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Fly Away

 The Robinson R44 shuddered as it cleared the ridge line, a familiar, comfortable vibration that Nigel felt in his bones. Below, the 405 was a molten river of brake lights, a slow-motion lava flow of metal and frustration. Above it all, the air was clear and cold, the only sound the rhythmic thump of the rotors and the crackle of the radio. "KBUZ 3, this is Central. Update on the Sepulveda Pass situation?" Nigel pressed his transmit button. "Central, it's still a parking lot. Looks like a multi-vehicle in the number two lane, just past the 101 split. CHP is on scene, but they're gonna need a miracle and a half to untangle this. ETA for clearing? Your guess is as good as mine." "Copy that, KBUZ 3. Stay with it." "Will do." Nigel clicked off and settled back into his seat. Twenty-three years he had left Guyana for the Bay Area. Twenty-three years of hovering over the same grid of streets, watching the same ebb and flow of humanity from a th...

The Wonder of Shastri

 The midday sun over the Caura River was a blessing Shastri felt in her bones. She waded into the cool, dark water, the muddy bottom squishing between her toes, her thick, curly hair piled in a messy knot on top of her head. Her swimsuit, a riot of fuchsia and orange, stretched comfortably over her beautiful, full body. She didn't check to see if anyone was looking. She never did. "Shastri! Girl, you going in already? We just reach here!" Parbatie called from the bank, struggling to set up a cooler. "The water ain't going to wait for we to lime all day!" Shastri called back, her laugh a warm, musical roll that echoed off the mangrove trees. She lowered herself until the water lapped at her chin, letting out a satisfied sigh. "Allyuh taking too long to decide life. The river decide already. It done telling we 'come'." This was a "river lime," a sacred Trinidadian ritual of friends, food, and fresh water. For Shastri, it was church....

The Busyness

 Dominic had won. That’s what he told himself, every morning, in a different city. His home was a sleek, aluminum-sided suitcase. His office was any cafĂ© with strong Wi-Fi and decent pour-over. He was the archetype of the “work from anywhere” entrepreneur, a free, untethered, master of his own time and space. Yet, somewhere between a co-working space in Barbados and a beachside bar in Jamaica, freedom had quietly curdled into captivity. He had become trapped, not by walls, but by the infinite, echoing expanse of possibility. He was a king ruling a desert of notifications, his scepter a smartphone that never stopped vibrating. His liberation had become a quiet, desperate busyness. His days were a seamless, gray blur of virtual meetings that spanned time zones, a torrent of Slack pings, and an inbox that refilled like a cursed goblet. He solved problems for clients in seven countries before lunch. He was always “on,” mistaking responsiveness for productivity, and availability for suc...

Hubert and Clara

 The silence between Hubert and Clara on the flight to Tobago wasn’t the comfortable kind. It was a tense, brittle thing, crackling with every unspoken grievance of the past two years. London, with its leaden skies, grinding commutes, and the relentless, silent pressure of their high-flying careers, had seeped into the marrow of their marriage. He, a corporate strategist, saw problems to be solved in every raised eyebrow. She, a litigation lawyer, prepared her defences over burnt toast and missed anniversaries. They were a masterclass in attrition, their love buried under an avalanche of mental clutter. Their villa, "Seabreeze," perched on a hillside in Castara, was a shock to the system. It wasn't just the view of the bay, a crescent of gold embraced by emerald hills. It was the sound or the lack of it. No sirens, no Tube rumble. Just the rhythmic sigh of the sea and the rustle of palm fronds. For the first two days, the quiet was unbearable. Clara itched for her work em...

Carmen's Protocol

 The Toronto wind bit through Carmen’s coat, a dry, unfamiliar cold. It was a far cry from the warm, humid breezes of Port of Spain, where the air smelled of salt and bougainvillea. At sixty-two, she had traded her corner office with a Gulf of Paria view for a small, shared apartment in a suburb where the snow piled high and grey. Her daughter, Alana, worked double shifts as a nurse, and Carmen saw the exhaustion in her eyes, the silent worry over bills that seemed to grow in the Canadian frost. So, Carmen applied for a job at “Horizon Solutions,” a call center. The young interviewer, seeing only her age and recent immigrant status, offered her a position in basic customer complaints. Carmen, with her University of London degree and twenty-five years as an investment manager in Trinidad, simply said, “Thank you. I shall begin on Monday.” Her training cohort was filled with students and newcomers. They were taught rigid scripts, to de-escalate, to follow the protocol. Carmen listene...

The Nation and the Dragon

 There was a nation built in the shadow of a great, sleeping dragon. For generations, the dragon would stir sometimes with the rumble of economic collapse, sometimes with the scorching breath of civil strife, sometimes with the crushing tail of a natural disaster. And each time, the dragon would wreak its havoc. The people would mourn their losses. Then, with a fierce and genuine pride, they would roll up their sleeves. They would pass the stones, hand over hand, to rebuild the shattered walls. They would forge new tools from the old, broken ones. They would sing anthems of perseverance in the town square, their voices raw but united. They called this process "The Forging," and it was the core of their identity. "See how we rise?" they would say, dusting off their clothes, surveying their rebuilt homes. "We are the people who cannot be broken." They became unparalleled experts in recovery. The dragon, gorged and weary, would always retreat back to its moun...

Twin Isle

 The first thing Brie learned to love in Trinidad wasn’t the sea, but the sky. From the ten-meter platform at the National Aquatic Centre in Port of Spain, the sky was a vast, liquid blue, mirroring the turquoise pool thirty feet below. At twelve, freshly transplanted from Calgary because of her father’s oil-and-gas job, the platform was her solitary perch. Up there, with the humid air thick as syrup and the distant sounds of soca floating from someone’s radio, she wasn't the new Canadian kid. She was just a body in flight, tracing a silent arc between two homes. Her coach, Mr. Warwick, a former Pan Am Games diver with a voice like gravel and eyes that missed nothing, saw her obsession. “You have the technique from your cold pools back home,” he’d say, “but you’re too tight. Diving here isn’t about fighting the air. It’s a conversation. Let the island soften you.” He taught her to listen. To listen to the trade winds that could subtly push a tuck, to the way the light fractured on ...