The Weight of Summer Light
By Tony Eetak
The oppressive summer heat hung thick and heavy, a blanket woven from humidity and the persistent hum of distant insects. Inside the community centre, the air was still, stagnant, despite the single, rattling floor fan in the corner. Paint peeled in languid curls from the window sills, and the scent of old wood and something vaguely metallic—the static charge of a dying fridge, perhaps—clung to everything. It was a place where time felt less like a river and more like a sluggish pond, mirroring the slow, quiet struggle of the community it served.