Not just a n_me

As a young girl I would only respond to Sophia never Sophie

The single syllable meant everything

Before I could tie the string 

on my shoes I knew my name

I knew my name the right way, the way where the A wasn’t ignored because it was my A

But now I turn my head to Sophie, to anything, to be obedient dog, not b-tch girl

To enter when called, called by anything remotely close to my name

Where did the frustr_tion go? 

My p_ssion?

My bones, my everything are delic_tely strung pe_rls now _s it is unl_dylike for them not to be

_nd I smile bec_use you s_y it is not good for me not to be

Bec_use you’ll s_y wh_t is the m_tter Sophie? Sophia? So

I will say- so if I said that it is Sophia, actually

Would it change the way you see me? 

Would it change the way you say my name? 

Would you put blame on the A

Hatred on the A

Would the A rust there at the end of it all 

By Sophia Fox

Polaris

The glass floor was slightly smudged with footprints, but Maria still pressed her cheek to it, blonde hair spilling around her head as she gazed down at the stars and earth beneath them. Shadow stared at her, questioning. She gasped and tapped her nail to the glass, the sound echoing throughout the ship.

“Ursa Minor, Shadow! Come see!” Maria called, and Shadow lowered himself to the floor beside her to see what she was pointing at. A glitter of the dust floating through space caught his eye, and although he was unsure what to make of where she kept pointing, the curious light in her eyes was enough to bring a soft smile to his face. 

“Okay, and if you look right next to it, you can see why it’s regarded as an asterism. The starfield of Ursa Minor is just a bunch of named stars, so that’s why it’s called the Little Dipper,” Maria explained, pushing herself upright. Her handprint was imprinted on the glass by the fog of her breath. She began to rummage through her satchel, fishing out a large book with pink and green sticky notes littering the margins. 

“It’s somewhere here. I’ll show you.” She flipped through the pages, licking her thumb every few to get a better grip on the corners. “Oh, see, found it. Polaris is the biggest star- that’s the North Star, Shadow.”

Shadow nodded along with her explanation, his eyes resting on her finger as it traced the words in the book. He slid himself over to her side, and she tilted the book to give him a better view. 

“Polaris was used by sailors to find their way at sea, kinda like a compass,” she said, moving to face the asterism. Maria pointed at each individual star, stating their scientific names off the top of her head. “So right now, according to the North Star, we’re heading that way. I’d assume at this point it’s June, because Ursa Minor is best seen then.”

“You certainly know your stuff, Maria,” Shadow said, nodding his head. She shut her book with a loud thunk, blowing air back into Shadow’s face. He shook it off, running his hands through his hair. 

Maria abruptly broke into a coughing fit, her chest contracting, bringing up an arm to bury her face in her elbow. Shadow cast his gaze to the floor. “Thanks! It’s just a topic of interest to me, honestly,” she managed out between coughs, shoving the book back into her satchel. She weakly stood from the floor, offering her hand to Shadow. He took it, and she pulled him to his feet. He kept a hold of her hand as she led him across the ship.

Every day it seemed she had something new to share, pointing out every starfield known to her, thumbing through books, and Shadow always nodded and asked questions whenever Maria became caught up in her stars. Her toe-tapping enthusiasm, her stumbling over words, her unbridled joy always made him want to learn more. Every star she pointed to brought more glimmer to her eyes. Maria’s mind was like an infinity, and she held the world– Shadow’s world– in the palm of her hands. Yet they were stuck here. Above the earth, floating inevitably on the existence of the ship. 

Shadow didn’t like to think about why Maria was here. Stuck forever, in time. He didn’t like to think about why she constantly coughed, hooked up to an oxygen concentrator, her satchel with her favorite books resting beside her. Or how she smelled too clean, like linoleum. He never liked the paleness of her skin, how deathly she looked. So he merely held her hand tighter. She always reciprocated, no matter how weak her grip was.

“I see you two are enjoying yourself,” a voice commented, and the two turned to see Maria’s grandfather at the doorway. Maria’s face lit up, and she dragged Shadow over to bury her head in Gerald’s stomach. He wrapped a hand around her back and patted Shadow’s head with the other. Gerald looked down at Maria with a solemn look in his eyes. “Maria, it’s time to do your albuterol.”

Maria shook her head and whined, “No, I wanna keep looking at the stars! With Shadow!” 

Gerald let out a guttural laugh, and Maria’s head shook with the force of it. He ran his hands through her golden hair, a soft look on his face. Gerald took Maria’s hand gently, leading her and Shadow in a chain succession to a bench overlooking the Earth. He rested his hand on her waist, carefully leading her down onto the bench to avoid straining her back or diaphragm. Shadow took a seat to her right, and Gerald did the same to her left. 

The hue of the starry sky, expansive and limitless, reflected off of Maria’s dull blue eyes. Shadow could see the stars captured in them, and he turned his gaze away in guilt. Even stars lose their light when they exhaust all their energy. 

“Now Maria, my dearest, you are truly the light of my life. My bright and shining sun,” Gerald began, running his hands through her hair, mingling with the curls and highlights. She nodded, gazing at him intently. “Would it make you feel better if I bought the machine here so you could stay with Shadow? We must keep you healthy, after all.”

Maria seemed to perk up at that. Gerald angled himself towards him and Shadow nodded, sliding closer to Maria. Without a word, Gerald stood and headed towards Maria’s room.

The air was quiet, gravity dwelling. Nobody spoke. From the corner of his eye, Shadow saw Maria rummage through her bag. Clearing her throat, she pulled out a thick book. Fewer sticky notes detailed the margins. She opened the book to a page marked by a single yellow sticky note that stood out among the pink ones. Her fingers shook slightly as she ran them along the words. 

“Shadow…” Maria started, her voice a tenacious waver. Shadow kept his gaze fixed on the floor, but he could still see her leg bouncing anxiously. “Shadow… do you know how stars die?”

He did. The answer dwelled inside his mind and stuck there, because Maria told him once, and anything Maria said Shadow would absorb like a sponge. “I do, Maria.”

“Once there’s no fuel left, the star collapses and the outer layers explode as a ‘supernova’. What’s left over after a supernova explosion is a ‘neutron star’ – the collapsed core of the star – or, if there’s sufficient mass, a black hole,” Maria explained. Her words were familiar. Like a black hole, they pulled him in. “Shadow, when I die–”

Maria. 

He didn’t voice it. He’d never lie to her. 

“I wouldn’t lie to you Maria. You’re making me sad. Maria, I don’t want to talk about it. I’m sorry- I know… you gotta get that off your chest, but…” he trailed off, his glare boring into the ground. 

“It’s only a matter of time.”

***

The repetition of breathing and beeping of a heart monitor had Shadow sitting alert, legs spread and wringing his hands. He kept his stare on the tiled floor of the medic room and tried his best to tune out Maria’s coughing and wheezing.

When he finally did glance up at Maria, she was looking at him, her eyes less dull. It was almost funny. Only when she was about to collapse did her eyes shine. They were as blue as the morning sky. Except when you’re in space, all you know is night.

“Shadow,” she called, but he didn’t respond. He didn’t know what to say. Anything said could be his last. 

“Shadow, why aren’t you talking to me? Did I upset you?” Maria said, voice muffled by the respirator she was hooked up to. Her words came out in pants, breaths reflected by clouds in the mask. It was like she told him once. Sometimes we can’t see stars, because they’re hiding behind the clouds. Shadow wanted to see her star. Her smile. But he didn’t look up, and the clouds didn’t go away.

The door opened and Gerald came in. His shoes clacked against the tile and stopped in front of Shadow. “I brought you some food.” Gerald said, placing the tray on the nightstand beside his chair. “Thank you for keeping her company.” Shadow didn’t bother to indulge himself, despite the growl of his stomach. 

Though Gerald looked down at him pensively, he failed to see how Shadow’s eyes welled up with tears that threatened to spill. Gerald left without another word. 

“Shadow… is my satchel there? Can you read me… uh… something? Whatever’s good.”

Reaching for her satchel, Shadow flipped through every loose page and sticky note, trying to find the most indented and ripped one. He pulled out a book with shaky hands, the cover reading Written in the Stars. “Is this okay?”

“Yes! I love Alison Davies… Can you read me the Leo section?” Maria asked. “It’s highlighted with a yellow tab.” She settled back into her blankets, pulling the thin cover up to her chin. She looked so small. Shadow turned back to the book, grating his fingers alongside the folded edges worn down by time itself. There was more than one yellow tab. 

***

When darkness envelops your vision– for a blink, for an eternity, for as long as time may seem– it’s scary. But sometimes the darkness isn’t complete, like when it’s blotchy and not quite there, when its permanence is undetermined, when a longing for death is met with everything but exactly that. Maria wiped at her eyes, but the splotches wouldn’t go away. 

They did eventually, but only when Gerald brought her food and in her sleep.

Maria hadn’t seen Shadow in a while. She missed him, even though he’d been more quiet than usual. He was her moon– waxing and waning but never remaining. 

Without him, it was lonely.  

***

Shadow spent his days hooked up in a room that wasn’t Maria’s. Sometimes Gerald came and tapped his knees to test his reflexes, and when he kicked back, Gerald would write something on a clipboard. Always analyzing, always indifferent to everything around him. It made Shadow worry and miss Maria more. 

Maria. 

He tried to pull her out of his thoughts. But when Gerald ran a flashlight across his vision to check his pupils, it was suffice to say they didn’t dilate anymore. 

***

The ship was colder than usual. The Sun had faded, and her existence had been whittled down to nothing but a collapsed core of a once radiant star. But as theories said, the Sun had swallowed the Earth and other planets before it died.

Shadow received lots of condolence letters.

Empty words, because the tests still continued. Gerald still knocked his knees, hit his elbows, and tried to get his eyes to dilate. They had started doing it again– a bit of star reflecting in them. Gerald still scribbled away at his clipboard. 

“Touch,” Gerald said, holding out a pin. Shadow flexed his pinky once, twice before pricking it. A small drop of blood bubbled on the tip, and Gerald pulled the skin back before watching the wound instantly close. He reached right for the clipboard, and once again nothing but empty words filled Shadow’s space. 

The stars had faded. Grief was strange. It pulled at his gut like a black hole. Maria really pushed him to relate everything to space when she still held the world in her palms.

When the sun is gone, orbit isn’t natural. Life dies. Shadow no longer revolved his life around Maria’s rays of hope. He had lost his compass. His Polaris. 

Gerald looked up from the clipboard with an odd expression. He offered his latexed hand to Shadow, hoisting him from the exam table. As he was led down the starless linoleum hallway, Shadow wished that the hand encompassing his was smaller and daintier and thinner and colder and Maria’s.

By Lyndsay Metts

Caspian Dreams

Fyodor had stared into the waters of the Caspian Sea for roughly an hour already. He was hypnotized by the eternal movement of the waves. The afternoon sun was pleasant – it kept him warm but did not burn him as it would’ve only several hours ago.

He’s been sitting there for an hour, what’s so mesmerizing about it? Alyona thought. She was slightly irritated by his lucid state. She approached him, placing her hand on his shoulder, using it to slowly sit down next to him.

She’s so beautiful, and her hand feels so nice, thought Fyodor. He continued looking at the coastline.

“Everything alright?” her voice sounded like a spoonful of honey.

“Mhm.” he replied. He turned his gaze towards her slowly, looking into her beautiful eyes.

Crystals. Literal diamonds.

“You’ve been sitting here for an hour already, don’t you want to do something else?”

“I am doing something else.”

“What?”

“Well I was sitting here alone, now you’re accompanying me, and with you I can sit for days and nights and weeks.”

“Aren’t you just a romantic.” she proceeded to kiss him on the cheek. A wave loudly threw itself towards the coast, and a seagull cried in a momentary fear. “But seriously,” she continued, “what do you want to do after this?”.

“We can always go back to Astrakhan and go to a cafe. Are you hungry?”

“No… well… maybe. I just don’t want to waste all my time here.”

“I wouldn’t say that we’re wasting time right now, are we?”

“No.”

She’s troubled by something. She always acts like this when she wants to tell me something but can’t, and every time it’s an excruciating fishing match to try to get out even a bit of information.

“Look!” he said, trying to distract her, “Look, a dock!”

“Yeah, what about it?”
“Let’s go there.”

He stood up in what seemed less than a single second, and extended his hand to her. Alyona took it, and he helped her get up. Then his hands moved again, swiftly picking her up. She laughed quietly,

“I live for moments like these.”

“I do too.”

Soon they were sitting at the dock, the splashing water of the waves occasionally reaching their legs. They spoke little, as both enjoyed the silence induced by their love, but finally, Fyodor spoke,

“You know, this is something I wanted to do this whole time that we’ve been together. Just sit together on a dock while the sun sets, completely alone. Just the two of us, sitting and enjoying each other’s presence and the sun’s warm rays.”

“I guess it has happened already.”

“And I could not be happier than right now.”

“Well…”

“What is it, my dear?”

“You said that you wanted it to be just the two of us, but…”

Fyodor quickly looked around. He didn’t see anyone near them whatsoever, and that confused him even more. He clutched his hands and could barely hold them together, while his mind spun as if it were the Earth itself. Her hand glided to her stomach,

“…but it’s really three of us, you know.”

Fyodor was disturbed by the cry of a seagull. He opened his eyes slowly, and saw before himself the setting sun. The Caspian Sea was calmer than ever before, and the waves could be barely heard. He approached the dock, walking over it carefully, listening to every creak that the boards made. As he sat down, he could smell her perfume, but she was nowhere to be seen. The scent vanished soon after, as did the dream.

By Henri Vasilyev

Story By Itself In The Space

A roster of silver bullets in its native endless summer 

traces the callous lows of Augusts backdrops 

and subtle duality that leaves us industrially grown with parted lips 

mounted on photographs.

Exhibitions confront the recreations of sections that she shifted

 in a smoky haze

 insestinantly in the celestial theater.

 Propulsive and deft, I spent that time littering the beloved creation

on the annual date of generations termination that we all wish we could have carried

 to flickering vintage labels that read ‘Come in, We’re Open!’

So much divide on the three nights where Broadway closed their doors

 to a classic dance that sat silent in the space ahead of rubber necks.

 It’s fiercely pleasurable projection color of black and white absorbed on the beach that I sat on as she fell with a hanging statue.

The experiments that they videotaped drew a modernist nineteen seventies pattern along the 

roof and air, and we both had swung like tinsel kaleidoscopes that dread the flurry acid waiting

at the mouth of the river Stix. 

The crowds kept wandering in circles, 

glinting and reflected on the glass facade that flooded our old room of monstrous ghouls

up and down another surreal picture. It showed everyone who had the mind to look 

A Paris landscape in a hand hand held strain, dripping.

By Thomas Bodine

I’m Not Emotional, But I Was That Day

By: Victoria Giannini

I’m not emotional, but I was that day.

I was crying in the tunnel,

It was really tough.

I don’t like him when he’s angry. 

There was a bit of a Braveheart culture to him, 

He’s the nastiest, most ruthless man in the world it could seem. 

My jaw was broken, 

Once he twigged it, it was. 

No club in Europe had experienced drama quite like this.

I looked around, 

I stood in front of all those faces and spoke to them in German. 

Leading the reds into Rome, I noticed that he was absolutely loving it. 

Most leads are made of three a cruncher, a buzzer and a spreader. 

He was, on his own, all three. 

We were leading, but the Romanians were stubborn and awkward opponents. 

And in Cold War terms, we decided to go nuclear. 

Where’s My Crown?

By: Gianna Episcopo

While hunched over the chessboard

of the world, we must sustain the

fickle fluctuations of this sort of

clarity that’s impassioned by the

madman’s theory. It is all a game. 

Mid-century players flail around

with tactical and overarching

framework of an Indian scholar’s 

notes. Artist-in-residence are quite

prominent in songs of them with

concertinas.

The pons at the prisons may

acquaint with some of those

sculpted knights that’re

juxtaposes and renditions of

bright rays of imprisoned hope.

They’re incarcerated by the eyes

felt in their craftsmanship and

unruly defenses.

We’ve been rankled by the

white tigers and the so-called

stargazing crown. The more

things remain the same, the

more same things remain,

don’t they?

The world made of plastic and

wood hits with hard depredation

and is narcotizing with a spur

of cloud space. Royalty is

skyrocketing with the shine of

electric-powered lights and the

whole physical environment

feels depressingly finished.

From The Jazz To The Blues

By: Taylor Kaufmann

We dance to the slow soothing jazz,

the old record spinning around again.

Our record and our song,

I watch as the jazz seeps through her veins.

But her heart is dedicated to the blues,

her heart beating to the slow-moving rhythm

Of the August jazz under the 

warm, setting summer sun.

To the February blues under the 

cold winter moon, arising.

Hide Away

by: Zemannie Rodriguez

we tend to tune out 

his words to create a complete and complex picture

his expressive eyes changed from attraction to shame,

anger to fear, piety to pain

he should be using his time responsibly 

it appears, that we can go somewhere 

dressed in a gray suit, gray tie and white pocket square

compared to the intimate world around us

reflecting his life around the spotlight

he maintains respectable, ambitious, gifted

his tears show meaning

which acts like a book with a 

chilling arc and swift lines

that shows drastic actions

he learned how to grapple with 

the world’s words

tragic right?

he creates the most dynamic and dangerous movements

the most vulnerable 

every square inch of love

wasted in lined and idle

areas with no alteration

ways we can never understand 

he makes everything possible 

his freewheeling persona continues

to influence the things around him

Your End

By: Julianna Egan

Self-righteous foolishness 

Simple hardships 

Wonderful ignorance

A wanted accident 

These are the phrases that define your end 

Your prematurely ended evolution.

However, you don’t stay gone,

like blood in the vein you travel

Throughout every orifice of my mind

I always have you 

Others may perceive you as weak 

But you were my

Strongest link 

You were there

Casual exchanges

Awkward moments 

You were always there 

Now i’m left 

with a missing link

And your adolescent words 

spiraling through my head 

Analyzing and philosophizing 

Every word you spoke

I wasn’t enough 

To keep you,
I wasn’t enough

To fulfill your

Radical needs 

I am eternally sorry 

That i wasn’t enough

Untitled

By; Simon Godovskiy

Depending on which employee

Might be described as an artist

Top of the academy

Valedictorian without an issue

A blade as a brush

A milk carton as a canvas

In the most endearing way

Hundreds of heads

A marvel of technique

And a near custard-center

Devotion to technique

Turns bacchanalian

An excellent show

Carve off a rack of ribs

Tossed into a spicy mix of tomato, onion, and green pepper

Sprinkled with chopped cilantro 

A roar of applause

Victim cuisine