A rock . . . well really the brow of a rock . . . its heart lay deep and hidden, but when I lay my cheek against it in the heat of the summer it cooled and I could feel the great primeval thump of its heart comforting me, when nothing else was understood.
I clutched this great rock, my only constant in a life of changes, while the earth itself, with me holding on tight, flew at increasingly careless speeds throughout my teenage years.
Beneath the arched viaduct it squatted uncomplaining of the shafts of steel and the weight of the stone it carried; my teenage weight, of little importance. It was always there when I came, in dream, or even reality taking the time to be calm and listen as I told it of my hurts and young confusions.
One Summer, I foreswore all others and promised it my heart, if it would only turn it to stone, and though the Rock it listened, I knew the answer without us having to speak; I was being selfish and it would have given all of its great and brooding strength to feel, just a little, of my pain.