Thunder murmurs in the distance, and the sky brightens in response. Both are soft at first, but in wee increments, they increase in intensity.
The murmur grows into a conversation, and then an argument, two gods boxing in the heavens, it seems, or perhaps it’s humans moving heavy furniture. No matter, the sound is now percussive, shaking windows and making entire houses shiver.
Again and again, streaks of incandescent amber divide the night sky, white-hot and singing with static.
The night air is thick with bruising energy that expands and expands waiting for when, with one great burst of white fire, the skies divide and rain descends.
The wind whips the water in different directions.
The precipitation spreads into every nook and cranny of the street, the pavement, the grass. Temporary ponds form.
As if someone turned off a tap, the rain ceases.
The booming and hissing in the sky fade away.
The night sky returns to its former state, with a mere hint of remaining humidity.
The storm is over.
The chorus of geckos, frogs, and crickets serenades the neighborhood.
Written for Brief #15 of Like the Prose 2021: Lipogram
(The omitted letter is ‘l.’)