A fifth-wear flannel, reek and all, drifted past me today, came and went as I sat cross-legged, marinating in the patina-ed post-meridian. He took one last apathetic drag from a half-burnt cigarette.
Let it fall through his fingers and onto the cobblestones below. Callous: an afterthought, he ball-changed and crushed the smoke-spitting litter underfoot.
Left me to stare at it there, still twisting plumes of itself up and out, streaking, snatched away in the wind.
Left me to watch this wisp of him sputter its death-throes in the street.