Synaesthesia Magazine Hush-Hush | Page 54

L ‘ Jawlines I want to suck on to stop the hurt from teething, like ice cubes. about Olivia Behan hails from Middletown, New York. She is currently a junior at SUNY Purchase, striving to get her B.A. in creative writing. As well as having her work published in Purchase's literary magazine, Olivia has also had the privilege to be on the board of said magazine the following semester. et’s imagine a world where I don’t fall in love with strangers, don’t obsess with the idea of toying with their clothes, loosening their straps, and straddling their hips. Let’s imagine we’re all just brothers and sisters of a holy place. But I do fall in love with strangers. Every single one. They sit there, on a train, in a classroom; stand there, walk there on a sidewalk, in the road, at a mall. Have dreads in their hair or lots of pockets on their pants. They have feminine smiles or masculine hands; touching these sheets, making them dirty, making them wrinkle, making them clean again. A nail-biting feeling and I taste the copper on my tongue; it swells in the back of my throat; a doe carcass on the side of the road with its legs jutting out in different directions of the sky. Sometimes I look at the fingers of the nameless and realize that I don’t love those fingers so maybe I could make them wear gloves. If the eyes weren’t the right color, I’d rip those out too; burying them in the backyard where I keep everything else in nice holes that I cover with doilies. It’s better to have manners with these types of things. Jawlines are important to me. Shoulders, necks, jawlines that cut me. Jawlines I want to suck on to stop the hurt from teething, like ice cubes. Maybe long torsos with abrasions down the ribs; valleys deeply engraved and scooped out. Maybe icy Alps popping from just above the heart; atop with raisins. Winter resorts dedicated to your slopes specifically. And I want a ride. But I can’t snowboard. Mind readers don’t exist but if mind readers did exist they would see my insides churn pink. Sometimes I think they’re in the room with me, so I scream my thoughts to see if one will flinch. Any time a stranger has a tattoo, that tattoo looks drunk. Flexing an arm muscle, the tattoo winks at me; it knows me by name. It has my zip code; I yell at it to stay away but it can’t pass the alphabet test. I may put a blanket over those tattoos too when I slither i