Parched

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

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

I took the last good glass from the cupboard. Not plastic, not a mug. A real glass, thin and clear. I held it under the tap and waited ten minutes for a single inch of murky water to collect at the bottom. I lifted it to my lips. I did not drink. I went to the sink

But the crack had friends. By August, my feet were a cartographer’s nightmare—a delta of broken skin, each line a tributary feeding into the great, dry mouth of thirst. I drank. God, how I drank. Glasses of tepid water by the bed. Bottles gulped in the car, the plastic crumpling like a second lung. Pitchers of lemonade so tart they made my jaw ache. It all went down, cool and brief, and rose up again as vapor the moment I stepped outside. Nothing more