Little nooses of rain extend downward in black runnels from the char-cheeks of death's head pillows that scrape off the humid rust from a mid-afternoon. Throw open the windows, let the dark steam that climbs from the lawn clippings approach the nose like an awkward dog, until it clings in the back of the throat, to be washed down with raw scotch.
The rough breeze dies in the shaking green berries that dot the holly dome, the rain stops in the street, chastened, & fat clouds grease on westward; she's not here and she won't be again - her cast-offs lie in shallow oubliettes, in shadow-bottoms of torn paper boxes - but this new-shirt weather speaks her name in the Braille-pecks of new, blue sky.