The interactions between Mom, Dad, and Mick show the importance of a loving and supportive family—and demonstrate the ways in which love doesn’t always prevent disagreement or strife. At first, Lisa’s memories associate Mick with happiness, sunshine, and the fertility of Dad’s garden, but soon chaos and disorder descend and the hawks kill all the chicks. This foreshadows the brevity of Mick’s time in Lisa’s—and the family’s—life. It also offers a pointed lesson that no one person’s efforts, no matter how conscientious, can offset or prevent suffering and death. Life involves both happiness and sadness, each in its own season. In this memory, the crows predict death and destruction, further cementing their ability to warn about bad news in the story.