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Here in the land of churches and gas stations, we move sparingly and slow in the simmering heat.
Peach fuzz rises with the sun. Days, over-exposed and glittering, melt into the same twenty four hours of recycled white noise. Asphalt softens like canal bank mud around concrete malls.
Outside, roses cremate themselves colorless; blackbirds haven't the energy to flap or complain.
A slow freight screams, drags itself toward the cool Pacific, steel and grease churning along burning rails.
I sweat, leaning into the open vents of a straining swamp cooler, pregnant, nineteen and newly married, breathless in some dark corner, wondering how the hell we ever made it this far.
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