Nightingale & Sparrow

Category: heat (Issue No. III)

  • Our Beautiful Bodies

    Our Beautiful Bodies

    Christopher Moore

    The ground sears the sole of my foot as I step out of the hotel onto the concrete, and I give a hiss of pain, instinctively edging back inside. I’ve underestimated the strength of the heat, the sun already burning the stone even at this early hour. I’ve allowed myself to be deceived by the sight of the breakfast area still being cleared by the waiting staff, forgetting that in this resort, at this time of year, it doesn’t need to be the afternoon before a cloudless sky starts to do its work on the land beneath.

    I consider what to do. Do I turn back, return to the lobby and take the lift back up to my room to retrieve a pair of sandals? No. Even avoiding the stairs, that journey will take far too much out of me, given how worse for wear I already am after the stupidity of last night. By the time I get back up to my floor, I’ll want to do nothing more than fall onto the bed and sleep for hours. So I clench my teeth, brace myself for a few moments of pain, and step purposefully back out onto the paving.

    It’s every bit as unbearable as I expect, and I shift from one foot to the other as quickly as I can in my condition, searching desperately for any sign of Mum and Dad as I head for the poolside. I scan the rows of sun loungers, almost all occupied with lightly burnt holidaymakers, until I finally spot Mum waving to me, unable to hide her laughter as she sees me hopping from one foot to the other like a demented bird. Dad, meanwhile, is asleep with his book hanging precariously off the side of the lounger, his snores audible the moment I reach them and sit down on the spare seat they’ve saved for me.

    Mum gives me the expected rebuke about how I should have had the common sense not to come down without my sandals, to which I retort that the journey back up to fetch them would have drained me, knowing full well that her reply, as it indeed does, will point out my foolishness in having had alcohol with a large meal last night. I can’t argue with her logic, so I grudgingly accept the telling off, and agree to her offer to rub some sunscreen on my back, turning round to face the pool as she takes the bottle from her bag, and applies some to her hands.

    The water is full of children laughing and splashing about, some on floats being pushed about by their parents, and I feel the inevitable pang of envy at not being able to join them in my state, resigned instead to a gentle dip later on, once I’ve recovered from the frantic dash to get here. I resist the urge to feel sorry for myself about how unfair it all is, though, given that the extent of the discomfort I’m in right now is largely self-inflicted. Instead, I simply watch the scenes before me, breathing in slowly, and applying the relaxation techniques I’ve been learning in my meditation classes back home. As Mum rubs the Factor 50 across my back in a gentle rhythm, and I start to let myself be soothed by the sounds of the children playing, it begins to work.

    And then I see him.

    Frankly, it’s hard to miss him. Glancing away from the water, up towards the poolside opposite, I catch sight of him sitting with his eyes closed, while an older man whom I assume to be his father rubs some protection across his back, just as Mum is doing for me. Even with his eyes shut, he’s beautiful. Visibly tall, somewhere between lean and muscular, the upper body of a swimmer. Wavy, fair, shoulder-length hair, skin lightly tanned in contrast to the otherwise crimson torsos that surround us. I blink as I stare across at him, my body automatically seizing up, and I sense Mum looking to see what’s caught my attention. She remarks that he looks nice, and I can hear the smile in her voice. Dad, meanwhile, continues to snore loudly beside us.

    He does look nice. More than nice. Face of a model, upper body of an athlete. And yet, there’s something in his features, something in his calm, contented expression as his eyes remain shut and he lets his father continue rubbing his back, that suggests he’d never seek out either the vanity of a modelling career, or the publicity of a sporting one. Someone modest about their aesthetic good fortune, not boastful of it. I imagine he leaves the people he crosses paths with a little bit in love with him. A perfect combination of gorgeous and unassuming.

    Then he opens his eyes, and I know that must be true.

    His eyes are bluer than the water beneath us. Bluer than the sky overhead, bluer than the umbrella canopies sheltering us from the heat of the sun. They’re almost luminous, as he stares casually around the resort, smiling gently at the antics of the children in the pool, before squinting up at the sun for a moment. I genuinely don’t think I’ve ever seen more attractive eyes, and I’m not sure whether he can possibly get any more beautiful, when he suddenly turns and looks directly at me.

    It’s like being struck by lightning. An actual charge shoots through my body as he stares at me, and I hear Mum chuckle behind me. It’s like his eyes see inside me, past the exterior and into every thought, every feeling and emotion currently swirling around inside my head. I’m convinced in that moment that he knows exactly what I’m thinking, that he’s some sort of low-level telepath, because the look he gives me indicates that he’s heard every one of my thoughts. And the fact that he then smiles at me as he engages in this burst of mind-reading is very, very encouraging.

    Because right now, I’m imagining him, without a word, subtly nodding towards the beach, before standing up, revealing himself to be even taller than I expected, and confidently walking off down the pathway toward the sea, leaving my Mum to, with precision timing, finish her application of sunscreen to my back, and quietly urge me to follow after him. I imagine hurrying back across the concrete, the pain nowhere near as bad this time, and jogging down the path, away from the palm trees and sun loungers of the resort, onto the beach below. I imagine searching for him along the beach, before finally spotting a waving figure out in the sea, leisurely bobbing amongst the surf, and I make my way down to the water’s edge before wading out.

    I imagine catching up to him quickly, and the two of us lying back and floating in the gentle current, properly introducing ourselves and exchanging small talk. Then I imagine him turning and, with a powerful kick of his toned legs, propelling himself forward like the professional swimmer he surely ought to have been, inviting me to follow after him in a spontaneous race. I do, and we slice back and forth through the waves with perfect synchronicity, as though in tune with one another, instinctively knowing the other’s patterns, styles and techniques, all the while laughing and flirting like we’ve known each other for years.

    Then I imagine us wading back out, back onto the beach, my eyes unable to avoid the way his shorts cling to his waist, or the way the hair on the back of his legs is matted to his skin by the water, or the way the surf splashes gently about his feet as he takes the final few steps back onto dry land. I imagine following him back up to the loungers, where, after a few lengths in the pool, we sit down by the palm trees and eye one another expectantly. Both of us knowing exactly what’s about to happen next.

    All my earlier discomfort is long-forgotten as I close my room door behind us, and take a long, proper look at him. If anything, he’s become even more handsome than he was before. Then, suddenly, his mouth is on mine, hurried, insistent. Desperate to be as close to me as possible. Swimwear soon lies on the bedroom floor, and we’re making love in the bed for what seems like hours, the two of us seeming to know exactly what buttons to press, exactly what places to tease, exactly how to make each other moan in delight. Our bodies, beautiful, fit, in their prime, move against each other even more harmoniously than our race back at the beach. As though designed for each other. By the time it’s over, I’m in tears at how good it was. At how right it feels lying there with him, hearing him murmur and joke and stroke my hair as we both relax into the afterglow.

    Then I realise I really am in tears, or that at least one is slipping its way down my cheek as I find myself back at the poolside, staring across at him as my imagination finally runs its course, and the spell that transported me to the beach and then into bed with him finally breaks. He seems to frown, probably wondering why I look so emotional, before casually looking away again and back to the pool. Quite possibly having never smiled at me in the first place—there’s a good chance I imagined that too.

    I stare at him for another moment, desperate to cling onto the fantasy for as long as I can. Then I see his father stand up and nod towards the snack bar further down the resort, before starting to walk off in that direction. I hope, for a precious few seconds, that his son will look my way again before he leaves, but he doesn’t. Instead, he turns, places his hands down by his sides, and slowly wheels himself along after his father. Calm contentment once again on his face as he goes. I stare after the wheelchair for another few moments, until, at last, Mum taps me on the back, and I surrender to real life again.
    She asks me if I’ve taken my painkillers yet, and I admit I haven’t. With a knowing sigh, she urges me to do so now, especially after the idiocy of overeating and taking alcohol last night, and reaches into her bag for the spares she always carries with her. Offering me her bottle of water, she waits for me to swallow them down, which I do. The daily ritual to keep my chronic pain at bay fulfilled for another few hours.

    Mum gives me a gentle pat, before settling down to sleep on her lounger while I settle onto mine, lying on my front and savouring the warmth of the sun on my back, still wet from the sun cream. Within moments, the exertion of the dash across the concrete earlier having tired me out, I’m starting to fall asleep.

    I dream of two bodies, moving in harmony together. Fit, healthy and beautiful.

    Free.

    Christopher Moore

  • The Nature of Knowledge Itself

    The Nature of Knowledge Itself

    Kathleen McKitty Harris

    My husband and I sat across from each other in a Catskills coffee shop; August sunlight bleached its storefront windows. Slivered white rectangles—stereoscopic images of the bright summer windows in my view—were cast onto the lenses of my aviator sunglasses, and their reflection highlighted the smudges on the surface.

    “Baby, your glasses are dirty. Let me clean those for you,” my husband said, while gingerly sliding the wired temples from the crooks of my ears. He positioned each lens in the cave-like hollow he formed in his open mouth and exhaled a whispery “ha” to moisten and fog the glass.

    I watched as he wiped them on the hem of his t-shirt. The gesture sparked the memory of an offhand comment my father made once when I was little, as he removed his thick-lensed eyeglasses and buffed them with a kitchen dishtowel on a Sunday afternoon.

    “Eileen cleans my glasses with alcohol and a bar rag. She says it’s the best thing to clean lenses. She used to clean her father’s glasses with whiskey. Cuts right through the grease.” My father went on to describe the chemical properties of alcohol and oil, explaining that “like dissolves like” and that some molecules are electrically drawn to others.

    I was eight, and I did not yet understand the science of such things. Yet, I knew the name of the barmaid—Eileen—who worked at my father’s preferred midtown watering hole. I knew that Tommy Fahey, his favorite bartender, hailed from County Kerry in Ireland and that he enunciated the anomalous pronunciation of his name—“FAH-hee not FAYYY-hee”—to the newbies who sat astride stools and ordered Jameson rocks. I knew that Maggie was the owner of the bar that my father frequented, and that she didn’t tolerate rowdy behavior. I knew that my father would pour himself a tumbler of scotch—two fingers neat—and dip a dishtowel into the amber liquid while he finished his story. I knew that he would not let the remainder of it go to waste, and would lift my parents’ Waterford wedding crystal to his lips as he spoke.

    I understood things about my parents’ marriage, too. My mother’s leather-bound telephone book, kept in the desk drawer near the rotary wall phone, had hastily-scratched entries for my father’s hangouts— under “M” for “Maggie’s”, and under “P” for “Pig and Whistle”. My mother never cleaned my father’s glasses, as Eileen did. There was something unnatural in this stranger’s tender act towards my father— this woman, reaching over the brass-edged bar, letting her fingertips graze his stubbled face as she removed his glasses. Such vulnerability was uncharacteristic of my father—a jut-jawed Brooklyn boy whose eyesight would blur and lose focus without his visual aid, leaving him defenseless with his back to the barroom door.

    Jean Piaget, the renowned child psychologist and theorist, famously noted that we are formed by schemas, or cognitive frameworks. These structures allow children to retain and interpret vast amounts of information during their development by creating mental shortcuts, so to speak— grouping cows with horses, for example, or apples with oranges. In many cases, children only change such schemas when overwhelming evidence forces the need to modify it.

    As for me—I grouped sadness with marriage, whiskey with Daddy, and glasses with bar rags.

    Kathleen McKitty Harris

  • August, 1980

    August, 1980

    Zoe Philippou

    The only Summer my red-haired
    mother was tan, not freckled,
    not pained and peeling,
    but goddess golden tan,
    we moved the porch swing
    back and forth too slowly
    to part the air.
    The hottest day gone too far.
    Brittle grey planks
    popped and creaked,
    tongue in grove,
    with the small shifts
    of weight that carried us
    teaspoons of distance,
    forward and back,
    nowhere at all.
    Inhale and exhale.

    She was breaking
    the last of the pole runner
    beans into wet newspaper
    spread across her lap,
    trying to save them.
    Sandals kicked aside
    the wooden kind she always wore,
    like a Dutch girl, finger
    over the cold water
    crack in the world.
    Feet resting heavy like badly chosen
    skipping stones, cracked and scattered,
    a dry creek bed that skinned
    your knees and shins
    if she curled up in bed with you
    to say goodnight.
    So she didn’t.
    Kept them tight to the floor,
    hushed you at a slant.

    I laid my cheek against her arm
    felt the slip of sweat and beach oils,
    salt and coconut
    though we had never
    been to the sea,
    closed my eyes on rattling thirsty
    crows, saw shadow suns
    behind my blind eyelids
    and counted, lips shaping
    the numbers, the tense and snap
    of her shoulder under gilded skin.
    Until she shrugged me off.
    dirty cheeked and whiny
    as a mosquito.

    I knocked her glass
    on purpose as I jumped
    to go, spilling sweet tea and ice
    over her stone toes.

    Jody Burke-Kaiser

  • Naked (for the women of Salem)

    Naked

    (for the women of Salem)
    Jennifer Gauthier

    Naked lately—
    flayed over fire
    innards exposed indisposed
    to tell my secrets
    to those who wait.

    Called to testify amplify verify the very part
    that hides itself away inside.
    Bartholomew knew the fate that
    I can’t escape
    To skin the truth off the lies to try
    To skim the oil from the water
    As it slews in circles across the surface.

    Roiling, my brain buzzes with bitter words
    Biting back the worst when they threaten to slip through the slit
    That gapes in my face.

    Naked later—
    Stuffed with stones sinking
    Into the dank underbelly of the stream
    screaming through the current wetly
    with a witch’s wail.

    Jennifer Gauthier

  • a spark to set the world on fire

    a spark to set the world on fire

    Jessica Minyard

    you are outside in the dark, alone
    you can hear the music, feel the bass
    rattle through your chest

    there are a few stars, winking
    like lazy eyes

    she’s in there, you know, but
    she said she doesn’t want to see
    you

    you imagine the booze flows freely, hot
    and sticky down throats, spilling
    on dresses, lowering inhibitions, until

    she forgets you

    you catch a flash
    of yellow hair, the sweet arch
    of a slender shoulder, and sigh

    the sloping walk down to the beach is short

    you take off your shoes

    the white sand is still sun-warm, but
    cool when you dig in your toes

    there is a crack, then another
    pungent odor of sulfur wafts down

    fireworks burst and shimmer
    against the black sky
    Streaking and shattering and exploding like tiny stars

    red
    blue
    green
    purple
    pink
    silver
    gold

    like her hair

    the colors ripple across the waves
    and disappear

    you cuff the legs of your jeans and
    step into the water, chill stuttering
    your breath

    but

    you’ll have the fireworks to keep
    you company

    Jessica Minyard

  • First Love

    First Love

    Merril D. Smith

    This universe is secret smiles—
    a boy,
    a girl,

    blushing stammers of
    will you?
    are we?

    It is slow eternity,
    delicious magic,
    a look,
    a kiss,
    that time of joy, embraced,
    and gone—

    remembered
    in the heat of a June night.

    Merril D. Smith

  • heat

    Contents

    ISSN 2642-0104 (print)
    ISSN 2641-7693 (online)

    Print Edition

    Online Edition

    Editor’s Letter

    Founding Editor, Juliette Sebock

    Poetry

    Into the Fire, Rickey Rivers Jr.

    Inferno, Naya Jackson

    August, 1980, Jody Burke-Kaiser

    a spark to set the world on fire, Jessica Minyard

    Secret Lovers, Ivy Monte

    Fire, Kevin A. Risner

    Scorched, MJ Moore

    A Break from Mowing, Lannie Stabile

    From the Sky to the Ground, Devon Marsh

    what’s left, Linda M. Crate

    Criminalis Carolina, Juliette van der Molen

    The mosquito meets death, Broc Riblet

    The First Hot Night of Summer, JD Sullivan

    I Should be Writing / Mango, Margaret King

    Heat, Kunjana Parashar

    Hot Water, Linda Goin

    Next to an orchard in central Washington, LE Francis

    First Date Not Counting Lester Duncan, Colette Tennant

    Fever, Judy DeCroce

    In the Heat of the Moment, Antoni Ooto

    Declaration, Megha Sood

    A cold glass of water against this heat, Laurie Koensgen

    Brimstone, Frances Boyle

    First Burn, Jeff Burt

    Magenta is a Landscape, Cymelle Leah Edwards

    The Pottery Firing at Mata Ortiz: Mexico, Janice S. Fuller

    On a Sunny Sunday, Lynn White

    Robin, Anthony, and Me, Hannah Skewes

    The Quintessence of Fire, Stephen Mead

    Oracle, Charles Venable

    11.52 PM and Pining, Jerry Chiemeke

    The Chilling Heat, Linda Eve Diamond

    Luminescent Two-Step, Essie Dee

    Playing with Fire, Martina Rimbaldo

    how to swim, Rick White

    That Summer We Knew Each Other, Kassandra Montag

    First Love, Merril D. Smith

    Manufactured Seasons, Prithiva Sharma

    Milk, Bread, and a Few Essential Groceries, Rob McKinnon

    Cracker Night, Kevin Densley

    Naked, Jennifer Gauthier

    In the heat of a sun too seldom felt, Elspeth Wilson

    Enjoying Emerald Isle, Catherine A. Coundjeris

    I’ll Forget You, Julianna May

    coolness, Constance Schultz

    Nonfiction

    Summer Memories, Kyla Houbolt

    Remember to Drink Water, Lynne Schmidt

    Scarzone, Hibah Shabkhez

    Aliens, C. Cimmone

    Confessions of a Poetry Editor on a Bad Work Day, Justin Karcher

    Bunker is Dead, K.T. Slattery

    Wildman, Dani Putney

    The Nature of Knowledge Itself, Kathleen McKitty Harris

    A Night in San Sebastian, Sarah Jake Fishman

    Ocular You, Alexondria Jolene

    Phoenix, Lisa Lerma Weber

    Fiction

    torque, Kiira Rhosair

    The Mind is a Crazy Place, Renee Lake

    Persephone, Mollie Williamson

    Taylor Stein, Max Eichelberger

    Honey of Andromeda, Jieyan Wang

    Our Beautiful Bodies, Christopher Moore

    Sitting in Ash, Sean Riley

    he felt infinite, Anushka Bidani

    Photography

    Saying Goodnight in Amber, Marsha Leigh
    August Evening, Elle Danbury
    unbroken, Rosie Carter
    wading, Rosie Carter
    goodbyes, K Weber
    that once was a picnic, K Weber
    Promise, Elle Danbury
    Evening Fire, Elizabeth Dickinson
    Insomnia, Rosie Carter
    venting in all directions, K Weber
    sugar-tongue, Britton Minor
    freckled fire, K Weber
    shade, Rosie Carter
    Bliss, Britton Minor
    Necessary Destruction, Zoe Philippou
    almost your scorched earth, K Weber
    Web Design, Britton Minor
    i cannot stand but you can withstand, K Weber
    burn the bright dots like you are the sun, K Weber
    Heart of the Fire, Zoe Philippou

    Cover Image

    Embers, Zoe Philippou

    Micropoems

    In the leadup to heat, we shared a series of micropoems across social media: 

    heat micropoems

  • On A Sunny Sunday

    On A Sunny Sunday

    Lynn White

    It was a sunny Sunday,
    a perfect day.
    So he dressed them in their
    Sunday best
    and they went to the park
    to play on the swings
    and roundabouts.
    My father.
    My half brother and sister
    on a sunny Sunday.
    They were surprised
    to meet her
    as they walked home.
    They were surprised
    to see that
    she was carrying a suitcase.
    They were surprised
    when she said goodbye.
    They didn’t believe it
    so they went home
    to their new council house
    to wait.
    She never came back.
    It had not been a happy home.
    She could be violent.
    But it was their home.
    She never came back.
    So they moved to his parents
    where they were
    only grudgingly accepted.
    It was not a happy move
    but it was the best he could do.
    Sometimes on a sunny Sunday
    she would leave the hospital,
    escape in search of her family.

    But they never found each other
    again.

    Lynn White

  • The Mind is a Crazy Place

    The Mind is a Crazy Place

    Renee Lake

    Vennie was born cold. Her mother said she was blue and had to be revived.

    Her father said he started reading her the stories in the NICU and each one brought pink into her cheeks.

    When she was five, they stopped reading her the tales. They worried she took them seriously.

    She tried to explain how they made her feel: loved and hot all over.

    They told her fairy tales don’t come true, that they don’t step from the pages of books and save you from real life.

    They were wrong.

    Fairy tales weren’t just stories in books, cool to the touch. They lit her skin on fire, heating her from the inside out.

    They were like stepping into the sunshine after being inside a cold movie theatre. When you turn your face to the sun, your whole body lights up.

    When she was eight, Wonder Hamster played with her when her parents would go out at night, flying around singing rhymes in his scratchy voice. He curled up next to her when they forgot to pay the gas bill, a tiny furry furnace against her skin.

    Her mother told her she had a cold heart, but it wasn’t true. With her friends, lava flowed through her veins. She didn’t understand why they didn’t see that.

    The year she turned ten, The Boy Who Could Have escorted her to and from school, making sure the bullies stayed away. His flaming red eyes winking in and out of the shadows.

    They moved to a place where it always snowed. At night, cold and shivering in her bed, the Living Flames would come and dance around her, chasing away her goosebumps and the nightmares. Their blue and white insides burned so hotly that she’d sweat.

    At sixteen, Vennie learned math from The Little Bat Girl, with her large eyes and wings protruding out of her back. She held her tongue in-between her pointed front teeth as she tried to explain the concept of imaginary numbers, her words scorching the inside of Vennie’s brain.

    She asked them why she couldn’t go back into the book with them. The only response they ever gave was, “Not yet.”

    Vennie thought that as she got older the fairy tale characters would disappear. Isn’t that the way with magic?

    That didn’t happen. In fact, it got worse.

    Vennie lost her job because she couldn’t tell Marrying Maria no when she wanted an evening of binge drinking. Vennie would wake up hungover and sick. Her companion would be bright-eyed, rosy-cheeked, and ready for her wedding day, again and again.

    Boyfriends and girlfriends left her, jealous of things they considered “make-believe” and “crazy”. She began dating The Fur Man of Everland. She called him Bob for short. While he was hairy, he also made her laugh. He made her skin boil in pleasure for the first time in her life.

    When he left she clung to his coattails begging to go with him. Before he faded away he said, “Not yet.”

    Her family pleaded with her, cried and cajoled, but she wouldn’t give up her only friends. The people who knew her the best. The people who kept her warm.

    Eventually, they locked her away with words like “delusional” and “schizophrenia”. She felt like she was encased in ice, frozen in time: wandering the frigid halls in threadbare socks, afraid to acknowledge her friends, mind dulling without their companionship and warmth.

    In her sterile white room, sedated and afraid, Little Golly Goldwin sang to Vennie of wonderful places and fantastic adventures. The ice around her started to melt.

    During therapy sessions, Vennie refused to talk; instead, she laughed at Woodle The Tiny, a small deer with fiery eyes, that danced on the window sill.

    Sunshine soared inside her. She didn’t want to ignore them. She wanted to be with them.

    Duprey the Crimson Snake of the Tides would slither against her skin, reading classic novels in his British Accent. His scales were so hot to the touch that small blisters formed on her arms and legs. Before he left he said, “Not long now.”

    It was no surprise to Vennie that eventually The Sunset Queen came for her, wrapping her in a searing embrace and promising her escape from her constraints. Vennie could only smile, glad to go with her, knowing she would never be cold again.

    Renee Lake