He sipped his tea. It was his favourite time. Not because it was beautiful—though it was, in a melancholy way—but because it was honest. The land stopped pretending. No blossoms, no glossy green leaves, no sweating tourists in hire cars. Just the raw bones of the earth, a low sun that never climbed high, and the promise of a deep, restorative sleep.
A single magpie landed on the porch railing, puffed its feathers into a grey ball against the chill, and regarded him with one pale, unblinking eye. They understood each other, he and the bird. Hunker down. Wait. season in may australia
The last of the autumn light bled through the clouds over the Yarra Valley, a bruised purple and gold that made you forget the morning’s frost. May in Victoria was a quiet thief, Liam thought. It stole the heat of March, the long evenings of January, and replaced them with something sharper—a cold that smelled of woodsmoke and wet eucalyptus. He sipped his tea
“It’s your last chance to clear the gutters,” his wife, Maya, called from the kitchen. She was layering a wool blanket onto their bed, already preparing for the 3°C night ahead. “The BOM said a cold front is coming up from Antarctica.” The land stopped pretending