It's morning, rain has fallen making all the ground darker shade and I'm sweaty, and, god, I didn't want to be sweaty. I'm pushing panting up a hill in sixth gear on my six-gear bike because the gear-shifter has long since broken as a result of a time I cut too close to a old-fashioned lamp post, caught my pedal on it and went spinning headlong into a rose bush.
The trees are green, greener than I've ever seen them. It's morning and the cars shick by, rolling atop the water in the road like Christ did in the early years. A car slams into a puddle. When did our lives become so perfectly metaphored in cars? The a to B life; stopping only when stopped by a glaring light or harsh word; filling up and running out; breaking down only on the road, never in my own garage.
A warm rain will fall this morning. I hear only the breathy whisper of my breath out my mouth and engines and tires. I think nothing, which is a hard-earned comfort seeing as I, like every person, have a lot to think about, ever since we invented the automobile; ever since we crucified a sinless man; ever since the moment we thought nothing, and were sent crashing into a rose bush.