prose

The Voice Unknown

Author: Zoe Belew

Genevieve Belle Mary Curry could recall so little of that night all those years ago, or so the people believe. They try to force the words from her being. Everyone from the town preacher to the resident hypnotist, with his odd charms and unnerving mannerisms, have tried all they know to make her speak of the past events. Yet, she refuses. Instead, she sits in a creaking and wilting rocking chair before the largest window on the top floor of the infamous Watkins and Abernathy Psyche Ward. The building itself is not a tall structure. Standing with a measly five levels and locked to the earth by thick concrete, the warehouse-like shelter rests atop the highest hill overlooking the tiny city of Nothing and Nowhere, Kansas.

    Genevieve, or Belle as she prefers, enjoys her time spent gazing over the quiet town. As a child, her favorite insects were ants; she liked their tenacity and ingenuity. She compares the townspeople to those spastic little creatures with the way they weave and swerve and crawl speedily through the streets, disappearing and reappearing. One might say that love is the only reason she humors the poor therapist and curious visitor who come lurking around her windowed haven throughout the year. In a blurred mass of wasted days over five years, Belle has met many from the town below the hill and others from towns miles away. She never speaks – surely they know this – but they come anyway. Regardless, she sits and stares beyond the spider web-covered glass as they spout their nonsense and go through their incessant questioning.

    They think her mute or she simply does not remember Christmas Eve from five years ago. Humorful, she remembers every detail.

#

    Sarah Curry was a loving mother of three and happily married to William Curry, the only lawyer to grace Agenda, Kansas, since his father before him. With a population of barely 75, the miniscule town sees the Curry family as utterly perfect. William handles all disputes among the residents, and Sarah is Teacher of the Year at Agenda elementary, five years running. Their daughters are no less dignified. Belle is the oldest at the hormonal age of sixteen; Gwen Bailey May is the unlucky thirteen; and Gem Bae Mayabelle is a curious six. Each girl favors their mother in appearance, but their personalities are entirely their father’s. They stand a mere four foot eight by the age of nine and never an inch taller. Their pale faces are curtained by unruly mahogany locks and vibrant brunette lashes wrap around peridotite irises. Together, they are calm, studious, and organized, just like their father, and unlike Sarah, their greatest enemy is anything involving the kitchen. However, there is one daughter more curious than the others.

    Belle avoided the granite infested area of their two-story home for a proper twelve years before being forced to participate after Gwen’s arrival. Luckily, she was never given anything too difficult, but her brief experience with the polished, freshly sharpened knives and the warmth of the preheating oven were enough to catch her eye. To Sarah’s surprise, her oldest went through a metamorphosis around the birth of her second child and retained that change through to the final bundle of joy. In the years that followed, Belle shadowed her mother every evening, learning recipe after recipe and utilizing many of the supplies hidden away in the aged cabinets. It wasn’t until Gem’s sixth birthday came and went around the holiday season that Belle wanted to help with her mother’s biggest meal of the year.

Christmas time in Agenda is a grand event. Strings of lights spiral up and down fence posts, and glistening trees glow from beyond the main windows in every home and every business. Mother Nature grants the many wishes for snow to fall, and the pot holed streets and winter frozen gardens disappear beneath a thick blanket of pure white crystals. Fires roar and families huddle around the warmth as old carols flow from static filled speakers. For the Curry family, the holidays are a time of peace and joy. The home is lively as all members are present, and there is a pile of freshly wrapped gifts stacked beneath the saddened fir shoved into a distant living room corner. William rests in his comfy recliner, sleepily oblivious to the world around him, and his two youngest children sit reading in the flares of the twinkling bulbs.

From the kitchen, wonderfully delicious scents are swirling through the air and filling each nook and cranny of the home. Sarah buzzes around swiftly, barely pausing to chop, stir, mix, or breathe. Belle watches her mother from the other side of the speckled island, and she mindlessly kneads the sugar cookie dough over a thick bed of flour. Just as Belle reaches for the wooden pin, her mother pauses near the hot stove to rake some fresh carrots into the stewing pot. She listens to the blade scrape across the cutting board with interest, and her gaze follows the careful swing of the metal. The spell breaks as the bubbling water spills over the pot and fizzes against the reddened ring below. Briefly, frighteningly, Belle wonders how to describe the metal’s forged color. She’s thought this way before, when cooking alone, but the hue has never been so sinfully distracting or exquisitely bright. Again, terrifyingly, she wonders how such a thing would feel beneath her silken palm. Would it burn? Would she really feel it after so long? Would…

“You better roll the dough, Darling,” Sarah berates, glancing over her shoulder at her eldest. “We have to set cookies out tonight.”

“With milk,” Belle adds quietly as she carefully flours the rolling pin.

“We’re making them for Santa!” Gem cries joyously as she rushes around the island, narrowly avoiding ramming her forehead into a granite corner. “Santa’s coming tonight, Mommy! Santa’s coming, Sissy! Can you believe it?”

Sarah’s cheeks lift with a gentle smile at her child’s exuberance. Rarely does she see such glorious emotion from her quiet one. “He is, Honey, and I’m sure you will get everything you asked for.”

The little girl’s eyes sparkle and widen as she gasps, hopping over to hug her mother’s leg. “Do you really think so?”

Sarah laughs delightedly and brushes the unruly strands out of her daughter’s eyes. “Mhm. You’ve been good this year, as always. We just have to make sure to get these cookies done, or Santa may take away a present.”

Belle rolls her eyes and shakes her head at her mother’s words. What a wonder it is they’ve ever gotten presents before. This wouldn’t be the first year the sweets were neglected in relation to a jolly, rosy cheeked man sliding down chimneys like some estranged burglar. Often, the dough goes forgotten and must be trashed after spoiling on the kitchen counter overnight. Still, they tempt success year after year. But Sarah’s words, unfortunately for Belle, have hit home, and the young sister’s fingers are soon digging into the disgruntled daughter’s thigh.

“You’ve got to make those cookies, Sissy! If you don’t, Santa won’t give me all my presents!” Gem orders in her high pitched voice.

Belle sighs heavily, completing a perfect circle of the sticky substance. She grabs a pile of metal cutters assorted of reindeer, trees, and stars. “I will finish these for Santa. You have my word. Now, go. I’m working, and you need to start getting ready for bed. The earlier you go to sleep, the sooner Santa will arrive.”

Sarah chuckles at the interaction and kisses her youngest on the head before softly pushing her towards the hallway. “Go on. I’ll be up soon to tuck you in. Tell Gwen to go, too.”

Little Gem rushes away with thudding footfalls, forcefully pulling the unwilling middle sister up the stairs and to their room. Belle slowly moves the freshly cut dough to a metal tray as Sarah begins cleaning up the messy counters.

“Thank you for humoring her, Darling,” she says, clawing at a particularly tough stain.

Belle shrugs away the appreciation, carefully storing the tray in the preheated oven. Once more, she sinks into the heat, just for a second, before slamming the loose door shut and careening away from the brimstone. You foolish Belle, she reprimands, stop getting distracted. Luckily, her mother remains oblivious to her inner turmoil, and Belle wonders if she should be worried, say something about her latest obsession. Her lips part as the final pan is stuffed into the overflowing fridge.

“There!” Sarah exclaims. “Everything is ready for tomorrow.” She turns to the stunned and glaze eyed Belle, barely registering her daughter’s slightly fearful expression. “I’m trusting you with the oven. I’m sure you’re going to sleep in the living room, as is tradition, so please do not forget to check the cookies every once in a while.”

“Yes, ma’am,” the girl breathes, biting her tongue at the onslaught of words waiting to tumble across her lips. Instead, her expression melts into a gentle smile. “I’ll be careful. Goodnight.”

Sarah cups Belle’s cheek with the lightest of touches before placing a soft kiss atop the downy flesh. “I’ll see you in the morning.”

She leaves her daughter standing among slowly cooling metal and a messy island. Belle flicks the bright kitchen light off so the dim ray of the stove lamp streaks across the vinyl tiles. Stepping closer to the no longer heat encapsulated ring, she cautiously presses a single fingertip to the outer edge. It burns – she feels it – but there is no pain, only warmth. Some seconds pass before she gasps and stumbles away, her back ramming into the granite edge. She gazes at her inflamed and abused skin with horror widened eyes, knowing she has never felt such a compulsion before. Why are you becoming this way? Why do you grow distracted by such things?

Stiltedly, she pushes away from the hard stone and makes a wide circle away from both the stove and oven to enter the abandoned living room. The tree lights cast out their life, and the dying embers of the fire slowly melt away. Ignoring the pain crawling along her spine and her wounded digit, she sinks into the thick cushions of the sofa before grasping the edge of the throw running along the back to drape it across her short legs. Glancing at the clock ticking away atop the mantle, she reminds herself to check the cookies in five minutes. She cannot forget. The reminder swirls around her conscious as she stares, unseeingly, at the leftover ash in the fireplace.

Fire…reddened ring…oven…warmth…

The voice intruding her mind is not her own; they sound nothing alike. The lulling hum of the words fades away as silence fills the wasted space, and she burrows into the pillow beneath her head, never blinking as the final spark dies.

“Fire. Reddened ring. Oven. Warmth,” Belle whispers into the dim. She repeats them and succumbs to the hypnotizing epitaph. The heightening ticking surrounds her, guiding her to rest, and each beat is highlighted by a syllable of the mantra. Slowly, blackness overcomes her, reminder long forgotten, and precious warmth spreads through her veins.

She lands in a dream ruled by heat released from a brilliant fire which sways with the breeze. Leaves perform a symphony of untamed, unidentifiable uttering as they brush and clash. Belle strides closer to the blaze and breathes in the natural perform of burning wood. She lowers to the ground, knees inches away from the pits’ edge, and she reaches a hand to feel the strokes of red and orange beneath her sweaty palm. She sighs at the caress and leans closer as the wind pivots. A monstrous cloud of black smoke attacks her pallor, and she gasps and chokes on the forbidden substance. She tries to crawl away from the evil infestation but it follows. Her ears strain beneath the shouting, cursing mantra which fills the hellish sky, and she forces her senses open until her form sags under the vicious onslaught. Vein colored, emerald eyes sting and mist as pure midnight pelts her sensitive skin and coats her lungs. She surrenders to the veil as the echoes continue.

The voice she hears is not her own.

#

Her lungs burn with every searing inhale and sluggish exhale. An annoying beeping resounds above her head as life reenters her veins, and the eldest child cringes at the sound while creaking fingers move atop a sheet covered bed of steel. Her body aches with every twitch, and the fire raging within is so unlike that of the once desired warmth. It dawdles through blood filled veins, across scarred flesh, and through miniscule pores. Yet, the surrounding room is icy; the walls are too white and clean. The tiles shimmer with wax beneath headache inducing fluorescents, and her eyelids tremble at the glare seeping through and attacking her sensitive irises.

Where can I be? Belle wonders internally as the medical lethargy creeps away. Am I alone?

Her heart soars and the raucous machine echoes its trembling, and the girl cautiously opens her eyes to reveal darkened and damaged vessels. She blinks swiftly and the world comes into focus, her gaze flickering erratically about the small room. The metal box roars when she takes in the black cloaked figure sitting in a worn chair against the far wall. The woman there smiles softly at the frightened and shaking girl, cautious of her tone as she quietly greets the scarred body before her.

“Hello, Genevieve,” the lady greets. “I am Caroline Bierson, and I work for the Kansas Adoption Services. It’s wonderful to see you awake.”

A flicker of perfected aggravation crosses the girl’s face as her first name escapes the female’s lips, but her horror overtakes it as reality claws its way to the surface. “W-where…” Belle practically gags as air licks up her smoke distressed throat, but she only swallows before trying again. “What h-happened?” she croaks.

Caroline’s smile falters with grief, and she creeps closer to the bed. Belle flinches at her proximity but greedily sips at the offered water, sighing with relief. “I’m afraid I have some bad news to give you.” She sets the glass aside. “But first, I’d like for you to tell me what you remember from Christmas Eve.”

The young girl’s lids flutter as she recounts all she can from that night who knows how long ago. She remembers every detail. The cookie dough, the distraction, her sister, her mother, the lovely Christmas tree, the dying fire, the warmth, the harmed finger, the forest, the fire…

The fire.

Hesitantly, she controls her features to mask her growing terror as a shadow of reality slaps her across the face. I never checked the cookies, she realizes, which means I never turned off the oven. She breathes deeply and stares into the eyes of the woman.

“I remember nothing.”

Caroline leans back at the subtle breeze of those empty, lifeless words. The once scared gaze now simmers with indifference, or defiance, and she does not wholly know what to make of it. Her jaw clenches. “Do…Are you sure, Genevieve? Are you sure there isn’t anything you want to tell me?”

“No,” Belle states. “I am confused by who you are and what happened to me. My name is all I can recall.” The lies escape blissfully smooth, and Belle feels a horrific splendor at the tales she tells. It’s like warmth, her conscience whispers. One bad habit for another.

“W-well,” the lady stammers, “there was an accident this past Christmas Eve, and I am terribly sorry to say this, but your home was destroyed in a fire.” She pauses. “The rest of your family did not survive.”

True fear and sadness overtake Belle, and the world blurs through her tears as they begin to fall. I should amend. I should tell the truth. But the words do not come. They sit in the back of her throat, and she hastily swallows them down. Instead, she questions, “How?”

Caroline sighs softly. “The investigators said the fire started from an oven which had been forgotten. It was merely an unfortunate accident.”

Belle greets the hard edge of panic encasing her, and Caroline watches, almost fearfully, as the tearful gaze transitions into something far more sinister. The girl’s chapped lips tremble as her chest convulses. Thunderous, shock filled laughter spills into the air, and a quiet murmuring crowds the sick humor. The woman is aghast by the turn of events and shuffles away from the demonic child. The mumbling nonsense morphs into that mantra from Belle’s dream, and Caroline escapes the room, knowing, should the child’s emotions remained tarnished, she will be unable to save Belle’s bested, broken soul.

“Fire. Reddened ring. Oven. Warmth,” Belle says quietly, happily. Rejoicing. Then, she sobers, returning to herself. “I did it. I killed them. I killed them all.”

With no one around to hear, those are the last words she ever spoke, but her mind still hears them in her unconscious mumblings, as well as those words which marked the beginning of her end.

Dementedly, the voice she hears is not her own.

#

Belle’s gaze lifts over the town to the distant horizon. Painted streaks of luscious pinks, purples, blues, oranges, and yellows descend with the sun to end another day. Another day spent before the cracked window of the dilapidated fifth floor. Another day reminiscing of what she lost. Another day surrounded by those who mock her; those who wish to force her to speak the truth. Foolish creatures, the lot of them.

She waits for the final orange and yellow rays before she sighs, picturing those dying embers. Rising from her withered chair and standing on unfeeling, scarred legs, she pads across the vinyl floors, stepping over the skeleton of Ray Benson – the resident, crazy hypnotist – and to the speckled granite island where a fresh mound of dough awaits. Carefully, she kneads it, looking over at the red painted, metal ring jaggedly staked to the last standing countertop made of pieces torn from the abandoned asylum walls. Once again, she must repel the distraction as one reality braids with another.

“Go on, Gem,” Belle orders to the charred bone fragments piled beside her feet. “It’s time for bed. The earlier you go to sleep, the sooner Santa will arrive.”

A reply never comes, but she works until a perfect, sticky circle lays before her, and she slices away at it with an assortment of rusted cutters. The tray is filled, and she shuffles over to a faded cardboard box. That same memorable warmth fills her senses, and like always, she forces the thin door shut before stumbling away. She returns to her seat in front of the window in time to see the sky embers fade to nothing.

You foolish, Belle, she reprimands, slipping into a fire filled dream.

The hellish mantra circles.

The voice she hears is never her own.

Even Zombies Know When to Call it Quits

Author: Chelsea Yates

 

Being undead sucked literally because you’re all like, “Braaaains,” and then you envision sucking them out with a straw. Double yuck. With being this type of undead you didn’t have any nice sire to dig you up from the grave, no pointy teeth to make getting at a brain easier (heads were not like walnuts; you couldn’t just crack them open), and soap didn’t erase that undead stench no matter how much you lathered Dove’s enchanting new fragrance on.

How was I to know that the guy checking me out at the bar hadn’t been tested for rabies?  In the pitiful existence of my life I had been with only one guy and that was my kindergarten sweetheart, Noah, whose sign of affection had been putting chewing gum in my hair. So who was I to judge when said bar guy had a bit of a mumbling problem, needed some serious breath mints, and kept inching way too close for comfort?

I’m not much of a “public displays of affection” person, but one love bite wouldn’t hurt. Then, it did and I may have thrown my gin and tonic in his face, but by then it was too late. A hickey to die for.

Turning took all of one bite. Due to me having a bit of a woozy at the sight of blood problem I fainted, was pronounced dead, broke my nails crawling up from the grave, yada, yada, yada, and here we are. You think I would have sworn off guys for a while. With my newfound penchant for digesting brains, all of that smartness had to have gone somewhere. Nope!

Blonde locks fringed his face, showcasing those gorgeous heavily lashed blue eyes. My gaze drifted lower to where he had the top two buttons of his shirt undone (not one, but TWO), revealing a yummy expanse of chest.

Mr. Blonde and Beautiful took out a flash of metal. What was that? Beside him, an unattractive male fell to the ground with a handle sticking from his side. Mr. Blonde knelt down, drawing out a plastic plate, napkin, and a fork from his backpack. Churning eyes look up towards me.

No, no, no. I drew the line at cannibalism. Daydreaming and breaking into morgues suited me just fine, thank you! Backing away slowly, I gave a little wave hoping he will think we are like-minded souls and dialed 9-1-1.

“State your emergency.”

“Hello, I would like to report a case of… cannibalism.”

Under the Ocean

Author: Adella Herron

Just another lonely, gray morning by the bounding main.  But that is alright because that is the way he likes it.

Another serene evening with only the wide, rippling ocean for company, and the small ginger cat he calls Jones at his side.  Always do the heavy sighs of the brine bring the salty, sweeping winds; the same winds that would ruffle the long, gray hairs peeking out from under the rim of the man's big hat.  The little twinkling-twinkle-jingling of the bell hanging from the cat's leather collar is like the song of a wind chime.  The twinkling sings in perfect harmony with the soft laps of water against the white sands.  Just another day.

Every morning before the sun even has a chance to yawn a big, bright yawn, the man is out setting up his little fishing boat.  On the side of the boat the word SunDogs can be read, having been crudely painted in white long ago.

“One of these days,” he would think to himself as he carried his supplies from his shack to the slow-bouncing boat; his back held down by the hand of many years, but his eyes bright gray with a determination as boundless as the sea. “Imma gonna get me a real boat with an engine and all.  One of 'em boats that has a cabin where I can carry all my books and my fishing stuff.”  The ocean would be his new “land,” he would think.  Alone and out adrift without direction and without any need for returning to the pearly dunes of the warm beach.

“I'd get my food from the depths.”  He threw the fishing rod into the boat. “And that will be my supper.  I'd float out in the ocean forever,” he placed his bait bucket of dead fish next to the rod. “And I'll have the moon in place for my reading lamp.” Finally, he grabbed little Jones and then he set out on a pathless blue journey.  Just another day out in the ocean, he would think.

 

The boat was riding the waves, but at the same time it remained stationary in the midst of the beautiful vastness; UP-n'down-UP-n'down-Up-n' so forth.  The rays of the hot sun shined down on the printed words – the words on the pages of one of his old but beloved books.  Like he would always do when he waited for the rod to catch a bite, he curled up by the fishing pole with his eyes cascading the many printed lines of fantastic legends; how his mind blissfully went off on the soft wings of fanciful reveries!  How he loved to ride the waves of fantasy as much as the waves of the ocean.  UP-n'down-UP-UP-UP – another day in a story.

 

MEW!” cried Jones quickly from the nose of the boat.  The man suddenly was thrown from his fantasy when he shot a surprised glance towards the cat; curiosity glittered in his exulted gray eyes.  The creature looked at him from a turned head with its wide eyes yellow and regarding.  Its slender, long tail was gently rocking, tapping gingerly one of its flanks then tapping the other in a perpetual rhythm. “MEW!” It called again.  The two held a glance for a moment, expecting the other to make a move but both expectations ending fruitlessly.

The man produced a wrinkled grin at the innocence of cats, then returned his attention back to the fiction laid out in a bundle of ink and paper.  This did not surprise the cat (the man's short-lived attention), but the tiny beast nonetheless kept its fixed gaze on him.  Then the creature's pointy ears must have detected a singularity, for they perked up and twitched sideways.  Something surely called the attention of its innate instincts.  Probably something behind the blue, trembling line of the horizon?  It turned its head.  It had to have a look.

A moment of peace held the calmness of the ocean.  The equilibrium of watery tranquility remained unbroken save for the sighing of the waving water.  The fishing rod was asleep with its bait still fresh and beckoning in the seemingly sapphire emptiness.

“Mew! MEW!” The calls of the cat were louder. It certainly sounded as if the beast demanded a form of stronger attention this time. Its tail was held high, swiping the air, and its little head was peering over the nose of the boat. It continued to cry.

“Well,” the aged man grumbled.  His rusty joints creaking as he hauled himself up after having hid the old book in his inner coat pocket. “You sure are vocal today, aint'cha?” Turning to the sleeping rod, he decided he would expire it and go back to the shore without bearing any supper for the day. “The fish are not biting, I wonder.” he said, plucking the little, untouched fish body from the hook and flinging it out into the vast blue.  It landed with a small whispering splash, exciting the ocean but only for a second. “Let's go.  We will try again tomorrow.” As he grabbed for the oars, the cat let out a yowl and hurried under the center thwart.  The startled eyes of a cat can never go unnoticed. “Well!” the man exclaimed with is hands on his hips. “Well! What is it with you?  Acting all like that!” He got up, guessing that the cause for the cat's excitement was something it had found in the water.  He searched the waters to the south of him but saw nothing queer.  The sides were just as quiet and without life.  Then, turning to the north of the boat where the cat had been perched, he soon found that he could barely maintain his footing.  Fright and surprise pinched his stability, forcing the boat to rock with his switching weight as he stumbled forward a little.  His petrified eyes were glued to something in the ocean.

There, unmoving and wholly silent under the fathoms of aqua, was an incredible black-blue hole.  The dark-blue edges melted into the surrounding teal light, but the singularity of the circle was of a pure blackness.  An abyssal entryway to somewhere far below the depths?

“In goodness' name?” The poor man has sailed these familiar waters since he was a child, and never before had he seen such a spectacle.  He clutched his hat tightly just in case an unexpected wind where to steal it from his head.  After what he saw, any other surprises, let alone a sudden gust of wind, would surely seem trivial.  He marveled at it, this strange hole-like thing, as he frantically tried to come up with some sort of wild explanation, but succeeding with nothing.

“Wh-what is this?” His gray eyes squinted from under his bushy, brown eyebrows.  His hands clutched the rims of the boat as he leaned forward over the water.  Near the maw of the great hole was a struggling form, a thrashing gray thing with its massive head swinging violently in agony.

A shark?!” The breath of the man was blown out from his dusty, old lungs.  He watched in silence as the terrified shark so far below was being pulled further and further into the hole, thrashing harder and harder with every passing second as if trying to free itself from an invisible pull.  Finally, its pointy head was engulfed in darkness, and all had returned to stillness....

The man waited as the trickling of the ocean's surface gossiped all around him and the boat gently rocking from underneath his feet.  He waited for something to come out of the hole be it the shark in triumph or something else.  But the hole only stared back at him with a big, black, centered eye.  In his still musing, he began to feel that if he were to wait long enough he would see two massive claws grip the sides of the hole and Cerberus himself would suddenly propel forward from the dark, chasmal cavity – the many heads of supernatural idiosyncrasy coming at him from under his tiny boat only to consume him in perplexity.  He waited.  And waited.  Waited. …  Nothing.  Nothing came out from the dark maw.  Nothing was seen coming near.  The sun was about to set.

 

The water glowed a delicate orange-purple, and the many shades of the amber sun mirage sitting just above the horizon made the sky appear reddish-orange; a faint shade of pink descended into the opposite horizon of the sun.  The man was still looming over the side.  His lips parted with utter confusion and with the particular sort of fear produced from the usual ignorance of new things.  Until the sky was dimming: he sat.  Until he was sure that nothing would come out of the hole if he were to turn his back: he sat.  Finally, breaking his fixation he hastily grabbed the oars and made way to the distant shore.  In his silence was he truly horrified.

The cat was still under the center thwart sniffing the floor with its wiggling, button nose. Though a bit tired, it kept open a vigilant eye because its innate instincts told it so.  And because it found the anomalistic humming from under its paws to be deviant.  For, under its paws, below the layer of wood and in the water, came an irregular, pulsating strum that even the acute cat had to actively listen out for.  It scraped its claw across the wood in wonder, sniffed the little cracks before abruptly becoming bored with it all.  It slumped on its side with laziness as the troubled man continued to lead the boat through the twilight.

 

Just another day in the lonely, blue ocean.

Analia

Author: Abigail Betts

Two hours until the end of her shift. And every minute seemed to slip through her grasping fingers. The pain-killers were starting to kick in, and she fought against the fog of drowsiness that was descending on her. She desperately wanted to stay awake and aware tonight, she wanted to memorize this place perfectly before she left. With her back to the rowdy kitchen staff, she meticulously wiped down each menu on the counter to help her stay awake and focused. The dining area was empty; so she quietly sang to herself. A feeling of running-out-the-clock hung in the air tonight, so no one paid any attention to her quiet hymns.

    Analia would have liked to stay there forever, but her mother was planning a party for tonight. She did not feel much like celebrating, but her mother did. It was impossible to miss the fridge full of casseroles and tiramisu. To the Castiglionis, there was no other way to celebrate; her mother had perfected their tried-and-true formula for celebration. But Analia felt less than enthusiastic thinking about a family party tonight. She would rather stay in this dingy little restaurant. The patrons were polite and loyal. She loved the little old couples who came every Sunday after mass, ordered the same drinks, and always tipped her twenty percent. The hours were reasonable, her manager was easy to get along with, and never made her work holidays.

    But it was probably for the best that she left. She could already imagine the relief that would flood into her mother’s eyes when she came through the door tonight. And that relief would be ten-fold when Analia left. Her mother was so excited. For the past two decades or so, Analia had watched hope slowly fade from her mother’s clouded eyes: to think of her daughter, over forty, single, and a waitress… More than one Castiglioni had been lighting candles for Analia after every mass. All that worry and guilt was because of her.

    It was almost a relief to think that, soon enough, very little would belong to her anymore. Very few people would be attached to her anymore She had felt the crushing pressure pushing her down for the better part of twenty years, and it was finally coming to a head. The escalation of guilt was finally coming down again. Now that the possibility of children had finally escaped from her, she could not bear to live in the disappointed heartbreak in her mother’s eyes for a second more.

    Everyone could let out a sigh of relief now. Time had finally worn down Analia’s hope and resolve. She might as well make everyone else happy. Life in a convent might be better than wiping grease-coated menus, anyway.

 

    Analia paused and rubbed at her aching back for a moment. They were closing down the restaurant for the night, and each chair that she flipped onto a table sent shooting pains throughout her body. This was just further proof that her body was begging her to let go and give up.

    After a few measured breaths, she reached for another chair. But as soon as she had it in her arms, pain flared through her abdomen and made her cry out as the chair fell to the linoleum floor. Her manager rushed from the kitchen and asked, “Are you alright?”

    Analia breathed heavily, clutching at her stomach and feeling her racing heartbeat echo through her body. “I think so, thanks,” she straightened up slowly and forced a smile. “I think I’ve just tweaked my back the wrong way.”

    He smiled at her. “I suppose it wouldn’t be right to go out on an good note, huh?”

He chuckled to himself and went back to the kitchen to close everything down for the night.

    She went back to closing the store out front, but the pain burning through her abdomen and back only worsened. When she had finished, and checked out at the register for the final time, her head was swimming. She was sweating, and her hands were trembling as she clocked out for the last time. Her rapid heartbeat echoed through her head like the roll of snare drums at the gallows.

    Analia called out a hurried farewell to her manager and stumbled out to her car in the abandoned parking lot. She leaned against the car for support while she dug her keys out of her apron. She knew she needed to get to the hospital. She sat down in the driver’s seat, breathing heavily, and stared at the phone in her hand. If she called her family and told them that she needed to go to the hospital, they would probably convince her to go home and rest in bed while the rowdy noise of the family’s celebrations leaked through her thin walls. And something felt worse about this than the flu or a stomach bug, but no one at home would buy that until she was passed out on the floor.

    Her mind briefly wandered to who else she could call, but even wandering near those thoughts were too painful. So, instead, she turned the keys in the ignition and drove in the direction of the hospital; alone and praying that she wouldn’t lose consciousness.

 

    The worst of it wasn’t the surgery. She didn’t mind the IV lines hooked up to her body. Her mother’s outraged visit wasn’t too upsetting; her mother’s anger was mainly funneled through her disappointment that the party had to be cancelled. Although, Analia still felt the blame aimed at her treacherous self. Her mother’s eyes seemed to scream “How dare you choose tonight to develop acute pancreatitis?”, even though her mother’s actual words had been, “How dare you forget to call?” Analia was actually pleased that no one stayed with her in that hospital room. Her mother had even changed the date of her flight until she had had a full recovery period in the hospital.

The worst of it was driving herself to the hospital. No one should have to drive themselves to the hospital.

 

    Analia had helped him from her car and struggled to support his weight as they made their way into the hospital. His leg was horribly swollen, and the arm he draped around her shoulders pressed a clammy palm onto her arm. She looked up at his face as they passed through the doors, and his eyes were rolling back into his head.

    “Someone help!” She called. “He’s going to fall!” A nurse and a patient in the waiting room grabbed his body, and she felt them disconnect him from her body.

She stood frozen as a swarm of hospital staff surrounded him, put his body on a gurney, and took him away through a door.

    A voice tore Analia’s eyes away from the door. “You brought him in?” A nurse asked her. The woman helped Analia onto a hard plastic seat. “Are you alright? We’re going to need you to fill out some paperwork.”

    Analia nodded mutely. The nurse returned with a clipboard and pen. Analia grasped the pen, but her hand was shaking violently. The woman took the pen and paperwork from her, and took a seat next to her. She asked Analia the basic questions on the paper, and filled them in for her.

    “Age?” the woman asked.

    “He’s…twenty-five.”

    The nurse paused with the pen for a moment. “And how old are you?”

    “Twenty-three.”

    The nurse smiled weakly, cast a glance at Analia’s hand, then re-focused her attention on the paperwork. “Reason for admittance?” the nurse asked.

    Analia tried her best to note each of the symptoms with a detailed chronology of their occurrence. “I think the fever started first, and I gave him some ibuprofen. Then he was sweating so much… I took his heartbeat, and that’s when I got worried. The fever spiked a couple degrees, and he was getting dizzy. I was re-adjusting the blanket to lay him down on the couch, and that’s when I saw his leg…”

    “Where was the swelling concentrated?” the nurse asked her gently.

    “His calf. His left calf.”    

    The nurse nodded and wrote. “Marital status?” she asked.

    “Mine?”

    “His.”

    Analia spun the ring around her finger. “Single.”

    The nurse looked down at Analia’s hand, but said nothing, and wrote down her answer. “Next of kin?”

    Analia answered immediately. “Me. Analia Castiglioni.” The nurse took her information, then asked, “Relationship?” Analia was silent, and spun the ring around her finger again.

 

    Analia felt unsteady as she leaned against the airline counter. Her father hoisted her luggage onto the scale for her. Analia was still recovering and weak, but the doctor had assured them that the surgery had gone perfectly. She was out of immediate danger after a few days. The flight had been postponed a week.

    Her family saw her to the security checkpoint. Analia endured kisses and hugs with a smile on her pale face. The last thing she saw before she turned her back and fell into line was the glowing relief in her mother’s eyes. The short, hard woman looked like Sisyphus at the top of his hill. She was unburdened.

    When Analia’s flight arrived, someone would be waiting to drive her to Bridgeport, Connecticut. The sisters of Santa Damaris were waiting for her with open arms. The convent was two thousand, eight hundred and ninety-six miles from Northwest Hospital & Medical Center. That was almost far enough to make Analia happy. That hospital was the reason that Analia’s mother would have no grandchildren. That hospital was the reason that Analia’s father never got to walk her down the aisle. That hospital had tried to kill her twice, but the second time had felt like a poetic kind of cosmic symmetry that brought her a strange sense of peace. She had been glad to walk through those doors by herself this time.

    Quiet tears flowed down Analia’s face while she struggled to remove her shoes for the security checkpoint. Bending over was still fairly painful.

    At least she hadn’t had to drive herself to the airport. It’s a terrible thing to have to drive yourself to the airport.

 

Rotting Beauty: The Story of True Love's Bite

Author: Erin Green

 

 

The legend starts with a “Once Upon A Time” story of a clichéd damsel-in-distress, locked away in a tower forever, only to be rescued by a prince through the means of a kiss, but not just any kiss, true love’s kiss. What if I told you this glorified elementary version of the story never really happened? What if I told you there was no such thing as true love’s kiss that broke the curse, set the princess free, and let the couple live happily ever after? What if I told you there was no such thing as a happily ever after? Would you believe me? In a way, you’d have to…I’m the storyteller, dictator of what falls on this page, dictator of what you will see written here in front of you, for you are the reader, and know nothing more than what I tell you…therefore you don’t have a choice.

I’ll be honest with you upfront, there is no such thing as true love’s kiss, and I’ll tell you why. You were given the sugar-coated version of what truly happened in that story. Let me take you back to the year 1346…if you know your history, you’ll know what was going on at that time in Europe. Our fairytale stories always take place in Europe. Imagine Europe 1346, a kingdom of sorts, ruled by a king and queen, happily wedded, and respected by their constituency. Around the year 1333, the king and queen conceived a young daughter, who we’ll address in this story as the princess. Because they all end up dying in the end of the story, there’s no need for actual names: it’s irrelevant. 

See, what history books got wrong about the Black Death that was eradicating European society was second strain of the infection that reach this kingdom. For obvious reasons, we’ll call this Type 2 Black Plague. Type 2 managed to infiltrate the kingdom, which had a rough population of about 72,000, killing off 45,000 within months. The people of the kingdom, knights, serfs, and priests all alike, came to the king, pleading for him to find a way to stop the Black Death, which was waving its cross bone magic across the innocent lives of the kingdom. The king, being a sympathetic man, was moved, searching for ways to save his land. More obviously, how can one be a king without people to rule?

A little more information about Type 2 Black Plague…this infection was so radically horrific, that it did not have the same effects of Type 1. People’s skins began to decay, mold, grow yellow and fall. Their movements slowed. Their speech pattern disintegrated. Their life force itself, drained of every drop of hope and energy. More importantly, the taste and hunger for human flesh was obsessively addictive. Only roughly 27,000 kingdom inhabitants were not infected with Type 2.  Residents were feasting on their neighbors, friends, and families. The kingdom was falling apart like a house of cards blown over by the cool autumn breeze. These infected creatures, bit into the skin of other kingdom goers, devouring their flesh, and also infecting them with Type 2. 

There was but only one solution, according to a witch…

See this is where history books got it wrong again. Besides the simple fact that they swept Type 2 Black Plague under the rug like a forgotten child, they completely omitted the unforgivable prophecy that was placed upon the king and his daughter, the princess. “You must sacrifice your daughter to the undead,” was what the witch told the king. “I will put a spell on her, make her sleep eternally for seven years. She will only be awaken by true love’s—not kiss—bite.” The father was skeptical of this witch’s prophecy, but skeptical about the fact of putting his daughter under a sleeping curse and sending her off to some forgotten tower to have her sleep for seven years only to be bitten by an infected monster that would save the kingdom. Ultimately…he was setting up his daughter, the princess, like a pig to be slaughtered for succulent sausages. 

Are you still with me? Stay with me, okay? I know you think you know the story about the princess being locked in the tower, guarded by the dragon, and true love’s kiss break the spell, but you in fact don’t know the story. That’s why I’m telling you the story. See, historians obliterated this story for a reason and substituted it with this “kid friendly” version for a reason. This horrific tale of a father, letting his daughter be objectified is too horrendous and appalling for modern day society. But I’m your storyteller. I’m here to break the walls down.

So what do you think happened next? Did the father choose his kingdom or his daughter? In order for one to stay, the other had to go. Of course like any other ruling king would, he chose his kingdom. The witch put a spell on the princess and the king ordered one of his remaining knights to transport her to the farthest castle tower where she was to sleep for seven years straight. The witch promised that if she slept, uninterrupted, for seven years and was bitten, the curse would be lifted, and the plague would cease to exist anymore. 

So, I’ll spare you the grotesqueness of the next seven years of body parts falling off their bodies, blood being vomited on the floors of the kingdom, and people lying on their death beds and rotting away. I won’t tell you how the kingdom was full of white slimy maggots, dancing in the rotting corpses in the kingdom. I won’t tell you how the undead continued to walk the kingdom, feasting on the dead, ripping its flesh apart with its teeth, violently ingesting intestinal tracks of God knows what. I’ll skip over the piles and piles and piles and piles and piles and piles and piles and piles and piles of dead bodies that stank from the stench of deterioration. I’ll skip over how the queen of the kingdom suffered from the infection, and died in her bath tub, and how her husband found her body, swollen with water, and how within moments her body exploded with decaying flesh. I’ll skip over brown water that residents drowned themselves in to escape the decaying world. I’ll skip over all of that because I know you don’t want to hear it. It’ll make you sick to your stomach, sick like the entire kingdom.

By year seven, the princess had rotted into nothing but a decaying lifeless twig. Her skin was yellowish brown, swollen with death. Her eyes were a deep yellow, thirsty for blood. Her hair, once full of volume, and a bright beautiful blonde, now dark thin strands of cob webs. Her lips were cracked porcelain worms glued to her face. The bones in her body, more brittle than winter tree branches. 

The princess was awakened from her seven years’ sleep and now she hungered for flesh. The princess walked all the way from the forgotten castle tower to the dying kingdom her father was ruling. Upon seeing her, he was shocked, nearly dying from traumatization. He had not expected to see his daughter in such a condition. The witch, watching the scene said, “In order for the kingdom to be saved…there must be true love’s bite.” See, there’s the catch. The king had been fooled. He assumed all he had to do was let his daughter be bitten to get rid of the plague, but in fact, it was he who was supposed to be bitten by his daughter, who loved him very so, and the plague would be no more. “From this plague your kingdom shall survive. When true love's bite, the plague shall cease,” said the witch, “For true love conquers all.”

So the princess bit him.

Her long thin arms embraced her father and she bit into his neck, causing blood to splatter, ripping the flesh away from him, gnawing into him aggressively, but with love. The king hollered, begged for mercy, shouted from the agony, the physical pain, but the emotional horror that came along with it. His vocal cords were silent as she, his daughter, the princess, had eaten his neck from the front to the back. The king was dead, and suddenly, her body began to convulse. Falling to her knees, she began bleeding from several orifices, foaming at the mouth, until she was also dead, on the floor, beside her father. 

Your textbooks say the plague ended roughly in 1353, and I’m here to tell you that’s about the only thing they got correct. They didn’t tell the story of the king who sacrificed his daughter to selfishly save his kingdom, but found out in the end that he was the one to truly be sacrificed. The textbooks didn’t tell the story of “Beauty and the Plague” in which a princess fell in love with the plagued creatures. Your textbooks didn’t tell the story of “The Rotting Mermaid” in which a princess from the sea started the infection on land. Your textbook didn’t tell the story of “Snow White and the Seven Sins” in which a princess was thought to be a witch, and the cause of the plague and horribly executed. And your textbook didn’t tell you the story of “Rotting Beauty.”

Just be warned of these fairytale textbooks rewriting stories and sugar-coating them to spare you the terrible details because not every fairytale ends happily ever after…the true stories end horribly ever after…

Grimm's Reaper

Author: Mary Campbell

John was normal, stereotypical almost. He had short brown hair, and chocolate eyes. He stood at 5'11", and wore a gray suit to an eight to four job five days out of the week. He was in his early thirties, and lived with his long term girlfriend, and her daughter. John was anything but special; he was ordinary. John’s life was predictably boring, and remained that way until the day he died.

6:15 AM. The alarm sounds, the same as every day, except today would be the last time a high pitched buzzing would rouse John from his prescription induced slumber.

6:40 AM. John steps out of the shower, brushes his teeth, and nicks himself shaving; the first time he had done so in months, and the last time he ever would.

7:00 AM. Breakfast with the family. Eggs, bacon, and sausage. John loved his saturated fats; they would eventually be the death of him, had he not been destined to die today.

7:30 AM. John hastily ties his cheap tie that was a Father's Day gift, and kisses his stepdaughter on the forehead. She was unaware this was the last time she would see her father.

7:45 AM. John is making his daily commute to work. His red light turns green, and he goes.

7:46 AM. A driver who was texting speeds through their red light.

7:46 AM. The reckless driver slams into John’s driver side door, totaling his car, and bringing his uneventful life to a terribly typical end.

7:47 AM. John’s heart stops. There was a beautiful silence, the kind death always brings. It was as if time itself had stopped, special to his passing. After all the death I've seen, this phenomenon never ceases to amaze me. 

John opens his eyes; the poor soul thinks he's still alive.

He chuckles as he exits his car, from nerves more than anything.

"I can't believe I'm okay." He says to himself, ignoring the ambivalent feeling in the back of his

mind.

Time is still unmoving.

7:47 AM. I step toward John, revealing myself.

"Hello, John."

He turns towards me, frightened, very obviously so.

"Wh...Who are you?" He stutters.

"I believe you know the answer to that question." I say calmly.

Ice runs through John’s veins as he sinks to his knees.

"You're the angel of death." He says quietly. "Aren't you?"

I nod. "That is one of my many names."

John begins to sob, taking shaky breaths, trying desperately to accept his reality.

"Please." He begins. "Please, I'm too young...I...I have a family."

I do not answer. John knows his fate is not negotiable; he does not need me to tell him.

"God!" He shrieks loudly, head in hands. "There's so much I haven't done! I wanted to see the

world!"

Still, I remain silent.

"Please..." He says to me again. "Is there nothing you can do?"

I debate silence again, but decide to answer John’s pleas.

"Tell me, John. Why should I take pity on you? Hundreds of people die every day."

John holds his head in his hands, shaking. "Just...please..."

"There is another option." I say after a moment of thought. "However, I doubt it will appeal to

you."

John’s eyes fill with hope. "Anything!" He exclaims.

"You see, my line of work takes me to all corners of the earth. This form also retains immortality, as I am neither alive nor dead, simply a bridge between the two."

I pause.

"But I am incredibly tired. So here is my proposition: I help you if you help me. You inherit my duties, and you will not be alive, but you will not die. You will be free to roam as you please."

John sits in shock. Clearly not expecting what I had offered.

"I...I don't know." He stammered. "I'm not sure I want immortality."

I shift impatiently. "Time is running out, John."

"Will I be able to see my family?"

"If you wish."

"Alright." He says while wiping the tears from his face. "Alright, I'll do it."

I smile. Finally, after centuries my burden shall be lifted.

"Be cautious, John." I warn. "As your touch does not bring comfort, it will bring death."

He nods fervently as I kneel before him. I take Johns hands, and relinquish myself to him, finally unburdened, finally free.

 

My eyes had been squeezed shut, afraid to look upon Death. Slowly, I opened my eyes as I felt his touch fade.

I was in my front yard. It was a normal day; the sounds of children playing in the distance, trees dancing in the light breeze. Had this all been a dream?

I scramble to my feet and run to the door, busting through, desperate for the sight of my girlfriend, and my daughter.

"Lori!" I feverishly shout. "Lori! Where are you?!"

And then I see her. I never appreciated her beauty. Fair blonde hair and delicate blue eyes. I want nothing more than to hold her in this moment.

But as she sees me, a smile does not flash across her face, nor does the slightest bit of happiness. She stares at me in horror.

"Lori, what's wrong?" I say in confusion.

She drops the laundry she's holding and backs away from me.

"No...No. You're dead." She's says in a hushed voice. "You've been dead for months."

"What?" I walk towards her, my arms outstretched. "Lori, I'm right here."

"NO!" She shrieks. "Get away from me! You're not real!"

Lori falls to her knees, sobbing, rocking back and forth. "You're not real." She says over and over. I stand there, dazed and confused. What did she mean I had been dead for months? I saw her just this morning, didn't I?

Just then, my stepdaughter came peering into the hallway, wearing her soccer uniform, and a bouncing red ponytail.

She freezes as she sees me. "Daddy?" She whispers.

"Hi, Becca." I say with tears in my eyes.

"Daddy!" She exclaims while running towards me.

Lori looks up, terror in her eyes. "Rebecca, no!"

I scoop her up and hold her tightly, appreciating her soft skin, and the tickle of her hair against my face.

Something isn't right. Lori is screaming, Rebecca isn't holding onto me anymore, she's gone limp.

I let go of her slowly, fear pumping through me.

Dear God, no.

Lori is screaming frantically, cursing me.

"Rebecca, no! Becca please wake up!" Tears are streaming down Loris face. Tears of loss, tears of agony, tears of more loss, and tears of hatred.

She turns to me, distraught and spewing venom. "Get the fuck out of my house! God! Haven't I been through enough?! Get out! GET OUT!"

Lori bends down over Rebecca, crying and begging her to come back, please come back. The world is going silent around me. What have I done? What is happening? Why is this happening to me?

Finally, pressure builds, and I collapse onto the ground screaming. I let go, I let the tears come. Emotion is pouring out of me like a faucet turned on high. I feel the loss of everything at once. My life will never be the same, I am alone, and I will always be alone.

When I open my eyes, I am no longer in my home. I am at the local park, now deserted. Not even the wind stirs movement.

I see him, sitting at the bench. Death.

Suddenly, my pain turns to rage.

I storm over to him, demanding answers.

"What the hell?!" I howl, my words mixing with sobs.

Death simply stands, and puts an understanding hand on my shoulder.

"I'm sorry." He says in his eerily cool voice. "I warned you, your touch would bring death to those around you."

"I...I didn't know..." I said in between tears.

"I am sorry." Death says to me. "Nothing is more tragic than the loss of a child. I understand."

In that brief moment, his voice was almost human. For the slightest second, I could see empathy in his eyes. But it went as quickly as it came, and he was ice again, cold and unfeeling.

"Speaking of which..." He says morosely, "I have to train you."

He turns from me, and begins to walk towards the pretty white town house that overlooks the park. Tom and Stacey, I recall. They're the young couple who lives there; they're new parents if I

remember correctly. I have no choice but to follow Death. So I do.

Everything was silent; it was stillness unlike any other felt in this world.

"What is this?" I wonder aloud.

Without turning, Death answers my question. "It happens when someone passes. All is halted; time itself pays it's respect to the departed. It's beautiful."

We enter the townhouse, and find ourselves in the nursery.

I turn to Death, and he nods.

"God, no. I can't." I plead with him. 

"We do not make the rules, John. Simply carry out orders."

"I just...I can't. Tom and Stacey wanted a baby for so long. I can't take him from them."

To my surprise, Death becomes angry. "We do not choose the details of life and death, John!" He yells at me. "We carry out the law that is delivered to us! If we do not, there are repercussions!"

I stare at him, shocked. I didn't expect any emotion from him. He continues.

"Do you know what will happen if you do not take that child?" Death points to the corner store half a block away from the home. "That store is going to be robbed in 20 minutes. If this child remains, Tom will enter that store, and be shot trying to stop the robbery. Stacey will be driven to suicide, and that child will be left an orphan!"

I stare at the floor, still silent.

"You carry out the law! You do not make choices! You are not God!" He bellows.

"I understand." I whisper.

I look into the crib, into the bright, smiling, blue eyes looking up at me. I close my eyes; I reach down, touch the child on the forehead, and feel his life drain away.

 

Many years have passed, I can't say exactly how many, I've lost count. At least a century has passed since I first accepted this burden.

I have been to all corners of this earth, and seen countless deaths. I have watched my loved ones fade away through the years, actually being the one who has to steal their life. I am alone in this life, and I always will be.

5:03 AM. I walk the streets of Rome right before sunrise. I've been to Italy millions of times; the beauty has faded. I wish for nothing more than the ordinary.

5:15 AM. Adrian De Pietro, a sickly young man lies in his warm bed, sleeping soundly for the first time in weeks. Unfortunately, this would be the last time he would enjoy a morning in bed.

5:45 AM. Daylight breaks, a beautiful mixture of blues and oranges cascading down on the city.

The last sunrise Adrian would experience.

5:50 AM. Adrian's weak heart gives out, and I welcome the silence.

5:50 AM. Time halts for Adrian, tipping its hat to the dearly departed. The stillness of Rome is captured as if we existed within a painting. The silence is the only beauty I find in this world anymore.

5:50 AM. I greet the boy. "Hello, Adrian."

He turns his head to look at me, and immediately tears well up in his eyes.

"You're here to take me aren't you?"

I simply nod.

Adrian begins to shake, afraid of the unknown. "I knew I was going to die." He whispers. "But now that it's time, I don't want to go."

"Death is a part of life, Adrian. It is inevitable."

"But I haven't lived. Not really." He says, trying not to cry. "I never had the chance to…I don’t

want to go."

I pause for a moment in thought, and smile, taking Adrian’s hand in mine.

"There is another option."

The Chosen One

Author: Juanita Wooley

“I love you,” he says again, this time he doesn’t bother looking at me. He already knows the answer. I don’t know why he doesn’t just give up. All his words do is cause me pain. I’m pretty sure that is not a good sign for someone who is not supposed to become attached. I love you, too.

I sigh, running my fingers through my newly cut bangs.  I can’t look him in the eyes either. “Why do you do this to yourself?” Why are you doing this to me?

“You don’t get it, do you?” his brown eyes flash gold. “If not you, then there is no one else.” You are the only one for me, too.

We both know this won’t convince me.  I have shot down Mark so many times that if this had been a war, I would have been standing in the middle of a massacre of my own creation. Yeah, with a bullet through my own heart.

“Mark, I am not a good person. Find yourself a nice girl and live happily ever after with her. Forget about me.” I close my eyes, leaning my head against the brick column of the Five and Dine where we have both been working this summer, him a cook and me a waitress. You are going to have to…

“You are such a liar. You are a good person and we both know it,” his face goes adorably red from sheer indignation. He always looks this way when he is angry, but I like it the most when he smiles.  When he smiles, I remember that the world isn’t always a bad place. It makes me warm on the inside. It reminds me that I’m alive. I wish I could stay.

“Give up on me, Mark,” I open my eyes, turning to look into his. In them, I see my reflection. Someone who looks like me. Someone almost beautiful. It hurts. Don’t look at me that way…just forget me.

“Please, don’t do this to me,” I plead. “Feelings will only make this harder. You need someone who can be there. I am going to disappear from your life just as quickly as I came into it and I cannot tell you why. You will forget about me. You will be happy.”  Even saying this, my heart is still breaking.

“I just don’t understand,” he slams into the wall. “Why can’t you stay? Don’t you know wherever you go, I will look for you. For me, it’s you. Isn’t there supposed to be a slice of happiness for everyone at least for a little while?” That’s not true. Some people don’t have happy endings. I will always be outside of your reach.

I don’t say that to him though. I would cry if I could, but this is really for the best, his best. You are the bullet piercing my heart. 

Saying those words, don’t change what is. No matter how painful this is, you must go on,” he glares at me as the words leave my mouth. I wish with all my heart that was true

I turn to him and give him one of my rare genuine smiles.I’ve got to go.”  Remember me this way. 

“Jina,” his voice rings in the distance, “You will always be the best thing to ever happen to me”. 

No, I am going to break your heart into a million pieces. You will resent me. Tomorrow, you will awake to a world without me.

I turn around one last time, memorizing the way he looks; it will have to be enough to last a lifetime. There will never be another connection, an attachment, of this strength for me. I know it, just as I know the truth. I cannot stay here. I don’t think about all the “I will nevers” just as I don’t regret not telling him I love him. Saying the words wouldn’t make a happily ever after real, but it would make the pain gnawing at the inside of my stomach more real. It would be burning a heart that is already ash. I needed to keep some part of me to myself.  I turn around, determined not to look back once. I throw my hand in the air and give a small backwards wave.

“I will see you again,” his voice echoes behind me with an unshakeable determination that makes my lips quiver. I want to shake my head in denial, but I won’t give him that satisfaction. No, really you won’t. Not Ever. 

A life of loneliness seemed unbearable now, but the choice was never mine to make. Mark will get married. Mark will have kids. More importantly, Mark won’t remember you exist. 

 Even as the tears I knew would come begin to fall from my eyes and my vision blurs, they still face forward.  You will forget him, too. 

The Tigress

Author: Susannah Ritchey

The steaming ground soothes and agitates me. Breathing in its stench, my body trembles in anticipation. The air is wet and thick and all around me I hear the unified echo- the caw of thousands all around me, in the same torment, in the same delightful anticipation. My jowls ache with the need to cry out, but I am no jungle bird. I do not get to cry out. They mock me, their beating wings motivation to keep going, creeping along the jungle floor, their waste and filth my Damascene path. 

    The echo halts, and so do I. It has started. The hunters come, tromping through the Jungle disrupting the natural order. The all-consuming echo turns into a silence that is no more than a vacuum. The hunters come, and we listen.  They preach with their guns, firing knowledge out of barrels pointed at our minds. 

    BAM!

    Their bullets hit my ears, and I fall. I fall into the kneeling position for I am nothing but a supplicant for their wrath. They impart their wisdom, and I bleed. They gather around, one at a time, sticking their fingers into my wound, spelling evermore lessons with my blood. They teach me how to live, they teach me how to die. 

    Not satisfied, one throws a rope around my flank and pulls it taught. Now I am wounded before their feet, tied to their punishments; I cannot escape. Another rope around my front paw, then another, then another. Even my head is the noose of their lecturing. The jeering that never stops. From one gaping maw to another I hear their voices. The wretched voices in so many languages, they make me understand. For the bullet is already in my ear, it has already torn through my brain. I have been ripped open, laid as an offering to their wisdom. 

    Finally, my instincts prevail, and I cry out. The jungle has become my pain roaring out at the sky. Why? Why must this be my pain? The hunters laugh and as one sycophantic voice of reason say, “This is how you survive.”

    As one they come to me, I prostrate on the ground. They hold knives and I fear them. They tear into me chanting as they do, seven voices that sound like trumpets in my ears. Seven horns they call learning. I bow and I am disemboweled. I give them my kidneys and my liver and my spleen. My stomach is gone and now I have no courage. My heart is gone and now I have no spirit. I give them the rest freely as to make it stop, but it will not stop until they have the ultimate prize. They want more, those greedy mouths, to partake of what I can give them. So I do. I lean forward as if I were being pulled by a devilish force and bow my head to them. What they see as a respectful offering I know is my last breath. With clawed hands they break my skull, and my brain is gone, into their mouths. 

    The sweet tigress droops to the ground, nothing but an empty vessel. They fill this vessel with their regurgitated thoughts, spitting into me the vanquished dreams, they call correctness. Sowing me back up, my dismembered flesh closing, changing shape until the tigress is unrecognizable from a bird. I open my mouth to wail, but I hear no growl of anguish and pain, merely a caw. The voices have started again, that endless drone of the echo. My body does not feel, just rises taking flight in the wind, leaving the path of filth and decay. No longer do I walk a path to somewhere, now I fly in a circling arc, adding filth to the path, excreting the words that have filled me up, sewn in tight where they cannot escape.

    Glancing down we see a tiger. We quiet signaling the hunters to their prey. They will not escape.

Skeletons Are Assholes

Author: Garrett Roth

Marcus lay on his untidy bed, staring at the familiar sight of his bedroom ceiling. The house, much like his life, was enveloped in a disappointing silence. He had been forgotten again, at least by people who mattered to him. He had only just begun to close his eyes when his phone’s lock screen came to and the LED on its top right corner began to glow blue.

He sighed and turned to face it, half-heartedly tapping its screen, to reveal that his aunt had just wished him a happy birthday.  It was 4PM and she was the only one who had. They also hadn’t seen each other in some twelve years.  He looked out to the setting sun through his window as he grimaced and rolled back over, holding back a depressing, melodramatic sob. 

***

    Amaius ducked out of sight of the window, fearing the boy had made them.

    “Fuck, man,” he whispered loudly as he looked down to his fellow sneaky skeleton, Jackus. He looked around briefly and peered back in to the window, the tip of his skull just barely crowning the bottom of the frame.

    “What?” Jackus replied, holding steady on the branch of a rather large tree just outside of Marcus’s window. He held Amaius up on his shoulders, the two forming a sort of dire skeleton. “He spot you?”

    “I don’t think so. Not yet, anyway,” Amaius rolled his jaw slowly, providing a brief relief from his achy jaw while avoiding the usual ear-shattering popping that accompanies a skeleton resetting broken or uncomfortable joints. 

    “Well hurry up, man.  Humans creep me the hell out. All that skin and shit,” Jackus shifted uncomfortably before turning his head and spitting out a loose tooth, pinging it off of the kitchen window.

***

    The pair waited intently, Amaius watching Marcus’s stomach and chest for the fateful moment when Marcus began using his diaphragm to breathe instead of his chest – a sign that the youth was asleep. It wasn’t before too long that the moment came and each of the boney compatriots began moving with purpose. Amaius carefully lifted the window, making the greatest care not to disturb Marcus’s slumber. The two scuttered across the floor, quietly clacking their bones as they tied each of Marcus’s limbs to the posts of his bedframe. Jackus skeleton sneaked through the rest of the empty, depressing home, and within minutes had acquired the family’s stupid fucking loud yappy dog and brought a sharpened femur (not his, he’s insistent on that) in to the dog’s throat over and over, splashing blood along the floors and wall, staining the shag carpet. He lazily dragged its corpse to the room and began writing in their ancient skellyman tongue over all of the walls using its blood, covering it with all of the incantations he learned in skellyman school for skeletons. They would need them for the ritual.

*** 

    Marcus slowly opened his eyes and upon realizing his predicament, contorted his face in horror as his eyes darted across the room. After catching the visage of the boney interlopers he tried to scream, but his fear held his tongue. He began to violently pull on his limbs only to find that they were bound by rope to the bedposts. His jerking caught the attention of his captors almost immediately.

    “Dude, shit, Amaius,” Jackus rattled and pointed to the boy on the bed. Amaius let out a loud sigh and ran his hands over his skull as though it still held hair.

    “Son of a bitch,” he muttered. Marcus swore he could see the skeleton’s face form a sort of frown, but he realized that the face was but mere bone and couldn’t possible emote in such a fashion. Marcus gasped attempting a shriek as the skeleton crept to his bedside and leaned down to meet his gaze, its face sitting only inches from his nose. “Alright, kid,” he began. His eyes, or his un-eyes, looked awkwardly off to the side as he began fumbling his words. “Well, uh, we have to do this thing-“

“A thing?” Marcus yelped, catching the surprise of his captors.

“Yes, a thing,” Jackus interjected, leaning backward in to Marcus’s view for a solitary moment before returning to his preparations. “We’ll be ready to go here in a sec’. Just dottin’ some ‘I’s and crossin’ some ‘t’s and we’ll be good to go.”

    “Hell yeah,” Amaius held out his hand in a balled fist towards Jackus who responded by smacking the top of it with his own fist and having the same done to him by Amaius before the two of them shook their fists while reeling backwards, making obnoxiously loud rattling noises all the while. Amaius snapped back to attention and returned to Marcus, who had begun to weep uncontrollably. “SoI know you’ve got some questions, and that’s okay, I got you. Y’see, my compatriot here an’ I are on our way to a celebratory shindig of a kind,” the skeleton began attempting to console Marcus in a mock-informative tone, the syllables for the longer words seemingly colliding in his mouth before falling off of his un-tongue in a dreadful cacophony of derision. Marcus couldn’t tell if the skeleton was actually intelligent and mocking him, or merely stupid and attempting to appear to be intelligent and mocking him. He didn’t concern himself with the thought for longer than a breath before returning to the horrifying as fuck circumstance he found himself in.

    “It’s gonna’ be pretty rad,” Jackus chimed in again, tossing the open torso of the dog over his shoulder. “We’re lookin’ to get totally fucking wrecked, but we need a DD before we head out. We’re going to pull Jeff’s soul from the immaterium and bind it to the skeleton inside of you. You’re not gonna’ make it but try not to think about it for too long or else this shit gets tragic.”

    Marcus could barely utter a brief ‘Wait, wh-‘ before his bones began to contract in his body. His fingers and wrist began to bulge against his skin. The bones began to violently shake, breaking themselves free of his muscles and tendons. Marcus’s screams pierced the uncomfortable, melodramatic silence of his home shortly before turning to gurgles, which in turn became exhausted gasps and groans. His endoskeleton began using his binds to find purchase against his skin, writhing freely though the living body now that it had shed itself of the muscles that bound it to its fleshy form. Marcus let out a single, solitary gurgle just before erupting in to fleshy gibs, his blood painting the walls and splattering across the window. Standing in the hazy, bloody mist was a new third skeletal fright. This new figure picked over his new body, removing chunks of nervous system and leftover muscle tissue.

    “What’s up motha’ fucka’!” he shouted enthusiastically, raising his arms above his head and waving them excitedly. The other two paid him no attention. At this point Jackus was thumbing through Marcus’s phone, his face lighting up with amusement.

    “Wow, this guy was a fucking nerd. It was his birthday and nobody gave a shit,” he chuckled. He scanned through a few texts, some poorly hidden fetish porn and his abysmally short list of contacts before tossing it back on the nightstand and looking to their new comrade. “You drive.”

    “Aww, man, how come I always have to drive? I never get to have fun with you guys and do all the cool stuff!” its lowered its shoulders and appeared to pout as it stepped down from the bloody bed. Its gaze wandered down to the floor in general dismay.

    “It’s ‘cause you keep getting’ put in dweebs, ya’ dingdong, now scoot or we’re gonna’ be fuckin’ late again, like always,” Amaius slid the window fully open and slipped out of the room. Jackus followed, sitting on the window sill and falling out backwards. Jeff lazily dragged his feet to the window before exiting through it and closing it behind him, letting out a sad, heavy and melodramatic sigh.

Frozen Bubbles

Author: Abigail Betts

“You shouldn’t climb that high.” he watched her place a hesitant foot on a suspiciously thin branch.

    “If we don’t get the lights to the top branches, it’s going to look like there are sparkling wine glasses all over their front lawn instead of trees.” She took both hands off the tree trunk to toss the strand of white lights onto a branch over her head. 

    “That doesn’t sound like such a bad alternative to me.” He looked around at the darkening sky. “The rest can wait until tomorrow, at least. If you’re hell-bent on defying death for the sake of fairy lights, you could do with some help from sunlight.”

    “I could do with some help from my spotter.” She smiled impishly down at him. “You know, seeing as you’re the only thing standing between me and my attempts to ‘defy death’.”

    He shook his head with a laugh, but took a step closer to the base of the bare bones of the dogwood tree wrapped in her lights. “I’m just saying that this could wait until tomorrow. We could go inside where it’s warm and cozy...”

    “That’s not going to work!” she called down in a taunting sing-song voice that was strangely tolerable. “You know I prefer the cold.” She tossed her scarf down at him with a flourish, and it smacked him across the face. “You, however, are free to go into the ‘warm and cozy’. I’m perfectly fine. Heat rises, you know.”

    He wrapped the mismatched, knit scarf around his neck. It was made from dozens of different colors, with no apparent pattern to its length, or to the recurrence of the colors. “What’s this scarf supposed to be?”

    “Everything,” she said simply. 

    He grinned into the warm wool and pressed her further. “Your grandmother- who I’m convinced has wandered straight off the set of some Disney film- will undoubtedly have caramel hot chocolate on the stove for you...”

    She paused for a moment. “No, she won’t... She made it for us after that unfortunate exchange of friendly fire during the first snow fall yesterday.”

    “And I’m fully confident that she’ll have made it again. She’s been watching us from the dining room window, anxiously waiting for the moment she gets to brush snow off your precious shoulders and wrap you in a warm, cozy blanket...” 

    She shook a branch over his head and showered him in snow. “Come off it, already! I’m nearly finished.”

    “It can wait a day.”

    The playfulness melted out of her voice. “No, it can’t.”

    “We’ve got a whole day-...”

     She interrupted him forcefully. “Yes, but I’d rather spend that day inside- in the ‘warm and cozy’- watching movies, playing darts, cards, and all the other silly games with you and everyone else in there,” she took her hands off of the tree to gesture to the picturesque, ginger-bread-house-come-to-life behind them. Icicles clung around windows that were hung with red ribbons and outlined with white fairy lights. Holding onto her legs while she had crawled around the second story windows hanging lights had been equally stressful. 

    “I’d rather spend the day like that, drinking gallons of caramel hot chocolate.” Her voice broke at the end of her diatribe. “And.... they won’t be able finish decorating out here for Christmas when I leave... it’s too cold for them to be out here.”

    He felt the imaginary warm that had surrounded them freeze in the air. “One more day,” he said quietly.

    She kept her back to him as she fastened the final strand of lights in their place. “One day.”

 

 

    “You shouldn’t go outside.”

    She considered that with dark amusement. “Shouldn’t I?” 

    Her laughter hardened the edge of his voice. “It’s below freezing. You’ve got to make your flight in six hours from now. It might make getting through security a little bit difficult if you’re hypothermic. I mean, I would certainly feel clumsier when I’m holding up a line of impatient businessmen because my fingers are too numb to undo my shoelaces, but hey, I guess that’s not really my concern.”

    The chiming of the grandfather clock in the foyer made them both jump. Neither of them enjoyed looking frightened at the moment. “How the hell do they sleep through that?” she hissed. Everything around them looked like it was glowing with a horrible blue light. As she gazed out at the growing cover of powder in the back yard, the falling flakes cast eerie shadows into the dark kitchen as they passed over the porch light. The snowflakes threw shadows all around them that seemed to make the dark waves of her hair ripple like water. 

    After a heavy pause, her voice startled him again. “You don’t have to come outside with me.”

    “No, I really don’t.” the acid in his voice was uncontrollable. The night just felt too heavy for peace. He felt the constant need to look over his shoulder. In the kitchen of a house full of people in the dead of night, it was only a matter of time... even if the living room was their “bedroom.” He muttered to himself, “I really shouldn’t be here at all, I suppose... but where else should I be?” He spoke to her back. “Should I not be here?” 

    He was met with silence. In his periphery, an array of knives caught the eerie winter light like icicles. White bones retracted like claws into his palms. “Six more hours... You should get some rest. It’s a long trip.”

    “It’s not that long. It will only be about a day spent traveling, including the train. It was worse when I had to drive out to Whangarei after I landed in Auckland.”

    “Beg pardon?” he asked through a sigh. 

    “New Zealand.”

    He couldn’t help but laugh. There was never a prologue to her presentation of information, large or small. “New Zealand?”

    She shrugged and turned on her heel toward the kitchen sink. She rifled around in a cabinet, and produced a bottle of dish soap. She poured a generous measure into a bowl, and then added a trickle of water from the faucet. 

    “What are you doing?” he watched her pull open drawer after unfamiliar drawer full of cookie cutters, stationery, and fossilized strawberry candies.

    “I’m going outside.” Her voice cracked, and he turned his face to hide the mask of anger that suddenly and violently pulled at his features.  He left her to her crazed search for a moment, and searched around their nest of bed sheets. He came back with his leather jacket, taken from the armchair next to the fold out couch. It felt like a particularly wretched armchair at the moment. It was her grandmother’s, and it was upholstered in a faded denim hue that seemed to dissolve in the air around them. He couldn’t blame her for wanting to keep away from “bed” tonight. He didn’t want to have to sleep there, either.

    “Damn it all.” Her voice rang out in the peace-less midnight. She was looking down at a small funnel with contempt. She plunged the funnel into her bowl, swirled it around, and then seemed satisfied. As she blew past him toward the back porch, he tossed the jacket around her shoulders. She froze in motion, and sloshed some of her mixture onto the floor in surprise. She stared down at the puddle on the dark tile floor for a moment. “It looks like ice,” she said in a small voice, as she continued onto the back porch.

    When he looked down at the glowing blue mess, he saw a rainbow caught in the light on its surface. It looked like the suspension of oil on top of water, though this was much cleaner, and wouldn’t result in the demise of pathetically sympathetic ducklings. It would have been nice to be suspended in simple distractions like that for a while.

    He stood in the doorway, perched between the warm, cozy carpet of the living room and the unforgiving stone walkway outside. She stood on the edge of the stone pathway. “Come back inside.” His facial muscles were clenching in response to the chill seeping into his marrow. “Come on-...”

    “It’s so pretty out here. I wish I’d taken more pictures during the day. Look at the sundial over there. You can just see the gnomon through the cap of snow,” she giggled in a burst of steam. “It looks like the tin man’s face is buried under a snow bank... 

    “What the hell’s a gnomon?” he asked while he tried to avoid getting his tongue caught between his teeth.

    “It would be the tin man’s nose.” She continued on. “And the birds... We never see cardinals back home. I’ve loved watching them in the morning over coffee. I suppose you’re used to them. Then again, you drink tea. But when they’re out the snow’s fresh, smooth and so...clean. Then they fly around and stir it up like blood spatters on skin...”

    “Hey-...”

    She kept going, unfazed. “It’s so violently pretty here. It’s the kind of pretty that hurts, don’t you think? I’m really going to miss that.” She looked at him and flashed a painful smile. “And I’m going to miss midnight dart competitions in the basement. Consequentially, I’ll miss the madness of doing shots while trying to throw sharp metal objects at a very small target.... Why did we do that?” she stared down at her bowl with a suspended grin.

    He couldn’t quite meet her gaze as he said, “I’ll miss the street market in Youngstown.” Her eyes were frozen on the bowl, and his eyes were frozen on her bare feet. “It was the first day.” In his memory, he saw swirling patterns of blue and white that blended into the reality of the world around them in royal colors. “You lent me your scarf, and called me a baby for getting cold. We walked around the stalls, and you were shaking. You had goose-bumps on your arms, so you walked around with your arms crossed... so I wouldn’t see.”

    She let out a derisive snort. “I wasn’t cold. You’re worse than Home Depot.”

    “What?” He pinched the bridge of his nose at the arrival of yet another abrupt shift in her tone and conversation. “If you just wanted to run circles around my head with- admittedly entertaining, nonsensical ramblings, that’s fine. But we could at least do it inside, under blankets, with thick wool socks on!”

    She ignored him and twisted her arm away from the hand he’d reached toward her. “You know, I can cut anything out of a band saw, and I can cut the same shape out using a reciprocating saw and manage perfectly smooth edges. I love the smell of wood, dust, and metal, and I don’t mind getting dirty. But when I went in the Home Depot here, those ass-hats in their horrid orange vests followed me around the store with, ‘What are you looking for, miss?’, ‘Do you need some help, honey?’, or ‘The garden center is that way.’ It’s bullshit, and I really don’t care to take it from you, too.” 

    He hazarded a guess. “I’m not trying to condescend to you-...”

    “No, you’re not. But I’m trying to distract you!” her anger seemed to crack in the air. She held his eyes with a sharp heat, but her lips were trembling.

    “Your feet-...”

    “My, how orange you’ve gotten!” she trilled manically as she swirled a finger in her bowl and splashed at him with choreographed nonchalance.

    “Just admit that you’re cold!” His shout came out in a visceral cloud of heat.

    She cocked her head to the side and said simply, “It looks like you’re smoking. Do you suppose that if you love a smoker, you could literally become addicted to a person? Second hand smoke has been proven to be just as dangerous as smoking first hand, so it makes sense that second hand smoke could be just as addictive as smoking first hand. Sure, the addiction isn’t actually bound to a person’s essence, presence, or whatever… But the brain would form the association that the gratification for its addiction comes from the person who smoked. So, your body would chemically crave someone. Now, I know what you’re thinking, but I’m not just waxing poetic here, it’s a scientific fact that-…”

    “You’re cold!” He screamed over her smoky words.

    He felt a painful chill as she abruptly lay down in the snow. His jacket was abandoned on the stone pathway. She placed the bowl on her chest, and dunked the broad end of the funnel in the liquid. “Don’t worry, I’ll be quick. Everything will freeze over in the bowl within minutes out here anyway, and clearly, you’re terribly chilly.” She held the tapered end of the funnel to her pale lips, and carefully blew a large bubble. Rainbows bounced off its surface from the harsh light overhead. She balanced the bubble for a moment on the funnel’s rim, watching it with a detached focus. Her features were harshly drained of color. 

    “It froze,” she finally said with a weak smile.

    She met his eyes, and all the blue in the world began to waver. He walked over the slick stones on bare feet and pulled her out of the snow. After retrieving his jacket, he ushered her back inside while she held the funnel in shaking hands. She clumsily sat down on the thick carpet the moment they were inside, and he forcefully shut the door behind them. The snow was already melting in her hair, and lank strands clung around her face. 

    She held a finger to her little orb, and pulled it off in a complete, solid piece. Blue eyes peered up at him from underneath wet lashes. “Watch.” She burst the delicately frozen bubble between her fingers, and it fell apart- not into shards, but into ethereal, disconnected wisps of gray.

    “It looks like burned paper.” He said quietly.

    “Strange, isn’t it?” her smile was gone, but her color was coming back in hectic roses. 

    “Why did you want to do that?” he asked quietly.

    Her eyes drifted toward the makeshift nest of furniture covered in bed sheets in the living room. “Six more hours....” when she looked at him, all the stubborn, frustrating madness had faded away. He glanced at her bowl of dish soap, and saw a thin, cracked film of ice on its colorful surface. The clock started screaming again. She cursed through gritted teeth and moaned, “What else are we going to do if we aren’t going to sleep?”

Saturnine Complex: Chapter 1: The Lonely Luminary

Author: Ryan Covington

Josephine introduced a match to the profound darkness with a flourish, carving a lonely sphere in the black.  The darkness remained at bay as she rifled through her knapsack for the candle that would tenure the light.  She felt the silver inlay of its base and pulled it free, lighting the wick as the flame reached her fingertips.  With a puff of breath and a flick of her wrist, she sacrificed what was left of the matchstick to the darkness it had insulated her from.

    “Only seven left,” she muttered to the darkness.  “I hope she’s coming.”

    “Don’t worry dear” it said.  “I’m sure she is.

    Its words comforted her.  How many weeks had she spent cooped up in this attic before the void had grown a mouth?  Who cared?  She appreciated the company.  The darkness knew things about her no one else could, things she couldn’t even remember.  After all, it had watched over her every night since she was born.  But it didn’t know where she had thrown the chest, and so she turned to the light.  That was scarcer, more precious: a dearth of unstruck lucifers and surplus of boards covering the dormer window guaranteed that.  She had ventured a glance outside only once since the first wave of them had washed over the village, and that only on accident as she tried to shoo away the crow.

    Josephine’s reluctance to see Therin as it was stemmed not only from a fear of being spotted, but a desire to retain in her mind a stock image of the village as it had looked every other year as winter came on—bustling with traders making their last stops before heading for the Pearls, skirted by icy mists that kissed the rooftops before climbing Mt. Krall to overlook the vale—beautiful.  The smells and sounds had made it hard enough to maintain the image.  But then Robert had come.  Suddenly doubting her sanity, she reached into her pocket and produced the letter, relieved to find it was real.  She unfolded it:

Dear Hugh and Madeleine,

I hope this letter finds you well!  It’s been too long since I’ve seen you or little Josephine.  Please express to her how sorry I am for missing her birthday.  I was promoted to head archaeologist at the excavation site in the Seran after the previous head passed, and I couldn’t get away.  I have a gift for her that I hope will compensate.  Thirteen is a special year; I can’t wait to hear how she did in her assessment.  In any case, I’m now on my way.  The research has proven fruitful, but the magisters insist on reviewing our expenses before agreeing to further funding—pedants, the lot.  But I relish the opportunity for a visit!  Winds willing, I’ll arrive in three days’ time and should be able to winter in Therin with the three of you.  Please feed Robert (the crow) a meal, if you would.  He has flown a long way.  Cheese is his favorite, but he’s not picky.  See you soon.

    Love,

    Dinah

 

    Josephine refolded the letter and placed it back in her pocket.  She smelled anew the stench wafting up through the floor boards, as if she had yet to grow accustomed to it.  Her stomach had hardened.  Or perhaps it was just too empty.  Either way, she felt no need to contribute to the dried vomit littering the corner where she had given up dumping the chamber pot.  The pile of biscuit tins picked clean and that corner were all that remained of a modest mountain of foodstuffs.  Robert had gotten his cheese.  She made sure he ate his fill, scrounging for whatever scraps and crumbs she could muster.  Three hours he had spent pecking at her window to deliver hope, and he had hazarded entry through it when she removed a board, even as she aimed to beat him to death with it.  That was reason enough to make him a meal of her meager supplies; delivery of her response was merely the prayer that accompanied it.  She hardly blamed Robert for corrupting the last vestige of her memory of Therin.  One mustn’t shoot the messenger.  The other crows, however, the ones that preferred to make meals of the countless bodies piled up rather than cheese, she was going to kill.  Their ubiquitous presence may have been, and likely was, the only reason the roving bands of arkads hadn’t noticed her or Robert.  But it didn’t matter.  She was going to kill the whole murder, even if she had to do it as a vengeful spirit.  The letter she attached to Robert’s leg contained only the essentials:

Dinah

Arkad attack. In attic.  Help.

    Jo

Those words cost her twelve matches’ worth of ashes to write.  She didn’t care.  It was her only hope.  Light had proven a fickle friend anyway, the sun failing Therin just as the arkads were beginning their assault.

    “I’ll never leave you.”  The first thing the darkness ever told her.

    Before Robert, Josephine’s only notions of escape had been suicidal fantasies—making a run for the wilderness while fending off pursuers, or sneaking past the sentries during one of their drunken revels.  Either plan, followed to its ideal conclusion, left her to trek alone nearly forty miles through the frozen Ipsith forest and Cairn mountains, sustained only by what she could forage.  At this time of year, nothing and mushrooms would be her most common discoveries.  The thoughts of actually surviving that the letter fomented ignited her psyche, and sitting still, waiting on a response she knew might never come did nothing to extinguish it.  By the time Robert returned the next day with

    Jo,

    I’ll be there late tomorrow night.  Can you get to the roof?

    -Dinah

Josephine felt as exhausted as if she had scaled the peak of every mountain surrounding the vale.  She barely managing to scrawl yes on the recycled note and reattach it to the crow’s leg before joining the darkness in its slumber.  She hadn’t had any food to give Robert this time, and when she awoke hours later, it was with a stifled scream, the image of a bloody beak corrupting her dreams of floating away with Aunt Dinah.

 

    Josephine took the tarnished pocket watch out of the pouch she had sewn to her shift and checked the time.  From her estimation, she only had a couple of hours before she needed to be on top of the house.  She had considered her options many times, but the only feasible route required descending from the attic into her home and sneaking to the backdoor.  If she were to go out the window, she would have to wrench free several boards and expose herself to the main thoroughfare; it was not a choice, but a death sentence.  From the backdoor, however, she could enter the alleyway, climb the lattice of the stables next door, and leap to the arch of her roof.  Willem and Dana—the blacksmith’s children—and she had made the ascent many summer evenings to watch the sun fall into the maw of the mountains.  But there had been no snow or ice then.  She would have to be careful.

    The timing had to be just right: she could neither miss Aunt Dinah, nor expose herself too long to the elements or the potential of discovery. She gave herself an hour to find the little chest. It had been over a week since she had thrown it into the wasteland, but if she was never going to see her house or her parents again, she had to at least look for it. Josephine kicked herself for having lost her temper in the first place.  The dim orb of light she held hardly made a dent in the void, but her memory compensated.  The layout of her necessities was simple: the little of her supplies that remained, she kept in the knapsack next to her scant bedding (a thick but moth-eaten blanket and a couple of bundled up petticoats).  Both were kept as far from the corner of excrement as possible, which served as a repulsive beacon, guiding her by scent if she became disoriented.  Lucky for Josephine, the smell of putrefying shit was nothing novel for arkads, so it blended right in with the smell of the corpses.  There were three leaks in the ceiling that she had mapped routes to, the biscuit tins she had placed underneath them collecting up to half a pint on good days.  Would the mists that heralded winter grace her rooftop less if they knew they were keeping her alive?  She asked the darkness once.

    “Darling, don’t think like that,” it said.

    The rest of the attic was a treacherous waste.  She seldom dared to navigate it for fear of making too much noise, but she was going to have to brave the chaos if she was to find the chest.  For the first couple weeks, the slightest creak had sent her heart racing.  Calm only came when she acknowledged death as a neutral alternative to life in her state.  Still, she preferred it remain her decision to live or not rather than the arkads, and so she took precautions: chewing and defecating she would reserve until she hadn’t heard a sound in hours or the arkads’ festivities grew so raucous that she felt assured she wouldn’t be detected.  On a few occasions, exceptions had to be made, the terror of the exercise doing much to facilitate the process.  The arkads that had taken up residence in her home seemed blessedly obtuse—maybe all arkads were—but every time Josephine considered testing the limits, she thought about the crows.  She had come to know her tenants, which horrified her.  She recognized their voices.  They had names for each other: Molt, Crotchett, Tork, sometimes guests.  Mostly they spoke in a grotesque, guttural tongue, but occasionally a word or phrase in Torvellan would make the rounds, each of them trying it out.  They would fight often, but their tone gave little indication of when a blow might land or a window might shatter.  Every conversation was a shouting match to Josephine’s ears.  She started to think of them as a mockery of her own family, herself the monster in the attic.

    What would the arkads think of her? she wondered, beginning to tiptoe into the wasteland, candlestick held low to consult with her feet on their placement.  They wouldn’t be afraid.  She recalled the sounds she had heard coming from the smithy across the street that first night.  Anything that could make Willem and his father scream like that would lose no sleep over the idea of Josephine bumping into things at night.  She lifted an overturned box and sifted through its scattered contents—books her parents had read to her before bed (Legends from Beyond Torvell, The Good Child, Secrets of the Magisters, etc.)—nothing she would take with her.  She had to pack light.   She saw something glint a few yards away and moved toward it.  

What did the arkads think of each other?  Did Tork consider Molt and Crotchett good parents?  Sure, Molt beat them, but he hadn’t killed either of them.  In fact, Josephine had only heard him kill one arkad, and that one sounded like it was trying to rape Crotchett.  Did that make him peaceful by arkad standards?  Was peaceful good?  She thought of her own parents. If they had beaten her like Molt and Crotchett did Tork, she might have been better prepared.  Had she been able to prove she was as cruel as them, maybe they would have even accepted her; then, she wouldn’t be starving in this attic, sustained only by the slim chance that her estranged aunt might descend in a balloon and whisk her away.  But Josephine couldn’t say.  She wasn’t even sure Tork was their child, or which of them, if either, were female.  Tork’s voice just sounded younger, and they only called its name in anger, never during sex.

The glint materialized.  It was a piece of the bottle she had broken.  “I think I’m close,” she told the darkness, careful to step over the shards.

    “How would you know?” it asked. “You were drunk.”

    “Because both of them hit the same rafter,” she said.  “I remember that.”

    The little chest had been her prized possession, the first item she had thought to grab when packing her knapsack.  It contained letters and poems—a particularly funny ballad from Aunt Dinah—but those weren’t what Josephine was hazarding the wasteland for.  She was after the brass locket.  All she needed, was that, Aunt Dinah, and her balloon.  Hang the rest.

Sweatpants

Author: Jessica Brooks

 

There was so much blood.

She knew there would be, in theory. But since horror films terrified her, she didn’t know just how much of it there would be.

There was blood all over her sweatpants.

Her favorite-- absolute favorite-- pair of sweatpants.

Why had she done it?

That answer had seemed clear to her before the handle of the knife made its home in her palm. Now she couldn't remember it.

There was her wedding night, lying on the kitchen floor. There was the night she became Mrs. Connor. Those cold hands were lying face-up, open and taunting her from the linoleum. In them were all the minutes spent in the marriage bed. There was the passionate, furious lovemaking followed by the calm caresses. There were the years of mediocre, obligatory, scheduled sex. There were the hands, that after two years of marriage, forgot the location of her clit. There were the hands that never dared to journey for it again.

There lying on the floor was the past seven years. She now could not remember why she had decided seven years was more than enough.

There was so much blood.

He had stopped caring. He had stopped treasuring her.

So much blood. All over her favorite sweatpants.

But he had tried. Hadn’t he? He had. He had tried. He hadn’t forgotten her birthday.

She’d never be able to wear these pants again. Then she remembered that he had, in fact, forgotten their anniversary. Were the sobs that overtook her heroin-wracked frame for the spouse she'd murdered? Or were they for the clothing she'd sullied?

The floor rose to meet her, and her face landed in warm red, which provoked her to cry more. Her first instinct was to drop the knife and wipe her face, but there was more blood on her hands. The poison leaked to her lashes, then to her eyes.

Fumbling, still weeping, she rose, feeling her way for the sink, until-- fuck! fuck fuck fuck! the knife! It bit her heel, and she limped the rest of the way to the kitchen sink in frustration and pain.

As the sound of the rushing water mingling with her gasps and wails overtook her ears, she thought how easily she could drown herself in that sink. She second-guessed her decision almost immediately--drowning seemed too harsh a way to go.

But at least there’s no blood.

When she finally rose and recovered the use of her eyes, she saw the snow falling in such a smooth, lilting pattern onto the balcony, a kind of beauty that seemed so out of place in the horrid mess her life had become. Walking heavy on her left foot, tiptoeing on her right to keep pressure off her still-bleeding heel, she opened the glass doors with a reverence she’d never known. 

She stood still for a moment, allowing the cold air to assault her exposed arms. The violence felt like love. As she looked over her shoulder, she cringed to see the patterned trail of crimson that she’d tracked all over the brand-new plush carpet.

Shivers replaced her sobs as the crying subsided. The upper half of her body was so cold, but the lower half of it was so warm she felt she’d burn. The blood should have grown cold by now but she felt it getting hotter...and hotter...and hotter…

She stepped out of the stained cocoon and tossed it over the balcony. She thought she heard herself laugh as she did so.

The more flakes of powdered sugar fell from the sky, the more she realized that love it or hate it, her whole life was lying in a pool of blood in the kitchen they’d shared, dead by her hand.

The front door opened.

“Marni?”

There was her shitty fucking excuse for a lover. He was only two doors down, of course he had heard the screams. He hadn’t seen yet.

There was a pause so long, it could have lasted seven years.

“Marni.”

Now, he’d seen it.

He was calling to her, but the pile of fabric on the sidewalk far below was calling as well.

She chose to follow the sweatpants.

Candy Corn

Author: Ryann Taylor

There is no candy more disgusting than candy corn. Not only does it not actually resemble corn, it also has a sandy texture that makes it crumble in my mouth like a piece of dirt. Yes, I have put dirt into my mouth before like any normal almost-five-year-old would, and in case you are wondering, no, it isn’t good.

    So today on this most horrible of days, the principal of my preschool has decided to bribe me to risk my life with none other than, you guessed it, candy corn.

    “Ryann, if you flush the toilet I’ll let you have a piece of candy corn.”

    She sounds nonthreatening if you don’t look at her pursed lips and her beady, black eyes, but I do. She stays perched in her big, cushy blue chair behind her desk. Her hands are folded on top near scattered papers I couldn’t read, even if I could see the tops of them, and near one solitary picture frame. The most hideous thing of all is the clear jar on the corner of her desk that contains the candy corn; it’s still only half-way filled like it was the past two months I’ve used the bathroom in her office.

    “Ryann…?”

    My fingers reach for my left pigtail, and they give it a slight tug. I let my fingers slide through the hair my mom brushed out this morning and put into two separate ponytails—pigtails.

    “No thank you;” I smile like my mom tells me to when I say no to something I don’t want to do. The principal’s lips are still in a tight line. Maybe she didn’t see me smile since her desk is so tall.

    I’ve used the bathroom. I said “no thank you.” That’s all there is to do. My new Velcro shoes flash as I take a few steps to the door, but a blue-jean clad thigh blocks me. Farther up from that thigh is a plaid shirt and the sympathetic face of my pre-school teacher.

    “Excuse me.”

    She doesn’t budge. I don’t get it. I said “excuse me.” 

    “Now, Ryann, you can either flush the toilet or I’ll have to call your mom.”

This is coming from behind me—from behind a tall desk.

“We’ll still give you candy corn,” my teacher croaks, smiling at me like candy corn is going to convince me to risk my life. I swivel and my shoes flash again to look at the principal.

Principal beady-eyes makes a “cheese” face at me. Her fingers are still tapping on her desk. The door to her bathroom is cracked how I left it a minute ago, and the neon, skittle-yellow light pierces my eyes. 

“Will one of you go in with me?” I beg, feeling my fingers reach again for my pigtail.

Beady-eyes shakes her head. Her “cheese” face is gone. The line is back on her face.

“What if something happens to me?” My feet begin to shake as they think about what they’re going to have to do.

“Nothing is going to happen to you,” beady-eyes sighs and stops tapping her fingers to motion towards the bathroom door.

“I’ll wait here,” my teacher promises behind me. Like she cares. She’s the one who wouldn’t let me out of this stinking room.

If they were to call my mom would she defend my precious life? Who would do the dusting for her if I didn’t survive? Who would take my toys? Then again, my mom makes me flush at home. The toilet at our house isn’t as—

“Ryann? Do we need to call your mom?”

I shake my head and take the wobbly, flashing steps it takes to get into the blindingly bright bathroom. I push the door further open just in case I get sucked in; one of them will see me and pull me out. I hope.

The stool I had just used a minute ago sits beside the toilet, waiting for the toilet to take its next victim. Maybe I’m being dramatic. That’s what my mom always says. I would think I was being dramatic too if I hadn’t witnessed the toilet’s loud roar and how it spits water while eating my pee and toilet paper.

Why does it like toilet paper anyway? I’ve tried it before. It’s not so great. It just tastes like dusty paper.

    My hands press against the chilly, brick wall as I place one foot on the stool carefully. I don’t want to wobble and fall in. Then I’ll definitely be a goner. 

    Inside the toilet there’s still pee with a now soggy string of toilet paper sitting on top. I’m going to have to set my hand on the seat to reach the lever. 

    “Can you see me?!” I yell outside before I take the risk.

    “Yes.”

    That’s all? They’re not concerned?!

    I set my hand on top of the shiny, silver lever and push down.

    I jump back as it roars and swirls and spits at me. 

    I land on the tile floor with my body in a bridge; hands on the floor, feet on the floor, tummy in the air.

    I walk out of the bathroom, not looking at the principal.

    My teacher smiles down at me. She places her hands on her thighs so she can bend down; “good job! Now you get candy corn!”

    Before I can even protest, the principal has left her desk and is by my side with the clear jar half-way filled with old candy corn.

    “You can take three pieces,” the principal shoves the jar in my face, and I don’t know what to do—other than take three pieces of candy corn. I count them out. One, two, three. They sit in my hand, cool and hard. 

    I look over at my teacher and her face is beaming. She nods at me. 

    I’ll let her have the satisfaction. I place all three pieces in my mouth and take a cautious bite down. It’s just as sandy as I remember.

Those We Never Remember

Author: Audrey Bearss

Were we special? No, oh no. We were forgotten, in the backwoods of the South doomed to community colleges and thrift store jeans. Yet we were perfect to each other. We drew on our eyeliner way too thick in dirty mirrors with an image of Joan Jett pulled up on somebody's cracked iPod in the corner to compare; as we crowded the tiny church bathroom well past maximum capacity. Pictures of some summer romance tucked in CD cases hidden in our book bags to trade. Dollar Tree lunches shoved down before the football smacks someone in the face. Amoung the dead of the cemetery we sit. Telling them our stories and imaging who they were. Homecoming queens, nerds, and rockers. Sprawled out on hot hoods as The Rolling Stones invade the parking lot and three chicks pound the diesel truck's hood in rhythm cause we're too young to drive and too bored to go inside. Ripped away by the month of May, only to be remember when a leg from a wreck goes numb, an Algebra I formula appears, or a tattered old guitar magazine is found in the depths of a closet.

Wishing Well

Author: Lauren Roland

She laughed.

    “Come on, you can’t catch me!” she teased, racing further through the woods, her blue dress flouncing with each step.

    He was panting as he chased her, following the trail of swinging branches and leaves. “Won’t you slow down and enjoy the day?” he called after her.

    Eventually, she did slow down. Stopped, even, right on the edge of the woods, the daylight dripping through the leaves and putting small bright spots all over her skin. “There’s always time to enjoy the day, Robert,” she sang. “Not always time to mess with you.”

    He put his arm around her and laughed as they walked back towards town.

 

    Marina busied herself with wiping her walls down. It was how she started every morning – wiped down the walls in preparation for the day’s wishes. Since paper and water didn’t mix, she couldn’t have a notebook to keep track in, so she used the walls instead. If you scratched hard enough with whatever coin they threw, you could make a pretty decent mark on the wall. Which would be wiped clean the following morning, unless they hadn’t come true yet. In that case, she would move them to a special section of the wall so she could work on them when she got ideas as to how to grant them.

    She was still working on the whole coming-true part. Some things she could grant right away. Others, not so much. 

    Marina settled down on her perch in the wall. It had taken ages to move enough of the stones so there would be a slight dip for her to sit in, but it worked beautifully now. She decided that she’d wait until she heard the bells for ten, and if nobody had thrown a coin in by then, she’d go up to the top and see what was going on. Otherwise, it was gathering both wishes and coins until she had a lull.

    She didn’t have long to wait at all.

 

    The sun was now high in the sky and they had left the coolness of the woods far behind them. Just on the outskirts of the town, they came to the old well. The stones may have been more round than square with the passing of years, but it still held cool water.

    “D’you want to stop and get some?” Robert asked. 

    Her breath was coming in short spurts now. “I don’t see why not.” 

    Robert removed the well cover, drew up the bucket and gave her the cup first. She settled down on the edge of the well to drink.

    “Don’t you think it’s a beautiful day, though?” she asked, tilting her head back to stare at the sky. “One of those days where the clouds aren’t too thick and aren’t too thin. Where you can see the sky, but not the sky. Don’t you understand?” She brought her head back down to look at Robert, who had settled down beside her. He laughed and tried to wrap his arm around her waist, but misjudged and she found herself slipping.

 

    It was a little girl who was first this morning. Margie, Marina thought. She’d been here a few times with friends, but never by herself. And never in such a state.

    Margie gripped her piggy bank tightly as she peered over the rail into the well. “Please let Kissums come back. I didn’t mean to get mad at her, I really didn’t.” She dropped the entire piggy bank into the well. It splashed heavily.

    Marina leaped from her perch and snagged the bank before it could hit the bottom of the well and shatter. It was surprisingly heavy. She looked back up at the sobbing girl and her watery heart broke. 

    Kissums. The name was familiar. It was Margie’s new kitten. Apparently, she was missing. Marina took a coin from the bank and scratched KISSUMS into the wall. Then she closed her eyes and reached out with her mind. 

    The kitten was easily located, napping behind the trashcans by the butcher’s back door. She had a full belly of scraps. Satisfied, Marina floated to the top of the well and whispered in Margie’s ear.

    Have you tried the butcher shop?

    Margie’s crying ceased and she looked around. She’d heard how the well sometimes spoke to people, but she’d always been skeptical. This, though – this she’d heard.

    “The butcher shop?”

    The butcher shop. Scared little kitten, hungry, she’d probably go to somewhere she smells food. 

    Margie clambered to her feet and looked around. She couldn’t see Marina, of course, nobody could. But she took off running towards the shop. Marina smiled and settled back onto her perch, picking up the piggy bank and rolling it in her hands. The coins inside jingled.

    Not twenty minutes later, little Margie was back at the well, lost kitten in arms. “Thank you,” she called down. Marina looked up at the small silhouette on the edge of the well. 

    You’re welcome.

 

    She toppled backwards with a squeak. Robert leaned over the well and grabbed for her, catching her by the left arm. Her booted feet tried for a hold on the slick stones of the well, but ended up just dangling uselessly, reflected in the water far below, and her right hand clutched desperately at the arms that were beginning to lose their grip.

    “C-come on, now, Robert,” she managed. “You got me. Pull me back up.”

    “Sorry about that.” He looked down at her with a mixture of relief and worry. “Good thing I’ve got–”     

    She smiled up at him, expecting him to set her safely back on the side and then continue on their way back. A different story played out: his hands slipped from hers and she reached for them again, but she was just a little too far gone for him to catch. She plummeted the rest of the way down the well, her billowy dress doing nothing to slow her descent, and landed with a splash and a small shriek in the water at the bottom, some thirty feet down. She sank quickly, but forced herself back to the surface.

    “Robert,” she cried, coughing up a mouthful of liquid. She was treading water frantically in the small space that she had. “Please, you have to help.” Her hand touched the smooth walls of the well, worn to an incredible slickness by the decades. “Get the bucket.”

    Robert had gone as white as a sheet. She looked so frail from such a lofty height. He panicked. He slammed the covering over the well, muffling her screams, and ran in the other direction, heading as far away from the town as he could.

 

    The scene repeated itself throughout the day. Someone would throw in a coin, make a wish, and Marina would scratch their wish into the wall with the coin. Then she’d use a little ghostly magic and attempt to fix whatever was ailing the wishers.

    Day turned into months, which turned into years, which turned into decades. Still Marina scratched wishes into the wall and tried her best to answer them. Days got busier as more and more people heard about the “real” wishing well. She could no longer instantly grant requests, and her lists on the wall would sometimes take three to four hours to remedy at the end of the night. There was one column on the wall that she didn’t touch, though: the wishes she had been unable to grant. They languished, sometimes for years before she was able to give the wisher what they were looking for. Many were looking for miracles.

    Fifty years passed, and the day of what would have been her seventieth birthday arrived. She was still stuck in the shell of a twenty-year-old, still stuck at the bottom of the well she’d expired in, and still granting wishes as best she could. She’d celebrated with a walk through the town the night before, marveling at how large it had grown and how few people she recognized were still there. There were more recognizable names in the cemetery, but no flowers on her grave yet. She looked forward to seeing if anybody remembered her day.

    By anybody, though, she hadn’t expected him. 

    

    Marina’s fingers were bloody and her toes were scraped to hell and back. She’d long ago kicked off her boots to keep them from weighing her down. Her socks had come off soon after. She braced herself against the sides again and attempted her seventeenth shuffle up the wall to freedom. It didn’t work, and as she slid back towards the water she knew she didn’t have the strength to hold on much longer. Her voice was already gone, from all the laughing she’d done earlier in the woods with Robert – where was he? – and from screaming for someone to “Help! Help, please!”

    She held on to the two slightly jutting bricks that were right above the water level. It conserved a bit of energy just hanging there instead of trying to tread water. She closed her eyes. “It can’t be that bad, to die,” she whispered. “People do it all the time.”

 

    She was organizing the previous days’ coin collection, sorting it into denominations (somebody had thrown in a fifty-cent piece!) when a large shadow blocked out the sun. She looked up, surprised. Nobody leaned over the well when tossing in their wish; it was a superstition left over from the days when people had still talked about her. 

    The profile was familiar. That made her smile, considering how few people were still around that had known her in life. She decided to leave her coins and drift closer to see who it was. 

    Robert McAffey stood staring back at her.    

 

    Marina’s arms were stiff. Judging from the weak light coming in from the minuscule cracks in the well covering, she’d been in the water for several hours. She no longer had enough in her to cry, and she was sure her entire body was blue with cold. Robert wasn’t coming back. Nobody was.

    She let go of the wall.

 

    He was old. That was a shock. She had seen others grow old, but she’d never imagined that Robert would have, too. His brown hair was white, his green eyes more gray, and his face was a lot droopier than she remembered.

    His hand shook as he fished in his pocket and came up with a handful of silver dollars. There were twenty of them, all dating from the year she had died. He stood over the well and held out his hand. 

    “This is for you, Marina. I wish that I could say that I’m sorry. Fifty years and then some of regretting what I did to you. Who knows why I did what I did? I sure as hell don’t.” He turned his hand over and let the coins fall. They plinked merrily into the water below, unlike Marina’s fatal splash all those years ago. His eyes began to drip.

    Marina picked one coin up and scratched ME into the wall. 

    Robert stood looking into the well for a long time afterward. The feel of the air changed, and tourists looking to toss a coin were deterred by the sight of the old man sobbing by the wishing well. She floated just below, watching him, working up the courage to make the connection. Finally, she did it.

    Hello, Robert.

 

    She floated for a while, because every time she started to sink she’d panic and wave her arms and bring herself back to the surface. Eventually, she could no longer feel her arms, and the well was pitch-dark. 

    She sank. The water closed above her head with a kiss. Her first breath of water caused her to cough, to sputter, to rethink the whole dying thing and try one more time to get up the walls. The second breath was easier, and the third, and then she could feel the bottom of the well scrape against her back. She closed her eyes and sighed.

 

    His head snapped up. “Not funny,” he growled. 

    I don’t really have much of a sense of humor any more.

    He looked around, fury billowing out of his eyes. “What sort of coward would dare–”

    That’s a curious question, coming from you, of all people. What sort of coward would leave his fiancé to drown in a well?

    By now, Robert was checking around the frame of the well’s little gazebo for hidden wires or speakers. He found none, because there were none to find. “Who are you?”

    That’s a pretty stupid question.

    “Oh, God.” Robert’s face took on a sickly green tinge. “The well. You’re the well.”

    Ding-ding-ding. Give the man his prize.

    “You’re the reason all these things come true. Makes sense, though. You were always helping anybody you came across.” A smile crossed the old man’s face. “Even those of them that didn’t deserve it.”

    Like you?

    He scowled. “That’s not fair.”

 

    They found her the next morning when an elderly gentleman went to the well to get some water on his way back from an early morning walk. She was an ethereal beauty in death, her blonde curls unfurled and drifting across the water, her face as blue as the dress she was wearing. She was peaceful.

    The old man was not.

    Within twenty minutes of the discovery, the sheriff dragged his macabre prize from the depths of the well. She was limp and water streamed off her clothing. She wasn’t wearing any shoes. They were fished out later, two scuffed black boots, along with her white lace socks.  

 

    What do you want to say?

    “I spent twenty years in prison for running away.” He passed a hand over his thinning hair and sighed. “I was a coward. I panicked and I left you behind.”

    I saw you come to my funeral.

    He nodded. “I was a wreck.”

    What changed you?

    Robert gave a small laugh. “The obvious answer is prison. Several people in there couldn’t believe what I’d done. I was beaten more times than I can count. And I broke. Got out early for good behavior.” His fingers gripped the well’s railing so tightly that his knuckles turned white. “And I’ve hated myself ever since.”

    She looked at his arms and noticed the scars. She put her hands on them and he shuddered at the sudden chill. 

    “Yes, I tried to kill myself. Took me thirty years to get up the courage to come back.”

    I forgive you.

    He looked up, eyes still red from weeping. “What? Why?”

    If you hadn’t, there would be a lot more unhappy people around here. Have you noticed? Fifty years of granting wishes. Everything from finding lost pets to healing broken hearts. I’ve only had twenty-three wishes I’ve been unable to grant. She smiled, even though she knew he couldn’t see her.

    “I’m so sorry,” he whispered. “We should have spent the last half-century together. Instead, you’ve spent it at the bottom of a well and I’ve spent it in regret.”

    I’m not angry. Not any more. I’ve been able to help so many more people in death. Hundreds and thousands of wishes.

    “Thank you.” He relaxed his grip on the railing and straightened up. “What – what do you do with the coins?”

    Homeless shelters and people on the street. She paused. A little like a modern Robin Hood. But the rich freely part with their money.

    “I’ve got to go.” Robert put out his hand, and he could feel the shiver of her touching him.

    I’ll see you around.

 

    The town grew. Marina faded from most memories, but the well was never used for drinking again. The story of the girl in the well was brought up from time to time, but nobody paid attention. Soon, tourists began visiting, and some decided to throw coins into the disused well and make a wish.

    It wasn’t long before they realized that their wishes were coming true.

 

    Years passed. More people made wishes, more people found what they wanted. And still Marina worked, and her list of unanswerable wishes gradually dwindled to zero as she figured out how to grant them.

    The day she wiped her wall completely clean, someone arrived at the well after midnight.

    Marina? It was Robert.

    Still here.

    A light drifted down to her, and the Robert of old was standing there – her Robert, the twenty-three-year-old wonder she’d fallen in love with all those years ago.

    She was suddenly very aware of how she looked – exactly like a drowned girl. Just the way she’d been found.

    You’re beautiful, he said. He held out his hand. This time, I’m not leaving you behind. Let’s get out of this well and go home.

    She looked around at the blank stones and dark water. She felt the chill and the damp for the first time in decades. She took his hand and her appearance changed. Gone were the limp hair, soggy dress, and bare feet. Her golden curls shone in the moonlight, her dress swayed happily in the wind, and her boot heels clicked softly against the wall of the well.

    She smiled, a big smile, one that made her whole face hurt. 

    Let’s go home.

The Accidental Slut

Author: Keshia Mcclantoc

Her porcelain face smiled at me, an assurance I neither needed nor wanted. I scoffed at her and wiped the drool from my lips. I'm sorry, I thought, for vomiting on you. She didn't answer, of course, because she was the toilet. Instead I was greeted with a gargled cry and an urging echo as she took my lunch and everything else with her. Anxiety came in many flavors, each with its own unique form of small terrors. This one, of course, had the usual ingredients of shaking hands and sweat parading across the forehead. The vomiting had been a surprise, something to throw a bit of extra spice in there. It was brought on by my heart beating in a furious crescendo and my breath getting caught in every beat. Oh my old friends, you would think by now I would know what to expect from you. Outside, through the paper thin walls of my safe haven there was a ringing crash, followed by a string of expletives. This is the reminder, it said, get back out there. Some hapless soul had taken to branding the mirror in black marker, saying solemnly in wide curving letters "I don't know who I am but maybe this will help." In a singular space, unoccupied by the marked transgression was a sticker, advertising some local band. The person who didn't know themselves must have put the sticker there, as some pretentious gamble, my music makes me who I am man. Maybe I didn't want to hear the angsty cacophony of your garage band, maybe a bitch just wanted to check her reflection. 

 

If you look up the word slut on Urban Dictionary, it tells you a slut is a girl who will sleep with anyone. Of course, when looking up the definition for anything, I turn to the true lawmaker, the Oxford English Dictionary. Slut, a woman of dirty, slovenly, or untidy habits. Slut, four letters, one syllable--two in the mouths of the right people. In its one syllable form it's delivered in a sharp swift cut, or the twisting of the knife in a previous injury. In its two syllable form it starts off tight to begin with, falls fat and round at the end. It's like that first heavy raindrop that hits your face right before the rain falls. Why not say both versions to yourself, practice them a bit. Do you hear that, the weight of those words as they leave your lips? 

 

Coming out of the restroom, I was hit with the cold slap of my anxiety all over again. The bathroom was behind the stage and I had to scoot along between the edge and the graffitied wall, while the band, tuning up and dragging equipment around for their set, stared me down. I didn’t see them seeing me, of course, but I felt the pull of their gaze as I rounded the corner and plunged myself back into the crowd. The people had separated themselves into groups of tall hunching figures draped in flannel shirts, girls whose thighs were accentuated by torn tights, and conversations building and rising in chaotic dissonance. Then, alone, a single lingering figure with hands shoved in pockets. 

Type: mediocre white boy, mid-twenties and still dressing like his sixteen year old self. Expression: monotone--and have fun trying to shake that look into anything else besides boredom. If you asked him what he thought of some nameless pop star's new video, then maybe his face would contort in disgust, and he’d tell you with great indignation, eyebrows raised, what real music was. Not too tall, not too skinny, a lot of greasy hair, shoved under a sagging gray beanie. His face was indistinguishable, only made unique by the sharpness of his jaw, the straight edge of his nose. Looking in the crowd I could see twenty or so more versions of him. It was almost like their soft suburban mothers got them all on wholesale at the Gap, and deposited them with lipstick smiles saying, “Make good choices.” The correct answer would be the rolling of the eyes, the pierced lip saying “shut the hell up.” This one, though, unlike his counterparts, belonged to me. Or maybe not belonged, he was attached, like a leech I had placed on myself. It wasn’t the first time I wondered again about why I had invited him. 

    “Hey,” I said, approaching. His response was immediate, a quick smile and a brief glance at me before settling his eyes on my chest. No, by some strange magic, my tits didn’t fall off in the bathroom, thanks for noticing. 

    “So, do you know if this place is kind to smokers?” he asked, flipping his pack out of his pocket, lighter twirling in his other hand. 

    “Well, I mean, people go outside,” I said, nodding vaguely towards the door. I crossed my arms over my chest, and he answered by letting his gaze follow mine outside. 

    “Well then,” he said, taking out a cigarette with surprising deftness and sticking it between his front teeth, “You cool?”

It’s okay Julia, it’s just me, we’re cool.

    “Yeah,” I said with a dry nod, “I’m cool.”

When he opened the door, a cold rush of biting winter air swept in and he caught the glare of a few naysayers. The venue was entirely too small for this massive crowd. What it lacked in width and length, though, it made up in depth. The ceiling rose into some dark shadowy abyss, segmented by an interlocking labyrinth of rusted pipes. Honestly, it had to be shit for acoustics. Even in their individual groups, the people had been tightly packed. This type of crowd, though, liked the bumping shoulders and bouncing music. Once the band started playing they would have their own little pocket of chaos, and, like a pack of wolves, they would devour it. It was the guy, though, and not the crowd, that had stirred my anxiety. With him gone it was easier to breathe. You could to tell, within fifteen minutes of talking to any guy, whether they wanted to take you home or leave you at the curb. Every impression he had given me so far had been that of former. He hadn’t even wanted to come here, instead he suggested we hang out back at his place. For what, I thought, Netflix and chill? I had been insistent, though, “No, really, my friend invited me and I can’t let her down.” 

    It was the truth, Xandra had invited me. I didn’t let him know, though, that Xandra didn’t want me to invite him. She was across the room know, surrounded, per usual by a flock of guys. Her smile circled around all of them as she giggled, made witty comments, and everything else a nice young lady was supposed to do when entertaining a group of young gentlemen. Her eyes caught mine and her smile stretched deeper, sinking into her dimples. I approached them and became Moses, a shambling opening form that allowed me into the circle.

“You okay Julia?” she asked and I nodded vaguely in response. It was hard for them to resist her, I knew. She was just the type of fine packaging they all dreamed of; small and petite but curvy as well, with big blue eyes, and a pouting bottom lip that she would bite lightly, a signal here, to let know she had other plans for those lips. 

“Your date seems kind of…” she let herself trail off here. 

I needed to tell her believe me, Xandra, I know my date isn’t up to your standards, but instead I said, “He’s not my date, he’s just a guy.”

“Well, if you wanna come over after this tonight, you can,” she said, casting me a sly grin. I returned it weakly and let myself fade away from the circle. One of these guys would end up the lucky one, the one Xandra would pull back into her apartment, kissing and giggling as she fumbled with the the keys. Perhaps she would turn on the light, let them see her as she pulled off her shirt. Soft skin, luminescent in the fluorescents, and her breasts two perky mountains, cupped in the lace of her bra. Or maybe she would keep the lights off, guiding them through the mess of her living room and pushing them unto the bed. If I did go there tonight, then of course I would join them, because Xandra always made me join them. 

 

The first time it had happened, she hadn’t asked me before, but instead took my hand and pulled me into her room. I was too caught up in the logistics of it, of what to pay attention to. There was so much going on and too much effort to be put into everything. And didn’t it bother them too, that the bed was squeaking too loudly, that we were all sweating too much, that I hadn’t even said once, “Yes, this is what I want.”  It had been the first time since the last time, and when I cried afterwards she apologized and told me, she had just wanted to make me feel good. She knew it was wrong, after what happened, but that she wanted me to feel good about sex again. I told her it didn’t matter, and when it happened again I let it take me away, like one of those lazy river rides at one of the ten thousand water parks parents dragged their kids to. i just let it pull me along and I didn’t make much effort to get out. 

 

“Hey,” someone said, grabbing my wrist. He was one of Xandra’s followers, casting a sudden line out to me. I noticed immediately that he was ideal for her, generic enough to fit in with the faceless others, but distinguished enough to catch her attention. His hand, lightly gripping at my wrist, was made of long, cold fingers. 

Julia, you’re freezing, let me warm you up.

“Xandra told me your name was Julia, I like that name,” he said, quick to the point, casting me a glance from my head to my toes. 

“Yeah, it is,” I said, pulling my wrist from his grip. “And you’ll have to tell Xandra I won’t be coming to her house tonight.”

His disappointment washed over his face in quick succession and he shrugged before joining Xandra and the rest of her zoo. Behind me there was a gust of cold air, and my anxiety joined me back at my side, the fresh smell of cigarettes on his breath and the red chilled cheeks pulling up along his smile. Just as he reached me, sound spread out across the mike, silencing the crowd. Finally, the band was ready. 

 

Almost immediately I noticed the guitar player, because it was the thing I always noticed. It was hard to detach the music from the person; it must be integral to their persona. But this music, loud and overwrought, sharpened like a knife against the oppressiveness of society was nothing like the person. The crowd ate it up, bobbing their heads in perfect unison, all along to a rhythm I couldn’t catch. He was soft, with limp blond hair that fell over his bending head. His posture, it seemed, was guided purely by how his instrument moved him. The line, from his shoulder and down the light muscles of his arm and into his fingers, it was a balance, a whole. My companion beside me didn’t notice me noticing someone who was not him. But when I looked back again, I didn’t see the guitar player standing there. Instead I saw the other guy I knew, the one who was a guitar player as well. Hadn’t he too, had that line of balance? Hadn’t he too, let his instrument guide him? Hadn’t he said, Hey, I’m not hurting you, am I? Julia, why are you crying? Don’t cry baby, you wanted this. It’s almost over, now, okay. 

 

Later on, in the car, I went through the motions of making out with the guy who was my date and not my date. I had told him, right after the first song, “You should drive me home.” What he heard was, “Do you want to fuck me in your car?” 

This part was easy, to put myself through each individual step. Step one, get the boy in the car. Step Two, mash your lips against his. Step Three, moan like you’re enjoying yourself when his hands find your way into your pants. Usually I was really good at step three, some might even say my performances were award Oscar worthy. This time I didn’t even get a bid.  

    “What’s up?” he asked, his cheeks flushed, breath catching at the end of every syllable. 

    “I don’t want to,” I said, short and succinct. 

    “Don’t want to?”

    “Come on,” I said, turning away from him. The anxiety found its way back again, in sudden, shuddering waves that slapped me coldly against the face. It was the scariest thing, saying no. “Don’t pretend you didn’t come with me tonight just to get into my pants.”

    “Well,” he said, “That may have been part of my agenda.”

    I scoffed and sank closer to the window, feeling his fingers run themselves with creeping tingles up my thigh. The words I said fell back into my stomach, hitting the ocean floor like heavy rocks, ‘I don’t want to’. The seaweed wrapped around them, locking them in place--useless. 

    “You know,” I told him, “I don’t even remember your name.”

 

    “Whose room is this?” he asked. His arms, around me, wrapped tighter. Too tight, I noticed, for me to wriggle my way out of. I moved my head around, seeing only the dark shapes and outlines. 

    “I don’t know, someone whose name I probably can’t remember,” I said and then his hot breath was at my neck, balancing suddenly at the edge of him pressing his lips against it. When I dragged myself into this room, I hadn’t expected anyone to follow me. My head had been pounding, and I knew Xandra would have at least another hour of lap hopping before I dragged her drunk ass home. Certified DD services in form of a friend, that’s me. But then Nathan, Nathan from my history lecture, who always sighed loudly, and audibly, every time Professor Richardson went off on tangents about Rasputin. I always noticed, he always looked over at me with an expression that said, ‘not this again.’ Nathan, whose band had played at the party that night, his fingers moving deftly over the strings. Nathan who had come up to me after they were done playing and asked ‘Julia, have you accepted Rasputin as your Lord and Savior yet?” I hadn’t told him to follow me, I had only said I was finding a place to lay down up stairs. I probably should’ve told him I was finding a place alone. 

    Behind me he pushed forward, finally kissed the back of my neck. For a brief second his arms loosened, and I understood, this is the part where I was supposed to turn around him and kiss him, and so I did. Perhaps after a minute, maybe more or maybe less, he started reaching down and I was aware of pressure, those fingers there, strong and insistent.

“No,” I said, and I knew even then, that he wasn’t going to listen. 

“But you’ll like it, relax,” he said and his fingers were there again, pressing. 

“I can’t, please, don’t.”

“Julia, shhh,” his lips were brushing over my ear, “you know you want this.”

“I don’t want to. Please, Nathan, stop.”

“It will be over in a minute, come on,” he told me, gripping me with those arms again, moving his fingers down again. I was trapped, and suddenly, I felt suffocated. I couldn’t stop him, because surely if I tried, he would never let me have air again.

Would it have been better if I had fought back? Would he have known to stop? Would you be able to say, now’s there’s a girl to believe when she tells us, she’s not a slut. I didn’t, though, and it was easier that way. I laid there, I let him wash over me. The lazy river ride, pulling you along. And when I started crying, he didn’t stop then. He told me afterwards I should have told him I had never done it before, he would have been easier. He thought I was crying because it was my first time. And then there was the girl, who belonged to the room, who found us in her bed and denounced me as a slut to the entire party. There was Nathan who said nothing, Nathan who had chuckled proudly with the rest, “Yeah, yeah that’s the stupid slut I just fucked.”

 

I walked home because I couldn’t stand be in his car another second afterwards. He didn’t matter and I wouldn’t see him again. But it didn’t matter, because he was just one of the many nameless dozen or so that came after Nathan. I never really knew my rapist was a rapist, at least not until he told me so. I hated that you had were supposed to say it that way, my rapist—like he belonged to me. The truth was, I would always belong to him. He would always have my answer, the no, the stop, the please don’t—those words were his now. He took them and locked them away, somewhere, seemingly, where only I could hear them. When Nathan called me, weeks afterwards, and told me, crying that he was sorry for what he had done, I didn’t know what to say. He relayed me the story, he had been with a girl and he couldn’t get it up, for his mind was too caught on what had happened with me. I laughed then, because it was so ridiculous, my rapist, apologizing to be and giving me a sob story about not being able to get laid. I knew immediately the laughter, loud and bitter with tears rolling down my cheeks, was wrong. I had offended him, he had tried to make the situation right and here I was, belittling him with laughter. “Well, maybe you are a slut,” he told me. “Yeah,” I answered, still laughing, “I probably am.”

 

 You have to believe me when I say I didn’t mean to be that girl, the one walking home at three am with the taste of some guy’s last score in her mouth. I didn’t mean to be the girl who let her friend pull her into sexual encounters that she didn’t really understand. I didn’t mean to become the girl who became the slut because that’s what people told her she was and sex was all people wanted of her. I was an accident, really, not what I meant to be. The accidental slut on her accidental walk of shame. That’s how life works though, what the person who scrawled on the mirror really needs to know, life is so much easier if you just become what people expect of you. It takes someone brave to defy expectations, and I am not a brave person.

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