Magma undulates in the mantle, forming as the Earth’s plates collide. A man and woman collide in a café. He pays for the coffee, and they share a table as they laugh and trade numbers. Magma is less dense than the rock around it, and it begins to rise. As they leave, he rises from his seat and holds open the door, placing one hand on the small of her back. The skin under her thin cotton burns. When magma erupts onto the surface of the Earth, it is called lava. Months later they lie in bed, amid tangled sheets. The surface of their bodies hot to the touch. Sheets of lava flow over the ground; the lava eventually cools. She’s on her side, one hand on his chest, one leg on his. Their exposed limbs, once wet with sweat, begin to cool. Cooled lava hardens and turns into basalt, pumice, or scoria. On their 50th he gives her gold. She turns the ring on her finger, and feels the cool metal grow warm against her flesh.
Igneous or “of fire”
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