Posts

The Taste of Salt

The heat in the beco was a living thing, thick as stale coffee and heavy as the silence before a raid. On the rooftop of Tico's place, the highest point in the comunidade they could safely reach, three boys lay on their backs, staring at the stars blurred by the city's glow. For João, the stars were just a distraction. His eyes were on the distant hum of the Avenida Brasil, the artery of a city that didn't know he existed. "Can you hear it?" he whispered. Rico, ever the pragmatist, snorted. "I hear a dog fighting a motorcycle. And your stomach." "Not that," João said, nudging him. "The ocean. The ships." From their rooftop, you couldn't see the water, only the maze of corrugated tin roofs and tangled electrical wires that held their world together. But you could feel it. The humidity carried a salt-tang, a ghost of the vast Atlantic that lay beyond the hills. That salt was their shared dream. It was the promise of the Marinha do B...

The Lesson in Silence

Vincent sat on the edge of the verandah, a half-empty mug of sorrel tea growing cold beside him. The morning was still the kind of quiet that settled over the neighborhood before the sun became relentless. Behind him, the house was stirring. He could hear his wife, Hazel, humming in the kitchen, the familiar clatter of roti being rolled, and the distant murmur of their three children arguing over whose turn it was to use the bathroom. At forty-two, Vincent carried himself like a man who had learned to take up less space than he deserved. He had built a life, a good one at that, but somewhere along the way, he had stopped reaching. The promotions he used to angle for had become "not worth the stress." The trips he promised Hazel had become "maybe next year." The dreams he had as a young man in this very house, fresh from Trinidad and full of fire, had quietly been shelved. He didn't notice, but his children did. That afternoon, his eldest, fourteen-year-old Mary,...

Cuba, we love you!

 The humidity in Port-au-Prince was oppressive, but Dr. Elena Marquez barely noticed it anymore. She was three months into her two-year mission with the Cuban Medical Brigade in Haiti, and her focus had tunneled down to a single point: the young boy on the operating table before her . Behind the fragile walls of the hospital, the chaotic noise of the city, with the blare of horns, the distant shouts, the ever-present tension of life in a nation grappling with poverty and unrest, all faded into nothing. All that existed for Elena was the precision of her scalpel and the damaged tissue she was there to repair. This was the unwavering intensity her training in Havana had instilled in her: the ability to find absolute calm in the center of the storm. Later, as she peeled off her gloves, the magnitude of her team's work came into focus. Her colleague, a seasoned surgeon from Santiago de Cuba, was already dictating post-op notes. "That's 77,391 lives saved since we first came,...

Simply Lee

 Lee’s office didn’t have a door. It didn’t need one. It was just a small, cluttered desk tucked in the back corner of the stockroom, sandwiched between a tower of boxed instant noodles and a pallet of discounted tinned tomatoes. From that vantage point, he could hear everything: the steady beep of the register, the low rumble of the delivery truck reversing into the bay, and the easy laughter of his staff up front. For thirty years, the "City Mart" had been the heart of the suburban street it sat on. It wasn't a chain. It wasn't flashy. It was just a single, sprawling trading store that sold a little bit of everything—hardware, groceries, work boots, fishing bait, and the best egg sandwiches in a five-kilometer radius. And Lee loved it. He loved the smell of the place first thing in the morning, a mix of floor polish and fresh bread. He loved the regulars: old Mr. Henderson who came in every day for the newspaper and a chat, the tradies who grabbed their energy drink...

Maya and Melissa

 Maya and Melissa were less cousins and more an accident of geography. Born three months apart in apartments separated by a single wall in Jamaica, their mothers would pass each other on the landing, swapping pots of tea and updates on the girls. They learned to walk holding the same grille of the same balcony. They learned to share before they learned to speak. Life, as it does, eventually pulled the map taut. Maya, a sharp-elbowed architect, spent her days on chaotic construction sites, the air thick with dust and the shouts of laborers. Her body was her tool, but by Friday, it felt like a blunt instrument, always aching and depleted. Melissa, a soft-spoken copywriter, lived in the opposite extreme. Her world was a two-foot square: her laptop, a coffee mug, and the glow of a screen. Her mind was overworked, but her body felt forgotten, a mere vehicle to carry her brain from bed to desk and back again. Their phone calls, once about boys and movies, became about the weight of their...

Gut and Brain

 Emma Chen scrolled through the Alberta winter forecast on her phone for the fifth time that morning. Minus twenty-three degrees Celsius. Another three months of frost on her windshield and daylight that vanished by 4:30 PM. At twenty-six, teetering on the edge of "late Gen Z" and "young millennial," Emma felt trapped in a cycle that looked good on paper. She had a stable teaching job, a modest condo in Calgary, and a routine that involved protein bars for lunch, takeout after lesson planning, and weekends spent recovering from the mental exhaustion of it all. Her body felt heavy. Her mind felt foggy. And her gut, a constant, bloated discomfort that no doctor could quite explain, felt like it belonged to someone twice her age. Then the email arrived. A last-minute opening for a Grade 5 teacher at the Oceanview International School in St. John's, Antigua. Could she be there in three weeks? Three weeks later, Emma stepped off the plane into a wall of humid, salt-t...

Ms. Leotaud

 In the hills of Cascade, where the breeze carried the scent of pink immortelle and the walls were high enough to keep out the noise of the world, Samantha Leotaud learned her first and most important lesson: just because you have everything, doesn't mean you deserve it. The Leotauds were old money, the kind of Trinidadian family whose name opened doors before the hand even touched the knob. Samantha grew up in a grand house with a driveway that curved like a question mark, a pool that nobody used, and a cabinet full of silverware that was only brought out for funerals. She wanted for nothing. Yet, from the time she was a little girl with ribbons in her hair, something sat uncomfortably in her chest when she saw how the world treated her versus how it treated others. It was her grandmother, Sophia, who set her straight. One afternoon, young Samantha had thrown a tantrum because the cook had cut the crust off her sandwich wrong. Sophia dismissed the small staff, sat down at the tabl...