Kaleidoscope 2012
Transcription
Kaleidoscope 2012
Kaleidoscope the springissue Bosphorus Chronicle: The Quarterly Robert College Newspaper A supplement of the Bosphorus Chronicle March 2012 issue. DITORIALPOLIC Kaleidoscope is the literary magazine of Robert College, published annually by RC students under the supervision of a volunteer faculty advisor from the English Department. The magazine is one of the several published under the auspices of Bosphorus Chronicle. Kaleidoscope is dedicated to recognizing original creative writing and art. Submissions of students, teachers and other members of RC all add to the colors of Kaleidoscope. All pieces of writing and art are discussed anonymously and are regarded objectively by the editors. Opinions expressed are those of the contributors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Kaleidoscope staff, RC or the English Department. All expressions, feelings and emotions are welcome to be shared and become another color of our lives. “Writing is a socially acceptable form of schizophrenia.” E.L. Doctorow Kaleidoscopestaff Editors in Chief Ecegül Bayram Didem Kaya Editors Esin Aşan Pelin Çeliker Oğul Girgin Hazal Göksu Bengücan Günen Hande Güven Derya İnal Cemre Necefbaş Kutay Onaylı Cansu Saltık Paulina Schenk Nur Sevencan Başak Sunar Layout Editor Ecegül Bayram Faculty Advisor Maura Kelly-Kuvvet Editorial Coordinator Güler Kamer Printing Type of Publication Local, periodical Back Cover Ecegül Bayram Place of Administration İstanbul Amerikan Robert Lisesi Kuruçeşme Cad. No: 87 34345 Arnavutköy - Istanbul/TURKEY 2 Cemre Necefbaş Feyza Haskaraman Nazlı Ercan Didem Kaya Cansu Sarıkaya Özen Uğurlu Moira Lang Burcu Küçükoğlu Deniz Şahintürk Miray Palaz Marita O’Neill Kutay Onaylı Tamra Hays Özen Uğurlu Andrew LaRaia Hazal Göksu Tamra Hays Öykü Bozgeyik Ege Yumuşak Sinan Hiçdönmez Andrew LaRaia Nur Sevencan Pelin Asa Elif Erez Mert Türkcan Jake Becker Didem Kaya Mert Dilek Onur Burak Kocabaş Oğul Girgin Kutay Onaylı Elif Erez Marita O’Neill 4 5 7 8 9 11 13 14 15 16 18 19 21 24 25 28 29 31 32 35 36 37 38 39 41 42 44 45 47 48 50 51 53 For the Road A Bicycle with Four Wheels Surrender Stockholm Nights The Wig The Elevator Frontier The Forgotten Bottle The Christmas Tree The True Love Factory Migration The Gazelle’s Gaze Glory The Duty Hell Town The Lady of Flowers The Difference between Which and That with Complications of Who The Fog Mortis I The Sunday Night Abyss Bones The First Photo Surrealistic Psychic Automatism Gardening 101 Fugue Town Meeting Item #4 Open Secluded An Afternoon at the Eternal House The Dead Weight A Poem is a Monastry Old Books The Call: A Love Song Contents 2 For theroad Cemre Necefbaş Let’s fake accents and go places We’ve seen on the reruns Of our favourite 60s movies I can be Bonnie, If you’ll be my Clyde Except the whole criminal thing Let’s not pack suitcases or bags We’ll save us the trouble Of taking everything with I can do “bohemian” If you’ll bring the guitar Except the whole overdose drill Let’s hit the road to somewhere Rain will soak us down Under the ever-bright sun I can sing Sinatra If you’ll do the dance Maybe we can be a part of it, New York, New York... 4 a Bicycle with fourwheels Feyza Haskaraman Let me tell you a story. I know you are not used to hearing stories from children. You are always the ones who like to talk about your very important stories of `money`, of `business`, of `Be careful` .I only enjoy the stories which -Thanks to God- don`t taste like the sleeping pills of Mama but has the same numbing effect. I know I will not hear a story from Daddy today, so I would love to tell you my best story in hand. There is this bicycle. As far as I have seen and its name suggests the bicycles have two wheels, right? Not like Daddy’s black Mercedes. Daddy bought me bicycle about three months ago. Jenny was bragging about her pink Lady Diana. Lady Diana was the key to be friends with the boys in our street, making trips to the nearest market, buying one loaf of bread instead of two to save some money for the Hershey`s. It did not take me long to drag Daddy to the nearest bicycle store. He showed me a blue one with its flash lights at its back, with a horn under the handle bars, phosphorous ornaments on its wheels. This bicycle was `optimizing the energy-cost and maximizing the performance` as the salesman told father, not even glancing at me, the real owner-to-be. The word that dominated the prattle was `Bianchi`. A light flashed as soon as I remembered the day when I had bladder and went to the nearest toilette which was boy`s and stayed in one of the cabins until the boys came after me left the toilette. They were talking about their `Bianchi`s. I later learned from my father`s conversation that the boys did not even know how to pronounce name of this Italian brand. The hands were shaken before I had time to protest its being a blue, bulky monster veiled under its elegant name. I feared it but Daddie told me that he was trying to buy the best bicycle for me. He made the disapproving gesture that I knew from the day when the cat that I found in the street and hiding at home had given birth and left my bedroom a mess with six kittens in a puddle of blood. This was my first experience of birth. It was miraculous! Anyway back to the bicycle story. You would think that I cried and vexed him, and finally made him buy the pink one like Lady Diana right? Not really. What really happened is that we left the store with the ‘Monster’, placed it meticulously at the back seat of the Black Mercedes. I felt myself like a grownup because I had made a 5 decision which showed that the colors, images and dreams were less important to me than the practicality. We took Monster to home and showed it to Mama. I took a long time to explain her advantages of the Monster to delay the upcoming step I needed to take. “You should learn how to ride it then.” mother said. The most dreaded sentence... Daddy told me that he was going to hold the saddle for the first ride. I was quivering because I knew that he would at some point let me ride by myself. He bent over me holding the saddle and the handle bars at the same time. As I held the handle bar with one hand, with my other hand I clasped his shirt. I was trying desperately not to show my anxiety. I knew he would never let me fall down, yet what if he did? Feeling his presence made my feet on the pedals start to turn. Once I started, I saw that it was nothing dangerous but fun to ride with Daddie. I pedaled faster and faster. Daddy was left breathless to catch up with me. We went all the way down the street. How his slightly white hairs were changing directions as I made turns! The street was ringing with my screams of joy. When we got back home he was exhausted and his shirt was wet with sweat, making the wrinkled part where I clasped a rooted print on the white cloth. I kissed Daddy and told him that Monster, Daddie and I were the perfect team! I guess this was why I could not ever learn to ride by myself. We were definitely a team. Without Daddy, Monster seemed threatening. I heard several times Jenny and the boys calling me `coward` when Daddy was not around. I did not mind them though my co-pilot did. Daddy asked me every time whether I was ready to do it. I was never and never would be. He waited about three month for me to build enough courage and confidence to rule Monster. Now, my bicycle has two little extra wheels at the sides of the back wheel. I know it does not make sense to have a `bi-cycle` with four wheels. Daddy put them recently after one of his frequent visits to doctor. It was two days before he suddenly fell asleep on his favorite chair. Then, there was ambulance in which Mama in tears left with Daddy. Our neighbors tried to take me inside the house but I escaped. I got on my bicycle with four wheels; two wheels were planted to take the place of Daddy. I rode behind the ambulance until I lost the sight of the red point in the mess of the clouds and horizon. I knew what was happening and Özen Uğurlu 6 I should admit that I was crying. Monster with four wheels did not give me any joy. We put it into the garage with the Black Mercedes of Daddy. I don’t want to see Monster again because I know Daddy will never ride with me again. Mama told me that Daddy will always watch over me in case I fell down. He would always be with me. This is probably her last story for me and she clings hopelessly to the probability of her story being true. But I do not want to hear stories any more like I don`t want to see two extra wheels trying to take place of Daddy. I am seven years old now. I feel like am big enough to tell my stories. Surrender Nazlı Ercan In the deserted ocean all alone A sticky touch covered my bare feet Losing the sunlight and the heat I tried to defeat it. The green flame hairs of it Held my neck, stopped my inhale With my shaking body going pale I pummeled the clammy creature. Yet the pressure on my breast Sucked all my energy to fight With my darkened and dizzy sight I obeyed the calling, pulling me firm. At the moment of becoming the darkness I felt the gentle lift of the ocean After the release of the persistent motion, Stopped me from losing the grip on myself. So who has surrendered? The seaweed or me? Both of us were all alone, paying the fee Of trying to get something to hold on. 7 Stockholmnights Didem Kaya Scheherazade fell in love last night after a thousand nights spent in fright and delight her time had come to an end even after a thousand and one sunsets dark still chased the light when she first walked into the room of this stranger a sacred sacrifice she thought she had made if she lost her way through her words she would loose her head so she served her tales delicately with her hennaed hands every night tale by tale she saw filaments of his heart where beneath his fury lay his woes drowned in drops of blood -one for every virgin when the sun rose this morning Scheherazade knew her tale had come to an end but she was not afraid and she was not brave but all her thoughts and emotions hid behind a greater pain what would happen in this story, to the one who remained ruins of a man who once had loved who buried his sorrows in the ink of her veins digged her grave with his hands, bare Scheherazade sat by the lake soon to turn black she cut her dark hair to be one with the night and began to wait redeeming the doomed prince with every last breath she had she sat there wondering what would happen in the end? 8 thewig Cansu Sarıkaya Penelope was looking at the reflection of her face in the mirror.She didn’t have the strength to hold the scissors. She was feeling nothing,she was empty.There was nothing left from anger or ambition.She was looking at the Latin girl in the mirror.She took her eyes off the mirror and gazed at the scissors in her hand.It didn’t seem like an enemy to her now.She was supposed to be crying her heart out,how could she smile?She didn’t know the answer but she was smiling.Maybe she understood her obligation,she was accepting it.She had to do it,she was an Espanol.If her family was hungry,she had to do everything she could to feed them.If her hair could bring money to family,she had to sacrifice it.She got rid of these thoughts and looked at her hair for the last time.It was auburn,the color of chestnut and she was picturing it in her mind Very slowly,she held the sccissors and cut a long piece of her hair.She looked at the hair in her hand and thought how simple it was.She realized that she was able to cut it in seconds.”I waited too long” she thought.She continued to cut.She was doing it carefully because the hair had to be long enough to make a wig. Five minutes later,it was all done. Penelope tried to keep calm but she was getting full of anger.She was mad at her self,at poverty.She started to cry out loud.Five minutes later,her anger was gone.She now was aware of her behaviour. She put her hair in a huge envelope and took the paper that the adress it was going to be sent was written on it.She walked to the post office with determination. She thought about the person that was going to wear the wig. Then she realized it meant nothing.Her children were not going to suffer anymore,that was important for her.She was going to get the money in two days and she was dying to get it. James woke up early that morning.It was a busy day for him.He looked at his watch,he had time for the meeting.He got dressed very quickly and went out.The weather was fine so he decided to walk.He thought a lot while he was walking.Why was he doing this job anyway?The answer was simple.He was doing this job because he had no choice. This was the only way of earning money.He dreamed about the day that he’s going to close the wig shop.He was going to work in another job and become rich. He had simple dreams,like his simple life.He was searching for meaning most of the time,it 9 was simple like that.He went the meeting place with those thoughts.He saw the huge boxes on the table,everything was ready. He gave the money and took them.He took a cab and went to his shop. When he got to his shop,he immediately started to put the wigs on to shelves.He continued to open the boxes and smell of plastic was getting heavier.”The same smell”he thought.He was abstracting the wigs one by one and organizing them in an order of color.He didn’t like his job,but he liked that part of organizing them.He was able see to all tones of brown and yellow. Once in a month he could see a very shiny red wig.But that day he saw a very strange color;the most beatiful tone of brown.He took the wig and touched it.”All the chestnuts in the world must have given this color to that piece of hair”he thought.He was very impressed.It was the most charming color of auburn.Without realizing,he held the wig up to his nose to smell it.There was nothing but the smell of plastic. He wondered about the person that gave this hair.Then he distracted himself,there was no good of thinking the owner.He continued to organize.Two customers came and went without buying anything.James started to get bored.All of sudden a woman rushed in to the shop.She was very nervous.James looked at the woman and he saw that she was a transsexual.”That’s why I hate this job”he thought,”I haven’t seen a normal human being coming here”, but he knew he had to endure it.James was observing her.She was very furious and also had a strange face.It was clear that she made an effort to look like woman.Then she realized that she’s been watched and started to behave uncomfortably.James didn’t understand anything and he was praying inside for woman to leave.At that moment a bold woman with a hat came in to shop.”Ha!Another maniac!”James thought.After a minute,the bold woman bought the wig that James smelled that morning.But there was something wrong.The bold woman was looking at the transsexual with a smiling face.James was suprised and not happy with the two weird customers.The transsexual bought a wig and left the shop.The bold woman left after her.James felt relieved and he started to wait for new customers. Samantha took her mascara and put it on her eyelashes.Then she took her lipstick.She was coloring every part of her face.She wanted to have a female sexuality in every part of her body.Most of the time she found that sexuality in her self but this time,when she looked at the mirror she saw Simon’s face.She did everyhthing to get rid of that face,that male voice.She was searching for a woman’s sexuality in her soul but the only thing she found was a man.She wanted to get rid of this torture and judging faces.Faces told her the prejudice.She couldn’t take the bus or subway.There were a lot of faces in there.That’s why she wanted end this torture,end this prejudice.She was going to be either Simon or Samantha,not both.Maybe a millon times she reminded herself,she was a man and she was supposed to act like a man.But it didn’t work. she couldn’t stop his desire to do makeup or wear dressses.She woke up from these thoughts and gazed at mirror again.Nothing was changed.She knew what she was going to do.If she wanted to be Samantha,she needed a lot more change.She took her purse and went out. She was walking on the street and faces were around her.Eyes had prejudice in them and eyebrows were not approving her. But this time she didn’t care to be judged. She got to the wig shop. She rushed in and started to look for a suitable wig.The owner of the shop was watching her with the same eyes,he had the same face.Samantha couldn’t take it anymore.She was about to cry when a bold woman wearing a hat came in to shop.Samantha turned her head,she didn’t want to look at her.She knew she was going to meet the same eyes.Then she saw a wig,it was the color auburn. It seemed like a magical color to her.Her eyes shined.She opened her mouth to want the wig but 10 the bold woman moved before her.At that moment their eyes met and the bold woman smiled at Samantha.She was suprised. She immediately looked another side but the woman was still looking at her.Samantha chose another wig to ignore her.When the woman saw that she said “Good choice,nice color.”Samantha looked at her face to thank her but she freezed. It was the most beautiful face she had ever seen.It was like an artwork.face.She thanked to woman and got out of the store.Suddenly she wanted to meet this woman who smiled at her.She had what Samantha wanted;the most beautiful face.Jealousy grew inside of her but dissapeared and she started to walk faster. “Cancer” said doctor three months ago.Juliet didn’t believe at first but then it became clear that the situation was serious.She didn’t want to know the details because she knew she was going to survive.She was sure.She was going to have her energy and ignore all the obstacles.She started chemotheraphy with that belief.At first everything was in normal routine. Her apetite was fine,her hair was not falling.But she started to notice the changes in her body as the time passed.She was able able to eat a whole pizza before but now she couldn’t finish a slice of it.Her life was dissapearing. It was after three months of chemotheraphy when she let it go.She was thirthy-five years old and why did cancer come in the middle of her life?She wanted an answer.That day she was combing her hair in front of the mirror. She touched the comb and felt a dollop of her hair.She didn’t cry at first,she continued to comb. But the more she combed,her hair was falling.Then she noticed something very painful;she didn’t have eyebrows.She made her self blind to ignore the invitation of death but now she was realizing the truth.She started to scream,cry her heart out. Then she got tired and stopped. She took her eyeliner and draw two thick lines above her eyes. These were going to be her new eyebrows.She took razor and shaved her head.She was bluffing ,death was going to think that she accepted his invitation.She gazed at mirror,now she was a “bold headed”.It was her new name. She felt peaceful and took her hat.She had a new style now. She was walked down the street.She found the found wig shop and got in.All off a sudden she saw her reflection in the mirror.She was like a ghost,a white face and white lips.She was running out of blood.She looked at the woman next to her and smiled.Juliet didn’t notice that the woman was a transsexual.”The woman must have a perfect health”she thought.At least Juliet knew that the woman didn’t have a mass growing in her brain. That woman had her blood fine. Juliet was about to choke when she saw that wig.It was a shining color,exactly what she needed. She bought the wig without hesitation.The woman bought another wig,when Juliet saw that she said something good about it.She wanted to meet that woman,tell her disease and cry on her shoulder.But the woman left.She wore her wig and left the shop.She was smiling because death was fooled with her bluff. theelevator Özen Uğurlu The woman fishes around in her pockets, the grocery bags traveling from one hand to another. She is looking for the keycard to open the automatic doors to the apartment building, reluctant to put the plastic bags on the floor; she is afraid that she does not have the energy to lift them back up. Her fishing is about to prove futile when a male arm reaches from behind her and swipes his own card. The banging music in her headphones must have concealed his presence, for it makes her jump in surprise. She acknowledges him with a slight nod. Since everything she’s been through, she does not speak to people anymore. She is here to make a brand-new start, and she will once she is ready. So she just steps into the lobby of her brand-new living quarters. The buzz of the air conditioning greets her when the doors slide open, along with a chill. The lobby is nearly entirely a dull grey; pots of ordinary green plants are lined up in front of large mirrors, with light bulbs hanging over them. Distributing the grocery bags between the two 11 hands, she ignores the stairs and walks purposefully to the elevators, blowing her new red hair out of her face. Normally, she would welcome all kinds of exercise, mostly to keep her shape than other possible reasons, but she lives on the top of the apartment and it is not humanly possible to climb twenty flights of stairs each time. She distinctly feels that the man is following her to the elevators, and fights the urge to turn around to take a look at him. Instead, she hits the elevator’s button. The redhead is so much like her, he muses as he swipes his own card. Then again, every girl he looks at reminds him of her nowadays. It must be her demeanor, he says to himself, the way he carries herself, even the way she claws through the interior of her sling bag. He wishes she would turn her head, even if for a second, so that he can see her face, and confirm that indeed this stranger before him is nothing like her. He follows her quick steps with his heavier ones. Maybe he should offer her to carry the bags. The least that can happen is him meeting a resident of the building in which he’s new. Plus seeing the woman’s face would erase hers from his eyes. For a couple of minutes, anyway. She never turns her head as her heels click towards the elevator. He wonders if she’s just moved too. Some companionship would be great after the severe depression he went through. She waits for the elevator’s inner doors to open, toes tapping, anxious to empty her hands and reach for her music player. She needs to change the song that came up on her music player. It was a soft, soothing melody, the kind that can lull you to sleep, or can be the theme song for a romantic date when coupled with some roses and candlelight. It was their song, the one that she never had the heart to erase. She shuffles inside, looking at her toes and trying not to cry. So many good memories flood her mind. The time and love they shared, and the bitter end of everything is not likely to be forgotten in such short notice. She sniffs, and looks up when she senses another presence occupying the brightly lit but cramped elevator space. Her eyes pop open, and for a moment she wonders if she’s dreaming. She is speechless, only able to blink. He almost screams, and more than certainly jumps when he finally gets to see the face of the mystery redhead reflected from the big mirror. Then she composes herself. She is steely, she can do this. She needs to know how this had happened after all her attempts of escape. So she starts with a simple “You.” He tries to grin lightly. His features are exactly as she remembers them. “Yeah?” She grits her teeth. “What are you doing here?” He does a double take. He decides to go with the charm that she had always liked. “I just moved,” he answers cheekily. She opens her mouth for a sarcastic retort, and then stops herself. She must be hallucinating, the time she spent dreaming of him must be finally catching up with her. There are only ten stories left until she gets herself out of the elevator and snaps out of it. Maybe get some medicine. Or go see her psychologist. His heart is thumping. This must 12 be fate, or why would they move to the same apartment building without knowing a thing about it? Maybe she is not angry anymore. Maybe she will take him back, give up the stubbornness and they could just be happy again. She eyes the numbers, only five stories left until she’s free, provided the hallucination won’t follow her to her apartment. Four, three, two— He loses his balance as the elevator halts to a stop—between the nineteenth and twentieth floor. He almost smiles as he pulls himself back together. This is definitely fate, now they have to wait to be rescued. She swears in frustration, and then punches the alarm button. The com comes alive, telling the two that they need to be patient and will be saved soon. It is easy for the doorman, she thinks, he is not trapped with a hallucination. Then the hallucination lightly touches her arm. “Well, it seems we are stuck here together,” he says, smiling with confidence. How can he be so sure of himself ? Is he not hurting? Is he over her already? She answers with the only phrase that she can think of now. “You are not real.” He seems shocked. “’Course I am,” he says, and then brushes his fingers up her arm. She cringes. “Fine,” she says, turning her back to him. He isn’t discouraged. “Why did you move?” he asks, to make conversation. She feels compelled to answer, for the sake of their times together. For that song. “Needed change,” she says. “Me too,” he continues. “I mean, I still can’t believe you’d leave me because of that, but I thought if I went away from our old place, accepting would be easier.” He looks at her. “I like the new hair, though.” She turns around, the compliment ignored. “You killed him. I don’t date murderers,” she simply says, trying to keep the sob out of her voice. Her wound is still too raw. “He was an animal! You broke up with me because of that animal, you know,” he says incredulously. “Don’t call him an animal! He was my best friend!” the sob is completely off her voice now, replaced with slowly creeping fury. “It’s not like it was my fault! He just went off and killed himself!” he defends himself. She narrows her eyes, her face contorting. “You were supposed to be looking after him! You were just jealous of the poor guy, weren’t you?” she yells. He cannot believe what he’s hearing. “Me? Jealous of that low-life? You must be insane! For the record, you were showing more attention to him!” “So you killed him because of it? You murderer!” She shoves him hard. He grips her wrists in a desperate attempt to stop further damage. “Murderer? I didn’t do anything! And I got you a new one!” She struggles against him. “My Gerald was blonde! The idiotic thing you got me was brown- Frontier Moira Lang We stand on the frontier, crossing, maybe, together. We listen to echoes, now insurgent shadow prayers, now rebellious voices. We speak evaporating words in a language we’ve lost, or one we never quite knew. 13 haired!” “It was a hamster, for Heaven’s sake, a hamster! You broke up with me because of a stupid little hamster; I hope you are aware of that!” he yells at her face and pushes her to the opposite wall, away from himself. Her lower lip quivers. Seeing him, the very person she was escaping from, made her heart thump loudly in her ears. He was just an arm’s length away, and maybe he was right. The dead are dead, after all. The elevator starts to move and she pulls herself back together. He. Murdered. Her. Best friend. And that is final. “Yes, I am aware of that,” she says coldly as she steps out of the elevator. Then she turns back. “But see you around,” she adds. the Forgettenbottle Burcu Küçükoğlu Drawers full with black and white photos A calendar of five years ago on the wall An Alzheimer lying on a cold bed, alone No heartbeat, no breathing at all. No one to wake her up from this endless sleep Nor to carry her to the warm soil. A forgotten bottle hidden in her old-fashioned clothes Untouched by any hand for the last ten years. I hold it to my ear and hear Her husband’s sincere voice And the deep breaths between each laughter, Struggling to survive for the next moment together. I hold it to my eyes and see His hair turned gray as the rocks close to the sea And his wrinkles gathering Around his affectionate shiny eyes Like a curious little child’s. I hold it to my lips and taste The pile of salty bitter sand, Delicious with all the memories it contains, Collected by them From the beaches around the world they went to And their dreamlike honeymoon At the age of fifty eight. So I see, I hear and I taste While she rests on the cold bed, Unaware now of the past she had. But I’ll carry her to her new bed, Which is already warmed by her beloved friend, And I’ll pour the nostalgic sand Next to her, into the soil; So she can also See, hear and taste The memories they shared. As the sand mixes with the soil, As the soil mixes with the body And as the body mixes with the sand... 14 the christmastree Deniz Şahintürk “Sure!” God, I loved these guys! Melly was avoiding my eyes. I could see her internal conflict, but I knew what she was going to do. “Yeah, right, whatever,” she finally said. “Yes!” I yelled and hugged her, making her jump. The bake sale had been the easy part of our adventure. Preparing for it - a total nightmare. This time, even Melly had to admit that being an orphan had its good sides. Most of the people who bought our cakes and cookies did it because they were touched by our sign that said “Please But Some Cookies So That We Can Sit Around A Christmas Tree This Year – St. Mary Orphans.” We were the happiest kids in the world when we entered that shop to buy our Christmas tree. As expected, our money was barely enough to buy the smallest one but for us, it was the most gorgeous one too. And that Christmas, we ate dinner around our Christmas tree with broad smiles on our face. Then, every other kid in the orphanage sang a Christmas Carol together for me, Joseph, Will and Melly. For them, it was the best prize they could get. For me, it was something else and surprisingly, Melly was the one who understood what it was. After everyone had gone to bed, I went out to the garden to watch the stars. “You did it for her, didn’t you?” I was startled by Melly’s sudden appearance, but she didn’t see it. The “her” she was talking about was Carol, the nine-year-old redheaded girl who liked reading more than anything else, who was like a sister to me and who was probably going to lose her fight with cancer before the end of the year. “They stopped the treatment and the doctor told me that she could hardly live for another year and she – she always liked these Christmas tres s-so I thought-“ I had to stop speaking to release the sob I had been keeping inside me. Melly hugged me and said “That’s OK, shh shh.” After I had calmed down, she apologized for mocking my idea at first, being a grumpy person who always complained, for never seeing that she was luckier than us because she once had a family and thanked me for being friends with her despite all these things. We went in shortly afterwards and as I was about to enter my room, she told me “You are a really good person, Luna.” When I looked back, she was already headed to her room. That night, in my dreams, I had another Christmas ceremony. This was in heaven, above the clouds with Carol, me and all the angels. 15 It was wonderful, but compared to the ceremony we had in the orphanage, it was just plain random. the true lovefactory Miray Palaz I entered through the shiny door with hesitant steps. The artificial smell of the air conditioner filled my lungs. The flawless bun behind the huge desk – I could not see the rest of her face, nor did she attempt to make eye contact with me – spoke with a mechanical voice: “Welcome to the True Love Factory. How can I help you?” I looked around to see no one else; the question was directed to me. “I... I was going to... order.” My voice rembled more than necessary. Now that she realized my anxiety, the flawless bun lifted her head and showed me her face, which was not less flawless or less emotionless than her voice or her hair. Faking a smile, she said “What would you like to order, madam? Second floor, One Night Stands; third floor, Long Lasting Marriages; fourth floor, Intense Love Stories; fifth floor, Naïve Love; sixth floor, Teenage Desires. If you wish to print your loved one’s picture on 76 different products, stop by out Gift Shop. You may also find scientifically-proven love strengthening dishes in our restaurant on the roof.” Mumbling a weak “Thank you,” I headed towards the elevator. As I pressed the heart shaped button, the door opened and the elevator cabin painted in the ugliest shade of pink came into sight. I stepped in; a man bathed in a sickening perfume followed me in. Without a doubt, he pressed on “2” with his fat fingers and turned to me. “Your first time? Obviously it is. Don’t worry, you’ll get used to it in time.” I leaned over and pressed on “5” softly. The man laughed mockingly and got off the elevator on the second florr. My short journey ended on the fifth floor. When the elevator door opened, I found myself in a green corridor. I heard soft but determined footsteps approaching to me from the far end of the building. In a few seconds, I saw her: A very thin figure with carefully combed shiny blond hair on her shoulders. She was probably in her early thirties, but had a spotless skin. Her lips were red and her pearllike teeth were showing under a pretty smile. With her pink dress and white high heels, she reminded me of my Barbie dolls. I used to love them so dearly, but also felt crumbs of jealousy inside of me, knowing that I would never grow up to be as beau- 16 tiful as them. At that moment, I fully understood what they meant by “Perfection is a flaw.” She reached and kindly shook my hand: ”Follow me please.” I followed her into a small office. She sat on her chair and I slowly got lost in an overly-comfortable armchair. Holding my bag with two hands and keeping my shoulders crookes, I showed no sign of self-confidence. The woman tried to comfort me: “Please try to relax. Many customers, especially those who choose the Fifth Oğul Girgin Floor, are hesitant at the first time.” The word ‘first time’ hurt my ears. I did not wish to visit this sick place. Not again. “First of all,” she said, “I need to ask you sume questions. We will try to learn exactly what you want. Would you like to create something new or recreate an ex-boyfriend, a loved one?” I smiled unintentionally. How could this woman know that I barely had a few ex-boyfriends and never had a loved one? I said “Somebody new,” without pausing. “Okay,” she said, filling out a form. “Let’s begin with physical featured. Somehow it is always easier for the Fifth Floor customers. What would you want him to look like?” “I don’t know. Does it really matter?” “You decide. After all, he will be the one for you.” I stopped. The idea was terrible; the idea of these people manufacturing the man I couldn ot find in a lifetime. I trembled. “I can help you, if you wish,” she said. “How would you like his eyes, or his hair? Should he be tall, or maybe thin? Tan or pale?” I thought for a while. “I don’t want anyone too handsome the look in his eyes is more important than the color.” “Unfortunately that feature is not a part of our product.” I felt that something was broken inside of me. Something was terribly wrong. “Well, okay. Brunette, I guess. Maybe slightly taller than me.” “Nice choice,” the woman said, still filling out the form. “What about his IQ?” “Smart enough to talk for hours, stupid enough to love for years.” The woman looked at me with blank eyes, and then said: “Okay, I will add the IQ of a standard model.” I wanted to scream “No! Not like that! I don’t want a standardized man. I don’t want your labels. I only want a man who can understand me, who will care about me.” I did not say anything. I could not. I knew that she would not understand. Even if she did, she could not help. “Now his sould. How would you like him to feel?” “Kind,” I said. “I want a man with a kind soul. He will never break my heart, even when his heart is broken. He will listen and understand. I want him to be like glass; transparent, translucent, fragile.” I stopped. “I want him to be like me.” The woman kindly smiled. “I see, we have your character analysis. We will manufacture a similar soul.” She looked at the form again. “Finally, would you like us to revise you? We may add you a few features that our product will love. If you have any characteristics you wish to change, we may tame you.” Her eyes watched me carefully. “We can also help you change your hairstyle or lose some weight. Remember, the better you are, the longer your relationship with the product will be.” “Do I really need all of this? I won’t change. The man you will give to me should love me very dearly with all my mistakes, with- 17 out expecting me to change. He should love me forever.” I remembered that I was in a factory. “Isn’t that part of the guarantee?” The woman looked startled. “I cannot guarantee that to you. Actually, no one can. Nobody will give you eternal love.” Silence was in the air. The woman cleaned her throat. “Okay, that’s it. We filled out the form. The product will be ready no later than half an hour. It will be delivered on the first floor. The payment will also be taken care of down there. Every product manufactured by the Naive Love Department lasts four to six months. Any argument or infidelity is a part of the guarantee. After siz months, you may visit us and renew your order. Do not forget to be nice to the product.” She shook my hand. “Nice to meet you. We wish to see you again.” I went down the elevator and sat down on a chair in the entrance. The woman with the flawless bun kept announcing department names. “Long Lasting Marriages, Number 27.” A short, pale woman ran to the door and held the hand of a fat, blank-eyes man. “Teenage Desires, Number 16.” A boy with pimples slowly walked to the door and met a tall, blank-eyed girl with a mini skirt. The woman with the mechanical voice repeated: “Thanks for choosing the True Love Factory.” Five minutes, ten minutes, fifteen minutes, I kept waiting. Many blank-eyed products were delivered to their owners, were emo- tionlessly taken away. Finally, I heard “Naive Love, Number 23.” I got to my feet, feeling nauseated. One step, two steps. I could not do it; I could not look into those eyes, believing they are his eyes, the one’s eyes. I turned towards the door and ran into my car, crying. Even miles away from the factory, blank eyes followed me. They followed me everywhere, all my life. But it is alright. I was going to bear ten thousans of blank eyes, just to find those one pair of eyes. I was sure I have never seen them before, but I had not doubt I would recognize them in a split second. Migration Marita O’Neill At first only one stork labors through the sky: a gull blown off course, we think, navigating the formidable Bosporus winds. But then suddenly above the roof is all wings-hundreds of them, plodding--clear white, black-tipped, wide as a heron’s, but like nothing I have ever seen. Not like geese or other orderly birds, their patterns, not neat and triangular. Instead they mimic people bumping into each other, like refugees, haphazard and laboring, compelled to follow that call: move forward, find home, leave and leave and leave again. As they trace the rising lines of the Turkish hillsides with their wings, I remember the Turkish verb to be —oldu--is almost identical to the verb to die: öldü. The night my father died, we told a friend in our pigeon Turkish: my father lives. Now, the birds have almost disappeared into the horizon. And the distinction between what it means to live and to die, to die and to live, seems impossible to trace, impossible to know where the dead leave and living begin, as the last few birds become cloud, become thought. 18 the Gazelle’sgaze Kutay Onaylı Your eyes are not huge they are not an emerald green are not an ocean blue are not a raincloud gray your eyes are not huge— Your gaze is not a gazelle’s gaze it does not pierce me does not cut through my heart does not spill my blood and drink it up. Instead your glance falls upon my body falls upon my soul falls upon my ideal self like a single autumn leaf its color the softest red its arms wide open -its fall so slow, so unharmful you think you might injure it with your own gaze, you think it rejects gravityand when the soft red leaf reaches the soil against a backdrop of Mount Fuji Mother Earth moans in pleasure as if touched by her true lover on just the right spot. Your gaze is not a gazelle’s gaze it is not unforgiving it appreciates it gives me the most clear shave it ties my ties it is a hand upon my shoulder a hand in my hand 19 I don’t have to look at it through a mirror I don’t have to worship it. Your gaze is warm, your gaze is good its only misdeed is that it terribly confuses me with all its merciful qualities: This is not the way I have been taught. Özen Uğurlu 20 Glory Tamra Hays Fields and farms began just beyond the haunted house, where a jail now stands. Cigarettes, lies, ouiji boards were among our petty crimes. West of the abandoned Fornoff place at the edge of town, there were five miles of neat rectangular bean and cornfields. Then you came to a petrochemical plant, obvious by its oily stink, its flare of burning gas, and it’s industrial misfit to the land. The stink was sometimes accompanied by a pinkish cloud that we called it the pink stink. We didn’t connect it with the taste of our water or the mysterious ailments that plagued some people. West of the plant was a creek, Dry Fork, some of whose water was diverted to the plant. Dry Fork disrupted the gridded pattern of square mile sections that had been imposed on the land. Here were meanders and woods that defied the order of the fields. North of the plant, farmland resumed and along Dry Fork, there were small villages, not even villages, but places where houses were closer together than usual, places with names like Chicken Bristle, Bennerville and Jimtown. The ring-necked pheasant flaunts his beauty in clean fields, a perfect target. Now the hen gleans what remains invisible to our eyes. From one of those farms came a girl who had a dream of competing in the Olympic games. In the early ‘60s before Title IX, the odds were against her; female athletes received minimal, if any, support. Where would she train? Who would fund her? How could she hope to compete against the well-funded and well-trained athletes from Russia and Eastern Europe? Fields and farms began just beyond the haunted house, where a jail now stands. Cigarettes, lies, ouiji boards were among our petty crimes. West of the abandoned Fornoff place at the edge of town, there were five miles of neat rectangular bean and cornfields. Then you came to a petrochemical plant, obvious by its oily stink, its flare of 21 burning gas, and it’s industrial misfit to the land. The stink was sometimes accompanied by a pinkish cloud that we called it the pink stink. We didn’t connect it with the taste of our water or the mysterious ailments that plagued some people. West of the plant was a creek, Dry Fork, some of whose water was diverted to the plant. Dry Fork disrupted the gridded pattern of square mile sections that had been imposed on the land. Here were meanders and woods that defied the order of the fields. North of the plant, farmland resumed and along Dry Fork, there were small villages, not even villages, but places where houses were closer together than usual, places with names like Chicken Bristle, Bennerville and Jimtown. The ring-necked pheasant flaunts his beauty in clean fields, a perfect target. Now the hen gleans what remains invisible to our eyes. From one of those farms came a girl who had a dream of competing in the Olympic games. In the early ‘60s before Title IX, the odds were against her; female athletes received minimal, if any, support. Where would she train? Who would fund her? How could she hope to compete against the well-funded and well-trained athletes from Russia and Eastern Europe? Linda Metheny began her gymnastic training, as we all had, with Peg Pettit. We worked on the balance beam in her basement in the winter and on the trampoline in her side yard during the summer, and nobody worked as hard as Linda. At first, Ms. Pettit didn’t hold much hope for the child whose first lesson was simply to walk around and around the courthouse, as if that sidewalk were her balance beam. But Linda persisted and began to compete in 1962. She found her own coach, trained in borrowed gym space, paid for her transportation to and from competitions, and by the fall of 1964, she had won a berth on the U.S. Olympic team. Before dawn on one cold morning that fall, Johnny Bozarth drove slowly through town, picked several of us up, and we headed out into the country. We were going to carry a torch for Linda who despite all the odds was going to Tokyo. The boys’ athletic teams had been invited to carry the torch as it passed through our town, but most of them didn’t want to get up that early, so it fell to the Girls Athletic Association and the few boys who were interested. Patchwork fields stretched to the north and to the south of Highway 36. Some corn stubble remained, but the bean fields were clean beneath a light frost. Lights shown from farms in the distance, and the chemical plant glowed to the west. Someone gave us instructions while we huddled together, stamping our feet and blowing warm clouds of breath onto our hands. Then we were dropped off, relay-style, along the highway, where we each stood alone in the silence waiting for the silhouette a runner bearing a torch. When the torch came to me, I was surprised to find out that it was a plastic flashlight in the shape of a torch, not the flame I expected, but I carried it to the next runner and ran with her until somewhere down the line the torch passed into hands from the next township. Afterwards, we ate breakfast together, then got ready for school, just another day of school. “We carried the Olympic torch!” we told our friends, but no one was interested in the most glorious thing we had 22 ever done. Linda placed 36th in the ‘64 Olympics, the second highest place for an American woman, and the town threw a big parade for her. After the ‘64 games, while attending the University of Illinois, she won seven gold medals in intercollegiate championships, but they were not recognized by the university, because these women’s events were not sponsored or sanctioned by the NCAA. It didn’t occur to me until later that this plastic flashlight could not have been the Olympic torch, and sure enough, after a little research, I found out that the official 1964 torch, a flame, of course, didn’t even come through the United States, much less through Douglas County, Illinois. Official torch bearers had uniforms and badges. We were a ragtag bunch of kids in sweatsuits and sneakers. Torch bearers were chosen for their distinction as athletes, as citizens. We were chosen for our willingness to run in the cold and the dark. So who sponsored this event? I don’t know, and I suppose it doesn’t matter. We ran for our friend, and we bore the torch, bringing light, however faint and spurious, to the darkness. A wildness exists, something that can’t be contained, along the river. It leaps and tumbles as if unaware of what can’t be. Özen Uğurlu 23 theduty Özen Uğurlu a couple of snowy cubes, sitting side by side wrapped within white paper knowing nothing but their white selves almost asphyxiated almost crumbling apart always tossed around but they hold on in their weenie world consisting of the other cube they hold on to each other their crumbles mixing together they wait and at the same time they dread what is to come for when the duty calls there is no choice the question lifelong partner or your job is never asked as the white paper is ripped apart and the suspense almost suffocates which one will be their fate disappearing that is certain but together or alone and the cubes fall side by side mixing together becoming one in the dark hot water as the spoon dissolves them and the only thing that is left is a loud clinging sound 24 Helltown Andrew LaRaia The bus ride home from our first loss of the season is not like the bus rides we are used to. When we win, Coach doesn’t care how we act, what we say; not even what occasionally might get tossed out the window. He tells us not a word, “Not a word! I want you bums thinking about what it was that you did and did not do to go from winners to losers.” Coach is furious. And when I say furious, I am not embellishing my words. That means exaggerate, and it’s one of my SAT words. I study them on the bus sometimes. When I know my mom will be waiting to pick me up in the school parking lot. Which is why I’m glad I have my flash cards right now; Coach said to keep out mouths shut and ruminate(SAT word) on how we screwed this game up, how we let Shitfield beat us. (Their real name is Smithfield, but we would never call them by their real name.) So, while everyone sits with their heads down, looking dejected, I secretly go over my cards. My mom won’t really care about us losing the game. She’ll just want to know that I got some studying in. She’s got this thing for seeing that I study. Also, that I go to college and get out of Helltown. That’s where we live, Helltown. It’s not really called Helltown… but it might as well be. Shitfield is a blighted (SAT word) little bump on the interstate between two other cities that aren’t any better than Helltown. Or any of the other awful towns we travel to. We just lost to Shitfield, like I said. But, we play the Shitsboro Indians next Friday, which we can win. Have to win, really…when I think of the names we give other places—people, too—I think, we ought to be more original. But, then when I look around me, at the faces of my friends, my teammates, my fellow Helltown denizens—that’s a great one, Mom!— I realize I can’t expect that much. Lots of playing on the word shit, maybe the f-word now and again. Definitely anything that sounds like a body part will work well. But, really, none of us are that creative. There’s Shitfield, like I said, Turdville, Cracker’s Town. Pretty lame. When you think of ways people show their smarts or stupidity, it’s usually in the energy they put towards something. When you can’t even bother to be creative in making fun of people you’re supposed to dislike, I guess there’s not a whole lot of hope. But, it’s not about energy. It’s about having quit and not being smart enough to know it. None of us are that smart. Well, 25 they aren’t. I’m a jerk for saying that. A real bum, I know. But it’s true. I live in a town full of idiots. People that don’t really go to school past 16; don’t go to college. They don’t leave at all, really. My mom says if it was still the ‘60s, every one of us would have been drafted and killed in Viet Nam. We’re that kind of town. I don’t really understand that, but I guess it has something to do with being, what she calls, nothing but a dead end at that termination of something that died a long time before and no one was smart enough to realize it. She works at the bread factory. The Big Bakery. My dad worked at the Eveready factory making batteries. But, he’s dead. So, I don’t talk that much about him. Too vexatious (not such a good one, but, it’s in my pile of flash cards somewhere). I mean, I could probably use a lot of other words to talk about my dad, but, sometimes, words just don’t really work like they should. Anyway, my mom is pretty adamant about making sure I hate this place as much as she does. She is making sure I don’t develop any kind of silly sentimental attachment and start thinking of this place as home, a place I wouldn’t want to leave. She’s too caught up in worrying about to see that I wouldn’t stay here, not even for a minute, once I graduate. My mom says my job right now is the SATs, followed by my grades. That’s what I have to concentrate on. Football is a luxury that I have to earn. Nothing matters more to her than me getting into college, getting a scholarship and getting out of here. Sometimes I feel like she’s pushing me right out of here, like she wants to get rid of me, but I know she’s just doing what she thinks is right for me. Still, hurts a little bit though. Even though I agree with her. I tell her she can’t come with me to college. And she’s fine with that. So long as I go. I don’t think she understood my jocular tone. I’d let her come with me if she wanted. I ask her sometimes, how she ended up here. Why she stayed here. She said, sometimes you live according to the covenant life decides on for you, sometimes you get to decide for yourself. She didn’t try too hard to make something out of the deal she got; she says I better get it together and stop settling for what life has to offer and take what I want instead. Mom’s tough. A lot tougher than me. Tougher than Coach, too. Who is now walking the aisle of the bus, toward me. I am sitting in the back row, so I’ve got time to slip the flashcards under my jersey and adopt a countenance (!) of shame and contemplation. Just like he wants. We’ve gone undefeated this year. Balls out, smash mouth, blood sweating, tear jerking football has carried us to 9 and 0. Until now. 9 and 1. To the Shitfield Suckers. Good for them, to be honest. Those sorry losers needed something to lift ‘em up. They haven’t won a game I don’t know how long…I don’t mind losing. Not that way. When it gives somebody else a little hope. A little spring. A little life. Coach comes to the end of the bus, and stands over me, looking down. My hands are empty, I feign serious contemplation. He says to me: “Jackson, you studying back here?” I say: “Yeah, coach. I was.” “You study those three blocks you completely missed?” “I did coach. Slow; not ready. Totally my fault.” He stands there, considers me for a moment. He has an intelligent look in his eye sometimes, but destroys any illusion of salience when he talks. He tries to be—sound—smart. But some things just don’t come out the way he wants them to. He says: “Yeah, well. OK. Get on it and stay on it next time. Got it?” “Yeah, coach. I’m your man.” He walks back up the aisle, looking for a fight, but everyone has their head bowed, like a bus full of altar boys in jerseys and pads. Our school bus passes silently through the chill October evening; there is a smell in the air of rain, maybe snow. It’s too early to snow, but the air has that scent, wet and heavy. There are 26 few lights on the highway, and we pass through small towns of houses with darkened windows, closed shops, blinking yellow traffic lights hanging over empty intersections. I’ve never lived anywhere else, never travelled outside of the limited range of our 12 game football schedule, so I have nothing to compare my restricted world to, save for what I’ve seen on TV. But, these empty stretches of road between islands of dead little towns, depresses me all the same. I’m not alone in that feeling. I know. It’s almost cliché for a small town kid to have dreams of something better, someplace that is alive and decidedly not the run-down reality of a dying town with no real promise of a future. My mom makes my reality clear to me each morning, complaining of her arthritic feet, cursing the flour from the factory bakery that sifts its way into nearly everything, her clothes, her hair, her ghost-tinted finger nails “God, Kiddo. Study hard today. You don’t want to end up like me.” I know this is also a laughable cliché, a formula she’s worked out in life for me to stick to, an action plan to guarantee a future. But, I don’t know what the guarantee is that it will be a good future. But, to my mother, a future is just that: good. A benefit that can be assured—no matter what the details are. As long as I am gone from this town, then no matter where I end up, I’ll be safe. I don’t feel that way: the unknown scares me, the multiple factors, the kind of equations she can’t comprehend, the factors she doesn’t know how to predict. I feel a sudden sadness, not at leaving her behind, but at the fact that she wants something so bad, but doesn’t really know what it means. Or what it will demand. I pull my flash cards back out. The word ‘flout’ is on top. ‘To reject or defy’. I was hoping for something meaningful, something prophetic. I rely on that kind of silly magic in my lowest moments. I think a lot of people do—look to the sky, or the coffee ground or the ripples in a puddle, the face on a card for some kind of happiness and meaning. And explanations and assurances. All those things mean something to a person when it suits them to be gifted some kind of kindness. ‘Flout.’ That means absolutely nothing to me. We pass through Queer-Town (the town of Quinn). Which puts us just three miles from Helltown. It is still. No one is talking. The bus glides on, as if the wheels are shrouded in blankets. About a mile out of town, it starts to rain, and the wet cloying smell comes in through the windows. The kid next to me, Charlie, shivers and puts up his window. I want him to leave it down, but he puts his head back down, the praying saint. I put the cards away again. And as we pull into town, the rain has begun to pour down. The team files off the bus, still silent. Coach gets off first and walks to his car. He is out of the parking lot while half the team is still on the bus. I expect the mood to break once he is gone, for the joking to start. But no one says a word. Everyone disappears. Waiting cars, wipers going at a frantic clip. I see my mom, in the car corner of the lot, in our grey Impala. Though I can’t see it, I know the car will be cloudy from her cigarette smoke; she won’t have cracked the window because of the rain. I run through the rain, ignoring my soundless teammates, and slide into the front seat. “God, mom—how can you breathe in her?” I ask, coughing in the cloud of smoke. She opens her window slightly, tips the cigarette out, and says: “Heard you lost.” “How did you hear, already?” “Bad news travels quick.” “How about: ‘nimbly’, ‘sprightly’ or…” I stop, raking my brain for a word. “Oh! ‘velociously’. How bout that?” “That’s my boy,” she says, and puts the car in drive. “Wanna talk about it?” “The game? Nothing to say, Mom.” 27 The Lady offlowers Hazal Göksu Here she is, Elidilonera. The Lady of Flowers. Wow. That dress does seem like it is made of flowers. It is. Really? Aren’t the flowers loosing colors or dying? They are. That is why they change her dress everyday. I see… It must be hard to stick all those flowers together. They are not sticked. Aren’t they falling apart? They do. That is why she is not allowed to move. How does she eat? She doesn’t. How does she sleep? She doesn’t. How does she talk? She doesn’t. Is she really alive? Yes she is. What does she do then? She wears a dress made of flowers. Is that all? No. She also smells nice. Nothing more? Nothing more. 28 The Difference between Whichand That with Complications ofwho Tamra Hays The poinsettias that were kept in the fireplace died. Their red sepals flamed for a few weeks, and then dropped in accordance with the nature of things that are transplanted to inhospitable climates. The others, which were here and there throughout the house, lived. No one asked why keep poinsettias in a fireplace. The daughter, who stayed in her room, barely noticed. But the child that paid attention to such things as sepals curled and dark like ash, cried. It didn’t matter if that child was boy or girl, that was the one who kept a cemetery of dead pets, planted seeds in the spring, and chatted with the neighbors. The other, the one who kept to herself, believed life to be cruel because she didn’t have the right shade of red lipstick. Seven lipsticks, which had been rejected, lay in a drawer in the hearthless kitchen. The parents, who worried about both of these children, wondered what to do. The parent who spent the most time at home was a little sick of both the selfishness of the daughter and the sweetness of the other. 29 The other parent, the one who spent most of the day away, felt helpless upon coming home to find poinsettias in the fireplace and not on windowsills, lipsticks among the pencils and rubber bands, and whiskey on the coffee table. Finally the holiday ended and things returned to normal. The family members, all of whom were relieved, went back to work or to school. The poinsettias that survived the festivities grew spindly and pale, but the lipsticks, which had been waiting for just this chance, the lipsticks found their way out of that winter-deep drawer and blossomed. Özen Uğurlu 30 thefog Öykü Bozgeyik That day was dark and rainy. The fog was around the trees’ necks and bodies; making them sodden with tiny water drops. The view was thwarted by the altogetherwhite drops, indicating an indicted air and ghastly premonition of insolence. The blurry view of nearby trees and deep white road was the reason of him coming here. With his carousel-red trousers and Ted’s-old-car’s-dark-blue coat, he was contrasting the vagueness and mysteriousness of the view. He walked in wariness towards the bench in front of the youngest and the thinnest tree. It was not difficult to recognize his anxiety as he was throwing questioning looks around and rubbing his hands nervously. Fast and deep breathing with arrowlike swift moves, rolling his eyes from time to time and shaking his collar of the coat were all suggesting the incensed-inside of the man. While he was walking towards the bench, “I’m fed up with this,” he murmured. He sat down and looked around. Because of his impatient doggedness he was here, waiting. Someone would come and they would talk. He would scold that person and let the white drops hanging in the air carry the silent anger through the deep and blurry road. The drops would vibrate with his anger, but the person would not respond back. Maybe he would say, “Do not come back,” and the particles would carry the message to notyet-chosen people and not-yetset situations. It was possible that he would regret because of not counting the harbinger characteristic of the intense particles surrounding him. He would regret because he was fooled by the frozen and stolid view. He hoped that she would come and moved his seat haughtily; but then the thought of her not coming preempted his kudos and anger. He looked at the road timorously and hoped that she would appear slowly amidst the white particles. Maybe she would come with Ted’s old car, he thought, but Ted would not be with her. She would be alone. When she walked towards him, he would stand and offer his hand, she would look at his hand first, and then look at him. She would reach his hand, but not to shake hands, to hand the toy of a carousel. He would stand and look at the red toy in bewilderment trying to understand what it means. She would look at his eyes, she would not cry, and when she opened her mouth her voice would not quaver. “Do not come back,” she would say curtly. His heart scorched, it was what 31 he was afraid of. The particles of his thought were like the drops around him, like the fog. He would look at her with blank eyes, because the fear of being alone again and the feeling of being cheated would knot in his stomach and this knot would not come up to his eyes. She would not understand what he was feeling. She would not stay long, and she would get in the car, dark blue car and drive away. The car would disappear just like it appeared, slowly. It would get fainter and the white drops would hide it eventually. He would not see the direction of the car; he would not know where she was heading. He would sit on the bench with the red carousel in his hand. He would look at his son’s toy and feel the fog. It was the espionage of the drops hanging in the air. “It is because of the fog,” he thought. The particles had carried the message to the not-yet-chosen person and not-yet-set situation. He looked at the blurry road again, waiting for the woman or the car. As he moved nervously in his seat, the drops of the fog made his dark blue coat damp, and the color got darker. He had said “Don’t come back.” Nobody came. Mortis I Ege Yumuşak Prologue -Report of Death regarding an ungrateful bodyAs he died, the body cried with anguish, “O soulless sky, O hungry earth! Let the scavengers chew away my concrete existence! Lest, spare my children and my wife, the false memories of a genial and kind man, which I failed to mold myself into. Let this amorphous remnant of a man join your nothingness and not bother them anymore.” So, I increased his agony by shoving his life to his miserable face as he ratcheted up the stages of death. I. Pallor mortis Do you recall how pale your face was, when your mother beckoned you to your father’s room, when you needed to say farewell, and solace him with a last smile, or a drop of tear –warm with your love, a soothing kiss on the forehead, or a sniveling, appropriately sentimental, a sigh of restlessness to connect to hold his reached out hand with intertwined fingers? You couldn’t, because you hadn’t eaten in two days in a futile attempt to die with him, because you were afraid to go on without him. But you failed to die then, and tormented your mother instead. Accusing her of being a burden on your sunken shoulders. That paleness 32 never disappeared after that day (the day your father died) , and your face became a black and white photograph shot in a dimly lit room with low contrast on color film. There was no loss of color in your face upon your death. II. Algor Mortis After years of torment, you left your home for college, studied economics just because you were good with numbers, and numbers sedated you. You drugged your way out of pain until you were burning aflame with drunk girls nuzzling your ears and leaving no part of your body untouched and you were blazing because it felt hot everywhere in and out and your mind was burnt, paralyzed just like now, but now, you don’t shiver although you are getting colder, your rectal temperature decreases by 1° C with every hour, and you are paralyzed by the loss of blood. Back then, your body was pumping blood rigorously and you were trying desperately to forget and degrade yourself in all that junk, by consuming money, sex, and whatever hazardous thing you could afford, to kill yourself without having to take on the blame. When it didn’t work, you succumbed to life, and cooled down, got married, and froze but even that, wouldn’t kill you. III. Rigor Mortis Thus came your ultimate effort, the ultimate contraction you could perform. The last energy you had left, got spent by the coupling of the million actin and myosins of your muscles and you became stiff. A perpetual state of contraction seized you. Don’t you regret those moments when your tongue was stiffened by exhaustion 33 and you could no longer respond to the demands of your loving wife? Those moments when you couldn’t twist it in her mouth anymore, and you felt that you were drowning in her sticky saliva, drowning in disgust of yourself, even though her love was the only love you knew after your father, but your vanity, preoccupations and memories of long lost times overwhelmed you, and you could no longer FEEL. You could no longer be unEMPTY. unFRIGID. unDEAD. What about now? How stiff are you now? IV. Livor Mortis You didn’t notice when your wife stopped taking pills in the morning, you were clueless of her protruding belly and enlarged breasts loaded with your child and its milk. And when she finally told you, praising your Oscar-quality acting skills, for all those months of pretending that you didn’t notice, you told yourself “you gave me the Oscar for the wrong reason, see how I’ll fake happy now,” and shot her an ear-to-ear smile, grabbed her by the waist, lifted her some inches up, put her back, and sighed, “god almighty, look how fat you’ve become!” and let her chase you, hitting you with a pillow, and when the night came, you could no longer hide your ingratitude, it sank with the force of gravity as you lay on your back with her palm on your chest with your baby, pushing you, prickling you where her belly touched your waist. Now the blood pools into your tissues, and the purplish pink sets your new color. You have become livid. You should be glad nobody has found you yet. V. Decomposition and Skeletonization You started as fresh flesh, but hardened and warmed and cooled and hardened some more, when you drove your car over that cliff, when it crashed the ground, 34 your body was smashed through the windshield, to the grasses, and I came by to take your clumsy life. I didn’t throw you into nothingness, because you asked for it. I did it because world is enough of a crowded place with the living, let alone stockpiling the dead. Epilogue I realized, the death of an ungraceful body was as sad as all the others to a spectator, and as merry as all the others to the countless creatures awaiting to feast on the remains. The Sunday Nightabyss Sinan Hiçdönmez Istanbul, often dubbed as, “one of the cities which never sleeps” doesn’t have many quiet places within, but there is one, ironically in the middle of all the activity of this buzzing city. Fortunately, it’s near my home and about two hundred people every day have the chance of tasting solitude within the reach of the abundance ofl ight and noise. This place is in fact a street called “Org. İzzettin Aksalur Street” braching off one of the busiest avenues of Istanbul. It’s possible to encounter children running around, trying to catch each other, some old people sitting on the benches on the sidewalk to gather some energy for the resto f their tiring walks. Pine trees border the sidewalk and the road, which provide a physical shelter for the pedestrians. Next to the road is the mili- tary area, surrounded by a never-ending row of thin blue bars with golden arrows on top, along with the signs calling out, “Entrance is forbidden!” The chirping of the miniature birds and covered women talking to each other, haslity walking home, children yelling at each other and the occasional passer-by dogs barking may give any viewer a wrong impression about this street in terms of tranquility. The real quiet is beyond the first one hundred meters of this street where only the sound of a few cars rolling by is heard and the peculiarsmelling car fumes are in reach of nostrils. This is actually where one can find true refuge from a tiring, noisy and disturbing city. Those in the quest for tranquility can find it in the buildings that have stood for more than 60 35 years without any signs of wear and metallic garbage cans which have to be filled to the brim. Even now people who are grateful to this precious quiet in Org. İzzettin Aksalur Street are going further away from the gigantic avenues with dispensable light and noise always present, in the pursuit of solitude, and unfortunately, by the way, spreading their contagious disease of sound and noise farther into the last refuge of solitude and quiet. One of those aformentioned people littering this street with noise was a five-year-old girl named Fatma who often came to see her grandparents, who were living in one of the buildings lining down the street. Naturally, Fatma always came with her parents to visit, and every one of these visits, which were always Sunday nights, guaranteed a strong wave of glamour overwhelming this young girl. The lights in her grandparents’ apartment were always turned on and the different courses of the family meal, which was always delicious, came to the table on plates and soon, the plates were wiped clean. Afterwards, Fatma climbed onto the lap of her grandpa and both of her grandparents embraced her as hard as they could. All these were such exciting moments the family always had lots of things to say to each other while they were going back home. This time it was the soup which was the subject of the post-visit talk. “Mom, wasn’t the soup delicious?” asked Fatma, and her mother answered, “Yes, sweetie, as always.” Right after this answer Fatma’s father, who believed it was his turn to speak although he was driving the car, turned back to face his daughter and made it clear he was in full agreement with his wife. Meanwhile, a beggar was about to cross the street to go to the freezing benches on the other side of the road. This poor and lonesome beggar hadn’t encountered as much luxury as the little girl in the car which was ripping the silence of the street with its noise. In fact, he never had a home. His life had been a story of misery, mixed into the wild but usually fruitless pursuit for money to survive. Now he was going to sleep on a cold bench on the sidewalk, something he had been used to all his life, but before that, he had to cross the street Bones Andrew LaRaia December makes me wish for Spring. Like it would anyone, August, for December again. January, I’m thinking Junes, But only in the evenings, when it’s just too cold. Oasis makes me think of London, Like good pop songs should, London brings to minde the Stones, The Stones get me in the mood for Bourbon, But only with ginger ale. Snow makes me think of being home, When it comes in a constant but quiet way, Returning home makes me think of poetry, And poetry makes me want to talk to strangers, 36 with legs which never seemed to have the energy to move. He dipped his right foot onto the road, started to walk across the street, but just at this moment the family car tore apart the silence with astonishing speed and the driver, with his back turned to the windscreen at that moment, talking to his daughter, never even saw the beggar on the street. A shrill scream was heard in the apartments nearby. The car had crashed into the poor beggar, who was now lying on the road, surrounded by a moat of crimson red blood as the family members crowded around him. Just then a leaf from a nearby tree, brown and crumpled, fell onto the body of the beggar. There was absolutely nothing left to do. But only about profound things. Your tombstone makes me think of my own, Though neither has been planted yet. I make myself nostalgic for things I didn’t know And the things I don’t want to know, Make me think of what I will miss when I’m in the grave. The Firstphoto Nur Sevencan Every day it is getting smaller here. I want to get out. I am telling you: I want to get out of here. Do you hear me? I am screaming and kicking and punching at the soft walls around me but nobody helps me. When I kick at Oğul Girgin the walls, I just feel the sudden warmness of your hands. I am hungry, when am I going to eat something? Are you asking me what I want to eat? I want to eat something sweet. Don’t ask me I don’t know what it is. Don’t turn around, stay silent. I am being squeezed here. What happened? Why are you crying? Did he make you sad? What did he say to you? He said you are getting too emotional? Forget about what he said, he never knows how it feels like...feels like... to be you. Bu the way, sometimes he’s more emotional than you are. While you are sleeping, he talks to me; do you want to know what he tells me? He tells me how much he loves you and how bad he feels when you’ve got spasms. He regrets for being in- 37 considerate sometimes, but he is too proud to tell it to you. He says he doesn’t know what to do when I come. He thinks he’s not ready for his new job. He says he never wants to disappoint me. I am sure he won’t. No, I am not taking his side; I’m always on your side of course. How can’t I be? You are the closest to me. Please don’t do it to me. I cry when you cry. Please don’t do it to me. You have a kidnap at least; I don’t have anything to Wash the salty teat drops off my face. You say, you want to hug me? Why don’t you let me come then? I am bored here. I want to know what it is like to be outside. I want to see you and see me and maybe see him. I don’t have a mirror here and I can hardly raise my eye lids. When I open my eyes it is too foggy here. Are you curious to see me as well? Did you say you missed me already? Oh, come on. Be patient. No, no. Stop crying. I am coming. You are going to hug me. We’re going to sleep together. I am going to look you in the eyes. I won’t be able to say anything to you because I would be so astonished by the new things surrounding me. But wait a minute, do I need to say anything to you? No, I don’t, you understand me if you look me in the eye. Do you know what I am going to mean firstly: “Forgive me; I apologize for the sufferings I caused.” I am not sure whether I would be able to say exactly like that, but you should take it as this. You will put your arms around me and push me against your chest and you are going to put a kiss on my blushing cheeks. Just imagine how happy we’ll be when we meet. ... Are you okay? What’s happening? Where does he take us? Are you there? Why don’t you talk to me? No, no where are you going? You can’t leave me there. I don’t know anybody there. I can’t do without you. I need you. You waited for me for months and where are you going now? You say, he will take care of me. He can never do as you would. You’ll be putting too much weight on his shoulders. It is too much for him. Don’t do it to him, don’t do it to me. I promise I’ll always be on your side; I’ll never leave you alone. If you are going, take me with your wherever you are heading to. I don’t want to go out without you. I apologize for my kicks and for my caprices. I promise I will be a good girl, I’ll never let you down. You’re going to be proud of me. You say you have to go? Is it the time? Will I ever be able to see you? Not here? Where, when? Somewhere, sometime… What if we can’t find each other? I am scared. Don’t go please, please. I LOVE YOU TOOOOOOOO… This is the first photo on my baby photo album. I am a newborn wrapped in white clothes, in my father’s arms and my mother is absent in this photo as she is in every other photo of ours. There are tear drops in my father’s eyes. And this the story that this photo tells me. I love you too, mom…. Surrealistic PsychicAutomatism Pelin Asa My thoughts are playing hide and seek with me They veil behind the convolutions and taunt with me and prick me with their truncheons All my body rail about this (but what can you do?) Then some words flood out of the pores of my body like a rushing sea leaving me a dried dam after the summer They are more than the blood in my body, I can’t grab any of them. If I could win the game I guess then I would know what they wanted to say and name the void they leave behind Why this so tougher now than before? I don’t know. (How can you? You are left unarmed against them.) I cannot put these wicked words in order and cannot know what my brain and heart say. I cannot even define the feelings 38 Özen Uğurlu Or give a meaning to them. I didn’t know there were so many things inside me Was it because there were so many things to write about that I couldn’t write anything? (and instead fill the squares on the page) Was it because I couldn’t understand them in the middle of this deluge that I played the god inside my head and created my own perfect humans, the perfect friends? (or because they are so truly redundant?) Now that they are out for once, Would they stay there? The words, I mean. Why they can’t take the thoughts and the feelings with them too? They sway on the blank page instead. This blabbering should finish Like how it started. Sudden. Senseless. Gardening 101 Elif Erez “Welcome to Gardening 101. Here, you will learn all the secrets of planting and maintaining a healthy, aesthetically pleasing garden. My name is Mr. Phloem, and I will be your instructor this week.1 The classroom was a dinghy, humid room in the basement of an apartment. It was around 1:00 AM, according to the digital watch on the teacher’s desk. There were about five other students, as far as I could see, but because I didn’t want to be rude, I didn’t turn and have a look around as Mr. Phloem was speaking. A long dinner table separated the students’ desks from Mr. Phloem’s. It was covered in flowerpots of various sizes and shapes, with a large soil bucket to the side. “We shall start with planting. Each of you, come up and pick a pot to work with,” said Mr. Phloem. Chairs squeaked, and the students were at the dinner table choosing the right pot for them. I counted: we were about ten, including myself, and I wondered how Mr. Phloem had even managed to gather so many people at this hour for a class on gardening in a city where trees were scarcer than weeds. “Mind if we trade pots?” asked another student-she was about for times my age, had one blind, milky eye, and was offering me a black cylindrical pot in exchange for the broad and shallow terracotta one I had random- 39 ly picked up. “Sure,” I said. “My name is Mel, by the way. Nice to meet you.” The old woman smiled, and said, “My pleasure, dear. I’m Odessa. And thank you, I wanted to grow watermelons, and it would have been impossible to do that with that black pot.” “No problem,” I replied. Now, everyone had picked up a pot, and was waiting for further instructions from Mr Phloem, who was extracting a large sac from a cupboard behind his desk. He placed the sack on the dinner table, shoving aside the remaining pots to make room, and opened the mouth of the sack to reveal thousands of little brown seeds. “These are tomato seeds. They were picked from a tomato field down to the south skirts of the city last summer, so they are fairly young. They therefore should be suitable for growing into the plants you wish.” The plants we wish? I seemed to be the only one in the classroom who had trouble comprehending what Mr. Phloem meant. Ij raised my hand. “Yes, Mel.” “Sir, what do you mean by growing the seeds into the plants we wish? Will a tomato seed not simply grow into another plant?” I asked. “Pardon me,” said Mr. Phloem, “I should have gone into more detail about this as not all of you-especially those raised in the city-may not be familiar with the growth and reproduction of plants. See, each parent plant produced seeds or pollen, that are dispersed over the land and planted into the soil, either close by the parent or far away, carried by the wind or under the boots of a passing traveler. Once planted, this young seed has the potential-depending on the type of the parent plant- to grow into a large variety of trees and flowers. The seed is independent to choose what it wants to sprout into. The genus of the parent plant only provides it with the opportunities it will have to choose from. “In this case, the choice made by the seed is not one of conscious thoughts and contemplation, but rather one brought upon by the conditions of the surrounding environment. Tomato seeds have the largest scope of options to grow into. If you, say, wish to have an avocado tree, just plant one of these seeds in a soil that will favor and demand an avocado tree, and by a high chance, your seed will choose to grow into one. Of course, the process is not entirely accurate, since the choice of the seed also retains a slight probability of random chance as well. Now, class, grab a handful of seeds, plant and water them, and think about what you would like to grow in your garden.” As I went back to my desk with a bunch of tomato seeds to sit down and plant in my black, cylindrical pot, I imagined what my garden would be like, if I had one. It would certainly have large, tall trees I could sit under, resting my legs on the fresh green grass. But I also would like to have an occasional bite as I sat in my garden. As far as I can re- call, tomatoes had quite a pleasant, satiating taste. I approached Mr. Phloem again. “Is it possible to grow tomatoes from a tomato seed?” He looked scandalized. “I doubt that any sound- minded tomatoborn seed would ever want to grow into the tomato stalk its parent plant was. First, you’ll find a way to convince it to revert to its ancestral state. I’ve never seen anyone manage that, but let me not discourage you.” I picked up the black cylindrical pot and thought, “Now, how do I will an artichoke to turn into a tomato?” Well, it was just 1:00AM in a dinghy classroom, in a decaying city, and I had a long few hours ahead of me. Oğul Girgin 40 thefugue Mert Türkcan Shallow the rising night remains, perfecting The forbiding stillness of introduction, musing Full of terror and intimacy,smiling Above what is incardine and unsuspecting. The crime of superiority slowly sinks in: Walter the he who knows the song of pondering Wishes to fare forward from the ravening rivers First by falling and then by flowering, witheringAlas, he contemplates of those still suffering. ‘Alistair!’ he calls the ferryman swimming by the bridge, (Whose father,ghostly, chants while his mother weeps) Whose relatives, in Mayfair, Victorian and rich, Of years and silence so uninformed, so ignorant remain, Who, to answer, trudges forward towards the amber archway, In his ragged clothes looks up,yawns and stinks‘Indeed I carry a few- Perhaps many,perhaps too many-‘ ‘Never too many- almost always too many!’ The Prussian envoy laughs, his cart sliding Over the ancient roads of the Ottoman Paris. Delighted with delights, honored by tapestries, A bloody wine he feverishly drinks. As the once honored chancellor,solemnly, awaits. While we were studying the Golden Bough, I remember, vividly, the chanting of The Romantics of the then-called Setting Sun’s Age: ‘Sixteenth century, Seventeenth century, Eighteenth century, that Bloody Revolution, Nineteenth century, many poets, many fanatics, Many nothings.’ There, my friend, there we had stood, Above the ivory towers, above the jealous clouds, And to the ancient grimoires, to the dusty tomes we talked, Talked, and talked. In Barcelona. Park Güell was Hard to reach; we never got to see it. In my memories it still lives, As something far below, something infinitely fearful, Something so powerful and yet eternally incomplete, Eternally old, longing for the stolen memories of a colorless rose. You, the rope-maker of Rome, renowned painter of Les Saltimbanques, 41 The jugglers, bored and delayed, told me of the agonizing truth That, terrified of yourself and craving hope, around the thorns Leading to the silent mountains of primal grief, full of joy and dismay, You are still pursuing the silent herald of your doom. And now what will become of us without the barbarians? Perhaps the last age shall be the worst of all, Perhaps we will yet embrace the holy light of the evening sun. For, i guess, there is nothing else to do, For the likes of us and our bleak, stirring, starless nightmares, Blending with the ever-fading sahdows of Denied wonders. Town Meeting: Item#4 Jake Becker So many beautiful songs for such a willowy town she mentioned bending their maple trees over the sea as a bridge to share. “Do we buy hammers for our woodpeckers? Do we clear wetlands for the grossly overweight? Did we get the interview with the sun you promised?” the board asked. “No.” “Next.” Town Meeting Agenda Item #6 “With those stones in his hands We can build a prison, temple, a new castle, a stronger mall or sell them to B-town, 42 widen our internet band acquire possibility permanently. Climb the giant when he is drunk And in sleep’s luck. Position two men at his groin With blue bleach and rusty knives threaten him and his unresolved offspring: cut music choke his drink lower and deliver the stones.” Then It is always this girl arriving in flying pants and misty breath the girl who saves daily rains and picnics by herself “He wants to work His hands have softened He’s never been asked So instead he naps.” “Write another fine. Assign her a new sponsor. Call the next town. All in favor .” 43 Open Didem Kaya an open heart is a black hole that does not pick and chose that takes in and accepts all that comes to it (like the open arms of Rumi) a black hole into you will fall and fall and fall deeper relish the emptiness because it too has been touched by the Almighty when you see nothing to hold on to be not afraid hold on to that which is within you it is all there was, all there is, all that there will ever be a piece of soul that was blown into you you will forget that falling is infinite but remember black holes don’t break bones 44 Secluded Mert Dilek Stuck. A rat in a maze, a tiger in a cage, every cliché that you can think of – I am stuck. Captured under the red sky. Solid. Fluid. And sometimes gas. Whenever I try to reach and touch, its strong and virile determination resists me. Each time I attempt to feel its surface in my palm, that slippery and selfish membrane rejects my little hands. Sometimes I try to peel it off. I can’t achieve, but I love trying. I know it really hurts. After a couple of strikes I see the blood coming from the inner sides of my nails. Not always, but usually. When they don’t bleed, they are peeled. Anela (my own angel, in case you don’t know) finds it ironic. She says that I should cease trying to no purpose, and I simply can’t decide the time I will be allowed to tear the sky. When my fingernails do bleed, I immediately stop going further. When I see the first drop of blood coming from me, I put it into the hole where I collect all the blood drops I got so far. What I do is I gather all the blood drops of my body into the shallow hole on the ground, just beside the one into which the gore of the corpse laying besides me had leaked. But that was long ago. * In the beginning, it did not smell bad. It was the smell of things coming from the cord attached to my stomach. Healthy. Nutritious. Full of life. I could see the intense way it leaked into my own room. Until it became so forceful that I couldn’t see where the red hole on the wall began and where it ended. From then on I couldn’t stare at the borders of that little circle. My room was filled with blood. Up on my neck. When Anela came, she was settling onto either one of my shoulders. Once she told me not to worry about the reduced space. According to what she was notified, over the course of my stay in here, the walls and the ground were going to absorb the blood in the chamber. She was right. With each passing day, I noticed how the blood level decreased and how the wall separating my room from the other one became transparent so that I could see the dead body inside it. He just looked like me. And seeing him in that position, hands curbed in the back, head upside down, and legs seeming broken, made me feel as if something was being snapped off from my being. It made me feel weighing less. And less. It was the first time I felt the smell. The blood that dried on my body and on the walls and on the ground smelled just like the sky. Or the sky smelled like it. I couldn’t understand, but I 45 realized how my own smell flew away and that odor stuck to my entire presence. When I asked Anela about it, I heard the word “dead”. When she pronounced it, and when I looked to her with questioning and curious eyes, she panicked and insisted that she didn’t say such a word. She was so feeble. And loved me a lot. She explained me what it meant. I wish she didn’t. Further she told me, worse my dread got. It began with tiptoes, then to the legs, from there up to my torso and finally to top of my bold head from where it evaporated and did not come again until the day I remembered what caused the blood to unleash itself from the body of my neighbor and to let him “die”. It happened when something very similar to that occurred again. Quaking. Vibrations. Shakings. No matter how I call it, the core will stay the same. Turning upside down, feeling the cord coiling around my neck, hearing the voice of crash when my feet and head hit the ground and the walls. Recalling that word again. Feeling how close the end is to me. Or how close I am to the end. * Recently I hear voices talking to me. In the beginning I thought I was just assuming that I was hearing them. But as my ears fully developed, I made sure that I was hearing voices. Voices talking to me. Directly. To be honest, indirectly. There is still no clue that the voice is referring to me but I do know. Something from the sky is leaking into my heart and just like the voice itself, whispering to me. Hereafter I listen to it. I try to understand what it’s talking about. I usually can’t, but when I do, I cry. Again, I don’t know why, but I really do. And when I cry, as if they are blood drops, I collect the tears from my eyes and cheeks and drop them into the hole. But not to mine. The reason why I don’t choose my hole is because I don’t like the color of the blood in that one. It is black, unlike mine. As black as the corpse, as his eyeballs, his limbs, his toes. The corpse is still there. It did not vanish, did not evaporate. I know it is whispering to me sometimes. It invites me to go and live with it. And in those times an incredible urgency to vomit arises inside me. And I do vomit. But it keeps smiling. When Anela comes, I beg her to kill me, to let me die. If she isn’t permitted to kill me, then she can teach me how to die. It would be easier in a way, easier than being killed. After a long time’s self-reflection, I decide to do it. By myself. Just like I did every time I tried to touch the sky, this time too, I raise my arm and make sure that it is as erect as the back of Anela when she sits on my shoulders. I stab my finger to the sky so hard that I hear a voice. Not the voice talking to me, but the voice of something falling apart. Sky, probably. No. Wait. Something is pulling my head. With all its force, it’s pulling my head towards itself, through the sky. I always knew that the only way out was through. The sky is absorbing my head. Then my neck, my chest, my legs… I see the silhouette of Anela, reflected to the red sky. She is smiling. But I can’t see because of them. They disturb me. Cryings. Moanings. Screams. I can’t distinguish the voices. I see the two holes turning upside down, and the blood inside them spilling to my toes. I see the black figure on the far edge. It is smiling. It keeps smiling. But this time it doesn’t let me vomit. * Freed. A rat besides his cheese, a tiger outside the barriers, every cliché that you can think of – I am freed. Released into the white. Sometimes solid. Rarely fluid. And mostly gas. I am killed. Left to die. Without knowing the mechanics of how or why. Or by whom. 46 An Afternoon at the EternalHouse Onur Burak Kocabaş Busy people were passing by, squishing the mud and ignoring this lonely little town cemetery which was located in a considerably dense area of the city. There were small Gypsy children next to the gate, holding their colorful umbrellas, selling flowers to the doleful visitors; the flowers spread a sweet smell, and took some of the day’s misery away. There were empty plastic cups on the ground left for the cats to eat. The food in them was now wet because of the rain. There were three black cats gathered around them, eating like mad, trying to fill up their hollow stomachs. One of the crows that had been caving on a tree decided to fly to another tree and put some contrast on the gray cloudy sky. Water was dripping from the edge of the gate, causing some more discomfort and adding some eeriness to the scene. The water that dripped was running into a small pond in the middle of the gravel road and a car would come every once in a while and splash the water on the gypsy kids, leaving them with mud all over their raincoats. All except one, Esmeralda, who was standing away from them with a book in her hands trying to read the carved Latin words on the top of the gate. One of the boys who was fed up with Esmeralda’s laziness told her to help with organizing the flowers in an angry voice tone. Esmeralda said that she was going to come in a minute, but her deep curiosity, as always, kept her doing some physical work. None of her sisters really liked her; after all, she wasn’t their blood-sister. Their Papa had found her when she as a baby left on the ground in front of the graveyard. He had made an effort and sent her to school for two years, which was something unheard amongst gypsy children. One of the girls called her this time and when she got no answer, she walked up and threw the book to the water pond in the middle of the road. Just as the book landed, a car came and went over it. “Now you are ready for work.” said the big sister. Esmeralda lost her patience, started to cry and started pounding her older sister. Now, she was never going to be able to learn what the carvings said. In addition, she didn’t know what to tell her father. If she told him the truth, he would beat up her sister to death. A slap landed on her face, taking her away from all the thoughts. This was the slap of her step mother, cursing ferociously at both the girls, shouting about the price of the book and how careless they are about the matter of money. She grabbed both girls by the arm and made them stand 47 behind the flower stand. “This is entirely your fault.” cried Esmeralda. “Shut up!” replied her sister “If my father hadn’t taken you six years ago, we were perfectly fine. We didn’t have to feed an extra stomach. If it wasn’t for my father, you would have been dead by now!” This was the moment Esmeralda learned the truth about her past. She started crying, throwing the flowers all over the place. However, her rage didn’t last for long and her mother landed another slap on her face, causing her to stop. Esmeralda didn’t complain because she knew that she wasn’t acting reasonably and being hit by the parent was not something so unusual those days. The pain of the slap seemed to fade away by time but her sister’s words didn’t. She had fallen asleep or fainted on one of the old wet seats with question marks in her head. When she woke up, the air had darkened but her sisters hadn’t sold a single flower. They looked sorrowful and hungry as usual. No flowers sold meant only bread and water for dinner. The mother’s looks were enough to understand the hardships of life. On the contrary, Esmeralda wasn’t thinking of food right now. No, the carving on the gate was not bothering her anymore but the things her sister told her was. She was used to her sister’s lies but this could be true. The main thing was that all of her sisters were dark tanned but she was blonde. Mama called her again and they headed for the little hut which sheltered seven kids and two adults. The sun had set now. The only light from the moon was shining on the gravestones, making it possible to read every single detail of the dead. Esmeralda followed twenty steps behind, reading every grave as she did every night. The Deadweight Oğul Girgin As subtly as ever he was reminded, Once again, Of his legacy The Dead Weight Pulling him down With even more strength And determination, Devoutly, Piously Really? Like a malignant tumor, It grew, Somewhere… From the cold and dark dungeons of his mind, Behind its moss-covered bars A voice calls “Cut it off ” But what exactly, The one thing he doesn’t know is The one thing it doesn’t tell. “Cut, cut, cut…” It ricochets off the walls And explodes Deafeningly black. He has to start somewhere, Before the concrete beneath his feet Completes its metamorphosis And hatches Starving, 48 Sucking, Leeching… “CUT! CUT! CUT!” And so he starts, Beneath the heavens oozing red, From his legs. From his stubby little toes, Right up to his muscular thighs. But he does not lose No Not even a gram. And so he cuts Even more vigorously, Into his own flesh. His arms, his legs His tongue and his eyes. Everywhere. No matter where he cuts, Gravity still pulls him, Crushingly. So he cuts it all, All until he is nothing more, Or less, Than what he thought he always wanted to be. Bodiless, yet still intact Where existence coexists With extinction A miracle, Soon to be tainted As he realizes that the Dead Weight wasn’t his body after all But was his very own, Himself… “cut?” 49 A Poem is amonastery Kutay Onaylı I retreat to the monastery that is the poem: First I form an expression a face of calm tolerance a face of condescending humility a soundproof face so what’s inside, the cataclysm within the monk will remain unheard by the world of woes and victories, to which I am as neutral and cool and moist as a monastery wall with my face of words printed on water printed on paper. I live in the monastery that is the poem: It is silent in here, it is still (The writing of a poem an onslaught, the decision to leave it all behind and join the monastery an onslaught too, but;) in here the battles are all over in here we just walk around on the battlefield and collect our dead and collect the dead of our enemies and we feast on all these, so we can live within the poem, and die within the poem. I die in the monastery that is the poem: They undress me in voluptuous silence They rub all over my body; oil and ointments, they wash me with their delicate hands, they gaze upon all the places they know they really shouldn’t, they gather wood for me, a forest for me, for me only, lay me on the softly on the pile and when it is time burn me with the fire burning within them, fools, they never checked my pulse— 50 it starts only now, though, burning within the monastery that is the poem. I have never felt more alive. And then I depart the monastery that is the poem in an urn and when the urn is broken what a fool the poem is: for every single letter of it which I wrote it gives another handful of me to another wind when it is out of me, it adds to me until it runs out of letters, which it never does. I enter the monastery that is the poem a monk with twenty-eight teeth I exit the monastery that is the poem the world itself. Oldbooks Elif Erez Unobstructed by clouds, the sun dominated the sky, coloring the meadow in brilliant shades of green and tallow. The crown and the tents could be seen from far off, and the laughter, singing, and delicious smells of the carnival had attracted many travelers, including Sig. One tent in particular, that had a wooden sign saying “Bookes”, caught Sig’s eye. It was not what the sign said that had captured Sig’s attention as much as the transforming the dull brown into a medley of purple, gold and maroon. Sig could even see through to the metal skeleton under the tent’s cloth that the bright light had rendered transparent. Inside were rows of dusty books, reaching as high as the tent itself, arranged in corridors of shelves where two people could easily lose each other. Slowly walking along a shelf, scanning the spines of the books for an intriguing title, Sig almost toppled over a boy of about the same age. “Oh, sorry,” said Sig, “didn’t see you crouching there.” The bot chuckled, and shrugged. “It’s all right. Say, have you looked at the books on this row?” the boy asked, pointing towards the bottom shelf. “No.” “Well I think I have dis- 51 covered something quite amazing. Although I guess this is sort of a discovery that I ought not to share with many people. Would you like to see it?” Quite excited, Sig exclaimed, “Of course I would!” One by one, the boy removed al the large, thick, encyclopedia-like books from the bottom row, and put them on the floor beside him. When about a dozen were removed, the boy said, “Look.” Sig was confused: “You just emptied a portion of a shelf. I don’t understand.” No, look!” said the boy grabbing Sig by the hand. “Look at the shelf.” Having crouched in re- sponse to the boy’s pull, Sig was now staring directly at a shadowed space. “You still can’t see it? Well, this should do it-follow me,” remarked the boy, and crawled right into the shelf, disappearing in the shadows. Without hesitating, Sig followed the boy. Apparently, to Sig’s relief, the boy had not vanished, but merely passed into a tunnel previously concealed behind the large books. The brick lining the tunnel felt cold and dry to the touch, the interior reminiscent of what Sig imagined a sewer would be like. Led by the bot’s soothing voice, Sig bravely crawled through the remaining short section of the tunnel, and stepped out at the edge of a grassy hill that led to a beach. As opposed to the midday sun shining over at the carnival, the sun at the beach was glowing a ruby pink, and was already touching the turquoise sea. Sig was astounded- and looked at the young boy for an explanation, peculiarity of it. The boy stared towards the sea for a while, and Sig took this moment of silence to examine this strange guide. It was not so muck the appearance of the boy that made him strange-quite to the contrary, the boy looked quite ordinary, had a fresh, smooth complexion, neat hair and the sort of clothes you would find appropriate to wear for a family dinner-but rather, the manner in which the boy moved and looked at Sig while speaking conveyed the air of a much older person. Perhaps Sig was imagining it, but the adventurous fascination the boy had, when mixed with his curious hint of old age was what caused Sig to feel sort of an attachment to the boy, and an urge to follow him to wherever he may lead. A moment later, the bot said, “There is a tree up at the edge of this hill. Would you like to go see it?” “Sure, why not?” said Sig. The hill was not too steep, but stretched a long way up. It was not until a few minutes of hiking that the scent of the tree reached them. It had a very familiar smell. Sig was sure there was a tree of the same king back home; the smell brought back memories of long hours of play in the garden, way before Sig had decided to depart. They soon arrived at the tree, which had purple and white flowers with large, whick petals. The boy reached up to a branch and plucked one of the heavy flowers, as Sig wondered low the stem managed to bear the weight of such mass. Bringing the flower to his face, the boy said, “I wonder what this tastes like,” and before Sig had time to say “Stop!” the boy took a bite out of the flower, chewed and ate the rest, which seemed easily to make up a mouthful. It appeared to Sig as if the boy was about the comment on the taste when suddenly, and expression of fear crossed the boy’s face. They boy was shrinking – no, rather, he was sinking, right into the swirling grass beneath his feet. Sig first thought that somehow, the beach sand under the hill had created this quick- 52 sand vacuum, and tried to step back in fear of being sucked in as well, noticing in the process that the ground was only moving under the boy’s feet, as if the specific intent it had was to devour only him. It was at this point, when the boy had vanished to about mid-torso, that Sig decided to stick a hand into the ground, in a feeble attempt to grab the boy’s rapidly sinking body. What Sig felt among the masses of the moving earth was but plain soil – in place of where the boy’s chest should have been, half buried in the vacuum, was nothing more than roots and damp dust. Holding fast on the boy’s hand, still in the air as the arm it was tied to was partially swallowed, Sig pulled as strongly as possible, reaching up to the branch above them, to pluck a second flower. The sun had almost set now – the sky was beginning to turn indigo, and a few white stars twinkled to the east. The sea, stretching to the west like a giant blue tabletop, had caught the last few rays of the setting sun as it rolled over its edge. At the hillside, under the long, twisting branches of the tree, Sig had an incredible view of the scenery. There was no sound now, except for the wind rustling the leaves high above, as Sig gazed to the seashore below, and chewed on the petals that were softly scented of citrus, the ocean and the pages of an old book. the Call: a lovesong Marita O’Neill for Duff From where the sound comes is all mystery. We’ve seen the domed roofs in the distance, emerging from the hillsides, camis tucked into tiny crevices of towns crumbling with names like Kurucesme, Arnavutkoy, Ortakoy. The mosques rise like that, like this song unfurling, the muezzin replaced long ago by prerecorded tapes from Mecca. A voice pierces the morning—5 A.M. with a robust ezzan, calling Allah, the vowels stretch open and long, all yearning and devotion. Other voices join from all over the town until our early morning dreams become a cacophony of prayer and yearning. In these Koranic songs, between the A and B notes over 15 notes exist unknown to western music. As if the notes yearned for infinity itself. As if in the marking of the rise and fall of the sun, we might discover a space between, a moment that can’t be marked or held. On our first date, you surprised me with a hug as we parted—no one had ever done that: overflowed, just overflowed unabashedly as if we were old friends, as if I had already agreed to I do, to plant tulips in the garden, to wait for you to come home, to draw you a bath and light you a candle. It’s summer time, early morning, and as I wake you sing my name from the bedroom, and I am called again and again, my fingers still drawn to touch your face, feel the curls of your hair, explore the place where love walks, lonely and songless, searching for lovers to give it voice. Oh, sleepy caller of the other room, how did you know my name before I was born? 53 54