Through this monumental city a troubled river runs under an ancient bridge. It's hardly flowing. There's just enough depth to reflect the accumulation of discarded waste - the sum of man's detritus.
At its edge, a man stretches his legs over long shadows cast by a line of Jacarandas. These are his invisible boundaries. He believes if he stepped out of their shade he would sink back into the quicksand of his past.
It was easy for him to give up. He just slipped through a gap to where the source of an old torment was quite forgotten.
This is where he spends his day. On the hour precisely, with a regular bell for measure absorbed in silent calculations, counting and recounting the length of his existence- a short span between life and certain death.
He's too busy to notice a sanctimonious world taunting from its own 'He's not all there' it whispers, 'he's in a foreign place.'
But it doesn't put him off his stride. He's miles away on a carpet of heavenly blue tethered to a dream, where mocking birds fly over his head, and his dog, streets ahead, barks urgently waiting for him to catch up.