If I had the time I’d tell you a story about the girl who could speak to the rain.
I’d tell you how she would sit in a quiet room and let it patter at her window. Few people know that raindrops speak a language distantly related to Morse code. She would listen to their hopes, their everyday worries and their weekend heartaches. She was usually content to listen, a well mannered eavesdropper, and they didn’t seem to mind. But occasionally she’d reply, tapping on the glass with her fingernails. And then the raindrops would gather on the other side, in eager clumps and clusters. She’d share little matters of little interest – what she’d had for lunch or a snippet from a magazine. And they’d be thrilled. Few people care enough to learn fluent raindrop. Sometimes she’d wish a raindrop ‘Happy Birthday’ and tonnes of others would arrive in a flurry to cheer and toss the birthday drop around. Passersby would frown and pull their collar tighter to their neck. Sometimes she’d go to other houses and overhear other people’s raindrops. They were never as friendly as hers. To long ignored they’d hurl themselves cursing against the window pane – threatening to break in and drown the householders. Other houses had sad raindrops sliding slowly towards the sill, crying and muttering how no-one loved them.
I’d like to learn to speak raindrop. If I could I think we might forge a better relationship. We could learn not to mess with each others plans.
2 comments:
I want to learn raindrop speak too - they sound like they would make great friends...I want to get to know the 'sad raindrops'...x
Do raindrops really talk about facts?
I've listened to them many times, and I think I heard them talk about love, sadness and peace.
But facts? I'm quite surprised to hear about that.
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