by Rebecca Klassen Harry comes home after work. "Right where I left you both," he says. Shivering and tired, I swear at him while Lily's head jiggles at my breast. The streak of light is sudden like a gunshot from the wall. From its root, the tiny porthole above the mantlepiece, I see the diminishing day, swallowed up by baby. When Harry peers through the hole, it casts a bright monocle around his eye. I press Lily to him, then retreat upstairs for shallow sleep until Lily needs me again. ~*~ Harry arrives home and asks about dinner, and I babble about initiative, swearing again. He calls me a prickly cow. More holes appear in the lounge walls, and Lily screams when Harry slams the door. ~*~ Lily teethes, and Harry and I jostle for position of most impressive martyr. The walls become more pocked, the holes weeping brickwork. What do I know about plastering? It’s probably impossible when you’re holding a baby. ~*~ Harry comes home and looks at the walls, the light freckled across his dark suit. Tears plop from my jaw onto Lily’s cottony body. "Everything’s going to collapse," I say. Harry sits next to me and strokes Lily’s head. "She’s beautiful, like her mama." I shake my head. "Now way; she looks like you." He slips his arm around my shoulders as the light in the room fades. I hear the rattle of stones and catch the scent of disturbed dust. "She looks so content," he says. "You’re doing an amazing job with her." I rest my head on his chest, sleepy in the rapidly dimming light. "It can’t be easy, being away from her all day." As Harry kisses my cheek, the room darkens, but I can still see his face as he rests his forehead against mine, Lily nestled between us. * * * Rebecca Klassen is co-editor of The Phare and a Best of the Net 2025 nominee. She won the London Independent Story Prize and was shortlisted for this year’s Alpine Fellowship. Her work has been performed on BBC radio.
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by Colette Coen Our argument seemed trivial now, but as she approached, I wondered if she would stop or even say hello. I stood my ground, determined not to shrink into the detergents and tissues. I might not have noticed her slight hesitation if I had not been watching her so closely, but it was there. I could almost see her mouthing the words I had said to myself when I spotted her. She kept coming until she stood in front of me, our trolleys side by side, blocking the aisle. "He’s dead, you know." I nodded, smiling slightly. "Water under the bridge." * * * Colette Coen was a runner-up in Mslexia’s SS Competition 2023 and most recently published in Causeway/Cabshair. Her books are on Amazon. She lives near Glasgow where she runs Beech Editorial Services. She’ll swap a story for dark chocolate. by Doug Jacquier The water bore’s gone dry and Adam stares at the grey-black clouds that cluster like a bunch of stuck-up girls at a school dance that turn him down every time. He flicks on his solar batteries (powered by the daily hell-fire Sun), loads his player with Classic Hits, turns the volume up to 11, hits play, grabs the microphone and in synchronicity with the soaring guitars, the drums and the backup singers, screams “God, make them dance with me!” An apocalyptic lightning flash is followed by raindrops like bullets and, as they hit the dust, Adam’s nostrils fill with petrichor. * * * Doug Jacquier writes from the Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia. His work has been published in Australia, the US, the UK, Canada, New Zealand, and India. He blogs at Six Crooked Highways and is the editor of the humour site, Witcraft. by Lorette C. Luzajic The seagrass, like woodcut lines zigzagging across the dark water. Rippling cords all tangled in the shallows like some kind of labyrinth. The soft moon illuminates a hushed halo over her brow. Sometimes she wails for her drowned child and the eerie sound fills up the whole world. Sometimes there is mere silence. No wind, no waves. I crawled off of the same shore, the epigenetic trauma of hate and war. Want spun through and through my story. Like a ghost, I wandered after her, needy and damaged and desperate, tugging at her silk nightgown, begging her to see me. * * * Lorette C. Luzajic reads, writes, edits, publishes, and teaches flash fiction and prose poetry. She is the founding editor of The Ekphrastic Review and The Mackinaw. by E.C. Traganas That look of yours! As if the whole forest would bow in your presence willows waving their hands in salute, larch trees snapping to attention, a copper beech in deep, resplendent curtsy. How like an unsuspecting moth was I, a simple speck on that faraway bark; Aiming high, flying straight and swift like a pin, burning, falling dead at your feet. Such were the magnets of your eyes. * * * Author of the debut novel Twelfth House and Shaded Pergola, a collection of short poetry with original illustrations, E.C. Traganas has published in a multitude of literary journals. She enjoys a professional career as a Juilliard-trained concert pianist & composer, and is the founder/director of Woodside Writers, a literary forum based in New York. |
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