(Just playing around with second person.)
----
So.
It's still raining properly but you don't care because the big, fat raindrops are slowing in tempo. Pretty soon it will be hard for you to tell when it's drizzle and when it's just especially thick fog. Your glasses are already fogging up in the heat, but you don't move to wipe them. It'd just make the world smudgier and blurrier. And so you walk back to your car with your hoodie pulled up to try and keep out the rain, even though this mummifies you in your own sweat. You convince yourself that it's worth it.
Steam is on your glasses, steam is rising from the roads like you accidentally moved into a sauna, steam is in your car. It doesn't seem possible that the inside of your car is even more sticky and humid than the outside, but it is. The car, however, has a max AC button. The outside does not. So you reach out and let your fingers run through the streams of chilly air, and you sit, and you stare at the car's dashboard. You haven't moved it out of P into D yet.
Past the new shopping center is a bit of woods that cushions the neighborhood behind it. In the new shopping center is the store that you have just exited. You remember when it wasn't a store. It was pine trees and a ravine with red clay banks and poison ivy that you found one summer, because your best friend used to live in that neighborhood. And in that ravine was a creek. Barely that - you could jump it, if you really tried, and it wasn't deep. But it was enough for tadpoles. It was enough for you to beg to go play in your friend's backyard. It was enough that you gathered up all of your toys and set off making them have a grand adventure and your mother came for you before they had reached their destination but they were all covered in mud (including you) and that was enough to have her forbid you from playing in the creek. Though you still did.
In high school as a moody teenager you came back with your cheap camera to make what you thought was art. You dressed all in black and wore a scowl and just dared anybody to call the police on you so you could prove them wrong by being perfectly innocent. Nobody noticed, though. It was just you and the creek. There were more empty soda cans and plastic grocery bags than you remembered, but you took a picture of one in black and white and said something very serious in class about how it was a metaphor for loss of innocence and then you got an A. But after that picture you had walked along the stream because you realized you didn't know where it flowed from. You expected maybe a larger creek, something that flowed to or from the wide, noble expanse of the silt-brown river that you only got a clear view of when it was flooding. Or something wondrous, like a spring, like Niobe weeping for her children.
You found the wide gaping mouth of a concrete pipe.
The creek never seemed as magical as it had before.
You still haven't put the car into gear, though the motor purrs expectantly, waiting for you to release the parking brake and get going. Instead there's the steam rising from the pavement: the summer shower is almost over. You have forty dollars worth of exercise videos and equipment riding in the passenger seat, and five more dollars of a milkshake sitting in the drink holder. You will taste it and enjoy it but realize it is nowhere near as good as you remembered before. It is nowhere near the first time you went to the new dessert cafe. It is certainly nowhere near the time your grandfather took you and your cousins on a tour of a local creamery and you were served a chocolate milkshake in a plain styrofoam cup at the end of the tour by a smiling woman in a hair net. And although you enjoy it, you are also disappointed, because you spent almost half your week's paycheck in one outing, and that night it will seem like forty dollars of workout instructions don't cancel out five dollars of milkshake and the thirty-five dollars of guilt to go along with such a treat.
You wonder if this is what growing up feels like. It's been so gradual, you hadn't really noticed, not before now.
You have never felt so tired in your entire life.
And you put the car into drive and head home.