Round the front the sun's gone in, or gone out, or gone away, and the flowers are withered and there's not a single butterfly on the butterfly bush, just dead ones smeared into the path, powder-paint skid marks with one half-dead one, flapping a bit . . .
. . . I've stopped, because the far end of the garden, the wall with the small black door - it's gone all faint and dim. Not because of evening. It can't even be four o'clock yet. Not because it's misty, either. I look up - the sky's still bluish, like it was before. It's the garden itself. The garden's fading away.