Paragraph | On Summer Season

The first true day of summer arrived not with a calendar date, but with the sound of the first cicada’s raspy call. By noon, the sun was a hammer of gold, flattening the world beneath it. The air shimmered above the asphalt, making distant cars look like melting mirages. In the garden, the roses, heavy with heat, surrendered their sweetest perfume to the stillness. Children, liberated from school, burst through screen doors, their bare feet slapping against the hot pavement as they raced toward the cool promise of the sprinkler. Lemonade pitchers sweated beads of condensation onto checkered tablecloths, and the long, slow afternoons stretched out like lazy cats on a porch swing. As dusk finally painted the sky in shades of watermelon and lavender, the lightning bugs began their silent, blinking dance, and the world sighed, grateful for the brief, beautiful brutality of the sun.