The rain over Coventry had not stopped for three weeks. Not the gentle, poetic kind that makes you want to write letters you’ll never send. No—this was the grey, persistent, industrial drizzle that seeped into brickwork and bones alike.
Arthur sat back on his heels. The drain was not just blocked. It was holding onto things. Things that had been flushed, dropped, or maybe hidden. He thought of the family before him—the one who had let the garden grow wild, whose youngest used to scream at night. He thought of the war renovation that had slapped this row of houses over bomb rubble. He thought of the old Coventry, the one that was still under there, buried but not gone. coventry drain unblocking
Arthur did not call the council again. He did not post on the neighbourhood WhatsApp. Instead, he cleared the roots with a handsaw he’d had since 1987. He hosed down the pavement. He put the locket in his coat pocket. The rain over Coventry had not stopped for three weeks
Coventry had been bombed, rebuilt, flooded, and forgotten. But unblocking a drain, he learned, was never about water. It was about what people try to bury—and what refuses to stay down. Arthur sat back on his heels
He reached deeper, and his fingers found the real blockage: a mass of fibrous roots, twisted around a clay pipe fracture. But wrapped in those roots was a tarnished locket. He pried it open with a thumbnail. Inside, two faces. A woman. A child. No names. Just the mute testimony of someone who had lost everything and decided to lose this too, down the drain, where memory was supposed to dissolve.
That night, the rain stopped. The drain ran clear for the first time in twenty years.
Arthur Cole, sixty-three, retired toolmaker, stood in his wellingtons at the edge of his garden on Far Gosford Street. The drain outside his terraced house was vomiting up something that looked like regret. Dark water, thick with the ghosts of wet wipes, congealed fat, and a decade of his neighbour’s cheap washing powder, pooled across the pavement.