“Obviously,” Leo grinned.
One evening, lying on the cool linoleum floor of the living room, the ceiling fan clicking its lazy circle, Leo heard the first cricket. Not the sport—the insect. A single, insistent chirp. It meant the heat was loosening its grip. The mangoes were gone from the shops. The school uniform hung ready on the back of his door. summer months for australia
February was a long, slow burn. The storms would roll in by late afternoon—bruise-purple clouds that split the sky with lightning and dumped rain so hard the gutters sang. Then, as quickly as they came, they vanished, leaving the world steaming and a double rainbow over the tin roofs of the suburb. “Obviously,” Leo grinned
That was the law of the land. While the rest of the world huddled by fireplaces and scraped frost from windshields, Leo’s world turned blindingly bright. The gum trees outside his window drooped, exhausted, in the 40-degree heat. The air tasted of eucalyptus, salt, and sunscreen. The backyard cricket pitch—a worn patch of grass with a wheelie bin for a wicket—was the center of the universe. A single, insistent chirp