The Autumn Air
It came early this year, slipping through screens and half-open windows before anyone noticed. The mornings carried a cool hush, the kind that made breath visible and coffee steam dance longer in the light. Leaves turned restless, whispering dry secrets to one another. The man paused on the porch, his hands wrapped around a chipped mug, and breathed in that clean edge of change.
Along the street, children walked to school beneath a sky polished blue. The air smelled of cut grass and far-off smoke — the last barbecues of summer, the first fires of fall. Each gust seemed to brush the world awake, reminding it that time was moving again. Even the dog felt it, nose lifted, tail still — sensing stories in every shift of wind.
By evening the light thinned to amber, and the air turned sweeter, as if touched by memory itself. Curtains swayed, leaves gathered in corners, and somewhere a door creaked open to let the season in. The man stood there a moment longer, watching the breath of the world — invisible, eternal — passing gently between what was and what would be.

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