In The Shadow
Nighttime, people strode past him in pursuit of merriment at the city’s main square.
In a high rise apartment across the street, flamenco pulsed from an open window. Singing and clapping erupted. Smells of warm foods being prepared at tapas bars flavored the humid, tepid air.
He pulled a quilt over his head when a nearby nightclub closed and rowdy customers zigzagged into the light of a new day.
There’d be coins dropping into the cup by him on a bankrupt store’s doorstep he called ‘home.’
Someone would throw him an empanada. He sometimes found one, after footsteps scurried away.
From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
Krystyna writes poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction regardless of the season, although she prefers spring.