Mike was in the back field with the dogs (their nightly 8pm-ish walk), and I decided to step outside to see how dusk would greet me. What had been a typically hot and muggy July day, had given way to a beautifully pleasant evening. I could still feel the humidity in the air and on my skin, but there was a coolness that could be felt, riding in on the slightest of breezes - SO slight that you really had to be paying attention to notice, and I was. And in that breeze, I could smell the grass, the clover, and someone's late, summer dinner cooking on a grill.
As I watched the sun give way to the moon, I was thinking there might be a chance for a dramatic looking sunset. I could see some pale shades of pink, and perhaps some yellow and orange forming, like an artist just beginning to add paint to paper, no vision in mind yet of what it might become. And the sound of a farmer’s tractor could be heard in the adjacent field, using up every moment of sunlight to complete the day’s work.
Like someone turning down the dimmer switch, the sky grew darker. The artist must have decided to give it a go another day. There was no dramatic sunset, but still lovely, nonetheless. And now the focus was on the moon.
Hanging to the left of me, there was a soft but noticeable aura
around it, likely from air pollution, though I prefer to think not. And it
looked, well, there is no poetic way of saying this, as if the moon was made out of gelatin, and someone
had squeezed it slightly between a forefinger and a thumb, one side still looking rounded, the other slightly concave.
As the sky grew darker still, I noticed the fireflies had come
out to perform their show. I noticed them mostly in the taller grasses behind
our house, where the birds and the bees and the butterflies also prefer to be. I
watched them play for a while, then noticed the silence. The sound of the farmer’s tractor had gone away - his workday had ended. Evening had turned to night. And riding in on
that slightest of breezes was the scent of a different type of grass in the air.