The Rain In Espana 1 -
“Tonight,” she said, “I decide nothing. Tonight, the rain decides for itself. It has chosen you, extranjero . It brought you to my door for a reason. When you leave, you will walk back to Olmedo on dry ground. But you will never forget the sound of the rain in España. And one day, when you are old, you will feel it again—not on your skin, but in your bones. And you will know that the rain has come back to ask a question.”
“The rain remembers the Romans,” she said, beginning to spin again. “It fell on their legions as they marched north from Mérida. It rusted their helmets and turned their sandals to pulp. They cursed it in Latin, and the rain drank their curses and grew fat.”
“What question?” I whispered.
I wanted to ask her who she was. I wanted to ask her why she lived in a door that appeared out of nowhere. But the words froze in my throat, because the oil lamp flickered, and for just a moment, I saw that her spinning wheel had no thread leading to any spindle. The wool she pulled came from nowhere. And the thread she created vanished into the air as soon as it left her fingers. The Rain in Espana 1
Inside was not a cellar or a cave. It was a long, low room lit by a single oil lamp hanging from a beam. The air smelled of wet wool, rosemary, and something older—smoke from a fire that had been burning for centuries. In the center of the room sat an old woman at a spinning wheel. She did not look up when I entered. Her hands, knotted as olive roots, pulled and twisted grey wool into thread. The wheel creaked in a rhythm that matched the rain outside: creak-hum, creak-hum, creak-hum .
She stopped the wheel entirely. The silence was sudden and absolute. Outside, the rain had ceased. The world was holding its breath.
“No,” I said. “I’m a writer. From the north. Ireland.” “Tonight,” she said, “I decide nothing
“You’re wet,” he said.
I did not hesitate. I pushed. The door swung open without a sound, and I fell through.
End of Part 1 To be continued in Part 2: “The River Under the Plaza” It brought you to my door for a reason
The rain came not in drops but in sheets, then in walls, then in something closer to a vertical river. Within sixty seconds, I was blind. My jacket became a second skin of cold water. The dirt track I had been following turned to chocolate-colored mud that sucked at my boots with every step. I could no longer see the village behind me, nor the low hills ahead. I was suspended in a world of grey and water, a solitary creature at the bottom of an invisible ocean.
“The rain remembers the Civil War,” she whispered. “In ‘36, it rained for forty days in the Sierra. Men drowned in their own trenches. Mothers buried children in mud that would not hold a cross. The rain washed the blood into the rivers, and the rivers carried it to the sea. But the sea, even the sea, could not forget.”
“The rain remembers the Moors,” she continued. “It came during the siege of Toledo, so thick that archers could not see the walls. The king said it was Christian water fighting for him. The imam said it was a test from Allah. The rain said nothing. It simply fell.”
I did the only sensible thing: I turned back, or tried to. But the track had vanished. The stones I had used as markers were gone. In their place was a shallow, fast-moving stream that was rising by the minute. Panic—a cold, rational panic—began to climb my throat. This is how people die in España, I thought. Not in bullrings or on dusty mountain roads, but here, in a ditch outside Olmedo, drowned by a sky that decided to remember the Flood.
And then the Meseta disappeared.