What Fathers Pass on to Sons

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May 27, 2024 by The Citron Review

by Elena Zhang

 

He hates his father. Such a dick, he thinks. Their home is the ocean, but he’s imprisoned in a raindrop. He suffocates under his father’s constant gaze even as he surfaces for air. Curfew at nine. Lights out at ten. Like he’s just a child. There are three-legged specters out there, his father warns him, with blood-tipped barbed teeth. But jellyfish don’t scare him. The scars that adorn his father’s ivory blubber fill him with envy. One day, when his father is suspended in sleep, he’s going to disappear, melt into blue skies, and see just how sharp his teeth can be.

 

Elena Zhang is a Chinese American writer and mother living in Chicago. Her work can be found in HAD, Ghost Parachute, Exposition Review, Your Impossible Voice, and Lost Balloon, among other publications, and has been selected for Best Microfiction 2024. She’s on Twitter @ezhang77.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Lake George photograph by Stieglitz, 1896

Alfred Stieglitz. Meeting of Day and Night, Lake George, 1896. The Art Institute of Chicago