like rain, tears water the gardens of our hearts.' Zozo looked at Lila, and Lila looked at Zozo. They both smiled. Maybe they weren't broken after all. Maybe they were exactly right.
In the small backyard garden at morning, wilted flowers droop beside a narrow path while Zozo hovers overhead, releasing a gentle, purposeful shower onto the thirsty petals. Sunlight sparkles through drops as Lila stands beaming beside the reviving blossoms.
'Can I try something?' Zozo asked. Lila nodded excitedly. Together, they went to Lila's small garden behind her house. The flowers drooped, thirsty and tired. Zozo took a deep breath. Then, very carefully and on purpose, he let his rain fall. Gentle drops watered each flower perfectly. The petals lifted. The leaves brightened. Lila laughed with joy. 'You did it, Zozo! You made it beautiful!' And Zozo finally understood: his rain wasn't a problem. It was exactly what the world needed.