Theres always someone around you who will call
Its nothing at all
L R
Shiny, shiny was his future until he saw his light fading away. He realised that he was listening at the music from a different point of view. The Sunday was indeed silent and grey but he had had proved himself for such a long time that a Sunday couldn't defeat a heartbreaking poem or a girl saying no. He was adolescent and he begged ,as every man at this age, for some silence to think. He prayed for he wasn't able to listen what he was thinking. The dust in the air was minimum, almost inexistent. He only felt cold oxygen; on the windowsill of the sixth floor the air was damp. The weather channel foretold a dry and blue day. The earth from his point of view, seemed to glisten white because of all the small tears that rolled down from the sublime white disc. A heatless circumference that every now and then stands for a God in some civilisations. The weather channel had been, yet again, mistaken.
By the time he decided to jump, the portable music device was already repeating by seventh time a colourless melody from any post-punk band toocooltobeheardbyanyonethatattendstomainstreamgigs. He once went to a place to seek for himself but he only found books about others, about the others, about people. He went also to a place for praying but the priests were too busy linking heaven and earth with a Christ made out of contributions of grandmas and other kinds of old and venerable people.
Thus, thinking of New Dawn Fades, he leaped from his best friend's balcony. He leaped and fell into the eyes of a face. He passed the most valuable threshold of God's mercy in earth: a handrail with a view of a quiet city in the morning.