Posts

The Follower

Karan's alarm rang at 4:47 AM. For ten years, that sound had been his promise. He would lie in the dark, listening to the Trinidadian rain hammer the zinc roof of his rented guesthouse, and he would visualize: the leather ball slapping into his gloves, the roar of a full stadium, the weight of a winner's medal around his neck. By 5:00 AM, the feeling would pass. He would roll over, check the score from last night's Caribbean Premier League match, and drift back to sleep. At thirty-four, Karan was a mid-level accounts officer at a shipping firm in Port of Spain. His body was soft, not fat, just unused. His knees cracked when he stood up from his desk. His back ached after long hours of reconciling invoices. He had not held a cricket bat in competitive play since he was seventeen, when a faster bowler had rattled his stumps and, more decisively, his confidence. But ask anyone who knew him, and they would say: "Karan? He lives for cricket." His Instagram feed was a m...

The Quiet Unfolding

Shawn and Kacey met on a Tuesday, in the sort of place where nobody goes looking for love: the returns counter at Bhagwansingh’s. She was returning a leaky garden hose. He was returning a drill that had died after exactly three screws. They both laughed at the absurdity of being in their late thirties and still buying the cheap brands. They exchanged dry jokes, first names, and nothing else. No phone numbers. No lingering glances. That was seven years ago. Their friends never understood the timeline. "Wait, you've known each other for four years and you just started dating?" they'd ask, as if Shawn and Kacey had committed some kind of romantic fraud. The truth was simpler and stranger: they hadn't been taking it slow. They had been taking it right. Here is what Shawn knew about Kacey before he ever kissed her: He knew she woke up at 5:47 AM every day. Not 5:45, not 5:50, but 5:47, because she said those three extra minutes of sleep were "mathematically optimi...

The Foreigner's Edge

Stewart had learned the math early. In North America, a Caribbean accent was either a punchline or a passport. He chose the passport. He arrived from Trinidad twenty years ago with a degree in finance and a voice that bent English into something melodic and disarming. While his classmates from Ohio and Toronto spoke in flat, forgettable tones, Stewart's "Good morning" landed like a small song. People leaned in. They smiled. They assumed he was warmer, wiser, and more trustworthy than the man beside him. He never corrected them. The first advantage came at a banking internship in Manhattan. The regional manager, a white woman named Diane who collected international art and spoke of her "year in Barbados," pulled him aside after a meeting. "You have such perspective, Stewart," she said, touching his forearm. "Different from all these cookie-cutter kids." He got the full-time offer. Three others didn't. He learned to calibrate his accent dep...

The Cage of Her Own Making

Simone was twenty-three years old and absolutely certain that everyone was out to get her. She didn't arrive at this conclusion by accident. She had earned it. Her father left when she was seven with nothing but a handwave and a "take care of your mother." Her mother, drowning in hurt, silence and cheap wine, taught her that love was a transaction that always left you poorer. The children at school didn't bully her exactly, they simply forgot she existed, which Simone decided was even worse. By sixteen, she had built a philosophy: expect nothing from people except stress and betrayal, and strike before they get the chance. It worked. Or so she told herself. Now she was an intern at a marketing firm in a Georgetown that never got quite warm enough. She shared a cramped desk with a girl named Priya who brought homemade muffins every Monday and left one on Simone's keyboard. Simone threw them in the break room trash when no one was looking. She's trying to make m...

The Salt of Unfair Things

Atillah cried often. Not the quiet, private tears of grief but the hot, public ones that came with a tight chest and a bitten lip. She cried on the bus (maxi taki) when she saw teenagers laughing with their mothers. She cried in the grocery store when the cashier's wedding flash caught the light. She cried at night, staring at the ceiling, replaying every slight, every missed opportunity, every piece of evidence that life had drawn her name on the short list of the unlucky. "Some people are born lucky," she whispered to her reflection. "And some of us have it hard." Her younger sister, Kemi, had just bought a house. Her college roommate, the one who never studied, had just been promoted. Her ex-boyfriend, the one who said she was "too intense" was engaged to a woman with a soft laugh and a trust fund. Atillah's jealousy was not a quiet thing. It was a physical presence, a rock lodged between her ribs. Every social media scroll was a fresh cut. Ever...

The Unwritten Blueprint

Sophia had always loved the word architecture. Not for buildings, but for life. She believed a perfect existence could be designed, measured, and executed like a blueprint. By twenty-eight, she had checked every box. A corner-office marketing role. A silent fiancé named Paul who proposed with a diamond exactly 1.5 carats. A down payment saved for a Colonial Revival with white trim and a swing on the porch in Ellerslie. Two names picked out for future children: Charlotte and James. She laughed at friends who backpacked through the Caribbean or quit jobs to paint. "Chaos is not a strategy," she'd say, toasting with chilled Sauvignon Blanc. Then came the night she never planned for. A work trip. Too many gin and tonics. A stranger with kind eyes and a forgettable name at the hotel bar during a business trip to Miami. She woke alone, embarrassed, and swore she would bury the memory. Six weeks later, the plastic stick turned pink. Sophia sat on her marble bathroom floor, hyper...

The Quiet Unfolding

Shawn and Kacey met on a Tuesday, in the sort of place where nobody goes looking for love: the returns counter at Bhagwansingh’s. She was returning a leaky garden hose. He was returning a drill that had died after exactly three screws. They both laughed at the absurdity of being in their late thirties and still buying the cheap brands. They exchanged dry jokes, first names, and nothing else. No phone numbers. No lingering glances. That was seven years ago. Their friends never understood the timeline. "Wait, you've known each other for four years and you just started dating?" they'd ask, as if Shawn and Kacey had committed some kind of romantic fraud. The truth was simpler and stranger: they hadn't been taking it slow. They had been taking it right. Here is what Shawn knew about Kacey before he ever kissed her: He knew she woke up at 5:47 AM every day. Not 5:45, not 5:50, but 5:47, because she said those three extra minutes of sleep were "mathematically optimi...