A demon places a sharp sabre in his hand, An angel gently whispers words of reassurance. The pain he feels is equal to having a dagger pierce his heart, the angel wants to take it out while the demon wishes to push it in further. Since he lost her nothing has been the same, he oscillates from melancholy to a furious rage that swallows him whole. This leaves his soul barren like a desert, an almost perfect ground for the deities to do battle. “Slay him and be done with it,” the demon says in a haughty tone.
Continue reading “A Quarrel Of Divinity and Impiety by Mirza Copi”Black Orange by Freshta Ayeh
Literally stories receive quite a number of submissions from writers who have English as a second language. More often than not we have to reject them for technical reasons. Every once in a wonderful while we receive something that we cannot reject. It has been an honour and a privilege working with Freshta and we proudly present her story
Black Orange.
They are sneering at you, the white plastic bag of oranges and his hand in his right pocket. That could be your hand. You try not to think of anything, to keep your head, but something pushes you and everything comes into your eyes as on a tv screen. You remember the time when you were still in your class and you were allowed to laugh at his jokes and he always shocked you and looked with his eyes wide open at your grades. He was cool, funny, polite and a little bit lazy. Not that he doesn’t study at all. It’s just that studying was not as important as it is to you. As for most boys.
He was getting lower grades than you and was studying less than you. Now you look at him, clench your hand in your right pocket and think about the 30% you rejected. The 30% that he is buying oranges with. You know that now, if you improve your English a hundred times more than him and even if you get 120 in the international TOEFL exam, let alone the orange, you won’t have any Afghani money with which you can buy chewing gum or pay for the bus to escape home. For hours in the days when all things around are trying to suffocate you. The decree that Taliban announced strikes your head, like an axe to a green tree. “The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan announces that girls and women are banned from working in any governmental or nongovernmental organization. Until further notice, a female has not the right to work.” And just yesterday, some educated, open minded women went out to fight for their basic right. For the right of work in 21st century! You were also there, in the protest. But what happened? The Taliban shot at you protestors, arrested some women. The women shouted, the men watched, you were angry, you were scared, you spat on a Talib’s back secretly, you cried. And what was the world’s reaction? “We strongly condemn this decision of the Taliban!” And you understood that the United Nations is only a symbol. No one cares. You are alone. An 18 year old girl in front of a cruel army that hates you and tries to eliminate you.
You fall back to the day when the guard stopped you at the Wassa’s door where you were studying computer. He allowed that young boy who was wearing smoked glasses and had long curly hair to enter. The tremor that had gripped your heart since the first day of Taliban arrival crept into your voice and you barely could say the word “why?” And he started like the black old radio of your grandfather: “It is closed until further notice. Don’t you have a TV? Last night they officially announced that all schools and educational centers are closed for girls until further notice. Only for girls. They even brought a letter yesterday. Last night, my daughter was crying until the morning. You know my daughter, my daughter studies from night to morning. She had the nickname of genius in her school. Like you, she always has a book in her arms. She finished her English last year. She teaches. What was the name of the Academy? Oh, I can’t remember. I forget. It had an English name. Old age brings a thousand errors my daughter. She’s studying for Kankor examination and pays for classes herself. But now… But don’t be sad, my daughter. Don’t be sad. Did you see that night always stays night? Has anyone seen this? Kind Allah will punish this hard, cruel people. My God, our God will order the earth to swallow these.”
If another young man had not come and interrupted the one-to one conversation between you and the guard and you were not pushed back so that the boy who arrived later than you could enter earlier, maybe he would have never stopped talking. And never stopped thinking, but you come to yourself. In fact, they bring you to yourself. You bend down and pick up your entrance card from the ground, put it on your head. You hide yourself in it. In your forced chador, your entrance card. You are ashamed of the kind guard who called you a professor. Ashamed of your new shoes and ashamed of all the male shoes who have permission to enter anywhere that your shoes don’t. Ashamed of Farhanaz’s big black backpack, for which you exchanged your white, beautiful dress. She waited 1 year and 6 months first. But no further notice came to let her go to school, and she wasn’t lucky enough to be in the first to sixth grades and so was able to study, get beaten, pick at her cuticles and be under the tents that smelled of forty kinds of student’s sweat and various perfumes of teachers in the hot sun, and in the mornings who falls asleep and is late, is made to bow and straighten herself twenty or thirty times as punishment, and listens to advice every day. She finally decided to exchange her bag for your dress and for a long time was happy that she had fooled you in that deal. Ashamed of your father, who was giving you money six days a week and was insisting that you don’t walk all that long commute. Ashamed of all those who encouraged you all this time. You are ashamed of Gabriel García Márquez, Mrs Afsana Vahidyar and Anton Chekhov, who sat in your bag and watched your failures, and you start to hate yourself. You sit on the side of the road, where the path splits in half, and you cry and decide. You get up and walk the way you just walked. Again. This time without your entrance card and looking only forward, not down. You don’t even wear the Chador where you have to wear it. You say to yourself: “Why should I listen to them when they don’t recognize me as a human and try not to let me breathe? And as soon as you arrive, you start kicking. But the door is stronger than you and nothing happens to it. Or no, maybe it is screaming from the inside. You kick, you look and nothing changes. It’s the same big black door with a handle that has been pulled too much and its color is lighter and sadder. Just like the color of the city in you. The door is so similar to you. You were also screaming inside and apparently, nothing changed and you still had the same eyes and body with the right to be nothing. You kick again and another man comes and he is afraid of you and joins the crowd of taxis and passersby who are watching this circus. A woman’s voice passes you and says, “Shit. What they’re doing with these shameless, wild girls is not even enough. And she goes…
WEEK 433: Feral Advice; It’s A Big World Afterall; A to Z of the Kitchen
Feral Advice
Come spring, Feral Tomcats, nature’s charming blighters, seek the bliss of temporary domesticity. Such is happening in my courtyard; or at least the attempt is being made. Both my Feral Tomcat friends, Andy and Alfie are doing well. But Alfie has been smacked with lovesickness.
Continue reading “WEEK 433: Feral Advice; It’s A Big World Afterall; A to Z of the Kitchen”Foster by Athena Vasquez
Before the second home in Montebello, I was placed in my first foster home, where my hunger for thinness was conceived and grew larger in size than I had ever been.
Continue reading “Foster by Athena Vasquez”Write me a story in the style of Hemingway by Stephen James
I watch the middle-aged man in the tailored suit with disdain as he states commands to the soulless, unblinking Ernest.
Continue reading “Write me a story in the style of Hemingway by Stephen James”Chasing Sleep on a Hot Summer Night in Gaza by L.F. Khouri
It’s a scorcher of a summer night in Gaza City and Fadi lies naked in bed, sweating buckets in the dark. His mother shouts something from the kitchen, her voice bouncing off the walls, mixing with the clanging of pots and pans. From the bedroom, his father’s reply is a muffled murmur, drowned out by the blaring TV. A stray dog barks outside, and soon a few others join in from a distance, their barks blending together like a chorus of sirens.
Continue reading “Chasing Sleep on a Hot Summer Night in Gaza by L.F. Khouri”What I’ll Lose by Phebe Jewell
The lady in the pink dress wants to save me. Her soft eyes wet, she reaches for me, hungry to share her joy. She steps closer, hand on my shoulder now, and pulls me to her. But I don’t like people touching me without asking. Jesus is knocking at the door of my heart. Let Him in. Everyone at the Holy Redeemer Revival wants me to say yes. I step back. What if He doesn’t like what He sees inside?
Continue reading “What I’ll Lose by Phebe Jewell”The Confrontation by Tom Sheehan
“You have any family, Hook, if that’s what they call you.” The heavy set man asking questions had been around for at least half a century, carried serious eyes, some obvious facial scars marking the years, but those remnants didn’t appear to be from life-threatening situations. Warmth, in no certain terms or applications, issued from his person as well as from his voice, a long-time cowboy tone carrying his words with a semi-hoarse baritone as though it came from deep in his chest and not through regular vocal channels. A cough would not have been so deeply issued.
Continue reading “The Confrontation by Tom Sheehan”Literally Reruns – Dave by Hugh Cron
Ah, the month of June. When I was a child June was a magical time. School was out and summer lay ahead like an endless fantasy. It was impossible to believe that something that wonderful could go bad. But it did; when school let me out for the last time I immediately began working at a job I needed but already hated.
So it is fitting that we mark this June with a tale of regret for something wonderful that was lost and always will be, with Dave by Hugh Cron.
Continue reading “Literally Reruns – Dave by Hugh Cron”Week 432 – Plod With No Shoulders, Removed Nipples And Bloater Is Too Close.
Another week bites the dust and we find ourselves at posting number 432.
This is being published the day after my birthday but I am writing it the day before as there is no point in typing it the day of my birthday. I’d miss all the keys and spill my malt onto the keyboard.
Continue reading “Week 432 – Plod With No Shoulders, Removed Nipples And Bloater Is Too Close.”