Last evening, after a long day at the office, I was sitting in the car waiting to turn left from the park and ride lot when I saw the rain begin. It was less than 50 away from me. I could see it sheeting the cars paused on the other side of the light but it hadn't yet reached me.
At first it was like that infinite pause between when you cut your finger and you start to feel the pain from the cut — there's often a lag there. On the other hand, there was a fellow-feeling with those cars drenched before mine, a sympathetic pain, almost flinching from rain that was not yet there.
Then I watched the rain advance across the pavement, fat drop by fat drop until finally it was pounding, pouring, a deluge.
I drove the two miles home with the wipers on full blast, and then, by the time I pulled in the driveway, it had almost stopped again.
I love the mercurial weather of summer, its flightiness, its lack of steady intentions.
And last night I loved watching the rain begin.