The smell of a spring rain settling on the earth is the smell of life anew.
At the window, I sit with a book, both cracked, cooled by the alfresco air seeping through, and tiny droplets glissando down the pane.
The pitter-patter of a soft rain falling to the parched earth is the sound of life replenished.
At the rain's offset, I leap from my chair, exiting the front door, to saunter through the lush green pastures that linger outside the library's confines.
How green the trees appear, and the grass-- how rich the stalks of the trees, their boughs with budding leaves quenched, glistening in the sun.
I even enjoy the scent coming off the once arid pavement-- it is the smell of the earth, freed from its impedance, rising above the stifling asphalt.
I smell the life that lingers beneath, and the dull metallic tinfoil taste of the pavement fills my open nostrils--
It is pleasant, though a little less so, than the ambrosial landscape.
I inhale ever so deeply, relishing my favorite part of spring, in the offset of a warm afternoon rain on a brisk day, sauntering through the wood-laden trails on worn brick paths,
to the paved parking lot where my car awaits-- delineated in a filmy layer of mired pollen residue. It needed a wash anyways.