She didn’t look at me. She didn’t need to.
I was walking fast, head down, avoiding the cracks where water pooled like liquid silver. The street was emptying. Shops were pulling down their iron grates with a sound like chain mail. Tourists had fled. Even the dogs looked bored. flash on church street
A woman. She was leaning against the worn stone arch of a closed bookshop, smoking a cigarette with the kind of unhurried grace people only have when they’re waiting for nothing in particular. Her sari—electric fuchsia—caught the last drop of daylight sliding through the clouds. For one second, the whole gray street turned soft and warm. She didn’t look at me
Not a sign. Not a reflection.
Then I saw it: a single flash of neon pink in a doorway. The street was emptying
The rain had just stopped. That’s the first thing you notice on Church Street after a storm—the smell. Wet granite, old incense, and the faint sweet rot of marigolds from the vendor on the corner.
Flash on Church Street