- 1 hour ago
By Dee Mohammed

My bi-annual check-up on my elementary school crush goes how I expect it to, with me frowning at the scraggly mustache that sprouts unattractively from his upper lip and the thick, American traditional tattoos sleeving down his arms, “US Navy” in his bio and “college dropout” in the subtext, all the makings of someone who, a decade down the line, would raise his children to call him “sir,” children conceived with a girl who is a petite shade of his mother, because he doesn’t follow his sisters on Instagram, but he follows his mom and a handful of swimsuit models who could very well be his mom’s age—regardless, he’d be known around the neighborhood as a stand-up guy who faithfully attends his kids’ basketball and football and baseball games, never mind that he arrives for only the last ten minutes of his daughter’s kindergarten performance of The Nutcracker, and his shirt is always tucked smartly into his Levi jeans, smooth down strong legs as the other dads call him "sport" and "man," even though the natural curl of his dark lashes and owlish set of his eyes belie a strange and fidgeting girlishness in him, one that I’d liked in third grade when I solemnly told him he had the prettiest eyes I’d ever seen sit on a boy’s face; this was before kissing his cheek and running off, though that was then, when he used to smile with all his teeth, and this is now, so I let myself linger on the semi-familiar face of a stranger who knows the shape of my mouth against skin before I close the tab, memory settling like sediment until, inevitably, it becomes disturbed again.
Dee Mohammed is a very tired, very hungry student at Texas A&M University, and her works appear in a handful of literary magazines from over the years.
Art by Jay Baker, an artist from Colorado living in Oregon, by way of New Mexico; he records music as Tom Foe.

