Ten Degrees Cooler Inside

The sun is relentless,

blinding as a candy striper in the cancer ward. 

Light hurls off stucco storefronts and glints

from the sidewalk mica, triggering 

retinal pyrotechnics of painful ferocity.

 


What little juice you have left

won’t salve your burning throat, and

your skin, once pale as the clerical collar,

turns a florid peat fire red.

 


In Singapore, Manila, and L.A.,

someone gets an idea, rises up for the kill, 

then falls back, seeking merciful shade 

and a long cool drink.

 

Battles are fought and forgotten 

in the heat of many moments,

all of which last a moment too long.

 

Still, the brain and heart are pliable organs.

The mind can wrestle a cartographic maze,

feed on foreign streetscapes and settlements.


And the heart lunges at variety, and crapshoot

with the aberrant and unknown.

A new puzzle. A new suitor.

 

But the body cannot tell a lie,

and it may refuse to put down roots,

to grip and fasten, to burrow deeper,

to even drink of this alien and untasted potion—

a wild mixture of sandstorm and cold space.

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