It’s nighttime, and- look, I won’t get into what’s gone on. I won’t get into Jenny or into what’s happening with the kids or any of it. I think it’s simpler than all that. And- it’s terrible. I don’t mean to say it isn’t. I’m just focusing on what I can change. There are people in terrible trouble and something’s gotta be done. Nothing can be done about Jenny. And the kids, I don’t know. I just don’t know. Anyway. It’s nighttime, which isn’t unusual. I am having dinner at the diner again. I sit in the booth across from the windows into the St. Pat’s rec hall. I watch him. This is the third night in a row after a few weeks waiting. I know something is coming because I’ve spent good time with thinking about it. I can feel it as if it were mine.
Continue reading “Pennsylvania Man by Tony Gordino”The Sun Rose in the West by Stephen J Kimber
The sun rose in the west and coloured the hills. Velvet dark, not quite black… Then burnt umber. Orange-red, limpid platinum. Light gathering.
The hills became distinct; hard, dry mounds the sun reached from, taking hold of the day, making it hard and brittle too.
A party of men came back into the landscape, carrying something wrapped in canvas. They stopped at a freshly dug hole. They laid the canvas bundle down, not too gently, and unwrapped it.
It was a corpse, bones really, hard white chalky bones, dead a fair while. These the men put into the hole, one or two at a time. Then, using shovels and a mattock, they refilled the hole. It looked hard work. The last blows were struck with the mattock by the smallest, oldest man – an Aborigine – and the other men stood about, talking. They were white men.
Continue reading “The Sun Rose in the West by Stephen J Kimber”And She Was by Jordan Eve Morral
Nothing, she thought, could make her feel better than having a nice, long cry in the shower. Nothing felt better than water flowing over and out of her, releasing every negative emotion that drifted into her mind. Hot, cold, she didn’t care; it was the best medicine. The blaze of an inferno and the frost of an avalanche purging every impurity. The only equal? A full day lying in bed, listlessly flipping through childhood memories.
Continue reading “And She Was by Jordan Eve Morral”Installation, by Geraint Jonathan
According to the man at the agency, half a meter’s rainfall over two days was all it took to so loosen the soil the local cemetery gave up its coffins. Dozens of them, he said, dozens of coffins bobbing along half submerged amid the general flow of debris – tables, wardrobes, phone boxes, and so on . . .
Continue reading “Installation, by Geraint Jonathan”Missing by Kayla Cain
As Molly pushed her dolls’ faces together and danced them around her bedroom window sill, she could see Mr. and Mrs. Green in their house next door. Molly named her favorite boy doll Bill and her prettiest girl doll Jill – last name Green, but no one else knew that.
Continue reading “Missing by Kayla Cain”Sunday Whatever – Roadhouse Blues an Essay by Dale Williams Barrigar
“Keep your eyes on the road, your hand upon the wheel…”
– The Doors
“This land is your land…” – Woody Guthrie
“Superman never made any money / savin’ the world from Solomon
Grundy / and sometimes I despair / the world will never see another
man like him.” – “Superman’s Song,” Crash Test Dummies, from
The Ghosts that Haunt Me
I used to leave in the middle of the night, solo, mostly.
It was the 1990s. I was in my 20s. My procedure for road trips in those days was simple.
Continue reading “Sunday Whatever – Roadhouse Blues an Essay by Dale Williams Barrigar”Week 566 -Obvious Prezzies, Paul Newman Was Brilliant And A Nod To Johnny Kidd And The Pirates.
Here we are at the first of the New Year with Week 566
Well, that’s the festivities over for another year. I hope you all have had a restful or mad time or a bit of both. I had some beautifully wrapped presents this year. I received a life size Dalek, a lucky horse shoe, an inflated beach ball and an anchor. I was grateful but not one of them was a surprise.
Continue reading “Week 566 -Obvious Prezzies, Paul Newman Was Brilliant And A Nod To Johnny Kidd And The Pirates.”Night Sounds by Tom Koperwas
Content that some readers may find upsetting – refer to the tags on the bottom of the page
Small towns are quiet places at night, especially the town of Hush. That’s what made it the ideal place for eight-year-old Sammy Keen to live in. The skinny boy with piercing dark eyes, a towering forehead, and large, floppy ears looked forward to bedtime every night, unlike his friends at school, who cherished the day and its fun activities under the bright sun. Changing into his pajamas, he’d jump into bed and turn off the lights. A smile would form on his face as he gazed at the open window and began to listen to the sounds outside, for Sammy was a gifted child with a wholly unique talent and the intelligence to utilize it.
Continue reading “Night Sounds by Tom Koperwas”Lost in Translation by Claire Massey
A Florida Fable for Our Time
When the Rainbow River began to speak, the remnant band of creatures eking out a living along its banks was dumbstruck. The waters they depended on to spawn fish and slate thirst had begun to gurgle and grumble in a quarrelsome, insistent pitch, as if complaining in a language no one could interpret. Divine Dominion being no competition for Manifest Destiny, the ranks of hangers-on were thinning by then, but the lone remaining panther, who was barely out of adolescence and a bit full of himself, summoned the hutzpah to organize a community forum. What is needed, he told the leader of the yellow-eared turtles, is an investigative committee. The old guy withdrew to his shell and considered, finally agreeing to send a representative. With the reptiles on board, the panther managed to assemble some shell-shocked deer and twitchy racoons, a patchy-feathered marsh hen among assorted wading birds, and the silver mullet king, who had suspicious spots on his fins and was not long for this world. Mama vixen promised to attend a meeting if she could bring her kits, humans having ruined her burrow by inserting mothballs and a blaring radio.
Continue reading ” Lost in Translation by Claire Massey”It Happened on Wednesday by Foster Trecost
Weekends are for my brother. I try to see him on Saturdays, but sometimes it’s Sunday. He doesn’t know one day from the next, so I don’t guess it matters. They limit his time with the other patients. I wish they wouldn’t. Even if he doesn’t talk, he might like listening.
Continue reading “It Happened on Wednesday by Foster Trecost”