Looking out of the window; a ribbon of duck-egg-blue sky, fringed by the sun's late light, is sandwiched by grey cumulus.
It frames Sycamore tree tops, red tiled pyramids with their expectant aerials pointing West, littering clean lines.
It is a mute view; serried bins wait for the mornings collection, cars sit dumb, curbed, their daily commute completed.
Two starlings flit, silent, and in the far distance a high contrail is picked out in gold as a thread in blue silk.
For five years this view remains changeably the same; unspoilt by the entropy of new perspectives. This is the summer of un-broadcast malcontents, pacified in Brazilian spectacle. Days simmer here and there.
Soap operas filter through, made to massage the message of consume and discard, of holidays and pistons.
And in the mornings, that never come, we abandon the cars that cannot diverge from work-honed routes, taking to the air from Sycamores as Starlings.