They sit next to each other on the couch. The only light is from the kitchen and the moon. There is a faint tang of Sharizadโs sickness hanging somewhere in the room.
โCarry on with the story,โ she says. The sides of their bodies are touching.
โItโs finished,โ he says. โThere isnโt any more.โ
โThere is more,โ she says. โHe will come into the shop again tomorrow afternoon, or the day after, and what will you do?โ
โWhat can I do?โ he says.
โHe knows that you have been thinking about him,โ she says. She looks around the room, into the corner shadows, as if she might have summoned something.
โHow can he know that?โ he says, leaning forward and turning to look at her.
โHeโs sensitive,โ she says, and shrugs. โThatโs all.โ
He looks disappointed.
โPeople drink,” she says, “because they feel everything.โ
โHow do you know why people drink?” he says.
She doesnโt respond. He doesnโt look away, though, and she finally meets his gaze without moving her head, raises her eyebrows and gives a slight shrug. His eyes roam all over her face, as if heโs appraising her. Then he sits back, but not touching her this time, and together they go on looking ahead, through the window, at the moonlit sky.
She can hear people laughing in another apartment. She doesnโt want to listen to any more stories, and decides that she will sit quietly for five minutes, and then she’ll go back into the kitchen, turn the radio on, and wash the dishes. But she canโt see the clock from where sheโs sitting, and she wonders what five minutes feels like.
ยฉ Barry Lee Thompson and ‘Stories, by Barry Lee Thompson’, 2013.

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