I came home this mid-morning and something, I can’t remember what, made me unlock the doors that have faced me - that I’ve walked past, sat in front of, looked through - for the near 10 years I have just “found myself” living here.
With one door open, I had to stop, suddenly. The air, the heat, the sounds flooded from outside to in, inside to out. I remembered opening a loch, to let the longboat pass through the canal one English summer. The waters rising, falling and mixing.
I forgot about my conversation over coffee an hour ago, forgot what I was thinking of doing next.
I stared at the shape of a leaf, heard a large fly speed past my right ear, noticed the sound of the fountain, surprisingly loud, the heat on my knees, the slamming of a car door, the breath of a warm breeze, teasingly infrequent.
“Perth doesn’t change.”
You hear that a lot.
But I rarely hear - see, feel - what it is that isn’t changing.