After a quick summer shower, a puddle forms on the driveway. It spreads a few feet wide, an inch or so deep, mirroring the gray clouds above. Water stands still, rippling slightly from passing footsteps.
This is the usual scene right after rain stops. The ground stays wet around it, and the air feels heavy with moisture.
Over the next hours, sunlight breaks through the clouds. A light breeze picks up. The puddle's surface shrinks bit by bit. Edges recede inward as water turns to vapor.
What starts as a noticeable pool becomes a shallow sheen. Footsteps no longer splash; they just skim across. By late afternoon, only a damp outline remains on the pavement.
The puddle, once a temporary barrier, fades into dry ground. Situations like this show how open water shifts with the weather's slow turn.
