Parched Apr 2026

I went to the sink. Turned the tap. A groan, a shudder, and then a thin, brown trickle. Nothing more.

And inside me, a strange desert was blooming. My tongue felt like a piece of suede. My lips were two slices of old parchment. But deeper than that, in the hollow behind my breastbone, there was a thirst that water couldn’t touch. A parchedness of the self. I had used up all my cool, green words. My laughter had turned to dust. Every memory felt like a photograph left too long in the sun—faded at the edges, curling inward. Parched

And in that silence, between one heartbeat and the next, I heard it: the faintest, most impossible sound. A single drop of water, falling somewhere far underground. A promise. A lie. Either way, it was the first thing in months that felt wet. I went to the sink

It was three in the afternoon. The air was a solid thing, a weight leaning against the glass of the kitchen window. I had my palm flat on the counter, and I watched the ghost of my own hand lift off—the heat rising in shimmering waves. The dog lay on the tile floor, his ribs rising and falling in a slow, dreamless sleep. Even the flies had given up. They clung to the ceiling, drunk on their own desiccation. Nothing more

The crack started at the heel. A tiny, silvered fissure, like a dry riverbed seen from a plane. I ignored it. You ignore the small warnings when you’re busy living.

I remember the precise moment thirst stopped being a sensation and became a presence.