When It Rains, I Remember That Evening

It begins, as memories often do,  
with the sound of rain on distant tin roofs 
and that strange scent of earth surrendering — 
a fragrance that awakens the silences we never buried, 
only misplaced 

between the folds of tomorrow’s conversations. 

That evening, 
when the streets glistened like forgotten mirrors, 
and twilight touched every leaf with something unspoken, 
we met — or perhaps two ghosts inside us did, 
pretending to wear our smiles. 

You spoke softly, 
as though words might fracture the delicate air between us. 
I looked away, 
counting raindrops like confessions 
that refused to reach the ground intact. 

We were together, 
yet loneliness sat between us 
like a third presence we never acknowledged. 
It listened, 
it inhaled every half-finished sentence 
and turned them into fog. 

How the world continued to move — 
the vendors closing shop, 
children chasing the scent of rain-drenched soil, 
dogs shaking off the sky’s tears — 
while we stayed frozen in the rhythm of what once was. 

***

There’s something about rain, isn’t there? 
It remembers where it has fallen before. 
It drifts through time like an old melody, 
returning only to test if the heart still hums along. 

And that evening proved it — 
that memory is water. 
It seeps 
even when you build walls 
and tell yourself 
you’ve dried the last drop of feeling. 

The café lights flickered on, 
each bulb reflecting a slightly different version of us — 
the way we should have smiled, 
the way we could have stayed, 
the way we didn’t. 

You traced invisible shapes on the table’s wooden grain, 
perhaps searching for the story underneath the surface. 
I watched your fingers, 
not your eyes, 
because the eyes had already begun 
to look someplace else, 
somewhere that did not rain. 

***

Time slipped, 
grain by grain, 
through our open palms. 
We didn’t even try to hold it. 
Perhaps we knew — 
nothing that fragile survives a fist. 

We were celebrants of endings, 
decorating our silence with laughter, 
pretending it was enough. 
Even the coffee cooled between us, 
its rising steam retreating 
like warmth leaving a body 
after the last kind word. 

Outside, someone hummed 
a tune that had no chorus. 
And I thought — 
maybe love is like that, 
a melody that forgets its refrain 
the longer you try to remember. 

***

Later, when the rain thickened 
and the city dissolved behind its silver curtain, 
we walked — side by side, 
each half a thought shy of touching the other. 

The umbrella was large enough, 
but the distance inside it 
was infinite. 

Every puddle held a reflection 
we dared not step in. 
Every streetlight bent 
like a candle tired of burning. 

Your silence poured heavier than the downpour, 
and mine had already drowned. 

***

Now, years later, 
when rain grazes the window 
with fragile, rhythmic hands, 
you return — not as a person, 
but as a texture in the air. 

I pause mid-sentence, mid-thought, mid-life, 
and the evening rewinds: 
the same music, 
the same unspoken ache, 
the same sense 
that we once held joy and sorrow
in unequal measure. 

You appear, always, 
between lightning and memory — 
a face the heart still sketches 
in secret ink. 

***

I no longer ask why memories choose rain 
as their messenger. 
Perhaps they, too, prefer 
to arrive quietly, 
to slip in unnoticed, 
and to leave everything glistening 
for just a while longer. 

The sky opens again — 
and the small droplets that kiss the ground 
whisper everything we could not say: 

that love is sometimes not lost, 
just unsaid; 
that absence 
is merely a language 
without sound. 

***

How easily we confuse “forever” 
with “for now.” 
We build promises like paper boats, 
and watch them drown halfway 
toward the horizon, 
calling it fate. 

But fate never writes — 
it erases 
and waits for us to make sense 
of what remains. 

That evening, 
the light dimmed just enough 
to make the air look tender. 
And tenderness — I’ve learned — 
is not the same as closeness. 

You can be inches away 
and still be galaxies apart. 

***

The moon rose late that night, 
bowing behind the soaked clouds. 
I imagine it watched us leaving — 
two shadows dissolving 
into the same direction, 
but never together. 

The sound of your footsteps 
was the last complete sentence 
I heard that night. 

***

Now, each monsoon 
becomes an unintentional summoning. 

When the first drops fall, 
I stop everything — 
the screen’s glow, 
the hum of deadlines, 
even the ticking clock seems 
to hesitate 
as if it knows your name. 

The past arrives uninvited but expected, 
wearing the same perfume of soil, 
the same drizzle-soaked symmetry 
of regret and wonder. 

***

I have walked through countless rains since then. 
They’ve changed, 
perhaps because I have. 
Their sound is more forgiving now, 
their touch gentler, 
like old letters that know 
they no longer need to be read aloud 
to be understood. 

Sometimes, when the world feels too dry, 
I step out without an umbrella, 
tilt my head back, 
and let the downpour translate 
what memory refuses to forget. 

***

If I listen carefully, 
beneath the layered rhythm of rain, 
I still hear the faint echo 
of that particular evening: 
the wet street, 
the unfinished coffee, 
the laughter that trembled 
like glass about to crack. 

And us — 
two silhouettes 
trying to celebrate a miracle 
that never arrived. 

We waited for time to stop, 
but time kept running — 
heedless, merciless, 
flowing through our palms 
as if it had somewhere more important to be. 

***

Now I understand: 
time doesn’t betray us. 
It merely reveals 
what won’t stay 
no matter how tightly we hold it. 

Love doesn’t vanish; 
it just changes hands — 
from presence 
to memory, 
from touch 
to echo, 
from rain 
to mist. 

And I — 
the same I who once stood 
beneath a dissolving sky 
pretending not to ache — 
have learned 
that grief, too, can be beautiful 
if you stop naming it. 

***

The night deepens. 
Rain still murmurs against glass. 
It speaks in the language 
we never mastered — 
a dialect of longing and release. 

Somewhere, 
you might be watching the same rain, 
in a different city, 
unaware that we share this silence again. 

If so, I hope you smile. 
I hope the raindrops 
don’t remind you of endings, 
but beginnings so fragile 
they could only survive as memory. 

***

Because now, 
when rain falls, 
I no longer mourn that evening. 
I honor it. 

It taught me 
that togetherness is not measured 
in presence, 
but in the echo it leaves. 

That even the loneliest meeting 
can become 
the most lasting connection, 
if memory chooses it so. 

So I let the rain fall tonight — 
let it rewrite what was left unsaid, 
let it reclaim 
every drop of silence between us. 

***

And somewhere, 
between the shimmer of then 
and the quiet of now, 
I whisper into the wet air: 

We were never meant to stay — 
only to remember.

And the rain
soft as understanding, 
answers nothing, 
because nothing needs to be said. 

Only felt. 
Only remembered. 
Only carried — 
like water cupped in trembling hands, 
dripping gently through the fingers 
of time.
When It Rains, I Remember That Evening

Comments

3 responses to “When It Rains, I Remember That Evening”

  1. Heather Mirassou Avatar

    Absolutely spellbounding and beautiful. Your imagery and metaphor are outstanding. Your story in the rain is mesmerizing. I was hooked the whole time. Awe, you have a new fan. Kudos on a stellar poem!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. PebbleGalaxy Avatar

      Thanks Heather. Welcome to the club.

      Like

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