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Rainy Season Creatures May 2026

All night, the rainy season creatures came. They didn't speak, but they left gifts: a forgotten button polished silver, a dried petal made soft again, a single note of a song her grandfather used to whistle. By dawn, they had slipped back into the gutters and down to the flooded fields.

There, pressed against the glass, was a face no bigger than her thumb. It had no mouth, only two wide, wet eyes the color of moss. Its body was long and thin, like a comma made of rainwater, and it clung to the glass with tiny, translucent fingers. Behind it, dozens more were sliding down the roof tiles, curling around the gutters, dripping from the eaves. rainy season creatures

Lina unlatched the window just a crack. One of them slipped through, landing on her pillow with a soft plink . It trembled, then uncurled and began to trace a slow, shimmering circle on her bedsheet. Where it touched, the fabric darkened, then bloomed into a tiny, perfect flower—a jasmine, she realized, out of season. All night, the rainy season creatures came

Every year, just before the first big storm broke the summer’s back, Lina’s grandmother would pull the heavy clay pots inside and hang bundles of dried lemon leaves over every door. “They don’t like the bitter smoke,” she’d say. She never said who they were. There, pressed against the glass, was a face

They weren't scary. They looked… lonely.

Lina was twelve now, old enough to notice that the rain didn’t just bring water. It brought noise —not thunder, but something smaller. A pattering that wasn’t rain. A wet, shuffling sound in the crawlspace under the house.

Lina never tried to catch them or show them to anyone. But every rainy season after that, she left a thimble of honey on the windowsill—not for the bees, but for the little creatures made of rain, who came each year to remind her that nothing truly lost is ever gone. It just goes underground, waiting for the wet season to bring it back up.