word of the day: miasma

effluvia

From Dictionary.com:
mi·as·ma [mahy-az-muh, mee-]-noun, plural -mas, -ma·ta

  1. noxious exhalations from putrescent organic matter; poisonous effluvia or germs polluting the atmosphere.
  2. a dangerous, foreboding, or deathlike influence or atmosphere.

Good King Mortimer fell to his death from the parapet into the moat of his crumbling castle. The black water burped a miasma over the splash.

Tabloid reporters watched for the slip of a celebrity with drooling tongues out and wagging. When no slip came, they pulled whispers from the miasma over Hollywood to feed the masses.

Jerry ate a pizza with roasted cloves of garlic and Canadian bacon. That night before falling asleep, he tittered and his sleeping cat woke and ran away from where she was tucked against his ass. Alex, his partner, covered his face so the miasma from Jerry’s side of the bed wouldn’t infect his body. “Your insides are rotting inside your body, you sick, sick, repulsive human being.” Alex said to Jerry.

Alex rolled over in the middle of the night to hug Jerry and was startled from his stupor as the miasma from Jerry’s mouth hit him full force in the face. He quickly rolled back over.

On a plane over the Atlantic, Alex sat in his sweat caused by a lack of sleep and nerves. After five hours, a rough atmosphere of miasma lingered two feet from his skin, choking his fellow passengers and his loving partner.