I sat on the doorstep, eating tinned peaches, and the rain fell.
Walking out, into the city, life falls in one-two beats; being nothing and comfortable, the architecture stows straight lips, moves on, the rain falls.
Freight rolls, wet tracks northbound, over-bridges exuding fine china, two fishermen idle away remaining hours; concrete bunches the rain into shallows.
How hollow the sea, that home, the crooked lines of the inland peninsula; how strange, this routine, in how so very full of emptiness I have become, like the rain, having fallen upon ebbing tides.