Category Archives: New Fiction

‘Living Well Is The Best Revenge’ by Connor Thewis

Suppose it is as they say it is: That life is a continuum which stretches from the beginning of time and is endless, unceasing, running infinitely into forever. So what does that mean for us all on a daily basis? Does it mean we should waste what time we have remaining or should we cherish it as the most precious of commodities?

These thoughts were in my mind as she undressed before me, my latest conquest for the evening. I had given her just over $500 and she had told me that would buy me an hour with her. Again, time is ticking against me. I watched her shoulder-length brown hair cascade across her back and suddenly felt like perhaps my money had not been well spent. She was lovely, no doubt about that, but I found myself unable to focus, to give her my full attention. I urged her to use her mouth and hands to get me ready, and she did as I requested. Ten minutes later I was spent and she was dressing to leave. Before she did, she whispered, “You have my number. Call anytime.” But I know I won’t. It has to be new and different each time. It’s just how I expect things to be

¶¶¶¶¶

Numbers are my thing, in case you give a damn to know. I usually tune out totally when people start to blather on about their line of work. How does this affect me? Why am I wasting a single minute on you? We all want to be heard, and want even more desperately to be understood and accepted, but longing for that kind of crap is wasteful. It leaves you empty and alone, makes you contemplate suicide.

So, I was saying about numbers: Senior financial analyst at Yahanna/Reiss/Felton. You should see my business card! Damn things cost nearly $5 each! I love my job. Or maybe I should say I love the money and prestige it brings me. I feel like I’m getting closer to ruling the financial world with each passing day, and I don’t even have to work that hard. Can’t believe they pay me as much as they do.

¶¶¶¶¶

She waves at me from across the restaurant and I try to feel something, but that fourth martini has erased most emotion from my consciousness. That’s the way I prefer to feel, or not feel, as the case may be. Being open to feeling things like love, hope, a sense of optimism for what is yet to come is a huge waste of life. That kind of thing just gets in the way.

I check my watch and see that it’s nearly ten, so I call for the tab and leave. I catch a glimpse of the girl who waved at me a few minutes ago and for a moment a name comes to mind even from under the fog of the vodka and vermouth: Cassandra? Fuck, is that the right name? Maybe she was just flirting, or attempting to, but then again, what if she works in the office and I just publicly dissed her? I don’t have time or energy enough to worry myself with anymore selfish indulgences when it comes to public pleasantries, so I’m in the cab and headed out to see what else the evening holds.

¶¶¶¶¶

Big mistake, I realize as I slide my hands along her back and hear her start to moan. It’s after one in the morning and I’m at some club where the lighting is so damn dark it’s all I can do to make out that she does indeed have dark hair. She’s softly whispering to me that she loves how my hands feel, but I’m light years away, thinking of a trade I made right before I left the office. I shorted a stock everyone else was banking on. I need to reach into my pocket and check my cell phone to see how the stock’s faring in the Asian markets. If I made the right choice, the firm stands to make millions and I could easily pocket nearly a quarter of a million myself. That is one hell of a nice bonus for a few minutes work.

So, yeah, probably a big mistake, but I take her hand and tell her I want her to come home with me. I’m about to ask her what her name is, but I’m afraid she’ll say something that ruins the mood.

¶¶¶¶¶

Next morning I’m regretting like hell bringing her back to my place. She’s one of those annoying people who wants to talk and be chipper before even having a cup of coffee. She’s pretty much everything I despise in human beings: shallow, vapid, obsessed with her own banality. I half wish she would get hit by a car when she finally manages to leave and I call the office. I tell them I won’t be in because my sinuses are causing my nose to bleed. It’s as good an excuse as any.

I check the overnight figures from Asia and see that shorting that stock paid some major dividends. When I check my email, I have one from none other than Gary Felton, one of the partners. Great job, he tells me. Feel better soon.

I already do. I decide to go out for a while and maybe have a walk in the park before I hit the clubs later. I’ve earned a nice celebration.

¶¶¶¶¶

Another boring night despite the fact that I’m out and in a room filled with people.  It’s all a huge waste, I realize as I stand at the bar and order a bourbon and Coke. Someone passes a thin joint down the bar. The bartender shakes his head and keeps mixing drinks. What does he care? They’re paying for the drinks and the tip jar looks like it’s filling up nicely. So you wanna get high and drink, too? Yeah, go ahead.

That’s when I notice her just a few feet away, sitting at the end of the bar, all alone, seemingly lost in her thoughts as she sips a Michelob Light. What would bring her to a place like this? Must be waiting for someone, I figure, turning away and watching as two girls in the corner begin kissing. Looks good. Might just have to go talk them up and see if they wanna come home me with me later. Been awhile since I had a good threesome.

But my focus is pulled back like a magnet to the Michelob Light girl. I start imagining her name in my mind: Holly? Annie? Damn, I hate trying to guess.

I take long sip from my drink and head her way, silently hoping she doesn’t see me coming and formulate some incredibly lame excuse line.

Turns out her name is Fallon, and her eyes are even more hypnotic up close. Can’t believe I’m actually falling for a woman just because of her eyes. When did that ever happen to me? Try never.

So, Fallon, what brings you here tonight? God that sounds so fucking pathetic! What bad movie did I cop that line from?

Fallon stands, takes one final swig of her beer, and tells me: Just wanted to see what everyone else was doing tonight. Take care.

I tell her to stay and talk at least. What can it hurt? But she’s seven steps towards the door and back out into the darkness.

Well, that was certainly odd. Guess she doesn’t care for talk.

I finish my bourbon and Coke, and then I almost walk to where the two girls are still kissing and touching. Instead I make for the door and call a cab.

Life is a continuum which stretches from the beginning of time and is endless, unceasing, running infinitely into forever. Jesus that sounds so fucking pretentious and trite. Means nothing. Never has and never will.

Damn I wish I’d at least gotten Fallon’s number. Time to head home and check the late figures from Asia. Then bed. Got an early day tomorrow and lots to do.

Copyright 2016 by Connor Thewis. All rights belong to the author and material may not be copied without the author’s express permission.

‘Prayers For Katie’ by Andrew Bradford

Seems she’s been sick for ages now, my poor Katie. It’s such a sin when children are born sick, such a burden on the world, and such a horrible struggle for the child. But it must be God’s will, and to that I submit always. He knows what is best for my little Katie. Only He can heal her. Only He has that power.

Katie is such an angel. Not even yet three, but a light in this dark world. Her eyes of sparkling blue always light up when I walk into the room. She whispers, “Daddy, I love you,” and every fiber of me melts. How was I so blessed with this gift? But other questions come, too:

  • Why must she be sick?
  • Why must a child be in so much pain?
  • Why has this happened to me?

I seek the answers in scripture and prayer, but am no closer to the truth than when I started. Which means I must redouble my efforts, pray more, earnestly seek for His will to be done.

#####

I awaken to the sound of Katie crying, calling out for me. I take a cold, wet washrag and rub it across her face, which is hot with fever. Then I kneel beside her bed and pray again, asking God to heal her. Please heal her, Holy Father! Please remove this illness from my only child! I beg of you! But the response I get is only silence, only more tears from Katie.

Once about three months ago I was told by a friend that I should relent, should take her to the hospital. My dear friend Anna told me it wasn’t a sin to let doctors, led by God, heal her. What can it hurt? she asked. Anna does not understand about sending your immortal soul to hell for all eternity when you disobey. I cherish Anna, but she is just wrong. And I will not give into the Dark Lord and sacrifice my daughter to their lies, their works. Anna tried to argue that doctors can be led by God, too, but how many people of science truly believe in anything other than their own personal genius? Some doctors are said to have a “God complex.” Is that the kind of person I want seeing to my daughter?

#####

Katie seems worse today. She has almost no energy at all. She can barely whisper “Daddy” when I lean forward to kiss her forehead, which is aflame with fever. I notice the bloodstains on the sheets and pray for deliverance from this momentary hell I am living through. He knows we are in need, and He will provide in time. This is merely a test of faith. To fail it is to lose everything.

#####

Katie went to be with God on March 15. She is in a far better world. I am praying for her night and day and know we will be reunited one day in the hereafter.

Anna wrote me an email, and it said:

You are responsible for the death of your daughter. She could have been healed if you had only done what needed to be done. If you were not so damn stubborn!

The police have approached me and I plan to cooperate with them. You are a heartless monster.

Later tonight I plan to get in my car and leave. I don’t know where I will go, but I am being led to travel far away from here. He will guide me. Only He can possibly understand what I am feeling now.

For now I will rest. And by daybreak, God willing, I will be on my way far from here.

Copyright 2016 by Andrew Bradford. All rights belong to the author and material may not be copied without the author’s express permission.

‘Left Unsaid’ by Andrew Bradford

My darling:

So many things to tell you, so many things that I should have told you long ago. Like this: I’m quite sure I never really loved until I met you. Sure, I had felt the pangs of emotion that far too often get labeled love in the modern parlance, but those were just combinations of lust and proximity.

For most of my life I have been lost, searching, and yet I never knew what I was looking for. I traveled like a wandering nomad because I thought what I needed was to be found in distance, in places, in the new of life. But those things are empty, even more so when you come to realize that the searching has only left you more lost than before. It’s a feeling of tremendous regret that cannot be fully expressed with words.

I have arrived at a place in my life where I now understand just how completely imperfect I am. And yet you don’t see me that way, do you? I can sense in the way you look at me, the way you smile when you read something I have written for you. In your eyes I am made complete, whole, at home, less imperfect than the moment before you entered the room.

Yet I can sense I will not be able to charm you forever. I am far too inadequate to ever dream of fulfilling you for a lifetime. So you will move on and I will be shattered into thousands of particles that can never be reassembled. Does that mean I should let go before the moment arrives when I am crushed? How would I ever live without you for even a second?

I wish I knew what I had to say, had to do, to have you in my life for all eternity. Such things do not happen to men as broken as me. It is the curse of the muse we chase and seek to tame with our words. All words useless at times like these.

So here is what I have never said and will never admit: I hate myself for my own need, but I remain the neediest of the needy. How weak and pathetic of me. How utterly pitiful I must appear to you. No wonder you will one day terminate all contact with me.

I would open my heart more fully, but I am not even capable of that. I can only beg. It is all I have left.

Lovingly,

Yours

‘Premium’ by Daniel X. Morrison

It’s not a bad job, despite what you might think. I like what I do, and I’ve always heard that if you find a job you enjoy doing, you’ll never work a day in your life.

My own life is a big mess. The company I work for has no idea who they hired. Years back I got into some trouble because a girl I used to date claimed I was stalking her, which is just a huge crock of shit. She nearly got me put in jail, but Dad knew a great lawyer who was able to arrange for probation and a fine. I paid the fine off a long time ago, and as long as I stay away from Sherri the cops leave me alone.

What else is messy in my world? Well, there’s this crazy little thrill I get from watching some of my policyholders after work hours. I mean, I would never harm any of them, but some of the women are just so…they drive me crazy with desire. Sometimes I watch them for hours and then go back home and…well, I make myself happy. No one gets hurt; it’s a completely victimless crime.

Then I sold a policy to Lynette, and my life changed. When I say “changed,” I don’t mean we suddenly fell in love and lived happily ever after. That’s never gonna happen for me, but I’m OK with the fact that I won’t be married or have children. Children are an encumbrance, and marriage would only stand in the way of me being able to find fun where I want to. Do I really need a wife asking me what I’m looking at on my laptop or why I have a collection of women’s stockings and bras in my dresser? It’s no one’s business. I work hard, I play hard. No harm in that.

Back to Lynette. She’s younger than me. She just turned 30 and decided she needed to get some life insurance to protect her and her parents just in case anything happened to her and they were left alone with nothing but Social Security. She’s a really caring, special person, and she’s so beautiful, too. You have no idea how much I wanted to tell her that as I sat on the sofa in her apartment and asked her the application questions for the policy. I still remember that she was wearing Levi’s and a T-shirt the said, “Panama City Beach” on it. She’s perfection, and I guess part of me wishes I could tell her. But that would be very unprofessional.

So Lynette laughed when I told her the jokes that are part of my sales talk. Her eyes were so bright with kindness and joy. When I handed her the pen and she signed the application, I made sure to note where things in her place were located. I even got a tour of the apartment under the guise of maybe being able to get her a good price on some renter’s insurance.

I don’t sell renter’s insurance, but she doesn’t know that.

***************

About a week later I’m back at Lynette’s house, but I make sure and drop by when I know she’ll be at work. I park about a block away and then walk the rest of the way so the car won’t be spotted. You gotta be careful sometimes in this job.

I go around to the back of the house because there’s a six-foot high privacy fence there that should keep any nosy neighbors from seeing me or what I’m up to.

When I walk up and try the sliding glass door, I find it unlocked. How lucky is that?

Inside, I take a pair of her sandals from the bedroom closet, two pairs of her panties (one pink, one white) and a wonderful lacy bra that I put against my cheek before I place it in my handy tote bag.

While I’m there, I figure I should have some fun, but then I pause and decide to leave. I’m getting some weird vibes off the place, like the walls are moving and I gotta get out before they crush me.

***************

I sell a really great policy to a couple across town and even manage to collect a premium check covering the first three months of the policy. My district manager is gonna love seeing that! Speaking of him, his wife is not bad looking. She’s maybe 40, but with nice firm tits and a tight little butt I’ve used to spur me on as I make myself happy.

We all have a need, and a right, to be happy, don’t you think?

***************

Lynette calls me a few days later and at first I’m scared shitless. Did she notice someone had been in her place while she was at work? No! It can’t be!

Turns out she wants to go out for dinner. I can feel my stomach churning as she tells me that she finds me very interesting and handsome, can feel my throat contracting as I try to reply to her.

Finally I tell her I’m engaged and she says she understands. But of course she doesn’t and could never hope to.

What I do, what I am, what I need, is beyond her comprehension, or that of anyone else.

But it’s not a bad job at all. Not really. It has its good days.

Copyright 2016 by Daniel X. Morrison. All rights belong to the author and material may not be copied without the author’s express permission.

‘Late At Night’ by Brad Thaxton

When the silence blends with the darkness

And the wind stands still for the moon–

That’s when it’s late at night,

And the whole universe is in tune.

When the stars start to sparkle and glitter

Like a new coin reflecting light–

That’s when all troubles fade away,

In the peacefulness, late at night .

Many times I’ve stood alone in a courtyard

And stared up at heaven and space–

Wondering where it all began ,

While the blackness poured down on my face.

The mystery of all creation

Lies hidden in the sky–

As I look upon the glory,

Of a comet flying by.

Such a special time for dreaming

A dazzling vision in my sight–

That’s when my soul is safe and sound,

In the calmness, late at night.

Copyright 2016 by Brad Thaxton. All rights belong to the author and material may not be copied without the author’s express permission.

‘Tower’ by Art Metzger

The lunchroom was packed – all the long tables filled. With class lunch times staggered from 11:30 to 1:30, it would be at least two o’clock before the last table had emptied. Joe wondered how long he was going to have to stand like this. He’d been standing, balanced, since a few minutes before noon. It was now 12:15. His own class had finished and gone to recess. In another fifteen minutes they would be returning to their classroom.

A few minutes past 11:30, just after Joe and his classmates had found seats and begun eating, someone had shouted at Joe – something about what flavor Gerber’s baby food his mother had packed for him today. Joe was used to the taunts, he had been teased and bullied about his size and poor health ever since he started school, but nevertheless, this time, he shouted back to shut up. Just as he did, the school principal, Mr. Chaney, happened to walk by his table.
“Joseph, since when has the lunchroom become the place for shouting?”
“I was just…”
“I heard what you were doing, you were telling someone to shut up.”
“But they were…”
“Joseph, that’s enough. Get up, fold up your chair and come with me. Normally I would paddle someone shouting like you were and then trying to argue with me, but, as you know, I have notes from your mother and your doctor not to ever paddle you. So we must find other punishments.”
Hundreds of eyes followed Joe as Mr. Chaney led him to the main entrance of the lunchroom. “Come over here to the side, Joseph, we don’t want you blocking traffic. Now set up your chair.”

Joseph is staring at the school buildings. For a grade school it’s a fairly large campus – two buildings, three baseball diamonds, and a field for football and track. The main building has a tower in one corner, overlooking the ball fields. Joseph remembers that the ground floor of the tower had always been used to store sporting and groundskeeping equipment. He has no idea what the other floors hold, if anything, but he is going to find out. He needs to know for his plan to work. He walks toward the tower, casually, trying not to look around. There are two gym class softball games going on in the fields, but everyone there is concentrating on the games. There is no one else around.
The door to the tower isn’t locked. Joseph didn’t really expect it to be, but he is still relieved. He steps into the darkness and closes the door behind him. He is in a square room that takes up the entire ground floor of the tower. There are two small windows letting in light, and Joseph finds himself surrounded with lawnmowers, rakes, and other equipment he doesn’t recognize in the half-light. He winds his way through to the stairs in the back left-hand corner of the tower. The stairs are a familiar sight, they are exactly the same as the stairs in the school building – up eight steps and then the flight turns back on itself, up and up. There is a small landing and doorway at every floor. Joseph starts up the steps, hoping that access to the roof isn’t locked.

“Put it up right here,” Mr. Chaney said. “Now I want you to stand on it until I come to get you. Maybe then you’ll remember that there’s no shouting in school, not even in the lunchroom.”
“You want me to stand on a folding chair? What if it closes?”
“Just be careful and it won’t close. Stay balanced. I’ll come to get you when I think you’ve learned your lesson.”
“But I have to get back to class soon.”
“Joseph, what did I tell you about arguing with me. Now get up on the chair.”

Joseph has climbed up to the fifth floor of the tower. He’s opened the door on the landing of each floor, but has seen no sign of any recent use by anyone. There are broken desks and old blackboards on the two lower floors, and crates of what he assumes are out of date school books and student records. But past the second floor there is nothing, just dust and cobwebs. Joseph looks up from the fifth floor landing and sees only two more short flights of stairs – sixteen more steps. The landing on the sixth floor is much like the others, the only difference is a metal ladder fixed to the wall leading up to a hatch. Joseph doesn’t see a lock, only a set of sliding bars controlled by a lever that held the hatch closed. The ladder is woven with spider webs. Joseph brushes them away as best he can and climbs the rungs. At the top he holds the ladder with one hand while he tries to pull the lever that moves the bars to open the hatch. At first the only budge a little, but Joseph switches hands and pulls harder. Dust and flecks of metal are falling down on him, but he finally gets the bar to slide, and the hatch falls open.

Once he was actually standing on the folding metal chair Joseph was afraid to move. He imagined a foot sliding backwards, just enough to put pressure on the back of the chair seat and cause it to close. He thought of the chair swallowing him, a brown metal lunchroom monster. “Look, we’ve got a floor show,” he heard someone say. He couldn’t tell who said it, but there was a round of laughter. He looked around for an instant, but then looked back down at his feet, assuring himself that they haven’t moved.
“Hey Joe, how’s the view from up there?” More laughter. “Do you want to get down? Do you want your mommy?”
Joseph risked another look out at the lunchroom. He didn’t recognize any individual faces, he saw only a sea of laughter. He spotted one or two teachers off to the side, standing, watching him. He thought he saw pity in their faces. He wondered if he was imagining it. Already his legs were getting stiff, and it had only been a few minutes.
“Are you going to cry, baby?”

Joseph climbs up the last rungs of the ladder and crawls out onto the roof of the tower. He stands in the morning sunshine and looks around. The softball games are still going on below him. The players are tiny, running for a ball too small to see. Joseph stares at them for a moment while they play a game that he has never been invited to play.

The lunchroom clock showed that only a half hour had passed since Joseph climbed up onto the chair. It was going on 12:30. His class was gone. Other classes had come in, filling his ears with more taunts and laughter. Girls pointed at him as they came into the lunchroom, already the whole school must know about him. Joseph’s right leg, the one pressing against the front part of the chair to hold it open was beginning to shake. Joseph wanted to switch them, but he wasn’t sure how to do it. He was afraid to move. He was afraid he was going to cry, though he knew that would only make things worse. Everybody coming in or leaving had to walk right by him. Everyone looked at him. Everyone laughed at him.
“Hey Joe…you know you look really stupid up there. Did you forget the way down?”

“Do you like it up there?”

Joseph takes a closer look around the roof of the tower. The roof is completely flat, there is no kind of wall around the edge. It is perfect for his message. He looks around again. One of the softball games is ending, the players heading into the showers. They would be replaced, Joseph knew, by a new class in a few minutes. He watches the students filing into the gym for a moment, then turns toward the school buildings. The playground between the buildings is empty, it’s still to early for recess. The teachers’ parking lot is filled with cars. Joseph doesn’t recognize most of them, but he does see Mr. Chaney’s car. Not the same car he drove back then, but Joseph had been watching, and he was sure it was Chaney’s car. Perfect. Two rows away he sees his own car. Turning, he goes back through the hatch into the tower.

Joseph was going to cry. He didn’t think he could stop it. His left leg was almost numb. He wished that he had gotten onto the chair facing the back, so he could hold onto the backrest, steady himself. Maybe lift one foot at a time and move his toes while he held to the back of the chair. But he knew that Mr. Chaney wouldn’t have allowed that. He wanted Joseph facing the lunch crowd. So Joseph stood, frozen in place. He had put his hands in his pockets, not knowing what else to do with them. It was a few minutes after one o’clock.

Joseph is back in the school parking lot, standing beside his car. He opens the door on the passenger side, pulls the lever that sends the front seat forward. The back seat is filled with trash, unpaid bills, unmailed resumes, old sandwich wrappers. Leaning against the seat is a large artist’s portfolio case, leather, zipped closed, with a handle. Unlike the car and everything else in it the case looks brand new. Joseph maneuvers it carefully out of the car. It seems fairly heavy. Once it’s out Joseph slams the door shut. His keys and wallet are lying on the front seat, but he doesn’t bother locking it. What difference can it make? Without looking back he starts back toward the tower, looking perhaps like a visiting art teacher.

Joseph couldn’t feel his legs. He thought his right leg was still shaking, but he couldn’t tell for sure. He no longer heard the other kids, no longer saw the lunchroom clock. He was locked in his own frozen world of terrified stillness. He wasn’t even sure he would ever be able to get down, even if he was allowed to. He hated the lunchroom. He hated the chair. Mr. Chaney. Especially Mr. Chaney. His mouth was completely dry. His eyes were wet.

Joseph’s ascent of the tower stairs goes much more slowly with his burden. He switches hands often, carrying it carefully to keep it from dragging or knocking against the wall. There is no one around, but still Joseph is terrified of making any noise. There is metal in the portfolio case. He doesn’t want it clanking together. Once up the last flight of stairs, it is even harder to maneuver the case up the ladder to the roof. The hatch was still open, as he had left it. With one arm hooked around the top rung of the ladder, Joseph finally manages to lift the case up and through the hatch. He pushes it slightly off to the side, then steps once again into the sunlight.

It is a few minutes before two o’clock. Joseph realizes that someone is talking to him. It takes him a moment, but he realizes that it’s Mr. Chaney. “Do you think this was a fair punishment, Joseph?” Joseph doesn’t answer. “Or do you think some of the people making fun of you should have had to take your place?” Again, Joseph doesn’t answer, but he does nod his head. He is thinking about how much he would like to see Mr. Chaney standing on the chair for five minutes. “I think you’ve learned your lesson, Joseph. You may get down now. Do you need help?”
Joseph shook his head no, but Mr. Chaney helped him anyway, sort of helping him slide down until he was sitting on the chair.
“Sit there for a few minutes, Joseph, and then get to class. I’ve told your teacher to let you in without a note. And no more shouting.”

Joseph unzips the portfolio case. Inside is something big and flat, wrapped in bubble wrap and tape. Joseph takes a small pocket knife from his pocket and starts cutting the tape. Occasionally there is a small pop from the bubble wrap. As he unwraps he lets the wind take the bubble wrap. He won’t be rewrapping anything. Finally the entire package is unwrapped. Inside is a brown metal lunchroom chair. It’s not really from the lunchroom, though. Joseph stole it during one of his short-lived janitor jobs, from cleaning up after a basement church meeting. Joseph unfolds the chair and sets it in one corner of the tower, just at the edge, looking down on the playground on one side and the parking lot on the other. In the playground children are just filing out for recess, some running, some bouncing balls for four-square or basketball. He watches the children for a moment, turns to be sure he can still see Chaney’s car in the lot, make sure he is still there, then he climbs up on the chair, feeling the familiar metal under his feet. He can feel the sun on his head as he starts rocking back and forth on the soles of his feet. He presses down on the back of the chair seat with his right heel and wonders which way he will fall.

‘Temporal Memory’ by Andrew Bradford

When he awakened, the first thing they asked him was what he could remember. Well, he wanted to say, nothing. I was working around the house and then I woke up here in the hospital.

As the doctor was leaving the room, he heard him remark, “Not a good first sign.”

————————————————————————————————————————-

You were Eric, he can feel her whispering into his ear, and yet he doesn’t open his eyes to check and make sure she’s actually there. Eric. Can you hear me, Eric? We were married, Eric.

He can hear her crying softly, wants to reach and comfort her, but she is a stranger to him, and he is uncertain what to tell her. Does he pretend to be Eric just so she will feel better?

Closing his eyes tighter now, the voice fades and he is once more in pitch black space.

————————————————————————————————————————-

Is this a dream? The question buzzes into the depths of his mind as he stares at the television in the hospital room. What is real and what is just dream? Isn’t that the question man has been asking almost since the beginning of time?

Could be a dream, he realizes. This could all be a horrible nightmare or a way of his brain to teach him some much deeper lesson.

They bring him lunch and he eats some of it, noticing how bland it all tastes, then suddenly frightened when he comes to the realization that he cannot name any of the food on the plate. Surely they all have names, but all he can identify them by is color and shape: a brown square, a short mountain of white fluff, tiny green figures that seem to have been cut to the same size.

When the headache starts, he cries out and they bring him meds for the pain. But the meds only make him sleep, and how is he to ever awaken if he keeps being put back to sleep?

————————————————————————————————————————-

More tests where he has to lie perfectly still and try not to breathe too much. The machine makes whirring noises and he closes his eyes so he will not see the movements of what they call “the scanner.” He has no idea what that means, and he merely wishes the tests would end, which they finally do, but not for hours.

When they wheel him back to the room, he notices there are flowers scattered around, along with cards and notes from people he assumes he is supposed to know. Who sends flowers and cards to a stranger? He thinks it might be nice to read the cards, but he doesn’t because he is already certain he will not recognize any of the names, perhaps the words will also make little or no sense.

He clicks the TV on and then just as quickly turns it off again. He’s convinced the damn thing has been giving him the terrible headaches which seem to arrive without any warning.

So he stares at the ceiling and counts the dots on the tiles that he can see. But he is not counting them because numbers do not have meaning. So he names the tiles instead, and each one he calls Eric.

————————————————————————————————————————-

The doctor appears one morning and asks him if he is willing to try something that has never been done before, something experimental. He uses the words “radical surgical intervention.” What exactly does that mean? To which the doctor replies, “It means you get well much faster and back to where you were.”

He signs the forms with an X.

————————————————————————————————————————-

As he awakens in the room once more, he feels much lighter, as if his body might suddenly float away and not return. He grabs the sides of the bed and holds on for dear life.

A woman dressed in white arrives and shines a light into his eyes. As he stares back at the light, he can feel the rage building deep inside of him.

He reaches up and begins to thrash around, hitting the woman in white and laughing as he notes the absolute fear in her face. She begins to cry out and he covers her mouth with his hand. He watches as the light fades from her eyes and her body becomes heavy.

Wandering around the room, he stops to admire his face in the mirror, only to be shocked by the scar across his forehead. It reaches all the way around his head and seems to go on forever, as if an infinite cord tying him to some new self he does not recognize or fully comprehend.

————————————————————————————————————————-

When morning dawns, he feels warm liquid covering his face and hands. It is red and somewhat viscous. He tastes it and is repelled by the saltiness of it.

Near where he lays, he can see the what appears to be flesh, skin, muscle, bone.

He reaches for his head to try and forestall a headache, but when he does, he feels nothing but an empty hole where what makes him who he is should be.

Reaching for a knife he sees on the floor next to him, he stumbles to his feet and begins to run, not stopping until he is driven to the ground by the pain in his face.

————————————————————————————————————————-

The doctor shakes his head and answers a question he does not even recall asking him: “The pain will never abate. We can keep you somewhat comfortable, but we cannot alleviate all of what you will feel.”

He stutters and mumbles as he stares at the doctor and inquires, “Am I dead?”

The doctor laughs and steps towards the door, replying, “You’ll soon wish you were.”

Copyright 2016 by Andrew Bradford. All rights belong to the author and material may not be copied without the author’s express permission.

‘The Canine Interrogatory’ by Andrew Bradford

Sarah’s Observations:

She looks at the dog and is immediately comforted. They had told her at the shelter that the dog was gentle and loving, one of the best they had available for adoption. Sarah had been sold from the moment the cinnamon-tinted canine walked up, wagged her tail, and licked her hand. Love at first sight, and yet as she rubs the dog’s soft fur, she feels the tears starting in her eyes.

Her friends had begged her to return the dog. “You got a Rottweiler?” her BFF Candace had asked as she ever-so-slightly began to look around for the door to leave the house in case the dog made a sudden move toward her. “Why in God’s name would you get a killer dog, Sarah? What were you thinking?”

What am I ever thinking, she wonders as she strokes the dog’s velveteen ears and lets the tears flow.

Ginger Talks:

She’s a good owner. All in all, I consider this to be a good forever home. OK, so sometimes she cries for no reason, but that’s just what humans do. They get all emotional and seem to have a need to cry. It’s not the worst thing in the world.

Sarah is a nice person, constantly talking to me, feeding me twice a day: morning and evening. She’s generous with the treats and even lets me share the bed. I can’t complain, but I wish I understood why there’s so much sadness inside of her.

Sarah’s Late Evening Reflection:

Maybe that last glass of wine was a bit too much, she thinks as she collapses on the sofa. The dog is right there too, hopping up and resting at her feet. This was a good idea, she realizes. Dogs are such wonderful creatures, and after all she endured with Roger–the verbal arrows, the lies, the physical violence that finally made her realize she had to get away from him–it’s nice to have someone to trust again. A dog will never let you down, her father always said, and he was so very right.

For a moment she understands that her life is quite a good one. She has a great job with a major accounting firm, a lovely house she bought with the money her aunt left her, several wonderful friends, good health, and now a pet. All the rest will fall into place in time, she assures herself. There’s no rush. Time is her friend.

The dog looks at her with warmth and it makes her more optimistic than she’s been in months.

Ginger Wonders:

Why does life seem so complicated for humans? At the shelter, I saw so many potential adopters with sad eyes and the pain of a wounded past etched upon their faces and hearts. Seems to be a waste of a life if it’s spent enduring hurt, merely surviving, failing to celebrate every moment of the goodness that’s been laid before us all. Why stay locked in a state of self-torture when there’s so much to love to receive, so much love to give, to be shared?

I will never fully know what it means to be human, and that doesn’t bother me in the least. It doesn’t leave me feeling unfulfilled. Life is for living.

Sarah’s Tuesday Evening Call:

When she sees the number on caller ID, she knows it’s Roger. No need to answer, she tells herself. Let the bastard leave a voice mail and she can erase it later. But almost by rote, guided by some deeper reflex, she answers on the fourth ring and hears him say for the fifty millionth time that he’s sorry.

He’s been drinking. She can tell by how he slurs some of the syllables in his apology. She hardens her thoughts, steels her heart, tells him it’s far too late for it all. What has been done cannot be undone, and then he gets angry, accuses her of being a heartless bitch, a pricktease, a hateful shrew.

She hangs up.

Ginger:

More tears from Sarah. These are deep, soul-wounded sobs that shake her body. I nuzzle closer to her and lick her face. This makes her smile. She hugs me close and tells me she loves me. Yes! Love! Love is what the world is meant to be. Not the bad, not the dark. It may be raining outside, but there is always sunshine inside where we live in our hearts.

I feel Sarah’s heart beating against me and understand that I’m exactly where I’m supposed to be. This was all destiny.

Ginger Hears All:

Because he’s called only hours before, I know the sound emanating from the front door must be Roger. As I hop off the bed and ease down the hallway toward the living area, I can hear him breathing. When I draw closer, I can smell the alcohol on his breath. It stinks, and he has a sweat of fear and anger coating his skin.

I peer around the corner and into the room where he stands. He looks around in the darkness, clutching a thick piece of bent metal in his hands. When he trips on the ottoman and tumbles to the ground, I know the time is right.

I pounce, my teeth penetrating the softness of his neck.

His blood is like poison, and his cries make me feel dead inside. Why does it have to be this way? Why can’t there be more love?

Sarah begins to laugh as she takes me by the collar and leads me away from Roger’s still-twitching body.

Copyright 2016 by Andrew Bradford. All rights belong to the author and material may not be copied without the author’s express permission.

‘Pictures from a Family Album Used as a Tarot Deck’ by Art Metzger

Take down the album. No one will see. No one comes up here, only us. Slide it out from the shelf. Handle it carefully, beware of fragility. It’s a heavy album, it goes back a long time. Sit down on the floor, right here in front of the mirror and open the album. We both need to see. Now choose pictures for the deck. Choose with care – twenty-one – seven times three. Seven for luck (good or bad?). Twenty-one cards, the Major Arcana. We don’t need the Minor. There’s no future to be read here. Shuffle the twenty-one and lay them out (though some already have been). Twenty-one cards for the deck. And the Fool.

THE EMPEROR
Four is the Emperor’s number – Father, husband, cripple, drunk. He reigns from his wheeled chair, lungs shot, leg gone. His only love, his beer, at his side. Always there. Always.

THE CHARIOT
Card of the Oracle, Card Seven. Seven for luck (again), luck for the Emperor, his wheeled chair a guarantee of servitude. Service at the ring of a bell, always at his left hand, bottle at his right. His chair a chariot to end his journeying, no more back and forth -refrigerator, table; refrigerator, table – all done for him now when the bell rings. Others must listen, others must fetch, others must serve.

THE TOWER OF DESTRUCTION
The Tower of Destruction is a bottle of beer. It’s in every picture of Dear Old Dad. The Emperor. It is bottomless, infinite, ever-present. But it would be, it is his first and only love.

THE EMPRESS
Mother of the Emperor, seated at the head of her dining room table with her sons – four of them. She rules with an iron hand and they obey without question. At least three of them do. I heard her say once, “I hope I outlive them all, otherwise who will take care of them?” As usual, she got her wish, one by one went into the ground, all save the Emperor, who never listened to anyone. Too bad. I took care of it.

THE LOVERS
This card shows a bedroom fit for deposed royalty. Not much light in the room, the windows are heavily curtained. There are two separate beds, plenty of room between. They were together once, certainly, but no more. Two beds, neatly made, but dusty, disused. A few cobwebs hang overhead. The Emperor drowses in his Chariot while his wife is asleep on the sofa where she can hear his bell and answer.

THE SUN
Let the mother be the Sun. Let her bring light to hide the darkness for a little while. Let her hide the pain. For a little while. She will let it return. She will let it fill everything, do anything. She serves the darkness, called by the bell. My mother, nursemaid to the Emperor.

JUSTICE
Justice is blind. Glass eyes staring from a life-size doll. She looks to be six or seven, prettily dressed. “I always wanted a little girl, but all I got was you. Now this is all I have.” How real is she? You raise her dress, curious and disappointed. You wonder if she bleeds, one or two tiny cuts under the dress. No one will know. Lips don’t move when she cries “Mommy”. Eyes don’t cry when silence answers.

TEMPERANCE
Here’s a kitchen shot, done in black and white. A family kitchen. In the background, to one side, is a kitchen sink into which beer can be poured to anger the Emperor. Hurry, grab it when he’s not looking. He moves too slowly, he can’t stop you. Pour it sweetly swirling foaming down the drain while he shouts and cusses, but can’t get up.

THE DEVIL
Whose picture is this? There’s more than one face here. Fallen angel. Angel of ambition. Angel of subtlety. Angel of lies. Many faces and Our Father. Our Father who art Our Father. He does bad things. I do things.

THE HANGED MAN
Look, it’s my birthday party! Five years old. Our tiny kitchen is full of relatives: mother, aunts, and cousins who have been given no choice. You were there, do you remember? There was the birthday cake that we never understood, a three-tiered cake with two tiny dolls on top – a man and a woman. We weren’t sure if it was a wedding cake left at the bakery or just something mom thought was cute (she had odd taste). After the party the dolls disappeared till a few years later when I found them in a drawer in Mom’s dresser, hidden under panties and bras. Remember how we took the man-doll, tied a cord tight around its neck and hung it on the wall of our bedroom, behind the bed where no one could see. No one saw us dress it in bits of the Emperor’s clothing. No one heard us smash its legs with a hammer. Just to see if it worked.

JUDGMENT
Judgment can be several pictures: A three-swing set where only one child plays, a table with only one place, a single bed. A final chat, just you and I, alone.

THE WORLD
The World is in four notebooks hidden in a behind the chair where Death will lie. Four notebooks filled with the cramped scratchings of madness punctuated with paranoia. Hundreds of pages filled with Fool’s words, Fool’s thoughts, Fool’s life. Four notebooks, opened by no one but us, read by no one but us, at least not yet. Four volumes of a closed world – self-perpetuating. They contain everything, all the answers to questions yet to be asked. Everything included save a final note.

DEATH
Death is a note and a bottle of pills. They’re not in the picture yet, you have to imagine them even as I dream of them. They will be right there on the floor, next to the chair, surrounded by three walls of books and a closed door, mirrored so we can watch. When the picture changes the bottle will be open, empty, lying on its side in a pool of broken glass and spilled water. But the note will be dry, written neatly at first, then sloppy, pen catching the slur of words. But not yet. Only the empty chair, the books, and the Fool rushing in.

THE WHEEL OF FORTUNE
Hey, here I am again! I’m coming in the front door with my first report card of the fifth grade. I’m ten years old. Old enough to hate school. Old enough to hate. Mom is waiting by the door, smiling, happy until she opens the card. She grabs me then and pushes me in to the front closet. “Just stay there until your father gets home, we’ll see what he thinks of this.” She slams the door, leaving me in the dark, buried in the stifling heat of stored winter coats. F’s! F for Fool! F for Fuck-up! F is for Father.

THE STAR
Mom took this picture, and several more, of the next-door neighbor’s whelp, clicking away whenever she could. Leaving for school, coming home, playing, riding his bike. He was her hero. Why couldn’t I be more like him – a question she plagued me with every day. She would grab me, shake me, and demand to know why she was cursed with me. Look at his grades, she would say. Look at his friends. Look at his life. I have to admit, she had a point.

THE MAGICIAN
There is no sparkle of satin and velvet here. No magic wand. Only a black and white picture of a girl. The photo is wallet-size, often handled – an obvious favorite. The girl herself means little now, though she was nice to us once, it was quick and over long ago. But her name – her name stays in my mind. Her name is a mantra, a name to conjure with.

FORCE
Here’s a photo of Cousin Bob! Remember him? Big, loud, not real bright. Strong. He was always coming to visit, always staying overnight. Mom used to watch him for extra pennies here and there always spent for beer. Beer to keep things calm, keep things quiet. She made me share everything with Bob – my toys, my comics, and more. Everything. She let him do whatever he wanted, take whatever he wanted. More than she knew. Bob was bigger, Bob was stronger. What could I do? I couldn’t tell what he did in the garage, in the basement, other places. All he had to do was deny it and she’d take his side, she always did. So I never told. I waited. No one knows where Bob is now. He was my teacher. He was surprised.

THE POPE
An old picture, eight by ten, black and white. Taken in a church. It’s the priest who married Mom and Dad, gave them his blessing. And they say I’m the Fool.

THE MOON
Ah, a picture of the Moon. How romantic. Who took it, I wonder? What special night was it, long ago? The picture is so old it’s yellowed. Even in the protection of the album it’s beginning to curl at the corners. A black and white picture, and yet the Moon is yellow. Does the Moon have a gender? There’s a Man in the Moon, but what about the Moon? If the Moon is a woman is she maid or madam? Madam is mad either way. Moon of madness. Moon of tides, bleeding. How romantic.

THE PRIESTESS
We’ve seen this girl before, you and I. She is The Magician. She’s in a new pose in this picture, and she’s nameless. Just a body in a different shot – a newer picture – color. It’s still glossy, less handled. She made it clear I couldn’t have her, but she let me get the camera while she mocked me. That’s all I’d ever have, she said. See the look of surprise on her face. She was the second, after Bob. This picture is meant to be worshiped, to sacrifice to. Her picture, her beauty. Her panic. The Priestess.

THE HERMIT
And here’s one of you. I bet you didn’t know I still had this, did you? My semblable, mon frere. It’s like a mirror. Just like me, but better. You stand there, you do what I do, but better, always better. Too good for me, really. You keep always to yourself except when you whisper to me, telling me things. And now here you are. You must be wondering why I’m letting you see all this as I finish it. Have I made you my confessor? Or are you in trouble? Serious trouble, I’d say. Bad luck. Seven years. Now you know. It’s smash for you and pills for me and ever the twain shall meet. Are you ready? It’s time. To go.

Copyright 2016 by Art Metzger. All rights belong to the author and material may not be copied without the author’s express permission.

‘Perfect Day’ by Andrew Bradford

It was the last gig you played before the Day of Quitting. Realized later that the sound of that was reminiscent of the time three months before when you said the same damn thing, but this can be different. Can. Be. Different.

Out there wailing like a cornered bobcat, the lights making sweat ooze off you like a baby’s hurting tears. Out there in the glow of it all, man it feels like you can live about a billion years. But what did the doc tell you just a month ago? How he shook his head as he looked at your arms and legs, then filled the script because you slipped him a few hundred extra. Not to worry, doctor, you ain’t seen the real me. The real me is stronger than any fucking drug. Gonna show you who has willpower! This guy! Yeah, this guy.

Not many know just how lonely you are. Put on a good face, don’t you? Say the right things and give a wink when someone asks a question; like you know a joke but you ain’t gonna share it with anyone else. All just a fucking slo-mo tango kinda ritual you weave among the usual spells that follow the famous. Step aside, all, there’s a star coming through, and he has no time for chitchat. Hell, most of time this one can hardly speak anyway.

It’s just past three in the morning and you’re sitting in a candlelit room with guns and knives on the coffee table opposite the sofa where you pull up another fix and pound that spike deep. Feel it groove…feel it leave you cool and so damn perfect. Till the world starts to melt away and the weight of all responsibility rolls off you and out the door. Gotta rehearse the set for the show tomorrow, but that’s light years away now. Now is just us. Now is what it feels like in your spine as every molecule finally relaxes and you learn how to really let go.

Cancel the show, you mumble to your manager. Show is off! Show is off! Repeat it a few million times to yourself like it’s some mantra that is gonna stave off the hunger building in you. Grab the bottle, get some relief with a few tablets. Might just make it to the next show. Never know what kinda comeback this one has in him. He’s proved them all wrong before.

Just look at you! Making that new day shine bright in the dark of the hotel room. Not gonna need anything for a long time but you and your friends there on the table: Little thin rubber strap, thin hypo, bottle cap, glassine envelope. Got the whole world right fucking here! Who needs more than this? Not this guy! Not. This. Guy.

Manager on the line, shrieking about it all going to hell. Saying he quits. Man, shit! You quit years ago. Haven’t been able to protect me since I signed that contract years back. I care if you quit? Nope. Not at all. Go! Be gone!

Not a whit of worry for weeks until she drops by and you let her in. Listen when she says the thing in her belly is yours. Oh, fuck! You need this about as much as you need a hammer against your temple. Just kill me already! A baby! Shit, man. Babies don’t need to try and raise babies. You are looking at a very very bad potential daddy, you tell her. She just starts crying, so you make the promises and send her off with a few folded bills.

It’s all gonna work out somehow. Fill that thing up and find that right spot just between your toes. All gonna be peachy keen in a minute or two. Doesn’t matter what they say, long as you don’t have to face all their stares, their words, their horrible feelings.

Don’t have to feel a damn thing except what you choose to.

What. You. Choose.

Laughing as you sit back and the warm pulls you into a blanket of skin. This is one perfect day. Best day yet. Proved them all wrong again.

Copyright 2016 by Andrew Bradford. All rights belong to the author and material may not be copied without the author’s express permission.