The Hunger, Once Named

It was a world of straight lines and sharp corners, a world where the color gray was not just a shade but a philosophy. We understood the rules, my Beau and I. They were not written in any book we owned, but they were etched into the very pavement we walked on, in the stiff set of strangers’ shoulders, in the cold, clear glass of every window we passed. Our love was a thing of locked doors and drawn blinds, a whispered conversation in the dark. It was a secret library, and we were its only patrons.

We had our own language, of course. A brush of a shoulder in a crowd that lingered a second too long. A glance across a room that carried the warmth of a full embrace. The use of the word “friend” with a certain weight, a certain ache, that made it the most beautiful and most painful word in the dictionary. We were architects of the invisible, building a fortress no one else could see.

But even architects grow weary.

It was an ordinary Tuesday, on a street washed in the pale, anemic light of a winter afternoon. We were walking home, the space between us a carefully measured covenant. I was telling him something—some small, foolish story about a man at the office—and he was laughing. Not the polite, public laugh he used with others, but his real laugh, the one that started deep in his chest and made the corners of his eyes crinkle. It was a sound that always undid me, that made the fortress walls feel less like protection and more like a prison.

In that moment of unguarded joy, my hand, swinging lightly at my side, found his. His fingers, startled and warm, laced with mine.

It was not a dramatic gesture. There was no clasping, no declaration. It was simply a fit. A perfect, quiet fit, like a key turning in a lock it was made for. For three, perhaps four, steps, we walked as men do not walk in our world.

The universe did not shatter. The sky did not fall. But the grayness of the street seemed to sharpen, every brick and pane of glass thrown into a sudden, cruel focus. The warmth of his skin against mine was an electric shock, a brand. We were speaking a dangerous, beautiful grammar in a single, silent sentence.

Then, like a reflex, like pulling a hand from a hot stove, we let go.

The space between us was no longer a covenant, but a chasm. The cold air rushed in to fill the void his hand had left, and it felt colder than before. We did not look at each other. We couldn’t. Our faces were masks again, our bodies once more obeying the unwritten laws. We walked on, a little faster now, the ghost of that touch screaming between us in the silence.

Nothing happened. No one shouted. No alarm was raised. Yet, everything had changed. We had, for a handful of heartbeats, stepped outside the lines. We had been real in a world that demanded a forgery.

That night, behind our locked door, with the blinds securely drawn, he didn’t speak. He just took my hand again, holding it between both of his, studying it as if he could still see the imprint of the sunlight, the memory of the open air, on my skin.

We had not been caught. But we had been seen by the only thing that mattered—the truth. And we both knew, in that quiet room, that a hunger had been named. And a hunger, once named, is a ghost that never quite leaves you.

*****

And, you know I couldn’t possibly neglect the obligatory shameless self-promotion. New Yesterdays is available through the following links: Books-A-MillionBarnes & Noble, and Amazon as well as your favorite bookshops. The Audiobook is available from Libro.fm, as well as Amazon.

Version 1.0.0
Unknown's avatar

About Ol' Big Jim

Jim L Wright has been a storekeeper, an embalmer, a hospital orderly, and a pathology medical coder, and through it all, a teller of tall tales. Many of his stories, like his first book, New Yesterdays, are set in his hometown of Piedmont, Alabama. For seven years he lived in the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world, Amman, Jordan where he spent his time trying to visit every one of the thousands of Ammani coffee shops and scribbling in his ever-present notebook. These days he and his husband, Zeek, live in a cozy little house in Leeds, Alabama. He’s still scribbling in his notebooks when he isn’t gardening or refinishing a lovely bit of furniture. His book, New Yesterdays, can be found at Amazon US, Amazon UK, Smashwords, and Barnes and Noble.
This entry was posted in Alabama, Amazon, Audiobook, author, Barnes & Noble, Birmingham, blogging, Books, Books-A-Million, Bookshops, Cherokee, fantasy, Fiction, Historical, history, Indigenous mythology, Jeremy Lunnen, Jim L Wright, libro.fm, Memories, Mythology, Native Americans, New Yesterdays, Principal People, Random Musings, Time Travel, Wright Tales, Writing and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to The Hunger, Once Named

  1. Fascinating story, Jim.

    Liked by 1 person

What did you think of this tall tale? Let me know in the comments section; I'd love to hear from you!