Rafian On The Edge Top <REAL · STRATEGY>
On the edge top, his thoughts often unspooled into plans. He had once wanted to travel—leave the warehouse, pack a single bag, and move toward a coastline he’d only seen in photographs. But the months stitched themselves into one another, and responsibilities—bills, a mother who needed groceries, the stubborn loyalty to people who remembered him when he felt forgettable—pulled him back. Yet those plans didn’t vanish; they persisted as sketches on a page, rough drafts of a life that could still be redrawn.
One evening in late autumn, when the air tasted like electricity and the streets smelled of wet pavement and frying onions, Rafian found himself drawn to the old mill at the edge of town. The mill had been shuttered for a decade, its windows boarded and its brickwork sagging as if bowed under the weight of memory. But from its highest ledge—the “edge top,” as the kids called it—it offered a view that stitched together the entire city's story: the river that cut through neighborhoods like a silver seam, the crooked church spire, the grid of apartment lights, and beyond, the soft, trembling hills. rafian on the edge top
Mina taught Rafian a vocabulary for the small tragedies he’d always felt but never named: burnout, the slow erosion of hope; resilience, the act of continuing anyway. Rafian taught Mina to see the way light simplified problems, how perspective could make burdens smaller if you drew them far enough away. They exchanged recipes and secondhand books, mended jackets and shared playlists. The friendship that grew did not demand dramatic bursts; instead, it settled into the steady rhythms of two lives intersecting at an unusual place. On the edge top, his thoughts often unspooled into plans
That night, as Rafian drew, a storm breathed up from the river. Clouds gathered in slow, theatrical folds, and the city’s lights dulled as though someone were slowly turning down a dimmer. Rain began as a distant, metallic patter and advanced into a steady, cleansing drum. Rafian pulled his jacket closer and kept drawing. The rain blurred the ink, smearing edges into softer thoughts. He began to sketch less the structures of the city and more the weather itself: lines that suggested movement, negative spaces that held the rain’s absence. The storm was an eraser and an artist at once. Yet those plans didn’t vanish; they persisted as
The show opened on a night when cold air matched the warmth inside the café. People drifted in—colleagues from the hospital, warehouse workers, a few homeowners who remembered the mill’s heyday, and a handful of city planners who, it turned out, liked to see what neighborhoods looked like when someone loved them. Rafian stood by his sketches, almost embarrassed by the attention. He listened as strangers found pieces of themselves in those lines. One visitor, an elderly man who’d lived near the mill for fifty years, pointed at a drawing of a gas lamp and described how his late wife used to feed pigeons beneath it. Another, a young woman, said she saw her grandmother in a portrait of a laundromat window.
On the mill’s last night, Rafian climbed to the edge top with Mina and a small group of neighbors. They brought lanterns and cups of tea, and someone read letters collected from residents—remembrances of the mill’s noise, of births and funerals tracked by its clock, of a hundred small rituals that had been threaded through its walls. Rafian drew until dawn. He drew the empty benches, the river glass-smooth beneath a pale light, the way the horizon held on to a shred of indigo before giving way to day.
Mina and Rafian kept their ritual, though now they found new roofs and early-morning walks that felt like edge tops in miniature. They found other perches: the steps of a closed theater, a rusty water tower, a bridge that hummed with traffic. Their friendship evolved into partnership—quiet, companionable, resilient. They moved through the city as citizens who had learned to fit their private maps into a wider public life.