my eyes and for so long my vocal cords seize up.
âDo I scare you?â She leans her face in close and our lips are nearly touching again.
I shake my head, although I am scared, but not for the reasons sheâs asking. Iâm not scared sheâs a psychotic stalker or scared sheâs moving too fast. Iâm scared because I donât do this. I donât fall for girls I hardly know. And Iâm scared in case it goes wrong and in case it breaks me. Iâm scared because Iâm scared of all that and Iâve only known her for about twenty-two hours. Itâs scary shit, being scared.
âDonât think Iâm a slut for sleeping with you on the first day?â
Shake my head.
âNot worried Iâm rushing you?â
Shake.
âBelieve in love at first sight?â
Shake. Nod. Shake. Not sure how I should answer.
âI donât either, but you do make my heart very, very fluttery, and Iâve never had that before.â
Smile.
âAnd Iâve never ever slept with someone so quickly. Normally heâd have to swim the Channel or climb a metaphorical Everest to get in my sheets so easily. So whatâs going on, Mr Whippy Man?â
I shrug my shoulders, kiss her lips, hug her. I havenât a clue whatâs going on.
âHow about we just go with it,â I whisper. âIt feels, it feelsâ¦â
âIt feels good.â
An understatement, but I say, âYes. Good.â
We lie there, skin on skin, legs intertwined like ivy, strands of her hair in my mouth, my hands on her back. I sense her life moving around her body and can feel it seeping through her flesh, her breasts, her hands, and every part of her body that touches me, into mine.
Into mine.
Into mine. A scratch. A jump. A moment stuck.
ALBINOS AND
ACTION MEN
K im and I drink kopi susu under a blue tarpaulin at a lean-to made from a few pieces of wood. We sit at a wobbly bench watching the owner of this fine establishment pour boiling water into something that looks like an old sock. From the bottom of the sock comes very good coffee. There are three men also sitting at the one and only table in this roadside shack. Two are playing chess and the other is watching intently through the haze of smoke that pours from the cigarette hung from his lips. Traffic passes by just a few feet away. Blown exhausts and horns mean conversation has to be turned up a little. And itâs bloody hot. Kim keeps picking his shirt up at the front and shaking it. Each time he does this he says, âFuuuck, itâs fucking hot. Whoa, itâs fucking hot.â
Iâm enjoying the heat. My shirt sticks to my neck and back and every now and then a little trickle of sweat runs down my temple. The heat makes me know Iâm somewhere different, it confirms Iâve changed my world, that Iâm being different. My old life has gone.
âFuuuck, itâs fucking hot.â A shirt waggle.
âI know, Kim, Iâm sat here next to you.â
âBut fuck, I know this countryâs supposed to be hot but this is fucking hot.â
âYou hot, my friend?â asks the chess-watcher.
âFucking hot, man.â
âHot is good,â he laughs. âIs my country. Is good country. Hot is good.â
âYeah man, good country, very bagus country, but fucking hot today.â
âWhere you from?â
âCanada. You?â asks Kim.
âHa. You not American. Good. Me from disini , from here, Medan, my town.â He throws his cigarette out onto the street. âAnd you, my friend? You Canadian?â
âEnglish.â
âAh, David Beckham, you know? Very good footballer.â
âI know. Yes. But I donât like football.â Not bloody Beckham again.
âManchester United? You like?â
âNo, I donât like.â I smile at him and sip my coffee. A drop of sweat plops into it from my nose.
âShame. Very good team. David Beckham
William K. Klingaman, Nicholas P. Klingaman
Victoria Barry
John McEnroe;James Kaplan
Ben Peek
Simon Brett
Abby Green
D. J. Molles
Oliver Strange
Amy Jo Cousins
T.A. Hardenbrook