Tuesday, June 18, 2013

An Evening in June

  Though the day had been a hot, drowsy one, the falling of the sun brought a completely different world to life. The empty streets were periodically lit up by dull orange lamps. A leaf rested on the cooling pavement, having been still all day but now reanimated by a soft breeze. The birds were all silent, and no cars drove by.

  A slim cloud was forming around the pal, sickly crescent moon. Slowly but steadily, it grew and morphed into many different shapes. Then it separated and became two clouds, a birthing and a spreading of coming change.

 The breeze was a spirit, a growing, restless spirit, trapped by the heavy sun all day but now free to roam. Stronger as it went, it tore through the leaves of the trees, and they fluttered in terror, shaking madly. The breeze turned into a wind, howling loudly as it explored the pavement, then the rooftops, and then the gardens. Every animal knew to remain hidden and out of sight, having heard the wind’s warnings.

 The taste of the air was cool, a strange shift from day time. The scent of long grass, unformed apples and warm earth mingled in the wind, a joining of separate things.

 A single crow sat on a rooftop, dark form blending perfectly into the night. One warning caw and then silence, waiting with unblinking eyes.


 A storm was brewing.  

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