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She, living in Baltimore, had not spoken to her Mississippi sun-burnt father in seven years. He was a farmer, she wanted a boutique. There were the phone-calls, at least in the beginning, but then they too dried up like clay pots cracking under a solar flare. Her scars were still there at least, she reckoned, and those were enough to disconnect any phone line. But there is still a gnawing at her insides, an impregnation of her nose hairs, a waltzing of her taste buds. She picks up the pay-phone, breathing heavier now, sobbing as if the dial tone could touch her. She knows that some fields just can't stay fallow forever.
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Feb 4, 2013
Feb 4, 2013 at 3:46 PM UTC
Dropped Call
She, living in Baltimore, had not spoken to her Mississippi sun-burnt father in seven years. He was a farmer, she wanted a boutique. There were the phone-calls, at least in the beginning, but then they too dried up like clay pots cracking under a solar flare. Her scars were still there at least, she reckoned, and those were enough to disconnect any phone line. But there is still a gnawing at her insides, an impregnation of her nose hairs, a waltzing of her taste buds. She picks up the pay-phone, breathing heavier now, sobbing as if the dial tone could touch her. She knows that some fields just can't stay fallow forever.
joshua-martin
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Feb 4, 2013
Feb 4, 2013 at 3:46 PM UTC
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