Leland Quarterly Vol. 15, Issue 2: Winter 2021

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LELAND QUARTERLY VOLUME 15, ISSUE 2: Winter 2021

Copyright 2021 by Leland Quarterly | All Rights Reserved Stanford University | Giant Horse Printing, San Francisco


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MASTHEAD EDITOR IN CHIEF

Lily Nilipour

PROSE EDITORS Adriana Carter Angela Yang POETRY EDITORS Malia Maxwell Lily Zhou EDITORIAL STAFF Lucy Chae Kyla Figueroa Jordan Pollock Saloni Sanwalka Christina Wang Cindy Xin Serena Zhang

FINANCIAL OFFICER

Elizabeth Dunn

LAYOUT Lily Nilipour BOARD MEMBERS Olivia Manes Linda Ye

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EDITOR’S NOTE It has now been a year since Stanford, and the rest of the world, shut down. Whether we were on campus or elsewhere, we were saying our farewells to friends and familiar places — farewells we thought were temporary. Now, some of us may never return to Stanford as undergraduates. And some of us still have yet to set foot there. In a period of time that has in many ways felt so stagnant, it is sometimes hard to imagine a potential for growth. That is why this issue of the Leland Quarterly is so exemplary. When the school year began remotely, my only goal was to keep this magazine alive. I did not expect it to become more alive that I have ever seen. As contributing artist Clara Spars writes in her artist’s statement, this issue “emerges as a testament to the period of growth and creativity experienced by Stanford students.” Her words are spot-on: we were astonished by the volume and quality of the submissions we received this quarter. The result was an issue much longer than our past publications, and dare I say one of the best. I feel lucky to have been able to witness such an incredible artistic outpouring. Finally, thank you once again to the unrelenting editors of LQ, without whom this magazine would fall apart. You are the glue that holds together my rambling Slack messages and the labyrinth of folders, forms, spreadsheets, and 100-page documents in the Google Drive. Most importantly, your careful attention to each submission — and all in the midst of the brutal online quarter system — is what ensures the integrity of our publication. And to our contributors and our readers: thank you for staying with us. As always, LQ hopes to continue to be a home for your art and a site for the flourishing creative community at Stanford. We look forward to what is to come.

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Lily Nilipour, Editor in Chief


Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

FROM THE ARTIST OF THE COVER This piece is meant to represent the process of finding and celebrating creativity even when inundated with worries or external pressures. COVID-19 brought about an enormous surge of stress, frustration, and grief, but for many, it also brought about an extensive period of reflection. The women portrayed in my art are physically distorted and surrounded by water, symbolizing the distress and confusion in their environments and the resulting turn toward an internal, reflective landscape. Yet, I have also tried to depict these subjects as being full of agency, dramatizing the pivot from quiet reflection to outward-facing action as they harness the power of their intellects and innovation. My internalization of the stress of the pandemic manifested itself in art and writing, as it did for many others. This issue of the Leland Quarterly emerges as a testament to the period of growth and creativity experienced by Stanford students during challenging circumstances.

Clara Spars, Contributing Artist

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CONTENTS Poetry When the Car Stops in Gambier, Ohio, Jiyoung Jeong 11 phases, Brennecke Gale 12 my father’s dead dog, Angeline Truong 16 a selfish poem for my unsteady father, Jessica Femenias 17 Dermatillomania, Via Lamberti 42 First Tuesday, Peter Caroline 44 Tennis Camp, Danny Ritz 45 when i dreamt you nearly drowned me, Sophie Boyd-Fliegel 50 A Summer Love Story, Jiyoung Jeong 65 This One Ends with a Paperweight, Elizabeth Grant 68 to grow old, Aditi Limaye 76 Indianapolis, Justin Portela 80 Oregon Muslim, Nur Shelton 81 Dear Gypsum, this is a love letter, Brennecke Gale 82

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Prose Express, Nadia Jo 14 Citrus, Clara Spars 19 Crunch, Peter Caroline 46 I Think of You Often and I Wonder if it Is Mutual., Justin Portela 56 Souvenirs, Cat Harbour 69 Birthday Card, Sophie Boyd-Fliegel 72

Visual Arts the passenger, Lilith Frakes 10 Excerpt from the photo series “By the Tracks,” Melina Walling 15 existential allergies, Lilith Frakes 24 Flower Bed, Roodolphe Gouin 41 Untitled, Ryder Kimball 49 Untitled, Miranda Li 52 Untitled, Miranda Li 53 Untitled, Miranda Li 54 Mushrooms, Cathy Yang 60 sauna (Excerpt from photo series “Self exploration through weight cut”), Gabe Dinette 66 Untitled, Ryder Kimball 71 Untitled, Ryder Kimball 78 Self Portrait 3.10.2020, Angela Yang 79

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the passenger Lilith Frakes 10


Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

When the Car Stops in Gambier, Ohio

Jiyoung Jeong

Lumped silence until the intersection, where the car sputters beneath your feet. Next to the faded yellow line you stop, pull out a flashlight, open the hood bonnet. We stand like the earth is eggshell, we don’t move, we shoulder a wet black sky like we are afraid to wake it up. Your arm touches mine and I am afraid to wake you from this daze, the same daze you had when we found her. Mother, an accident sprawled horizontal next to a bottle. We left her muscles to die — when should they be left to die? You and I stood, unable to touch mother — she might regret her last violence to the world, a big whopping fuckyou. Now she lay as still as a painting, we were the viewers, we were the critics, I stared and felt ashamed for it, like I was watching her undress. Then she was peeled from the floor, all five feet lifted into arms of men neither you nor I knew and she slid away to a world where we have not lived.

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Phases

Brennecke Gale

in eighth grade, I had a science teacher who taught us the phases of the moon. he taught us other stuff too, like physics and friction and gravity and velocity and why it snows more on one side of the mountain than the other. he taught us all sorts of things, but I only ever remembered the moon. I knew that it looked like a “D” when it was growing and a “C” when it was shrinking. the moon set the alphabet backwards. waxing waning crescent gibbous words that flowed over my tongue and straight to the memory crescent slivers over campfire flickers and a mirror lake full moon reflection. the moon is hard to forget. that teacher followed us to high school and one day there was a solar eclipse and we gathered outside not not looking at the sky. he approached me and asked if I remembered why eclipses happen. I didn’t. I looked instead at the half-moon leaf shadows the eclipse made on the ground. like a waxing gibbous, I said, pointing at the dancing shadows. he smiled, a little sad.

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Phases | Brennecke Gale

in college now I go for a bike ride near my childhood home where my life has been put on pause. the sun has already set the sky went from orange to pink and now, blue again, like the day needed one last look. the deer have gathered in the field. the wheatgrass looks like moonlight. I look up, and there, tucked in among the blue-grey sky. fingernail moon. waning crescent. just a sliver of wheatgrass.

Excerpt from photo series “By the Tracks” Melina Walling

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Express

Nadia Jo

A symphony of plpleaseplease putputput on put on on yyour put on your youyou yourmask mmask youyourmask greets me while transferring from subway line 3 to line 9. Dubbed “hellway” by longtime Seoul residents, line 9 is the most crowded in the entire subway system. A mix of all-stop and express trains disorient riders, and a sea of Koreans flood the escalators whenever they get off a train. Until I first started working fulltime in Seoul in 2019, I had never witnessed such homogeneous waves of people before. A stream of black-haired Asians morphed across paths and into stairways: everywhere you turned, your eyes would rest on the same characters. During COVID-19, the resemblance between people grew stronger: dark hair, black parkas, white masks, and obscured faces. Silent and efficient, shuffling towards the next destination. The next short-term goal. In this chaotic city ritual, I could disappear into the cogs of the well-oiled machine — society — that we all promised to uphold. Most times, I reveled in the fast pace and carelessness of strangers around me. I felt efficient as I ran down the left lane of escalators, which everyone silently agreed to designate as the side for people in a hurry; the right side was reserved for people who wanted to stand still on the escalator. Running down the escalators signaled busyness, the drive behind someone with a packed schedule who couldn’t waste time idling on the right lane. No one stood still on the left lane; we all made way for each other, clearing out the path as quickly as possible for others. In the summer of 2020, I always switched to subway line 9 in the “Express Bus Terminal” station. I was used to the procedure: jog up the stairs after getting out from line 3, pull

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Express | Nadia Jo

out my subway card as I walk in order to save time, tap the card and walk through the turnstile without pause, race down the escalator, and try to catch the express train. After rushing down the incredibly long escalator, I found myself in a gigantic open space with clean white tiles and impossibly high ceilings, with the sci-fi grandiosity of 2001: A Space Odyssey. I took in the strange dystopian beauty of this platform during a few seconds of walking, then headed down the second flight of escalators to finally arrive at the subway. Chaos makes this station simultaneously hell and a highway to hell. I always discreetly smirk at how we all look the same: a stark contrast from the vibrant diversity of American cities I’m used to. Then, I smile a little less widely as I observe people in their 20s who are numb from the repetitiveness of 9-6 jobs they don’t want to be stuck in. When I settle into the tightlybunched-together rows of seats, I look around for a few seconds at everyone escaping into digital worlds on their phones. A few minutes of distraction, texting, and catching up on TV shows before boring office jobs. At the same time, their predictable motions of taking out phones from their pockets and putting on AirPods feel painfully banal to me. However, those passengers would probably describe both as activities ridden with anxiety. You can’t exactly enjoy a reality TV show when the screeching of subway wheels seep into your ears, and you have to listen to overhead announcements to see if they call out the name of your stop, or you have to feel the familiar duration of the trip with every cell in your body to “automatically” know when to get off. It requires attention, focus. Even during escape.

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my father’s dead dog

Angeline Truong so when the dog died at the ripe old age of twelve my father responded as he usually did, which was to sigh heavily, boil an egg for six minutes, and eat it in two bites. my mother always believed if you made hens lay eggs year-round, they’d run out, so in the winter my father would eat oranges instead like a monster: biting them whole, spitting out the rind. I peeled them hesitantly, and he beat me for the orange residue under my nails. my father loved that old dog. once my mother cursed it as she came around and found it licking rotten apples; my father loved that dog so he bought five apples at the grocery store, and forgot the bread. he used to crawl downstairs while my mother was asleep, so he could pet that dog, kiss that old dog, who slept so soundly. in the mornings I woke to see his body circled around the circle of that dog banished to the kitchen floor. I had to wake him back to my mother, place an old coat over the dog, so it would not stir. my father loved that dog, though he always knew his marriage would outlive it, that one day there would only be a cold bed, the white morning sky in the window, and no-dog curled in-between them, but possibly it was precisely because my father knew that dog would die in his lifetime, possibly he only loved it because he knew that sad beast would die someday soon, and after he had kissed it goodbye, he could get back to what mattered, things that would only last for as long as he had his mouth around them: bites out of covered fruit, full of seeds and rind. drinks from a boiled egg at night, tipping back the wet and yolky center, as he laughed, mouth wide, face up towards the yellow moon.

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a selfish poem for my unsteady father

Jessica Femenias My father’s voice bears the weight of indignant, violent memory a voice so heavy that he struggles to carry it it swells and collapses and sways and stirs, and I worry that he will fall right to the floor right down to the floor, there with his feet there with his head, here with me, A constant inclination for a cold, inhospitable, merciful floor And at the summits of the swells and the riverbeds of the valleys, At the apogee and at the anchorage, I worry

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Citrus

Clara Spars

Part I: Miro Miro stared at the clock in agony, cursing at himself for signing up for an intermediate-level drawing class without any experience in art. He shifted uncomfortably in his stool as the teacher — who had demanded that everyone call her by her first name, Bethany — sighed a gush of peppermint that made his eyes sting. He did his best not to stare straight down her shirt, but the angle at which she had positioned herself, leaning loose-waisted over the opposite edge of his desk so that her opal pendant stared at him like the eye of a cyclops, made it almost impossible. “You know what I love about your work, Miro?” her voice shifted down an octave in pitch and a few notches in volume. “I love the texture of your drawings.” She elongated the ex. The words dripped from her mouth. She laid a palm on the edge of his drawing sheet and pushed it straight down the center. The charcoal smudged in a linty streak following the trail of her hand. “It has such a lovely feel to it.” She held up his sketchbook for everyone to see. “Can’t you feel it just from looking?” The class stared back blankly. A couple students indulged her with a slight nod. Bethany returned the sketchbook to Miro. “Excellent work, Miro. Keep it up.” She winked. He looked around. Everyone’s papers were the same, and had to have the same texture. She probably couldn’t think of anything else to say about his drawing. The sole reason he had enrolled in Drawing II sat three stools away from him, looking an earthy sort of beautiful in her baggy grey sweater. Miro glanced over at Darcy, trying to read the flat line of her mouth. When she caught sight of him staring, she smirked and rolled her eyes at Bethany. Looking at Darcy always made Miro’s gut feel like it was

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levitating in his torso, like if he stared too long, he might burst with affection. He calmed himself and went back to sketching. The art teacher was tall and slender, and wore tight black skinny jeans. Everything about her seemed to climb upward toward the sky. Her eyelashes reached so far up her face that they seemed to prop up her perfectly penciled eyebrows like the legs of a table. The cuffs of her leather boots clung to her knees, a short distance away from where her hips swung like a pendulum whenever she walked. Even the way she spoke seemed to be reaching for something; her voice lilted upward at the end of each word, as if everything that came out of her mouth were a question. “Everything exists in relation to its surroundings,” she whispered, “The pencil’s length is only a small fraction of the desk’s, just as we are smaller parts of the universe.” Bethany had set a cardboard box atop a table at the center of the room. Above the box was an arrangement of random objects: a selection of knobby orange squash, soda cans, crinkled paper bags. The desks wreathed the centerpiece, facing inward. “Let’s start with some gesture drawings,” she announced, clapping her hands softly. Her dozens of thick metal rings clicked against one another. She circled the room like a vulture, explaining the importance of acting on instinct. An artist needed to trust intuition and let his eyes guide his hands. She glanced at Miro as she said this, and Darcy stifled a snort. Fifteen minutes into class, the door opened and a bearded man entered. He was large, hirsute, with porous, splotchy skin that resembled an old, discarded lemon peel. Bethany stared at him with pursed lips and spread her nimble fingers over the center of her chest. “Can we help you?” “I’m the model. You must be Bethany.” There was a pause. A look that resembled panic crept into Bethany’s face, starting with her twitching brow and crawling down into the curves of her frown. Eventually, it melted into a tired recognition. She let a puff of air out of her nose while stretching and snapping an elastic smile. “The model. Yes, of course. Let me get you set up.” Bethany led the man to the storage closet at the back of the classroom. The class remained silent, and some kids exchanged

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confused looks and shrugs. Darcy texted Miro wtf. He responded idk. Bethany returned a few moments later with her usual silky calm demeanor. “Jerry will be set up here for those of you who’d like to… Incorporate his form... Into the still-life.” She pushed the cardboard box setup over to the side and wheeled a wooden stage into the center of the room. Jerry emerged from the storage closet sporting a bright orange kimono. There were swirls of gaudy cherry blossoms detailed on its hem. The man’s red beard had been sectioned off into tiny braids with neon beads woven in here and there. He mounted the stage, swinging his leg up and revealing his lack of underpants. He shed the robe and positioned himself. Darcy stared at Miro, her eyes wide with horror. Miro shook his head in disbelief. Though the students tried their hardest to focus on the assortment of inanimate objects that were originally meant to be the subjects of their drawings, Jerry seemed to be doing the most he possibly could to retain the full attention of his audience. He struck poses with such violence that his muscles shook, his flabs of skin quivering like the ears of a hound facing the breeze of an open car window. Bethany would interrupt now and then to give students individual advice. “Mind if I…” she would say, already reaching for a stub of charcoal and leaning over the student to get a better angle at their drawing. When she leaned over Miro, the tips of her wavy blond hair grazed his forearm, her breath warmed his shoulder, and the smell of lavender essential oil and patchouli wafted into his nostrils. Her opal pendant bumped his earlobe twice. “There, see? Like this.” Miro nodded uncertainly. He saw Darcy raise her eyebrows. #

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“The art teacher wants you,” Darcy snickered as the two of them made their way down the steps after class ended. Miro shook his head. “She wants everyone. She exudes sex.” “More often than not, it’s channeled at you.” “What, are you jealous?” Darcy punched him lightly with an arm that jangled a dozen thin gold hoops. “Of you, not her. I want someone to look at me like that.” Miro’s skin tingled. He’d been in love with Darcy for three years now. They had slept together once, when she stayed the night in his dorm room after a party a few months before. A week later, he had asked Darcy on a date — a date date, as he shyly explained to her — and she laughed and shook her head. “You kill me, Miro,” was all she had responded with. Then he let her walk away, her black ponytail swishing like a wagging finger. After class, they sat on a patch of grass at the corner of the campus’ main plaza with cups of iced coffee that Miro had insisted on buying. Other students biked by trying to make it on time for their next classes. A tour group was being herded by the corner of the lawn where Darcy and Miro were spread out peacefully. “What was your SAT score?” a parent was in the middle of asking. She was a mother with a platinum bob, her arms folded across her chest with a brochure clenched in one of her well-manicured claws. The tour guide tried to avoid the question unsuccessfully. “Seems like a miserable job,” Darcy mumbled. “Being a tour guide, I mean.” Miro nodded slowly, “You know what seems like a miserable job? Nude modeling for college art classes.” Darcy laughed, sucking up the last bit of coffee at the bottom of her cup and rattling the leftover ice. “That Jerry guy must be pretty sure of himself to be able to flash his junk at a group of twenty-somethings.” Miro hummed his agreement. “Good for him, I guess.” # During their first-year orientation, Miro saw Darcy for the first time sitting at a picnic table with a sack of mandarin oranges. Clusters of eager freshmen darted around like dragonflies, trying to make as

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many friends as possible within the first hours of college. They wore lanyards with flimsy name tags screaming their names and hometowns in bubble letters, and chased after anyone else they saw doing the same. Amid the chaos, Darcy sat alone. Her lanyard was tossed aside. Having things around her neck, she later explained, made her throat itchy. Darcy was tan with long dark hair and lots of piercings. Two silver hoops hugged her left nostril in parallel, and her ears were stickered with glinting earrings shaped like stars and moons. She wore eyeliner that framed her coppery pupils in thick black. Her navy blue nail polish was chipping so that the leftover paint on each nail looked like the shape of a country. At the table, she wrestled a mandarin from its netty sack and stuck her thumb into its navel. The scent erupted in the air, pooling out with the light breeze. Miro tried to think of charming ways to start a conversation. He wanted to come up with a joke about the mandarins. All that came to mind, however, was that somewhere fifteen or so miles away in suburban California, the placenta that he had been birthed with was buried under a mandarin tree for good luck, because his mother was a strong believer in harbingers and superstitions. He couldn’t start off with that. “Want one?” Darcy asked as she popped a section of her orange into her mouth. Miro hadn’t realized she’d noticed him. “I took them from one of the activity tables.” She explained, swinging one of the mandarins in front of her twice, mimicking the toss that she was offering. He caught it in one hand. “Thanks.” Sitting across from her, he quietly peeled his fruit. He asked if she was a freshman, too. She nodded at the lanyard that sat next to her. He read the nametag aloud, “Darcy. Like in—” “Pride and Prejudice. No, not like that one.” “Like what then?” She shrugged, peeling another orange. “Where are you from?” he tried. “I grew up in Florida.” “I guess that explains why you like oranges so much.”

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“I like mandarins,” she corrected him. “Oranges are too aggressive.” Miro sat in awkward silence. He thought about leaving her be, but was exhausted from having the same three conversations over and over that day and had nowhere else to go. Plus, Darcy was pretty. “My placenta is buried under a mandarin tree,” he blurted. He looked up at Darcy hesitantly, and his gaze met with the white flash of her teeth. Her smile dimpled her cheeks and tucked her makeup into the thin creases by her eyes. “So is this some twisted form of cannibalism?” she laughed. “Yeah, I mean… Circle of life,” he said, loosening up. “Are you quoting a Disney movie?” “It was actually Jane Austen,” Miro joked. He relaxed, and let it show. Resting his elbows on the table, he leaned in and looked up at her from under his hair in a way that he thought was flirty. She grinned, offering him another mandarin. He made a silent wish on it, hoping he could make her smile like that at least once a day. # During the next two years, Miro and Darcy remained close. They ate meals together in the dining halls regularly, crammed essays and projects in the library late at night, and ran errands at the local shopping mall in the janky, rusting car that Miro bought too enthusiastically off Craigslist. For Miro’s birthday, Darcy gave him a necklace that she had wrapped with a scrap of newspaper. The pendant was a small metal disk with spirals engraved on its face. Miro never took it off. Over the course of many months, the cheap metal began to turn bronze and stain his skin gray in a blurry line around the back of his neck. He developed a habit of reaching for the little disk, flipping and pressing it with his fingers absentmindedly throughout the day. Sometimes he’d put it between his lips and let it sit there until he moved enough to make it fall out. Halfway through their junior year, Miro declared his major in biochemistry, and Darcy chose graphic design. She spent her afternoons outside, sketching in her notebook in the sun, carrying around her tablet so she could work on her digital compositions at

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existential allergies Lilith Frakes

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Citrus | Clara Spars

every moment of stillness. Sometimes she’d draw comics of Miro as a lizard navigating life with one missing leg. “Why a lizard? And what happened to my leg?” he demanded. “Would you rather a snake?” Darcy doodled his scaly avatar sunbathing on a beach. “Snakes don’t have legs to begin with.” Miro pouted. “What am I doing now?” Darcy had started a new panel that featured the lizard digging through what looked to be a pile of dirt. “I think you’re confusing lizards with dogs,” Miro sighed, knitting his fingers together and stretching his arms above his head. “You’re looking for your buried placenta.” Miro smiled childishly, pleased that she remembered. “It’s supposed to be under a tree.” “Draw it yourself, then.” “I can’t draw.” “Then learn. Take a class with me.” The closest Miro had ever gotten to sketching was penciling in the squares of his graph paper while struggling with math problems, but the thought of being in a class with Darcy, sitting at a bench sketching their homework, was enough for him to sign up for Drawing II that very night. # The next art assignment was an abstract piece representing desire. “This piece is completely open to interpretation. Feel the heat and let it guide you, let your creative juices flow,” Bethany sang. Two minutes in, Darcy had already produced a masterpiece, a beautiful composition of warm swirling colors and geometric shapes. Miro couldn’t draw a straight line, even with a ruler. He scrapped the first draft of his drawing and tried again on a new sheet of paper. He had finally produced a single squiggle that he was somewhat satisfied with when the classroom door swung open. A bespectacled young man stood in the threshold, the sunlight from outside flexing around him and bleaching the floor. “Bethany? Is there a Bethany here? So sorry I’m late.” The whole class gaped at the lanky man in his wool turtleneck.

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Bethany paused the smooth jazz that she had started playing from a bluetooth speaker. “I am she. And you are… The model, I presume.” “That’s me. Where should I set up?” Bethany gestured at the wooden stage, and the model helped her wheel it over to the center. She giggled, but her voice was woven with a thread of uncertainty. “I forgot that there was a model coming today! Silly, silly,” she chirped. “Class, do your best to incorporate, um—” She beckoned at the model. “Adam!” The man in the sweater chimed in and bowed. “Adam. Great. Do your best to work Adam’s figure into your interpretive pieces.” “Do we have to?” Darcy groaned quietly. She was nearly finished already. “Do what you can,” Bethany smiled. Miro looked back at the single graphite mark that sliced the center of his page in half. He started drawing what he thought resembled Adam’s head just underneath it. # Miro was struggling. When he signed up for this art class, he hadn’t cared in the slightest if his drawings looked like shit — it was an elective course that he wasn’t even taking for a letter grade, and he had no interest in becoming an artist. He hadn’t expected to develop deep embarrassment over his lack of skill and a looming sense of dread every time he had to present his work. When it was his turn for a class-wide critique, students gawked at the misshapen lumps scribbled onto his paper, not knowing where to begin with their feedback. One person mistook his still life of flowers for an abstract interpretation of explosive anger. “I guess I thought the petals were supposed to be like fireworks,” the girl had said after he had explained it to her. Worst of all was the look on Darcy’s face. It wasn’t disapproval or contempt, more like a quiet but obvious exasperation. He felt guilty for making her take a lower-level class with him. Miro attended Bethany’s office hours one day, wanting to

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improve without Darcy’s help. Bethany finished talking to the last student from her previous class before directing her attention to him. “Hello, hello, handsome fellow!” She perched herself atop one of the nearest tables and swung her legs expectantly. “How can I help you?” “I wanted to get some extra practice in.” “Wonderful! Why don’t you take out your sketchbook.” Bethany set up miniature statues on a nearby desk, shuffling them around and switching the angles of the light source from time to time. She went over tips for finding forms, recognizing negative space, and estimating proportions, all from less than a foot away. “Is art something you want to pursue in the future, Miro?” Bethany asked him. He let out a snort. “No, I just wanted to—” he started to say, but stopped himself. “You just wanted to…?” Miro exhaled. “I wanted to impress a girl. Or something.” Bethany breathed a laugh that tinkled like a wind chime. She smiled knowingly. “Of course you do, honey. Is it working?” He shook his head defeatedly and stared at his paper, “Not with drawings like this. At this rate, I’d be better off as one of the models.” Bethany’s eyes narrowed. “You could try that, you know.” “I’m sorry?” “You could model for a class I’m teaching in thirty minutes.” Miro stared blankly. “You mean nude?” “Well, as nude as you’re comfortable with.” “No way.” She furrowed her brows as though offended. “Why not? I used to model all the time in college! It’s an excellent way to gain confidence!” “I really don’t think—” “Come with me, it’s just a building over. You can decide when we get there.” It was more of a command than a suggestion. Miro packed up his stuff and followed her out nervously. #

In the neighboring building, Bethany led Miro down the

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hallway, tossing a bright “Come on!” over her shoulder every now and then to keep him moving. When they arrived at the classroom, Bethany opened the door to reveal twelve senior citizens stationed at various easels around the room. There were walkers and canes strewn about them. “I teach the elderly every Tuesday at five. Isn’t that wonderful?” she twittered. Miro nodded. “See? There’s nothing to be intimidated by here.” She leaned in and added, “Some of them can barely even see!” Then, turning her attention to the class, she shouted, “Good afternoon, everyone!” Some appeared to have heard her. “Instead of doing our usual still life exercise today, we’ll be drawing Miro, here.” A combination of adrenaline and sheer pressure made Miro gravitate toward the small stage at the center of the room. A few students turned to look at him. Bethany motioned for him to mount the stage. He did so uncertainly, removing his jacket, and after an encouraging nod from Bethany, his shirt. He shot her a look of panic and waited for her to explain what to do. “Miro will be holding a pose for one minute at a time, starting now.” Miro was mortified, his cheeks flushing, his underarms sweating. He stuck an arm above his head awkwardly and did his best to hold still, gazing at a crack he found at the corner of the back wall to distract himself. His arm started to tingle, then to burn, then to hurt. He shook it out a few times before returning it to its position over his head. He wondered if people could see his sweat. “One minute is up! Next pose.” Miro scrambled to rearrange himself in a sitting position, leaning back on one arm and resting the other over a bent knee as naturally as he thought possible. This time, he hesitantly looked out at his audience. He expected that everyone’s gaze trained on his body would plunge him further into humiliation, but he noticed as the students’ cloudy eyes traced his face and limbs, they weren’t really looking at him. Like the miniature statues or the knobby looking squash that Bethany used as models, they were simply internalizing his form, with no judgment or contemplation other than how to connect one line to

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the next, how much space to leave between one mark and the other. He relaxed a little. By his fifth minute, he was settling into a rhythm. He reorganized his limbs in ways that he thought were interesting, without being too uncomfortable, crossing one leg over another, turning his head one way and then another. He no longer thought about the people drawing him, but rather what position he should assume next. When the exercise was over, he felt good. A few of the elderly had completed beautiful sketches. Some could hardly see the paper, and ended up with a few unintelligible marks, but even those impressed and touched him. He thanked Bethany, who called him “a natural” and told him to come back soon, winking. Then he left the classroom feeling light. # “You did what?” Darcy gasped, already bursting into laughter. “I’m not kidding!” Miro told her about the class while eating lunch in a dining hall the following day. “What possessed you to become a nude model? Did Bethany seduce you? Oh my god, don’t tell me she blackmailed you.” “I told you I wasn’t nude. And it was a one time thing.” “Okay, but why’d you do it?” Miro paused, he felt oddly defensive. “I don’t know, she seemed to really want me to. It was honestly kind of fun. The old people were nice and some of them made cool drawings. Plus, it’s like a… Confidence thing.” He shifted uncomfortably. “You posed for old people to boost your confidence?” He felt his frustration growing, his cheeks flushing. “Yeah, I did.” “Oh, come on. You don’t need to work on confidence.” “How would you know that?” He couldn’t stop himself from blurting. “Miro, please. You’re fine as you—” “I mean, I’m obviously not good enough for you.” “Whoa, what?” “Tell me I’m wrong.” “What are you—”

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“I’m not good enough for you.” He had stopped bringing up the fact that they had slept together, since Darcy never responded to it. The confusion and agitation and affection and longing puffed and deflated in his chest like a balloon depending on what day of the week it was. Some days he could hardly contain it, and wanted to grab her by the shoulders and shake her. Other days, he was content just knowing she existed at all. He hated loving her. His life and their friendship would be easier if he didn’t. But whether it was her pretty face that seemed to get prettier each day, her dry sense of humor, or the way she started talking three times more quickly when he brought up things that she was passionate about, his feelings for her weren’t fading. He felt the balloon of frustration grow and grow, until it reached its limit and slowly deflated in defeat. There was no sense in scaring her away. He exhaled. “Never mind. Sorry. I’m in a weird mood.” He ran his fingers through his hair. Darcy gazed at him and said, “Okay.” She didn’t bring it up again. Part II: Darcy Darcy wasn’t clueless. She knew Miro was in love with her. A big part of her desperately wanted to fall in love with him, too, but the other half knew that it was more out of convenience than real desire. He was handsome and tall, with a humble but keen sense of style that made him look like a kid who might play bass in some starry-eyed indie pop band. His curly hair and kind brown eyes were soft accents to his boyish friendliness, and he tended to her with a quiet focus and care that no one ever had before. But no matter how hard she fixated on Miro’s wonderful qualities or how compatible they were, when he was around, she didn’t feel the swells of nervous energy that she associated with attraction. She felt comfortable in the way one would with a best friend or close family member. After weeks of uncertainty over her own feelings, sleeping with him only cemented that reality, and from then on she avoided acknowledging that it had ever happened. The memory of that night after the party crossed her mind as

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the two of them walked back from a dining hall one afternoon. Darcy felt languid and contemplative. She looked at Miro, thinking to herself that he was goodlooking — cute, even — but the thought sat weightlessly in her head, and when he smiled at her goofily all she could think of was that he once laughed so hard in the dining hall that milk shot out of his nose and he spent the rest of the afternoon smelling like sour cream. She grinned back. On the other side of the walkway, she noticed a man in a bright orange vest stoop over the edge of a fountain. He had a bucket in one gloved hand, and his other wielded a massive blue net. “What’s that guy up to?” She wondered aloud. They watched the worker as he dipped his net into the shallow water and stirred it around. When he lifted it over the surface, it chinked with dozens of wet pennies. He shook them off before emptying the net into the bucket, and after a few minutes of collecting, he lifted the bucket and carried it away. “Where do you think he’s taking the money?” Darcy asked. She passed the fountain multiple times a day on her way from one class to another, and had frequently seen people tossing coins in it as part of a campus tradition. She had never thought about anyone cleaning the coins out. “Maybe it gets sprinkled into the university’s endowment,” Miro offered. “Or maybe he takes it for himself.” “People make wishes on those coins.” Miro stuck out his lower lip to blow a strand of hair away from his forehead. “You know what they say. One man’s wish is another man’s burden.” Darcy smirked, “Who said that?” “Plato. Or was it Pacino?” She rolled her eyes and went back to staring at the man. “Have you ever made a wish at that fountain?” Miro nodded. “Have you?” “Nope. What’d you wish for?” “If I tell you, it won’t come true.” “Bullshit.” “Okay,” Miro huffed. “What would you wish for?” “For world peace. Or more money.”

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“You’re a real hero.” “I prefer ‘saint.’” “Those are cop-out answers. You have to wish for something real.” “Like what?” “The first thing that comes to mind the second you toss the coin. It’s a psychological thing. ” “According to whom?” “Freud. Or maybe it was Fallon.” “Stop doing that.” Miro’s eyes widened, and he ducked behind Darcy’s right shoulder. Bethany was making her way up the path to the bookstore on the opposite side of the plaza. She wore a black hat with an enormous brim and sunglasses that covered nearly half of her face. Her wispy blonde hair flew around in tendrils, glowing eerily in the sun. She moved more hastily than her usual bendy strut allowed. “Should we say hi?” Darcy smirked. “Please don’t,” Miro sighed, “The last time I saw her I was shirtless for the elderly.” He let his face drop onto Darcy’s shoulder and shook his head into it. She felt his curls tickle her neck. She patted the top of his head before playfully shoving it off. # Another nude model interrupted their drawing class. Bethany gave the same fluttery speech about forgetting the modeling schedule, but there was something off about the way she carried herself. She spoke flatly and briskly, not bothering to help the woman get situated. When the model asked about setting up the stage, Bethany tensed, telling her to just do whatever she pleased in a tone that was almost cold, and went back to helping the student she had been working with before the class was interrupted. The model was a beautiful young woman with reddish hair, pale, freckled limbs, and voluptuous curves. She showed up just as Darcy had finished laying out the groundwork for her midterm piece. Darcy did her best to squeeze the model’s body into a corner of the composition, but no matter how she adjusted the figure’s pose or dimensions, it sat on the page with an unnatural, layered disjointedness

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that made her want to rip her own hair out. She was relieved when the class ended. That evening, Darcy and Miro worked on art homework in Miro’s room. Darcy finished her sketches long before he did. “Draw me while you wait, then,” he suggested. “I’m fresh out of inspiration for lizard doodles.” “No, like a real portrait. Draw me.” She shook her head, grumbling that she had other homework. “Why not? You see my face every day, it’ll be easy.” She groaned and flipped open her sketchbook. As Miro continued to draw, she sketched the general masses of his head and hair. Her eyes traced his outline and her hands translated them to paper. She captured the tip of his nose, the folds in his ears, the swoop of his eyelashes that cast subtle streaks of shadow down his cheeks under the icy light of his dorm. Every now and then, he’d tilt the plate of his face toward the ceiling to stretch his neck, and Darcy imagined him watching the moon somewhere above the roof. A few minutes in, he quietly slid out of his T-shirt. All that rested on his chest was the small silver pendant she had bought for him for his birthday. Darcy had found it at a local antique store while looking for a cheap couch for her dorm room. “So that you can finally reach your full indie-boy potential,” she had joked when she gave it to him. Seeing it now against his bare skin made her chest tighten. “What are you doing?” she snapped. “Those old people must have really gotten to you—” “Just draw me, Darcy.” His tone was impatient, almost harsh. She quieted and gave in reluctantly, outlining the mounds of his shoulders, the ropy muscles in his biceps, the timid puffs of hair on his chest, the glimmer of the pendant against his skin. When she looked up again, he was staring at her, and her face grew hot. “Let me see.” He leaned over the top edge of her sketchbook, their foreheads inches apart. Darcy tried to comprehend the unfamiliar speed of her own heart rate. She remembered the night after the party, how Miro had held her so close and kissed her so passionately. Then she submitted to herself. The balmy night became one in which she could no longer distinguish the neutral comfort of another human being from the sort of affection that meant more. All she

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understood was that sitting in front of her was a person who clearly cared deeply and fixedly, a person opening himself without restraint, and for the moment, that felt like enough. She craved the physical contact that breathed security and validation deep into her lungs. So she leaned in. While they kissed, she imagined loving him, walking around between classes with her hand in his, sleeping in the same twin bed every night as the other couples she knew at school did. She pictured it, and felt a tingling sensation growing within herself, something that spun and teetered with what must have been her heart as the fulcrum. She was terrified. As Darcy took off her own shirt, she heard a voice in her head telling her you do love him, you do, you do, you do. But it was a voice, not a feeling, and the voice eventually relinquished itself to silence. Then she was left with herself, and her body, and his body — and with nowhere left to go she felt herself leaving her body behind, floating over it and watching herself, naked and rolling around an ugly carpet while kissing her best friend. Suddenly her stomach was filled with something that felt like shame, or guilt, or some awful combination of the two. Returning to herself, she looked up into Miro’s closed eyelids and discomfort washed over her in nauseating waves. She laid a palm over Miro’s chest, catching the pendant and pressing it against him. She pressed until she was pushing, and then she pushed him off. “Whoa, are you okay?” A look of panic set into Miro’s eyes. “Darcy, what’s going on?” She stared. There was a red circular indentation where she had pressed the pendant into his chest. For half a second, she remembered reading on some tacky CVS greeting card that only the misfortunate and the blessed know how to laugh at themselves. Then she started laughing. And she laughed and she laughed until tears formed in her eyes, and then before either of them could tell what was happening, she was crying. “Oh my god, did I hurt you? I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry.” And after a moment, he told her he loved her. And she told him not to. And he insisted he’d wait for her, even if it meant she’d never love him back. And she told him that was ridiculous because they were only

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twenty years old, and they had only known each other a few years, and that he’d meet someone better. She cried even harder, and part of her wished that she could be outside, somewhere cold and wet where her tears could be masked as weather, instead of under a gross fluorescent dorm light with a boy that she loved deeply, but not in that way, where he could see her sitting stupidly on his ugly grey carpet, confused and crying for no reason. “I just wish... ” Miro started to say, but his voice trailed off. Darcy put on her clothes and walked back to her dorm, leaving her drawing with him. # The next day, Bethany held office hours for the midterm project. Darcy was nearly finished. When she entered the art studio, she was the only student there. Bethany’s eyes were red and puffy. She looked older and weaker than her usual self, and was gazing blankly at an easel set up in front of her as though she could see right through it. When Darcy let the door shut behind her, Bethany straightened herself and shook out her hair, rubbing her hands against the sides of her jeans. “Darcy! What can I do for you?” Her voice was shrill. “Just looking for some advice on my midterm.” Bethany pursed her lips into a delicate smile. “Let’s see it.” She smacked her hand onto a table next to her own easel where she expected Darcy to lay out her work, and let her fingers slide off the surface one by one. Darcy’s drawing was a muted forest stretching somberly toward a purple horizon. One of the models’ naked forms sprawled out awkwardly under one of the trees, staring up at its branches. Darcy frowned. The crisp, pale body stood out intrusively against the peaceful blend of color. “Oh, how lovely,” Bethany cooed, smoothing out the paper. She pointed out a few areas that could be sharpened, places that needed a little more shadow. Darcy nodded along. Bethany eventually raised an eyebrow, “Why didn’t you sign up for the advanced class? You obviously know what you’re doing.” “My friend’s a beginner and wanted to try an art class. Thought

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we’d meet each other halfway.” “Miro, right?” Darcy nodded, her stomach turning. She hasn’t seen or spoken to him since the night before. “Funny, I thought you two were dating. Cute boy.” Bethany’s tired eyes glinted. “No. Just friends.” “Oh, come on. I was in college once too, you know!” Darcy cleared her throat, laughing uncomfortably. “There’s really nothing going on, I swear.” Leaning over her own drawing, Darcy noticed the easel Bethany had been staring at when she first walked in. On the sketchpad’s surface was a drawing of the most recent model with the red hair. Her face had been scribbled out. “Beautiful sketch,” Darcy commented. “Ah! Thank you. Just a little exploration of negative space. Thought I’d make use of the model while she was here.” Darcy smiled awkwardly, eyeing the violent strikes of charcoal where the woman’s head was supposed to be.“Speaking of the models, what I actually came here to ask about is whether I need to include the human body in my midterm drawing. The model feels out of place, so I was hoping I could just leave it out entirely.” Bethany nodded slowly, “Right, I’m sorry about that. I really should keep better track of when the models are scheduled to come in so you have more time to prepare. Silly me!” She tossed a strand of hair over her shoulder and flashed her teeth. Darcy straightened up and gazed at her quizzically, “They come in almost every single class.” There was a pause, and she prodded further. “If you don’t mind me asking, is there a reason for that?” Bethany’s face darkened and relit like a flickering candle. For an instant, the redness in her eyes made it look as though she might cry, but her expression rearranged itself to its usual calm. “Drawing the human body is a great way to recognize basic forms in a subject.” Darcy hadn’t eaten and was feeling lightheaded and queasy. She was in a foul mood, and in spite of Bethany’s peculiar distraughtness, she felt her own confusion border on impatience. “But they show up even for the classes where we don’t need them. Like for the abstract section, or the landscape pieces. No one even really draws

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them.” Bethany heaved a deep sigh, her thin eyebrows furrowing into zigzags. “To be completely honest with you, Darcy, I don’t really know when they’re coming.” “What do you mean?” Bethany tapped her nails on the table and smoothed her hair, tucking loose strands behind her ears and biting her lip. “I’ve made some mistakes like any other woman has. You know what I mean.” She started fidgeting with things around her, organizing pencils on the desk, and then rearranging them. She pulled her skinny jeans higher up her waist. “I’m not sure I do,” Darcy responded hesitantly. Bethany sighed again, deeper. “I was married to a man I didn’t love.” “Okay.” “And one day, the stars aligned and I crossed paths with someone whose soul matched mine — perfect reflections!” She stared off into the ceiling dramatically. “You should have seen it. The sparks, the energies. Everything about us fit perfectly.” “That’s great.” “I fell for him almost instantly. The temptation... It was a spiritual connection, too special to go to waste.” “What happened?” “I followed my heart.” “So you had an affair?” Darcy’s hand flew to her own mouth. She hadn’t intended to be so blunt. Bethany waved it off. “Well, yes, but to be fair, you couldn’t possibly understand what it was like to be married to that man. Our parents set us up. They told me it was the only way I could pursue art seriously.” “I didn’t mean—” “All his complaining, all the time. He never credited me for my work or appreciated my art.” Bethany’s voice began to rise. “He’d — God, he’d wear street clothes in bed, his pants were always unzipped, his gut just grew and grew, and he wore these awful chartreuse buttonups… Can you imagine? Chartreuse button-ups?” “No, I can’t say I—” “And don’t get me started on his complete lack of sensuality.” “I really don’t—”

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“As if he could ever fully satisfy me emotionally. Or sexually! Ha! The man was about as lively as an ironing board. And I, the hot, steamy iron, ready to—” She stopped herself. “I’m sure you’re old enough to understand.” Bethany traced the edge of Darcy’s drawing absentmindedly and shifted her weight to her other leg so that her hip jutted out. Her face morphed from hysterical to brooding in the span of a few seconds. “I’m not much older than you, you know. Not even thirty-five yet.” “Right. Of course... I’m not really sure I see how this connects with the models.” “Well, you see,” Bethany exhaled, pinching at the bridge of her nose, “my ex-husband runs the biggest nude modeling agency in the state.” Darcy blinked. It hadn’t ever occurred to her that there were agencies specifically for nude models. “So you get them to come to your classes for free?” “Mmm, that’s one way of putting it…” Bethany now rubbed her temples in slow circles. “Listen, I hope you won’t speak a word of this to any of the other students.” Darcy nodded warily. “I have a restraining order against Bill — my ex-husband. I left him, but he just couldn’t keep away. The police were involved, it was a whole mess. It was actually the inspiration behind my Red Period. Did you ever get a chance to see that exhibit? No? Shame. Some of my best work.” “So he just sends you nude models now?” “It’s his way of communicating, I suppose. Some weird form of a ‘fuck you and your appreciation for the human body!’ Or something.” “Can’t you just report him?” Bethany stared at her own sketch of the model, at its scribbly mess of a head. “Oddly enough, I feel as though I deserve it.” “What?” “It’s the price I pay for… The affair, as you said. And maybe it’s not even punishment at all!” Bethany pulled her shoulders back so that her chest puffed. “The human body is beautiful. I’m lucky I get to admire it in so many forms.” “Right...” There was a brief pause while Bethany collected herself. “So the

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answer is yes.” “I’m sorry?” “Yes, you must keep the human form in the midterm drawing. I just decided.” “Can I ask why?” “It’s your punishment. And maybe your blessing!” “Punishment for what?” “Trust the process, honey. The human body will surprise you.” Darcy had no idea what she meant, and almost wished she had never come to office hours. She packed up her things and had her hand on the door handle when Bethany called out her name once more. “I’m sorry if I overshared,” she breathed. “It’s been a mess.” Darcy gazed at Bethany, who looked small next to her easel, then released a weak smile. She nodded and told her it was no burden. She stepped out the door. # On her way back to her dorm, Darcy strode along slowly. The fresh air eased her headache and nausea marginally. When she passed the campus cafe, she recognized the gentle tuft of Miro’s hair through the window. He was seated in a corner where he often did his homework, this time with three other people, and no laptops or books spread on the table. They were talking animatedly, waving their hands around and erupting in laughter. One of them was a girl Darcy recognized from one of her classes. She hadn’t realized they were friends. Darcy watched them, relieved to see Miro laughing. The part of her that imagined him sulking alone in his room after her rejection and departure untethered itself from her chest, where it had clung tightly all day. For an instant, her uneasiness melted into something warm and reassuring. When Miro had told her that he loved her the day before, he had said it with a subdued kind of desperation that almost made her feel like he’d be okay without her — a longing that was more about him than her. She exhaled. Miro loved her because she was sitting right there, she told herself. He loved her because she had been right there from the

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start, ever since she called him over with that stupid bag of mandarins. If anyone else had been in her place for those years, he’d have loved them just the same. For a few minutes, Darcy watched the four of them take sips from their paper cups of what must have been the cafe’s specialty lukewarm coffee. Miro often chewed the lip of his cup until it was ragged and unusable — something Darcy often chastised him for. She wondered if he was doing this now, but the thought of his mouth made her queasy all over again. The girl from Darcy’s class tossed her head back in a glamorous laugh. She briefly laid a hand on Miro’s arm, and retracted it to take another sip of her coffee. Darcy turned away, feeling like she’d witnessed something she wasn’t supposed to see. She shook it off and kept walking. She stopped at the fountain, and marveled at the way the floor of it glistened copper like the scales of a fish. So many pennies. She had never tossed any in before, and suddenly she had the urge to. She fished a coin from the loose change that lived at the bottom of her backpack and tossed it high in the air. The second it left her fingertips, she waited for a wish to come to her. The coin glimmered, turning once, twice, three times. Wishing for money felt silly in the act of tossing a coin away. Instead, she thought about the man who would come to clean the fountain. The man who would collect the little pieces of copper and the wishes that weighed them down to the shallow depths of the water. She wondered again where these pennies would go. When she got back to her room she unrolled her drawing once more. She pictured herself sprawled along the edge of her own forest, where the nude models’ faceless figure sat, gazing up at the leaves against the purple sky. With a marker from her desk, Darcy drew a copper-colored dot on one of the trees, so small that she could barely see it. She imagined it was a mandarin. Somewhere beneath the dirt, a part of someone was starting to grow.

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Flower Bed Roodolphe Gouin

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Dermatillomania

Via Lamberti I. When we moved in, my parents thought the tree in our backyard was dead or dying; its peeling bark evoked an ear of corn not quite shucked, a natural edge run ragged. We would soon learn that the shagbark hickory is not born with shag in its bark; but grows into it. It is the story of age as paring knife, bark as shed skin. II. I let my first whitehead ripen until my mother snipped pus fruit off the vine with flesh between pinched fingers, a pop. This is how rite became passage of time, and how I could not help but pick and poke and prod and pop each bump, raze what was raised into submission, into scar.

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Keep squeezing after all the pus is out, just to be sure, or just so that a steady drip of blood may follow. Two birds, smooth your face and yourself, one faucet running red. III. There is a beetle in my sink. It scuttles out of the drain so rapidly I can imagine the ratatattat of legs on porcelain. The urgency of an ugly thing. We know each other, beetle and I, beetle who could crawl into an oversized pore and shimmy under my skin, hatch eggs in my cheek and excrete itself in pus. An ugliness that can spiral back down the drain. IV. When we moved in, my parents thought the tree in our backyard was dead or dying, and so peeling bark was tempting for idle hands to pry off. To leave a scar behind: a reddish-gray gash, a nakedness. When Caliban looked in the glass did he too see Ham? Are there pimples on the cheeks of forests? The beetle living under my skin laughs at me. No, it says. And still they grow.

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

First Tuesday

Peter Caroline Pops and crackles on God’s gray Earth herald men and their tires, balding in unison, leaning back and over pebbles in the gravel lot, and coughing dust hot behind them. and I, in a low cinderblock building with a veil of sunlight spotlighting dirt and dust feather-falling to the linoleum, watch through a grime clouded storefront while the radio beside me and a fly far off somewhere, ducking behind rows of dusty snacks struggle to see who can drone the loudest the bell above the door announces guests: farmers caked in clay nod toward loose cigarettes our hesitant exchange strung together by broken words in the other’s language. and a gray-haired man that could be my father all knobbed joints and trembling fingers scrapes daily at a lotto ticket with a filthy coin that matches a lonely tooth gleaming in his face like watery eyes looking at something far off he leaves even poorer and above the door, a stroke of orange at dusk paints the bell and I hit the jackpot every time

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Tennis Camp

Danny Ritz Ankles painted red with clay, we’d pound our chests like timpanis, comparing the shape and depth of our blisters and calluses against each other. Anyone who thought we were twins was victim to our fool, my name escaping your lips from across the court. Bright yellow fuzz we’d find in unexpected places hours after we were finished. We’d laugh loud and ask just how it could’ve gotten there. We’d brace for cold showers on hot mornings underneath the unforgiving sun, for suicides and spider drills and you asking our coach why the conditioning exercises always had such violent names. The day after you quit I saw an actual spider on the lip of the baseline and pounded it flat into the clay with my racket. 45


Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Crunch

Peter Caroline

I pushed uphill after the dark shape of the neighborhood kids. I remember trying to scooter uphill; it’s like running, but with one leg. I stamped furiously at the road, with a sharp flick of the sole behind me and fighting gravity, my purple Razor scooter crawled up. I was the only kid who didn’t have a bike, so I was perpetually at the end of the pack, sometimes minutes behind. But I didn’t mind, the stilted bursts of movement which pushed me over asphalt weathered a divot in my sneakers and a blister on my toe that hurt like a friend socking you in the arm. Sometimes I’d detour, taking the long way to jump over curbs and picnic table seats. Best of all was going downhill. Already out of sight of my whooping and noisy friends, with worn wheels and shit brakes, I’d fall to the earth cutting the wind. Steering then was useless, so I often just closed my eyes until I felt the ground beneath me even out and I had to push again. Every afternoon, we rolled up the hill to the CVS pharmacy at the top. Our mecca squatted on the outskirts of The Hills’ dingy apartments and we loitered religiously, sometimes muscling a football through the air or just sitting on the curb in sweaty silence. Now and then someone would have money. Kids our age didn’t have jobs, and parents in The Hills were the type to think two meals a day and a roof to worry under were allowance enough. But we had good eyes and fast hands. Though pilfered change only bought so much. My dad was never home, so on rainy days we sat on the floor around the television pretending it made the day go by faster. We saw this one movie, Dead Presidents, where a bunch of people tried robbing an armored truck. They hid in the shadows of a dark street wearing face paint and dark clothes, then ambushed the police. Everyone died or went to jail at the

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end of the film, but immediately after the screen went black and credits tumbled past, we planned our heist. They call it aiding and abetting, I think, when someone doesn’t commit a crime, but helps. I wanted to do that. I hid behind the statement, “I don’t want anything.” An obvious lie; everyone in The Hills wanted something. They laughed, rightfully calling me scared, and continued like I hadn’t said a thing. *** I crested the hill out of the apartment last, like usual, and neatly folded my scooter while they threw down kickstands with scuffed sneakers and filed in. They were the fast hands of the operation, and I was the good eyes: the lookout. My job was to be a paying customer, using money I’d saved up for weeks to buy candy upfront to distract the cashier while the others, one per aisle, filled backpacks and black hoodie pockets with whatever they could grab. In the end, everyone would join me on the way out. Innocent kids accompanying a friend. There was no reason the plan shouldn’t work. Our Plan B was quick feet and our Plan C was a box cutter nestled in my sock. But, again, there was no reason the plan shouldn’t work. I remember a smiling man who was my parents’ age. Wrinkles spilled out of the corners of his eyes and he had a thick accent that seemed out of place. He asked how my summer was going, and I mumbled a stressed “Pretty good.” I wondered which kind of chocolate thieves bought the least. I considered one of the pricier chocolates, some sort of penance for my friends skulking behind me, but ended up picking a Crunch bar. They came in cheap Lunchables so were practically free. People didn’t steal free. The man made and returned my change and I turned to leave while the other kids grouped around me, signaled by the chirping static of a receipt fighting its way out of the machine and the rip of it being torn away. We left in a pack. Everyone assembled their respective vehicles, cutting glances and smirks around the parking lot at each other before howling and speeding back to The Hills. Anyone who recognized our crime would have to catch us first, and they never would; we were going downhill.

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Pedals beat gravity, so as they distanced themselves with butts raised above the seat, my scratched scooter glided smoothly down. We crouched in yellowing, itchy grass to divide up the plunder in the patch behind the apartments. We ogled in a circle like worshippers around soda cans, small toys, chips, a lighter, and a box of condoms; they were fuel and mysterious artifacts to middle schoolers, and day dreams of lighting things ablaze, cloud watching with snacks, and giggling conversations made them sacred. Yet, I didn’t get anything because they did all the work. I had my Crunch bar. We neatly arranged the items in a pile off to a corner and played football for the rest of the day. When the streetlights whined on, casting periodic pools of light into the street, we untangled ourselves and rolled home. I remember tossing my scooter over the railing of our second-floor apartment that night. I wrapped my hands around the railing and hoisted myself up, one leg after the other, then swinging my weight into the indigo space. If you hung with your arms full length, you could drop and not hurt yourself too much. I hung there for a moment, watching my sneakers lazily sway above the grass, before letting go and crumpling in a heap on the ground. My blistered toe sang out, but I was otherwise unharmed. I walked to the street and rode in the direction of the hill, cutting through pools of streetlight, connecting the dots on my route. In my periphery, well past the golden reaches of streetlight, tense figures smoked on picnic tables or kissed necks of bottles in paper bags. On one street corner, older kids huddled in a circle chatting in low voices while the ember of a cigarette orbited their lips flashing red. Once at the base of the hill, the night became silent, save for the sound of me pawing my way up and the scooter’s gravelly motion. I rode to the locked door of the CVS, peeking in at dark shelves and sitting on the curb looking at the stars. I left soon after, daring to close my eyes as I hurtled through the dark, placing more and more distance between my scratched scooter and the Crunch bar I left in front of the door.

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Untitled Ryder Kimball

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when i dreamt you nearly drowned me

Sophie Boyd-Fliegel

i tried installing a shower drain in my sternum i texted like 10 surgeons each had some version of no nastiness will stick down there not just lotions in gummed up hair but ash and crumbs and smells too the fumes of jealousy will stain like wine and stripe the bones if any bleach in rage hits ammonia in fear youll be done then theres all the little things belly marbles of contempt ulcers of unread emails tonsil stones of regret might swallow too-small clothes that slip past the solar plexus where they’ll rot so bad you can’t forgive your parents youll need more pills one doctor said to block all nightmares at the neck youll want to cast your clavicle in false praise and cement

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when i dreamt you nearly drowned me | Sophie Boyd-Fliegel

he sent the scripts and that emoji w/ a zipper for a smile from another just screenshots of gauze 1. stuff down your esophagus 2. call ambulance for side effects i was recommended apple sauce i was referred to a psychiatrist i bought extensions for my spinal cord but got all tangled in the wires im stuck i decided ive got water on the tongue so i wrote im out of office packed a stethoscope and drove until i reached the thin horizon where in a haze of eucalyptus with the metal to my diaphram unanesthetized and mirrorless i held a needle to my center and my breath so i could listen past years of rust and mold i tore my own drain open

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Untitled Miranda Li

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Artwork by Miranda Li

Untitled Miranda Li

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Untitled Miranda Li

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Artwork by Miranda Li

from the artist https://www.citizen-times.com/story/news/ local/2020/06/04/asheville-police-chief-zack-apologizesmedic-tent-destruction/3148766001/

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I Think of You Often and I Wonder if it Is Mutual.

Justin Portela

One girl. Your hair is yellow like white wine. You are religious, but I don’t yet know this. A college dorm is a normal place for 20 teenagers to gather in a dark room to watch a horror film. These movies are doltish. They are playthings for the mind. But this is ok. The movie is about a mirror. It’s horrendous. You grab my shoulder during a jump scare. Jump scares are a cheap movie tactic. Grabbing onto people during them is even cheaper. But your hand gets the blood rushing through my body. I can feel you throughout me, my gut in my legs. The three Vicodin I took an hour ago are making their presence felt. The movie drones on. You can really hear the static buzz beneath it all. I can’t decipher the language. My brain is in my belt. You hold my hand. I take it as if I’ve been waiting for it. My hands are cold and shaking, unprepared for visitors. But yours are warm like good news. Your hands and wrists are muscular. You impress me. I am nervously standing in the doorway of your body, but your hands invite me in. You are in my arms, but I am not in control. The movie ends, people disperse. They have things to do. We find a couch in a common space. Your breath is cold, which I welcome. You tell me about your father. You tell me he is a nice man. You talk as though you mean it.

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I Think of You Often... | Justin Portela

My father is not a nice man. I don’t tell you this. I tell you about the nice things in my life. I tell you about my grandmother’s cooking. You laugh. I try to be both sincere and tantalizing. I do an unremarkable job, but you do not demand more of me. You talk more about yourself. About your god. About the things people don’t understand. About the obnoxious boys at your church. Your brother was in rehab. To this, I can relate. I tell you this, but I pretend I am also talking about a sibling. We are silent. Addiction is an odd zone of emotions. It has no good vocabulary. This is silently acknowledged. We share this moment. We talk into the night. You begin to look like somebody I know well. I allow myself the guilty pleasure of imagining our future together. Perhaps we will live in the way that I have, and each night we can tend to each other before we rush to sleep. Perhaps we continue in the way that you have, where we find god and live amongst good Americans who think about their pensions. I wonder if I deserve this. Someone who believes in paradise will surely not believe in me. You tell me goodnight. The substances inside me begin to echo, expecting answers. I find myself alone in my bed. I have a roommate, so I should not masturbate. But he is sleeping, so I do anyway. I think about your blonde hair in tight knots in my fists. I think about your body rocking against mine in the darkness. I think about your pale skin. I think about you smiling as you come free. The next day you tell me we should watch another movie together. I am not naïve. I understand social contexts. I agree. Of course I do. You are beautiful. You have a heroic color in your cheeks. You remind me of a rainstorm. You arrive at my room. I’ve been preparing for hours, excited like a child boarding a rollercoaster. I cannot imagine anything else but the sight of your Neptune eyes. You look around my room, inspecting my belongings, picking up mugs and putting them down. You do this silently. I stand in the corner, awaiting your approval. I want you to be proud of the life that I am living here.

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You look at the fan in my room. Bad for the environment, you tell me. You motion me to unplug it. I quickly oblige. Of course I oblige. I want you to want me in the way that I want you. Soon we are in my bed. This bed is too small for two persons. We giggle as we adjust, learning to cooperate our bodies. We are close to each other. We are interlocked like halves of a pretzel. Each motion from one of us begets motion from the other. We are intertwined, truly. I can feel each one of your coughs and twitches. I am studying the patterns of your skin. My thumbs are depressing into your curves and your valleys. We do not speak during this. This requires focus, this thing we are doing. The movie is playing. I do not know the plot. I do not know the characters. The movie is not what is happening. Something else is unfolding here. I try to kiss you. I would love to kiss you. I want nothing more than to kiss you, and I hope that you want the same. But you stop me. You place a hand gently on my chest. I understand. I tell you I don’t mean to presume. I am not trying to intrude, I explain. No no no, you say, It’s not you. I want you, you tell me. You remind me you are religious. There are rules. You cannot kiss me. You would like to kiss me. But you cannot. I do not understand, but this makes sense to you. I do not understand, but of course, I oblige. You are standing for something, you are capable of denying yourself pleasure, which only makes me more anxious to provide you with it. Perhaps I will wait for you, and you will come to me eventually. Perhaps I will spend the rest of my life imagining you. Either way, I am content. I ask if you would like to leave. You squeeze my hand. You are happy here. This puts me at ease. I am adrift, longing for your shores, lost and confused, but I can relax because I know that you are happy. We continue in this way. You come to my bed each night. I feel the waves of your body. You move with me in rhythm. We do not kiss. We never kiss. We come close, once, while your head is on my shoulder. I have just smoked a cigarette. You hate these, but you understand.

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I Think of You Often... | Justin Portela

You are very understanding of my life as a sinner. Maybe that is because you think that the cigarettes are the extent of it. I don’t dare tell you about everything else I need to feel deserving of you. Maybe one day, once we have traversed the universes that exist between us, we can speak honestly about these things. Your head is leaned towards mine. My face buoys against yours like a ship onshore. Our lips brush faintly. If you weren’t paying attention you might think they did not touch at all. But I am paying attention. I am tracking the points where our skin intersects. This is the movie I am watching. And this, this faint brush, this is enough for me. I can feel the conflict inside of you. I do not mean to push you, but I would like you to be pushed. We talk more about your father, who works in a bank or a firm or something of that sort. You have cliché stories of camping trips and I listen as if I’d never before heard of the concept. One night you ask me about where I come from. I tell you I grew up in the woods of Minnesota and that my parents died in a car accident, neither of which are true. A week or so passes, under the clouds, I am walking to a class I haven’t been to in months. I get lost on the way to the building, but I still arrive early. You are in the room next door, looking as though you’ve gotten taller. Sitting, taking notes, checking your phone, living as if nothing is wrong. You are following the lecture, aware of what is happening around you. I can barely feel myself, for a moment it’s clear that I am not anywhere. But you are someone of constitution, and I know that I made the correct decision in loving you. You walk out with a friend I have never met. You don’t introduce. You say hello to me and leave. Your hand grazes mine though I cannot tell if it was purposeful. Instead of going to class I swallow two more Vicodin and speak to nobody for the rest of the day.

I see you that night. No clothes come off, but our shoes do. We speak like friends when you arrive. You tell me about

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Mushrooms Cathy Yang

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I Think of You Often... | Justin Portela

your day. I am eager to hear about it. You speak of friendships and ambitions and the tedium of your degree requirements. A girl who bullied you in middle school texted you today to apologize. When we talk, we sit apart from each other; you occupy one chair, I occupy the other. While this happens, we act as though the talking is all we are doing. Some nights you read to me, picking up random books from around the room. You read about math formulas and turn to random pages in a James Joyce novel my grandfather bought me. You tell me you like the way the Irish names roll off the tongue. One day I rent a book of love poems from the library. The librarian is very helpful in this effort. I tell her I am celebrating my girlfriend’s birthday. Though nothing in that sentence is true, it feels nice to say. That night I read them to you, hoping to suggest something. You tell me they are beautiful. I tell you that you are. You say thank you but nothing more. I realize that you have a strength that I could never dream of. You reveal yourself to me in important ways, in the way that lovers would. I am depressed, you tell me one day. I understand this. I tell you I feel the same. This is the truth. You tell me it came on gradually, that you were depressed long before you had a name for it. You were sleeping too often, your parents noticed, they were supportive. The guilt and the selfloathing followed. You wondered how it was possible for you to be so sad in a world so beautiful. I tell you that mine came on suddenly, on a Thursday, that I was surprised that it took as long as it did. I don’t tell you that the depression became a good excuse for the descent that I was already planning. If you could just have one good day, you tell me, then that would turn into two good days, and then you’d be back to normal. That is a word you use often — normal. What is happening to you is not normal, but soon you will recalibrate. I ask if what we are doing is helping. You tell me that you don’t know yet.

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We exist across from one another. There is nothing to be done. We are up against walls, in a way. But we are with each other. I tell you that I have a hard time relating to other people. That they take for granted the things that haunt me — out of bed, on time, three meals. You touch my hair to calm me and this is when I know I love you. I love you as you tell me about seeing your brother collapse on the floor in front of you. I love you before the pills kick in and I love you even more afterwards. I ask more about your god. You tell me that you love him, that he feels the same about you. You tell me about the meaning your life has been endowed with. How you know that something wonderful is waiting for you. How you are becoming a better person. I don’t know how to ask about what I want to know. About the rules. About why you can only love one of us. You ask me if you can borrow a jacket. I motion to the closet. You slide the glass and peer inside. You take a brown one that I know has two Dilaudid in the pocket. I stiffen in resignation, fearing that I’ve reached the end of the road. That you will slip your warm hands in and wonder aloud about what you’ve found. That I will have to explain it all. That it didn’t start because they made it feel better but because they made the pain make sense. That they made it feel like something important was going when I would sit in my bed for hours without moving. That I could tell myself that I was experimenting with the beauty of melancholy. That they gave me a reason for why it was all so awful. That one day I wondered if taking an Oxycontin through the nose would make it work faster and it did. That that was when the mixing started. That a week later I really did try to kick the stuff but that I gave myself back after 72 hours awake and a seizure in the dining hall. But you say nothing. We do a crossword puzzle. The Roman counterpart of Eros is Cupid. Neither of us know the lead actress from Sixteen Candles. I ask if you would like to watch a movie. You know what this means.

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I Think of You Often... | Justin Portela

Sex moves in stages. There are checkpoints. There are benchmarks. This is not sex, but it acts like it. At first, we are above the blankets. There is a laptop in front of us. It acts as a moderator in a debate. It prompts us, tells us our next lines. This is the first stage. We are moviegoers. Our appearance is very important to you. Somebody is watching. That somebody, to you, is god. I do not understand this, but I no longer try to. I am content with your ridges and edges. I wish to know you, but I understand if I cannot. The second stage is where we touch. This is deliberate. It is slow. It is purposeful. We advance in small bursts. Our hands will graze. This is a moment. We are aware of this moment. We pretend that we are not. That is the fun of it. But they will graze. And soon they will touch. And soon our fingers will greet each other. And they will become acquainted. And they will reveal themselves to each other, under cover of blankets and darkness. And soon our hands are doing what we cannot. They are solidified as one, as close as two things can be. We do not dare to let go of what we have formed in subtle nativity. This is a long time coming. Our hands are the product of our thankless labor. We are under the blankets now. That was the third stage. We may rest. I am with you. I am in love with you. I inquire further towards your body. Some nights you are hesitant to answer me, and I retreat to your hands, where I know I am safe. But some nights I am welcomed to the small of your back, and other nights I am welcomed to your stomach. And so often I can interlock my legs with yours like shoelaces. On special nights I am allowed to put my head into your neck like we are puzzle pieces. I always savor this moment. This means something that everything else did not. This will be the moment I remember. I will remember my cheek against your collar bone. I will remember the small pimple under the left side of your chin. I will dream of kissing your neck

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and feeling your warm legs shudder. Later, after you have left, I will hold myself with this moment in my mind, the drugs will take over, and I will sleep the sleep of the dead. My friends tell me I am wasting my time. Of course they say that. That is the masculine thing to say. They do not understand the nuances that I do. But they are right. They know that I am not what I would like to be. They know that I can admire the power in your resolve but that I cannot replicate it. I cannot help but imagine going missing inside of you. When I hold your waist in my hands, I am forced to think of your thighs caressing my head, of you telling me my own name in pants and laborious breaths. These thoughts invade the love I have for you. I would be at peace if I didn’t think this way. I would be comfortable if I could accept you as you are. But of course I will demand more. And I will try to kiss you again, soon enough. And again, you will say no. This is important to you, you will tell me. I will reassure you that I know this. That I am sorry. That I am trying. You will tell me that you forgive me. But soon you will be elsewhere, and I will not know where. And soon I will be doing with them what I could not do with you. But I think of you often, and I wonder if it is mutual.

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A Summer Love Story

Jiyoung Jeong Five weeks after we met two weeks after we’d begun living together, in heaving heat, he walked me to the train station. We saw the Acropolis along the way, the ruin cliffed in high sky. He carried my backpack, my five weeks humped behind his shoulders. At a crossroad he peeled his hand from mine and gave me a paper bag — What is this, I’d asked, and he said, as if he would every day for many years, for when you get hungry. Honey sandwich and apple. We passed narrow train tracks, where trains sometimes came, ducked station turnstiles that have not worked in months. We sat in silence and when my train came, air splattered against me like paint. We turned to each other, he pressed my head into his wet chest, my heart between his stomach and his hand. I think I’ve said all I want to say, he said and

into his chest I told him, he who had said he did not love me, I love you

through the window I saw him, standing, the train moved, I went back to not knowing him, what we grew emptying,

mile by mile.

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sauna (Excerpt from photo series “Self exploration through weight cut”) Gabe Dinette 66 66


sauna | Gabe Dinette

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This One Ends with a Paperweight

Elizabeth Grant A goldfinch caught in the light sits on the faucet in my kitchen, displaced: there are splinters in the yard where his birdhouse used to be. A door behind me opens. My son in the hallway holds a paperweight. His face turns fiendish, his arm cocks — The bird opens like a music box, revealing the shades of his insides.

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Souvenirs

Cat Harbour

The silence in the 4x4 was tangible. “Holy shit,” I muttered, forgetting the presence of my Mamaw two seats over — the kind who “doesn’t do spice,” capturing the life of the savannah with her first generation iPad as if she were Paul Nicklen, eyes squinting behind thick black frames to protect them from the slightest breeze — but no one seemed to be listening to me, except for a small chuckle escaping our guide’s lips, each word delivered with a thick Afrikaans accent: “Isn’t nature beautiful?” The rest of them just sat there, as did the birds, onlookers from a safe distance. We watched the cheetah cubs toy with their live food. As if in a game of Marco Polo, each of their movements was received by a bleat, weakening with every response, from the poor baby impala that must have strayed too far from its creche. At first it ran, or at least it attempted to, but its long sinewy legs, awkward and wobbly and fueled only by what I could tell was its mother’s milk, were the perfect chewing toys, and within an instant, a loud crack sealed the young one’s fate. The wide brim of our guide’s hat cast a shadow over his pale skin, causing his white teeth to glisten and his eyes to sparkle with fascination and wonderment. All was quiet. He had turned down his radio, an action that seemed habitual, his fingers moving by muscle memory, but the meaning of which I couldn’t discern: was it a nod of respect to the gruesome death of the impala, or the elimination of background noise causing each helpless cry and the destruction of flesh to echo throughout the bright open plains? At that moment I was engulfed by the silence. Sometimes, the emotion that fills empty spaces rings louder in

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one’s ears than does any decibel of sound, and sometimes this deafening silence can transport you through time. I thought of Grandmommy. She was given two funerals. She was loved enough to fill two separate rooms full of stiff wooden pews on the first, and on the second, loved enough that the bitter December cold attracted a crowd, ignorant of their frozen tear ducts as their chattering teeth sobbed through the heatless church. As for Mamaw, she is also the kind that would receive two funerals. The matriarch that stands in the middle of each awkward family photo, with dozens of children pullulating from her lineage. We watched as the cubs clumsily sank their juvenile teeth into the backside of the impala, and only with their mother’s help could they dislocate the rear quarter from the cordage connecting it to the young one’s frail bones. The impala no longer cried, only producing deep lumbering breaths; its head rested in the tall grass, with eyes wide. Its body was mutilated, not preserved, its funeral procession waiting to drive away without it and its time on Earth traded for currency and our viewing pleasure. I remember hearing my sister’s camera shutter click. We sobbed as we watched the light go out. We mourned on the ride back to the villas. We were quiet over dinner. We had other worries by morning. We complained about the long flight ahead. Upon returning home, we raved about the trip, and our new souvenirs: a beautiful zebra pelt, a spring buck throw, and two impala pelt pillow cases. The SD card containing the photos was lost in transit.

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Untitled Ryder Kimball

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Birthday Card

Sophie Boyd-Fliegel

Grandma’s house was on the top of a hill with no view. Driving up the crowded hillside for the first time in almost ten years, all the houses I used to think looked like easter eggs had somehow grown uniformly washed-out. We turned onto her street where some bigger lots had front yards with shrubs that sprouted chain link fencing and guarded two-car garages. The garages, I supposed, were for things and not cars because the cars were strung along the asphalt where the sidewalk should’ve been. The street sagged in the middle, and yellowing lawns baked in front of empty porches. It might’ve looked so exhausted because of the late July heat, thick as a nosebleed. But it was probably because she was gone. I hate to say it, but I wouldn’t have remembered the exact day Grandma Clara died, except it was the day after my sixteenth birthday, July 24. She’d left me a message two days before. I remember I’d gotten home from driver’s ed, checked to make sure my mother was still at work so I could make some Top Ramen, and played the voicemails. Grandma Clara always called on my birthday, or whenever she remembered, and she’d always repeat herself, saying I had to get out to see her out where it was “California calm.” In the voicemail she only said she’d try again, and there was a card that should make the mail before Sunday. I used to get dropped off at Grandma’s on weekends when we lived in the valley and mom had to work. But since we moved to Michigan for mom’s old boyfriend’s Amtrak job we’d never been back. I used to tell Grandma not to take it personal, we never went anywhere. The truth was, I stopped asking to visit when I hit high school because it was always the same answer: “If she wants to see you,” my mother would say, “she knows where to find you.” She hadn’t called on my birthday or the day after. I was in the family room watching Antiques Roadshow when I heard mom put the

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Birthday Card | Sophie Boyd-Fliegel

landline on speaker and continue washing dishes. Maybe her hands were wet, or maybe she figured I wasn’t around because I heard the police still on speaker say they’d taken her mother’s body from the bathtub where it had been for 60 hours. “Autopsy pending,” I heard a man say, “Sure,” mother cut him off before she hung up, followed by, “that’s all right.” What else should she say, I guess, if she didn’t want to know. Still made me mad. We flew out the next week because estate services said everything had to be gone by the end of the month. I wasn’t going to go, but was told it was my last chance to grab anything before it got sold or dumped. “We’ll get some stuff we can remember her by and some stuff we actually want,” mom said in our kitchen as she packed her suitcase with empty bags. She didn’t say much on the flight there except to tell me I didn’t need the Biscoffs. I only spoke to offer to split the earbuds so we could watch Wedding Crashers for the second time that summer. She said yes but didn’t laugh until the credits when I asked if I could drive the rental. We didn’t stop for lunch, just drove straight there. I was starving, but the combination of the air conditioning and the second hour of Rush Limbaugh made me nauseous. The moment the car stopped moving I turned everything off. My mother said nothing, just pointed to some knocked-over squirrel feeders. “What?” I said. “So nice,” she said, “to know she cared about some living things.” “Don’t worry, they’ll die too,” I said, wondering if Grandma had actually managed to take the dependent rodents with her. She would’ve loved that, hippie hoarder that she was. We idled in silence while my mother corrected her drawn-on eyebrows, nearly permanent now that she had the habit of casually ripping out her brow hairs with her fingers. I was losing my patience and more nervous than I thought I’d be. I swallowed snot and jiggled the child-locked door. “Devin,” mom said with her eyes still on the mirror, “don’t open the door.” “Thought I was here to help,” I said. “No, the house door,” she said. “The house will smell like her.” “I know.” “I mean like dead her,” she said, now she looked straight at me. “I said I know.” I found the lock, forced the handle, and blew

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my nose onto the wavy hot concrete. Mom got out halfway and drew one of her two-part breaths, exhaling forever. She looked so much older. Made me more annoyed. I thought about how slowly she’d moved in LAX, tripping over herself on the escalators, and how I’d actually felt sorry for her then. I watched her find the hide-a-key, the rock hadn’t changed, and click it into the padlocked garage, then shove up with what looked like the last of her. Inside, hundreds of cardboard boxes lined the walls, all different sizes, five, maybe six deep in places, stacked to touch the ceiling. We hesitated together on the threshold of the garage, which was surprisingly cool and deep. My decade-old memories of my grandmother, always busy preparing lunches, pulling weeds, or ordering toys I’d wanted off paid programming ads, were beginning to fade. Mom’s paranoia was replacing them, about Grandma’s drinking, her run-away debt, bad teeth, fat dog. From what little mom had said about growing up with an alcohol and credit-addicted single parent, I’d guessed there would be a lot of stuff. I was expecting it, just the sheer amount. But then I realized I probably would never see it all. I thought about crying. Maybe, if it had been a dump, we could’ve called a scrap truck. Except what we had was a library, a temperature-controlled collection of everything Grandma might’ve breathed on since, like, the forties. She never really touched it either, by the look of the boxes’ sharp corners, how they hadn’t softened from age or being moved around. Each box had a Sharpie name tag on one side with her strange all-caps writing. My mother had already turned back to light a cigarette. I started reading the tags as fast as I could. Hello, my name is: PANTS. FORMAL. ’71-’82. Hello, my name is: XMAS COUPONS (ALL). Hello, my name is: DRAWER ORGANIZERS. Hello, my name is: BUTTONS. (SINCE ’00). Hello, my name is: MELINDA — DOLLS (FOR DEVIN). It would take months, maybe a year, to go through it all. But I could figure something out. I could block off the street, get a crane to arrange the boxes on a mile-long blanket where I could splay everything out, look at everything one at a time, then all at once. Sure, an inconvenience to the neighbors, but I could turn it into a museum, free of charge except for a suggested donation for my troubles, call

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Birthday Card | Sophie Boyd-Fliegel

it “Clara’s World.” Or I could make it a theme park with a Maze of Memories, games to win rodeo paraphernalia, rides like Tupperware Tumbler. I’d have info plaques with her favorite salad dressing flavors and get the catalogs she loved to sponsor the merchandise. There would be a big book at the end that everyone had to go out of where they would write down things they loved about her, even if they didn’t know her and were just there for the experience. Or I could win Antiques Roadshow. “God, be near,” I heard mom say as she pulled out her notebook. “Who gets the house?” I asked. “The bank,” she said, continuing to write. “Bank accounts?” “Not your business,” she said, “even if there was anything.” I waited. “Too bad,” I said, the closest I’d come to a condolence. I walked back into the heat of the driveway and scanned the street for neighbors, mailmen, dogs, anyone that she might’ve known by name or who might’ve known hers. My mother’s bleached, perm-curled hair had fallen over her made-up eyes, still on her notebook. I couldn’t believe it, she could write nonstop, but she refused to talk to me. I grabbed the key off the car hood and slipped it in my giant sweatshirt pocket. “I’ll check the mail,” I said. No response. I turned the corner, took the shallow steps to the back door under the fading scalloped awning, slipped in the key, and turned the lock. I took a breath and considered if I should hold it while I tried to find the card, just in case of rotten food or, I don’t know, whatever mom was worried about. But I’d only taken one step and looked down before I saw it on a table, next to a fake hydrangea bouquet and an ashtray. On top of a plain envelope was a pink Hallmark card with owls who had rhinestones for eyes. “To my beautiful granddaughter,” the front read. I opened it immediately. “DEAR DEVIN,” was in the top left corner, printed small as if for a long message, but there was nothing below.

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to grow old

Aditi Limaye

Life is a short thing, the flies that buzz around my room will stop their droning gaggle in a day a day or two, anyway. The large gourd-shaped hulk who bellows beneath the depths has over 200 years, that lucky thing and when my son tugs at my pant leg, and asks me why my hair starts to look like the feeling of a key ring, silver and weighed down by things, I read him a book about whales and hope that he will not ask how many whale lives I have left but how many fly lives I have. Life is a long thing, when starfish lose limbs, it’s usually just because they’re a little warm, it’s their small discarded sweater but when I get a little warm at night, my body shoved by invisible currents, I sit in the cavity of the couch eyes falling like stars from

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to grow old | Aditi Limaye

when I used to stay up all night and it was an act of joy, instead of a lonely, slow-moving river that just pushes me towards when that orange strobe rises above the water line, when my eyes clench from its brilliance and the bones in my body have not fallen off like the starfish, they have never felt so weighted. Life is a short thing, because the macaroni penguins, they mate for life, and my son and I were watching discovery channel discuss Antarctica, a place that feels like running out of time, at the end of the world, something like me, and he turned to me and said that he wished I were a penguin so I didn’t have to be alone. I said I’m not alone, I have you. And he smiled the same smile from when he visited his first zoo and said “I have you too” and the narrator talked on.

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Untitled Ryder Kimball

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Self Portrait 3.10.2020 Angela Yang

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Indianapolis

Justin Portela I want to live with you in Indianapolis I’d like to work normal hours and shop for groceries and maybe go bowling And maybe we would go on a hike sometime or maybe we wouldn’t And maybe we’d have sex but we don’t have to And we can have friends but we don’t need them And we can talk about big things or we can talk about small things Like the weather or who is running for mayor or that the Walmart just moved our favorite yogurt to a different aisle And we could read mystery books and watch Wheel of Fortune And it would be nice but it doesn’t need to be So long as I get to be with you in Indianapolis

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Oregon Muslim

Nur Shelton One day in this life, insha’Allah, I want to leave the train in Marrakech or Istanbul and listen to the adhan as it soars from morning minarets. I want to sleep with the city in the day when the shops are shut on Ramadan time and wake with her when the night begins to shake hands and sing – to pray for peace and give thanks for three sips of water and a date. I want to kneel shoulder to shoulder with sibling strangers and put my forehead to the masjid floor, grateful for a chance to be better and a path to walk on my journey home. I will give salaams to the people in the street, to the pilgrims and porch cats sitting below windowsill flowers. Until then, alhamdulillah, I will be here at the other end of this world with my hands in the rain-blessed soil of this garden mosque, content to praise Allah by watching the snow peas spiral towards the top of the fence post, or heaven.

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Dear Gypsum, this is a love letter

Brennecke Gale because tonight it rained for the first time in a month. Just for a few minutes, it never stays long, but afterwards the brand new baby leaves on our front yard aspens glittered like polished emeralds pulled from a late summer afternoon. The birds got louder, maybe to sing of rain-rebirth or perhaps the new crop of worms, or maybe the world just stopped for a second to listen. In Gypsum, rain is a gift. The Ute people call the town the hole in the sky because bad weather always seems to skirt right around it. I think Gypsum got missed by other things, too, the future drove right past on I-70 without looking to the right. It’s easy, I know, but if you glance out the passenger window and the sun is just right you’ll see green, emerald green, aspen green, green, green, green, all the way up the dirt road valley to the top of Red Hill. Gypsum is painted into colors and the world whips by at 60 miles an hour. Up in the hills above the highway there are the gypsum mines. I’m shit at geology but I could pick some gypsum out of a hat blindfolded if I had to, soft, flaky,

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Dear Gypsum, this is a love letter | Brennecke Gale

barely even a rock. The breakfast table in my old house had a telescope view of the mine roads and I’d watch the trucks collect dust over my soggy oatmeal. In third grade we went to the factory for a field trip. We walked there from the school. They gave us a piece of drywall and promised that their polluting smokestacks were only steam, like cloud memories of the mines. Gypsum is not a water town, but a creek has snuck its way into the wrinkles of our lives. Softly, like a gentle reminder that we are not all rock. It feels like an afterthought compared to the respect commanded by the Colorado just a few miles away, but in the spring rainbow trout spawn and melted snow rushes over river rocks smoothed by seasons and time and the sunset’s reflection dances through the neighborhood. In Gypsum, all roads lead to dirt. Fifteen minutes out and you’ll forget about the mines and the cookie-cutter houses painted puke green and the air will tug on your lungs like wildflowers on the wind and the scent of sage burns in your memory and all you can see is rock and dirt and life and death and somewhere, a car is passing the exit and a fish is stuck in the stream and the birds are singing and wondering if it will rain again.

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Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Contributing Artists & Writers

Sophie Boyd-Fliegel (Poetry & Prose) is a senior from Seattle, studying English and Human Biology. She likes to write and satisfice. Peter Caroline (Poetry & Prose) was born and raised in North Caroline, and the experiences and people from back home inspire much of his writing. He shares a lot of his work on his show at Stanford’s radio station, and can be found there listening in to music or writing in one of the studios. Gabe Dinette (Art) is a junior studying product design. He is from Colorado and is a wrestler at Stanford. Gabe enjoys art, creating, and using his talents for expression through visuals. Jessica Femenias (Poetry) is a sophomore studying philosophy and history. Her heroes are writers, so she also sometimes writes. Lilith Frakes (Art) is a senior majoring in Anthropology and Comparative Literature, studying primate behavior, anthropogeny, ritual, decolonization, and psychoanalysis. Brennecke Gale (Poetry) is a current junior studying Human Biology and Creative Writing. She’s from a small rural town in the Colorado Rockies and can’t seem to stop writing and thinking about where she’s from, why it matters, and what it means to carry different people and places with you. Roodolphe Gouin (Art) is a photographer and filmmaker from Central Florida. Elizabeth Grant (Poetry) is a junior studying English with a Creative Writing concentration in poetry. 84


Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Cat Harbour (Prose) is a frosh originating from New Jersey. She has always had an interest in expressing herself through writing but had trouble exploring it until her time in a THINK course during her first quarter. She plans to continue to develop her interest in using short stories to comment on social issues. Jiyoung Jeong (Poetry) is a senior majoring in History. Born in Seoul, Korea, she currently lives in the Boston area. Her favorite poet is Sharon Olds. Nadia Jo (Prose) is a sophomore majoring in Political Science and minoring in Creative Writing. She has also written for The Stanford Daily and The Interlochen Review. Read her movie reviews at https:// letterboxd.com/nadiajo/. Ryder Kimball (Art) is a photographer, storyteller, and digital designer from New York City. He is currently completing his graduate degree in Environmental Communication. His photos in this issue were all taken in the past few months and were shot on 35mm film. Via Lamberti (Poetry) is a sophomore studying History. In her free time, she reads contemporary weird fiction and stares at walls. Miranda Li (Art) is two quarters deep into a yearlong purgatory between her second and third years of Stanford. She is studying Computer Science, so most of the time her hands are either asleep or typing, but when they are not she asks them to please draw things and sometimes they comply. Aditi Limaye (Poetry) is a goofball who is always looking for new ways to funnel that goofiness. She happens to, unfortunately, be a STEM major, but really enjoys writing to express the things that sometimes get lost in the nitty, gritty, detail-oriented mess that is life. Justin Portela (Poetry & Prose) is an undergrad from New Jersey. He is desperate for your approval. 85


Leland Quarterly | Winter 2021

Danny Ritz (Poetry), ‘23, is a sophomore majoring in English and minoring in Music and TAPS. He enjoys writing, performing, making music, cooking, the sport of basketball, and watching The Sopranos with his parents. Nur Shelton (Poetry) is an English major stuck somewhere between junior and senior year. Time at home has gradually turned into a gap year, and when Nur is not working at a tea house in Ashland, Oregon, he’s playing the same three songs on guitar and taking long walks in the woods. Clara Spars (Prose & Art) is a senior majoring in English with a focus in Creative Writing. She is also a an artist and the owner of a small business called KITA. Angeline Truong (Poetry) is a senior majoring in Human Biology. She is interested in the intersection of storytelling and refugee health. Melina Walling (Art) is a coterm pursuing her M.A. in Earth Systems with a focus on multimedia environmental journalism. She earned her B.A. in English with an interdisciplinary concentration in photography. She enjoys hiking, yoga, swimming, loose leaf tea, writing letters, and anything involving animals. Angela Yang (Art) is a junior still trying to figure out her place in the world while studying Psychology and Asian American studies. She writes fiction in her free time, as well as the occasional cathartic poem. 3.10.2020 is a self portrait of her driving home from campus when the pandemic began. Cathy Yang (Art) is a super-senior studying Art Practice and coterming in CS. She’s interested in creating compelling images in both traditional and digital media. When she’s not doodling, she’s probably petting cats.

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Cover Art by ClaraQuarterly Spars | Winter 2021 Leland

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