by Gabriella Brand Years ago, she would have screamed. Hit it with a rock, the edge of a hoe. Killed it, if she could have, because life hadn’t yet mellowed her. Now she just stared at the young, coiled snake that had surprised her in the garden. She had lifted up a cinder block that had fallen off the fire pit—and there it was, pale khaki with thin blue-green stripes, like a military uniform. She waited for it to slither away. But it didn’t. Fear glued it to the earth. She stood there for a little while letting awe creep over her. * * * Gabriella Brand’s fiction, poetry and essays have appeared in such publications as The Citron Review, Vita Poetica, Shiuli (India) and Room. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee. Gabriella teaches French and writing in the OLLI program at the University of Connecticut.
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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 Paul Lewthwaite She is envious of her shadow. It flickers in and out of existence, oblivious of bills, bawling kids, screaming husband, and the toothache that’s bothered her for months. Would she swap? Escape the noise and grind for grey-scale monotony? Perhaps not, but when life burns too bright, jealousy still lingers. * * * Paul is a retired physician living in Scotland with his wife and a small, but all-powerful cat. He’s always surprised when he can write a story. Some appear at Dark Moments, fiftywordstories.com, and 101words.org. by Michael Brockley My white German shepherd’s ghost sleeps in the passenger seat as I wrestle my road-weary Silverado onto the Ghost Road. We have survived half-resurrection and tombstone blues in magic cities. And practiced nighthawk songs with devils in blue dresses. Sadie barks as I shuffle through the biography of a phantom. As I grope for the name of Bluebeard’s first wife. Lady Blue or Black Cherry. Last night a blue angel serenaded us with a song coaxed from a rose drum. I’ll let Sadie sleep through the cross-dog hours. Through the three shades of dream. Even ghost dogs get the blues. * * * Michael Brockley is a retired school psychologist who lives in Muncie, Indiana. His poems have appeared in The Prose Poem, Superpresent, and Dreams of Rust and Glass, Volume 2. Poems are forthcoming in Last Stanza Poetry Journal and confetti. by Elysia Rourke I am born on a whisper of your breath. A sigh of wind volleys me skyward, the corners of your mouth in close pursuit. Can you see all you’ve created, mirrored on my cellophane skin? The garden, masterpieces scrawled in colourful chalk, and two children with remnants of homemade raspberry jam sparkling from spring-kissed cheeks. I settle on the grass, its blades dulled by winter. There is still time. You lift your wand again. My siblings flutter from your lips. The children squeal, “You made a rainbow, Mummy!” You’ve made their smiles too. Here, enough simple joy I could burst. * * * Elysia Rourke lives in Almonte, Ontario with her husband, two sons, and dog. She has a weakness for London fogs, Christmas morning, and a salty ocean breeze. Her writing can be found at www.elysiarourke.com. by Keith Hoerner The sweet Nebraska breeze swept wavelets across the wheat, brushed its kiss along each crops’ tassel, just as the auctioneer announced Parcel 43 open for bid. Silence. David Billingsly stood ready; his family farm was—again—within reach. But with nearly 20 local farmers sitting in tow, many with banks at their backs, he knew the chance of regaining his familial legacy had only one leg to stand on. Then, the bidding began. And… silence? He raised his paddle and put out his highest offer. Again, silence. Stunned, David heard the gavel, looked into everyone's glassy eyes, and saw home. * * * Keith Hoerner (BS, MFA, current PhD student) is founding editor of the Webby Award recognized Dribble Drabble Review, an online literary ezine and print anthology series of all things "little-ature." His work has been featured in 160+ lit mags / anthologies across five continents. by Cortni Merritt I saw you with the box today, pink and mirrored, dark-skinned figure, twirling to that tune I know but not by name. It was in your hand but it held something you'd forgotten or maybe misplaced, a dream or a wish or a past person you thought you would be. I pretended not to see you wipe your eyes when you asked, "Do you think she'll like it?" and you whispered, "my little girl." It was perfect, even though empty. * * * Cortni is a mother, writer, editor, and college instructor living in Central Florida. She enjoys cats, karate, and a well-cooked curry. Find her at www.srdeditingservices.com. by Louella Lester The sun’s down and his outstretched hand seems mud-painted midair. He’s on the field side of the road’s marshy ditch. Crickets spitting out confetti streams of babel. Frogs gulping deep. Headlights sweep past, disappearing into their own dust. He only needs one set to slow. To turn. Bring the starlight. * * * Louella Lester is a writer/photographer in Winnipeg, Canada, author of Glass Bricks (At Bay Press 2021), contributing editor at New Flash Fiction Review, and is included in Best Microfiction 2024. 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 Ani Banerjee The fan overhead makes a creaky sound; somewhere, a dog howls, and from downstairs, Baba coughs. The couple toss and turn in bed and he says, "Let's go to the roof." Under the stars, their bodies meet, sweat dripping salty over her, both breathless, air thick as mango pulp. “Like dipping in the Ganges,” she jokes. “Next year, we should get some air conditioning,” he says. “Or we could just hop on a cloud and go to the mountains,” she replies, and he laughs. Below, on the street, four flights down, the night watchman stomps his cane and asks, “Everything ok?” On cue, from downstairs, his ninety-year-old Baba calls out to her, the disposable daughter-in-law, “Munni, water, water.” She says, “Coming, Baba,” but she can’t get up; her saree is crumpled and wet and tangled. As her feet keep slipping beneath her, she clings to the railing, but like old houses do, it groans and the railing gives way. * * * Ani Banerjee is a retiring lawyer and an emerging writer from Houston, Texas. Her flash fiction has been published in Lost Balloon, Janus Literary, Dribble Drabble Magazine and others. by Julie Brandon The wind chimes near the front porch swing clanged in the breeze. Beth pulled her dad’s old sweater tighter around her. She remembered the Christmas Mom had given it to him. All those hours knitting while he was at work so she could surprise him. He’d said he loved it. Towards the end, he’d hold it, running his fingers along the rows of yarn. “See here?” he’d ask her. “This is where she dropped a stitch.” He’d stroke it and smile. Although he’d forgotten everything else, he never forgot the dropped stitches. Beth touched them, wishing she could forget, too. * * * Julie Brandon is a playwright, and poet from the Chicago area. Her work has appeared in Bewildering Stories, Altered Reality, Corner Bar Magazine, Witcraft and Bright Flash Literary Review among others. Julie's poetry collection "My Tears, Like Rain," was published in June 2024. |
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