Posts

Fatima's frustration

 The alarm on Fatima's phone sang the same melancholy tune it had for three years. It wasn't a song, really, just a default notification, but to her, it was the sound, just like a movie she had seen, that of Groundhog Day. She reached out and silenced it, her hand hovering for a moment in the grey pre-dawn light. Beside her, Yusuf slept soundly, one arm flung carelessly over the empty space on his side of the bed. He looked peaceful. Free. She slipped out from under the duvet, her feet finding the cold floorboards with the practiced silence of a ghost. In the next room, two-year-old Amina would be stirring soon, her soft gurgles the only thing that truly warmed the cold cavity in Fatima's chest. The day began its relentless march. Nappies. Bottles. The mushy remains of porridge scraped from Amina's chin. The pile of laundry that seemed to breathe and multiply overnight. It was a loop, a comfortable, suffocating loop. At 28, Fatima felt ancient. She had been a girl with ...

A Change in Awareness

 Carlos had been an excellent evening manager at The Grand Azure Hotel, in theory. He knew the protocols, understood hospitality, and had a warm smile for every guest. But in practice, his attention was a leaky vessel. A question at the front desk would be abandoned mid-answer as he noticed a flickering lobby light. An inventory report was left open as he chased down a non-existent noise complaint. The final straw was the Viscount’s anniversary dinner: Carlos, distracted by a debate over linen napkin folds, forgot to relay the sommelier’s message, resulting in a spectacularly wrong, and ruinously expensive wine being served. The dismissal was polite, final, and filled him with a burning need to prove he could be his own master. His pivot felt inspired. With his severance, he bought ten kayaks and twenty striped lounge chairs, setting up shop on the bustling stretch of Sapphire Cove. Carlos’s Coastal Comforts was born. He was the captain now. No one to micromanage him but the sun an...

Sammie and Latinda

 Sammie found Latinda in the kitchen, standing motionless in front of the open refrigerator. The cold light fell across her face in slices, illuminating the small furrow between her brows that had appeared somewhere in the last month and never seemed to leave. "You okay?" he asked. She didn't turn. "I don't know what to make for dinner." He almost laughed, because Latinda always knew what to make for dinner. She was the one who meal-prepped on Sundays, who had a rotating cast of recipes pinned to the fridge, who could look at a half-empty pantry and conjure a meal that felt like intention rather than survival. But lately, the pinned recipes had yellowed. The Sunday preps had stopped. And tonight, she was just standing there, the refrigerator beeping its gentle warning that the door had been open too long. Sammie crossed the kitchen and gently closed it. He took her hand. It was cold from reaching into the empty shelves. He led her to the small table by the w...

Logged on

 Ernesto woke to the hum. Not an audible one, but a felt one. A vibration in the mattress spring that matched the charging cycle of the devices on his nightstand. His Apple Watch buzzed a gentle greeting: Good morning, Ernesto. 6:02. 32° and cloudy. You averaged 4hrs 22m of screen time yesterday. Up 12% from last week. He smiled. Progress. He swung his legs out of bed and immediately checked his phone. Seventeen messages. Three missed calls from a number he didn't recognize. A breaking news alert. Two likes on a photo he'd posted at 2 a.m. He shuffled to the bathroom, phone in hand, reading a thread about a basketball trade while he brushed his teeth. The toothpaste foam gathered at the corners of his mouth. He didn't notice. At breakfast, his girlfriend, Michelle, placed a plate of eggs in front of him. "Big meeting today," she said. He nodded, eyes on his tablet, where he was scrolling through a presentation deck. "Mm-hmm." The eggs cooled. He didn...

14-0

 The rain fell on St. Martin’s College field in a cold, steady curtain, the kind that soaks through jerseys and chills bones. Edwin stood in the center of it, mud streaking his face like war paint, his breath coming in ragged clouds. The scoreboard at the far end, a hulking digital ghost in the grey afternoon, glowed a merciless, impossible number: 0 – 14.Fourteen. It wasn’t just a defeat; it was an erasure. For eighty-nine minutes, the champions of last season’s Secondary School Intercol, the Red Axe, had conducted a brutal, beautiful symphony of football. They moved with a telepathic understanding, a blur of red and gold that turned that blue and burgundy of St. Martin’s, Edwin’s beloved, scrappy team of misfits and try-hards, into frantic spectators in their own nightmare. Edwin was just an average player. He knew this. He had average pace, an average foot, an average sense of positioning. But what he had in surplus was a dream. A big, fragile, luminous dream that he carried not...

A Trip That Lasts

 The plane banked left over the Atlantic, and she pressed her forehead against the cold plastic of the window. She had spent the morning in 32 degrees. Her grandmother had braided her hair on the porch while the sea threw itself against the rocks below, and she had told her, for the third time, to buy a proper coat. Not a jacket. A coat. She had nodded, not really understanding the difference, and promised to send photographs. Now, twelve hours and one hemisphere later, the captain's voice crackled through the cabin. Something about descent. Something about weather. She was barely listening. Because outside the window, the world had turned white. She had seen snow in movies. She had seen it in magazines, in Christmas cards sent by a cousin in Toronto, in the shimmer of crushed ice in a rum punch. But I had never seen it. Not like this. The mountains appeared slowly, like a photograph developing. First a suggestion of grey, then the sharp ridgelines, and then, white. Not the white o...

Shoes

 Marcus had a problem. His sneakers were old. He noticed it one Tuesday morning, tying the laces by the door. The white rubber soles had yellowed. The mesh fabric near his pinky toe was fraying, and a small, stubborn stain from a rainy day months ago had faded to a dull gray-brown. "They're holding me back," he thought, as he walked to the catch a maxi taxi. At work, he felt sluggish. A project stalled, and in his mind, he felt a lack of sharpness, a lack of newness. He looked down at his feet under the desk. The old sneakers looked tired. He felt tired. That weekend, he went to the store. He spent an hour trying on different pairs, feeling the spring of a fresh sole, the clean embrace of untouched fabric. He settled on a perfect pair that was crisp white and immaculate. He wore them home, feeling lighter, faster, newer. The next morning, he laced up the new sneakers and walked to catch the maxi taxi. The world felt different. The air was sharper. He felt capable. He sat ...