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The girl in the black bathing suit swims through my dreams; her orange eyes warn me that summer is coming. An inescapable swelter of air threads itself through the slats of picket fences, crisping insects and terrifying an army of black birds bivouacked in the trees. I hear the soft explosion of hibiscus, red petals as bright as belly wounds, and the heartbeat of the dog panting, stupefied by the heat of a relentless star. Up and down the street, abandoned children call out from the bottom of empty swimming pools. I slouch in an aluminum chair, trying to get black-out drunk on warm gin and tonics. The tidy rectangle of grass around me ignites in a legion of slender flames. I remember the dark room and my father’s deathbed, his whispered, final words: dying is thirsty work. I strip to my underwear and fantasize about ice. I pray for the neighborhood sprinklers to spring to life.
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Apr 24, 2017
Apr 24, 2017 at 12:40 PM UTC
Another Forecast
The girl in the black bathing suit swims through my dreams; her orange eyes warn me that summer is coming. An inescapable swelter of air threads itself through the slats of picket fences, crisping insects and terrifying an army of black birds bivouacked in the trees. I hear the soft explosion of hibiscus, red petals as bright as belly wounds, and the heartbeat of the dog panting, stupefied by the heat of a relentless star. Up and down the street, abandoned children call out from the bottom of empty swimming pools. I slouch in an aluminum chair, trying to get black-out drunk on warm gin and tonics. The tidy rectangle of grass around me ignites in a legion of slender flames. I remember the dark room and my father’s deathbed, his whispered, final words: dying is thirsty work. I strip to my underwear and fantasize about ice. I pray for the neighborhood sprinklers to spring to life.
jonathan-witte
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Apr 24, 2017
Apr 24, 2017 at 12:40 PM UTC
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