I remember the first time Somebody held my hand to spell you right in fourth grade and in a better handwriting.
She had a long braid that dillydallied in the law of inertia and a mad boy instead of playing with us kept rushing after her.
Of little things that I remember and I share this trait with Stephen King, Petrichor is how you're recognized widely, but I smelt you between the cracks of my cement roof, my sweat when started pestering me despite your elongated water droplets trying to win over my body
Your shyness, which shows in your hurry to touch the ground as soon as possible is fought back by the shine that you give to a lush green mountain pasture suddenly finding itself bathed after days like boys and girls in colleges topped by a ray of hope to not get exposed to the winds that might block your nose.
Rain, Bangalore makes you unbearable so I quit my job to come back to where you belong best, in the sounds of my hair being stroked and brushed by a hand, subtle, like a woman's hand reaching speed of light, having converted to energy, makeshift gestures of sorcery, on you coming from above, like a snap of remembrance of a long lost key somewhere in the heap of clothes and underwears.
But I did mistake winds for the sound of you in Cubbon Park
Rain, I'm so selfish I only talk about you when I'm with you, Rain, perhaps next time, instead of writing a poem to you, I'll just listen to the stories you silently whisper in the sounds of squishing of my sole against leaky shoes