“What a sunset,” I coughed. 
I do not know why I remember this,
but I recollect my deplorable health. Nulling stress, 
little sleep, sparse food, and too much nicotine were at
fault. By some means, I found myself 
lounging on a pleather sofa perched on a concrete balcony.
Boone’s Farm helped little in this 
scenario. I recall the flavor: Snow Creek Berry. What the
fuck is a snow creek berry, anyway? 
            “Right?” whispered a guy I didn’t
know. Dark cyan sky lit his sunk eyes, defined jaw, 
uncombed mop. Thunder broke through the steel clouds. He
smiled. “Sounds like storm 
season.” 
 I recognized his voice, but cigarettes and
cheap wine kept me puzzled. I strained from 
asking more questions than necessary. The night was too
beautiful to eat at with queries. A light 
breeze kissed my cheeks flushed from the wine and I breathed
in mountain air. 
 “Petrichor,” I spat. 
 “D’fuck?” 
 I laughed. “Petrichor. It smells like
petrichor.” 
            “Is that some of your literature
scholar bullshit?”
            I snorted. It seemed he knew me. I
hacked and spat over the edge, threw my legs up 
onto the railing — sank further into the tan pleather. It
had to have been from the ‘80s. “Yeah,” 
I admitted. “It’s the scent of rain on dry earth. Grass and
the like. Romantic shit.” 
 “A’ight. I dig.” 
 I heard him fight a Zippo. He won, for an
orange flare opened my nose to the smell of 
cannabis burning in glass. The stranger coughed. I reached
out for the lighter, tipped a cigarette 
into my mouth and sucked until I burned. Swing low, sweet
chariot, I thought. Then, I knew the 
taste of cancer well. 
 Rain plashed. Gentle drops crashing against
the veranda. The guy inhaled. 
            “Petrichor?” he asked. 
 “Yep.” I sucked until my cigarette seared my
tongue. What use was it with few meals? 
            Churning storm turned a pallid dusk
sable. Streaks of ozone-rich lightning flared verdant 
against the nimbus vortex. Devil’s fire — angels at war, as
my grandmother explained weather 
phenomena. Strands of Christmas lights along the gutters
flickered; a solar timer brought them 
life. Another strand of lightning. Distant. It broke violet.
Violet and jade. A war of color in a 
black sea as rain crashed in sporadic, heavy sheets. 
 “It’s raining sideways,” the stranger cackled.
Horizontal sweeps brushed my boots. I 
huddled deeper in my sweater, flicked my dead cigarette butt
into the tempest, rubbed my 
numbing hands. Atypical cold seized April, but recurrent
showers retained. The stranger sucked 
at his bowl, rolling French inhales and putrid smoke rings.
“Fuck finals,” he spat. 
The Throne and Parliament remove
Catholics from London following Guy Fawkes’s 
Gunpowder Treason in 1605. Isolated
to the suburbs, they relied on communal efforts to
survive. As an example: Alexander
Pope’s The Rape of Lock, a heroi-comical poem, 
attempted alleviating a growing
feud when Arabella Fermor and Lord Petre’s scandal 
threatened dividing and conquering
his Catholica community. 
Bioluminescence — the production
and emission of light by living organisms. Marine 
vertebrates and invertebrates (such
as plankton), some fungi (such as foxfire), 
microorgansims, and terrestrial
invertebrates (glowworms and fireflies) are common 
producers. 
“Don’t remind me,” I hissed. I lit
another cigarette. Flaming lightning split like spider’s 
legs across the void. A brief, effulgent ball branded the
horizon. I coughed, closed my eyes, and 
thought. 
St Elmo’s Fire — weather phenomenon
where coronial discharge from objects in strong 
atmospheric electric fields forms a
luminous plasma. Named after patron saint of 
sailors. 
I drifted as thunder broke and the stranger lit his second
round.
Khristian Smith is a senior at Bethany College in Bethany, West Virginia.
 
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