Caren Lee Brenman

Counter Man

Fan belts hang on nails like hunting trophies. Behind the counter pinned to the chipped brown paneling are several calendars with faded images of classic cars or girls with teased hair and small tops holding a wrench with an inviting look.  Each calendar shows a different month and year that has long since past. I wonder about writing down the random pattern to see if they form some kind of code, but I’ve lost  interest because the sound of grinding metal brings me back to the question of how much will this set me back? In the small waiting area, I sit on one of the metal folding chairs that serve as a conduit for sending small electric pains straight to my lower back. The man behind the counter answers phones and shuffles yellow receipts paying no attention as he is used to having a waiting audience as he works. He knows if he catches anyone’s eye, he will be forced into small conversations that he has no interest in. When he senses a growing restlessness, he volunteers bits of information, “They are checking the tires and it should be about 15 more minutes.” It does seem to collectively calm us to know work is actually being done in this gasoline and grease scented purgatory. Occasionally one of the guys from the garage comes to confer with him about a needed part or else to drop off a dirt-stained piece of paper that he quickly turns into an invoice. He then calls out a color and car model because giving us the dignity of our own names would be too much. The newly freed person jumps up and quickly passes their credit card through as if it is opening a gate. While the  machine churns out the small tongue of a white receipt, he pushes their keys across the  counter and says “out front”.  

 

I pull out a New Yorker from by bag and begin to read about a young boy named Adam whose precociousness in his understanding of the stock market has already made his family millionaires. The article didn’t say if he went to school or if instead, they kept him locked in his bedroom with large computer screens broadcasting Nasdaq, NYSE and international markets while they wait just outside in the hallway for his next oracle pronouncement. The writer called  him “Baby Buffett”.  While I am wondering if Adam will one day kill his parents, the woman next to me says, “Isn’t that  fascinating?”  I think she has been reading  over  my shoulder and is in support of Adam losing his childhood for greed, but instead I look up and then follow her eyes to where there is a small rust colored bird  silently hopping  up and down on the dirty cement floor like a bird mime.  She asks me, “Don’t you think the bird would rather be flying free then stuck here with us?” Without waiting for my answer, she kneels down cupping the bird in her hands so its small body contracts into the dark cave of her palms, and then as if I trained for this moment all my life, I get up and open the glass door and we both step outside. She looks at me and then  splays her hands and with a slight push the bird flies into the air and away from us. “Lucky bird,” I say and she agrees. I hold the door back open for her and we both walk to our original chairs while the counter man says nothing. 

 

Eventually she is called and then it is just me. He turns the radio on to fill the space. It is tuned to a talk radio show where I hear men’s voices yelling about liberal snowflakes and transgender groomers,” so I stand up and walk over to the counter to ask him to change the station. He looks at me and turns the volume up just a bit more. I make my request again which seems to be throwing a gauntlet because he comes quickly from around the counter and stands in front of me with a slash of red heat rising from his neck. I am surprised to see that he’s at least a foot shorter than me, and I am not tall. “Do you know you have a tall man’s face?” I ask him. As if hit, he squares his shoulders and narrows his eyes, “My shop. My radio. You can wait outside until your car is ready.” He then reaches up pulling the door handle to set me free.


Caren Lee Brenman lives and writes in Philadelphia PA. Her work has appeared in Philadelphia Stories, Drunk Monkeys and Still Harbor’s Anchor Magazine. 

Jack O'Grady

Thinking About the Immortality of Crabs

The thin stretch of Atlantic sand where Cal had taken his first steps welcomed him for his last. Anxious energy bounced out through his heels and gave him a toddler’s gait as he staggered to the beach. Blind commitment moved him, each step placed with deep intention to keep him balanced on the knife-edge of grief. It cut through his bare soles and he bled a trail of scarlet memories turning silver in the moonlight. 

The beach rose up to greet him as he crested the last of the low dunes. He’d chosen this place weeks ago for its tide, heavy with memories and hiding more than enough force to pull a man deep under the water and keep him there. 

They’ll call me missing and leave it at that. There’ll be vigils but no funeral, no one will have to do all that again. 

He laid feet gingerly on the chill sand and shivered. The cold whispered eulogies through the prickled surface of his skin. A funerary wind rushed silently over waves and beach, wisping fingers through his hair. It smelled like the bedroom he’d shared with his brother when they were kids. 

This morning he’d woken in that room alone, as he’d done for the past month. His brother’s old bed was a blank space, a spot of void skipped over and untouched since his death. His mother wouldn’t even go in there anymore, but he had nowhere else to sleep. 

I’m sorry, mom. Demolish the whole room, burn the house to the ground, it’s the only way out.

The last decision of his life moved through him like a tidal wave that washed out livelihoods, something enormous and destructive passing at last into a smothering calm. 

Sand flattening underfoot. Salt lingering in the coastal breeze. The moon’s reflection glittering over the ocean in blankets of restless light. The world refining itself into a fine point, a relentless narrowing that cascaded through him into nothing. 

A great cluster of breakers smashed together as he approached the water, each wave churning over the other. The final thrust of foam settled into a brackish film that continued to tremble and drag forward. Cal braced himself for the tide, but nothing reached him, no water lapped frigid around his ankles. 

No, the tide was crackling as it rose. It was clicking, skittering, separating into individuals with edges raised to catch and cut the moonlight. There wasn’t a tide… it was crabs, hundreds of blue crabs scuttling out of the froth in a horde. The mass swarmed up the beach, coloring in the blank spaces and freezing Cal at the apex of his fatal march. 

He ventured one foot over the crowd, searching around for an opening that could carry him through this obstacle, but the crustaceans were packed in from here to the water. 

“Excuse me,” he tried to incline his voice down to the mob. “If I could just get past you…” 

He flinched when the crab closest to him raised a single claw, that daggered shape echoing countless childhood scars, but the pincer didn’t cut him. The crabs, however, did not move at all, they remained firmly in his way. 

The leading crab kept its pincer raised. He crouched down to look closer at this little creature demanding his attention. Face-to-face, the crustacean began shifting its complex mouth around, biting limbs moving with clear intent – let me speak

“Fine,” he sighed. “I can’t really step over you all, let’s play this out.”

The vague, jittering movements of the crab’s triple jaws crunched and cracked as they came together. This mess of noise went on for thirty seconds or so before the delicate interplay of the crab’s jaws fell quiet and grabbed at nothing but the still night air. Although the sounds spat between them were nothing but animal groans, carrying no meaning besides the confusion they elicited in Cal, the crustacean poised itself thoughtfully, as though it was waiting for his response. 

“I don’t really know a lot about crab behavior, so I couldn’t even guess what you’re all doing out here, but I’ll be gone soon,” he said, as politely as he could, waving at the crustacean like he might shoo away a fly, grimacing when they didn’t flinch. “Look, I’m sorry if I bothered you. Please just move.

A great murmuring passed through the crabs before the leader raised both of its claws to call them to silence. Its whole body tilted upward when it did so, and he could spy the piercing tip of its apron; the spot where his fingers would clamber as a child to pry out the richness. 

“I’m sorry, too, if I’ve ever eaten anyone you know,” he added. The crab didn’t notice, its arms already curling and pulling themselves around another garbled verse. 

“Stop it!” he interrupted, kicking up a spray of sand that the crabs blinked through, unmoved. “I don’t know what this is, okay! I don’t want to but I will step on you if you don’t get out of my way. You can’t stop me or change my mind, you’re a crab!”

A sea of eyes as dark and potent as coal moments away from becoming diamond wiggled silently at him in agreement. 

“GOD! All of this is so stupid,” Cal groaned, the blank eyes of this leading, accusing crab holding him with an unnerving depth of attention.  “Can’t you just let me get it over with? Just get out of the way and let me leave. I’m ready, I decided, it’s over.” 

He slumped backwards into exhaustion, the crabs shifting around to make way for his legs as they splayed out. The sand beneath him was damp, uncomfortable as it seeped into his shorts. He remembered cleaning sand off after days at the beach with his family, how rapidly the process could degenerate from inconvenience to desperation as the scrubbing went on and the grit remained stubborn and unreachable. 

“Maybe I’m losing it, because now I’m thinking you would understand, actually. Crabs die, right? And it can’t always be okay, it can’t always be easy,” he voiced the thought to test how real it might become. “Death is so ordinary, even for you. It’s… fuck, it happens all the time, families fight, people leave and they don’t always come back, living kills everyone.” 

Tears quivered behind eyes he’d spent months turning stony and lifeless. 

“People say that like it makes losing someone easier,” Cal struggled through each word. “What does that actually change, though? I still didn’t want him to go. I don’t care that this happens all the time, or that other people know how it feels. He was my brother, he was the only person who understood me and I don’t know what to do without him.” 

The crabs only stared while their little limbs twisted aimlessly around. Lifting his gaze, he tried to return himself to the killing moment that had brought him here. Anxious eyes traced the curve of the ocean, the undulations of the waves, the suggestion of breath latent to the tender movement. He imagined taking his last, drowning breaths in time with that ancient rhythm and frowned. The beat would never match, the ocean didn’t move like a dying man.  

Cal slowed his breathing, trying to pull in the salty air and release it in time with the ocean. He was watching the far waves, the rising of deep water that danced to lunar music. Gradually, the in-out of his lungs found the rhythm those distant performers were following. The crabs sat with him in this silence they had grown slowly and now suddenly to share.

“I wish it’d been worse,” he admitted. “I wish it had been so bad I could just lose it and everyone would think… what else could he do? Maybe we could have fought or something else awful and then he'd have gone ahead and died.” That word came out stuttered and glottal. “But it was so dull. There were fights, of course, but I always thought, I always knew that he’d come home. That was a fact. Saying he’d be there when I needed him, it was like saying the sun would come up tomorrow. No question.”

The crabs raised their claws in recognition. Everywhere Cal looked were those white bellies and inset aprons. 

“I want this, you know,” He had come here burning with suicidal desire, but the moment was flickering, turning dim and impotent the longer he was forced to sit in it. The ocean that he was supposed to drown himself in was gone, and the beach was flooded with all of these clawing, clattering things that refused to let him find it again. “Can’t you all just get out of the way, please?”

All of the deadly surety of his actions broke in one heart-rending collapse and the pain flooded into reality as tears. The weeping moved out of him like an ocean through the breaks of a dam, his quivering nose spewing bubbles of snot with each wretch and moan. His whole body became nothing but the vehicle for this grief, face buried deep in hands and everything contorting, struggling to disappear into its own shadows. The killing moment terrified him now; it burned in his stomach like he had tried to swallow embers. He wanted to sob until the very memory of it was drained from him, until he didn’t know anything at all about any brothers or any loss. 

Crimson-tinged claws closed gently around his finger. Shaking, he matched tear-stained eyes with the crab’s midnight stare. The vacancy there was deep enough to hold him.  

“It hurts too much, what am I supposed to do but this?”

The little crustacean urged him forward. He stumbled along in a low crouch, unwilling to part from his guide and their tender, daggered hand. Its kin split to ease their passage, pincers raised high toward the moon. Their clicking swelled into a great chorus as he drew close enough for the waves to toss a chill around his ankles. 

Shivering slightly, he looked to find his guide and found nothing but the ocean. The waves were rising to his waist now, pulling at his shirt and splashing foam into his tangled hair. They would not hold him here, this was as far as he needed to go tonight. 

Matching his breathing to the steady heartbeat of tide and moon, Cal wept out as much grief as he could summon into the ocean. It poured out in tears, in cries, in stories, in memories turned silver as they mixed in with the sea shimmering off starlight. He gave the best and worst of his brother to the water, everything they had ever meant to each other and everything that could’ve, should have been. The ocean received it all with raised claws, singing the infinite out of each moment, drawing the love from the grief and returning it to the world as the tender motion of waves breaking sweetly over sand. 


Jack O'Grady is currently writing from Boston, but grew up writing from Maryland and graduated with a degree in Advertising & Public Relations from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Since he began writing seriously, he's been focused on translating vulnerable experiences with nature and time into stories that strive to question our conception of either. His writing hopes to soften genre and structure into something like a soup, warm and nourishing. Outside of prose, he also writes tabletop games and runs games as often as everyone's schedules align (not often).

Nicole Grace

An Ohio Massacre

Sean McAllister’s ex-wife Nancy bailed him out following his arrest for filed-off serial numbers on an AK-47 he swore he would never use. An AK-47 whose previous owner said that it’s just good hygiene to keep these things untraceable. Nancy told Sean she posted bail so she wouldn’t have to take care of his animals, but when his sentence was read out, she did just that—she, and some hired hands she paid with money from Sean’s bank account. The two hadn’t spoken since the day of sentencing, when Nancy told him everything would be taken care of. But on day 402 of fulfilling his debt to society, Sean was informed by a guard that he had a visitor. His first in months. He thought maybe his sister finally made the drive up, guilt-ridden and with her children in tow. But it was Nancy’s face that shone beneath the prison’s glaring florescent lights. 

Nancy told him, through the phone linking the two sides of a glass divider, about Mark, her new man who Sean could not manage to find fault in. She would soon be Nancy Fischer, she said, she would soon be married to someone who knew what contentment was, she implied. And she also told him she was done, officially, with looking after the animals. 

“Your land defies the laws of nature. I have done my best by you—and Sean, I love you still and want the best for you always—but I cannot carry on like this,” she said, her eyes wet with tears that she did not let fall. The tally was imprinted on her brain: 18 tigers, 10 lions, 8 bears, 3 macaques, 2 wolves, and 1 zebra.

“Will the men stay?” he asked, too broken to convince her to do the same. 

“They will. They are paid more than any sheet metal company can afford. And they’ve really developed relationships with the animals. You understand.” 

“How much is left?” he asked. He did not want to discuss the hired hands and their ability to feel how he felt. He believed that no one could feel how he felt about the animals. No one could look into their eyes and see what he saw. Sean loved them, and they, in turn, made him special.  

“Honey, by the time you’re out of here, not much,” she said. 

Nancy left the visiting room soon after she arrived. Apart from money and the property, there was little she could bare to discuss with him anymore, little interiorly he was brave enough to share. 

When he returned home 742 days after he first donned his prison jumpsuit, Sean confirmed Nancy’s message: his bank account held $3,452.61, and the workers had fallen in love with the animals the way Noah fell in love with God. Sean, wanting God all to himself, if only for a little while, fired them all and emptied his bank account. 

Sean’s homecoming was muted—save for his reunion with the animals, who recognized him still. The house itself was covered in a layer of dust that he decided he would never clean. It was empty of person and sound, and Sean could only think of talking with Nancy again. Nancy, whose former presence in the house could still be felt. He saw her in the decorative plates displayed atop the cabinets, the salt and pepper shakers in the shape of two small porcelain pigs, the mystery novels that lined the living room windowsills. 

He wanted to call her and tell her all the things he should have years ago. He wanted to tell her that he was lost, that what made him feel found was never enough, that he should have made her feel enough. Sean also very much wanted to tell Nancy that he loved her still, too. 

These were the things he did not have the introspection to know until he spent night after night in a cell, finding the thread connecting his actions—his obsession with beauty that led him off path time and again. Sean callously left his high school sweetheart who held his hand for years and never put him down as soon as he first saw Nancy dancing to ABBA at a bar he—the very moment before—begrudged playing ABBA in the first place. He traded his home in town, surrounded by things to do and friends to see, for the beauty of the country: ladybugs on every sunflower, willows protecting a still pond, and countless blood orange sunsets. He spent large sums on a collection of antique cars now parked in the brown grass beyond his barn, their grandeur undiminished by their age and rusted edges. And now he knew he lost his wife to his pursuit of beauty. 

This final obsession being the most beautiful thing he had ever seen; the last thing, as it turned out, he would ever see. A Bengal tiger, for sale on the dark web. His desire for this creature felt like a need, and his land, an opportunity, and his wealth, fate. He had seen a tiger in person only one time at the Columbus Zoo, and possession permeated his blood ever since. He picked up the tiger, whom he named Charles after his childhood dog, at Ohio’s Kentucky border using his neighbor’s horse trailer. His neighbor did not ask why he needed the trailer. He was nice like that. And Sean returned the trailer the next day, as promised, with no noticeable signs of wear, no outward appearance of change at all. But the neighbor knew the trailer had changed because his horses would no longer go inside it. 

            This was not when Nancy left. But when one tiger became ten, when zero bears became five, when a monkey overran the house—then, she left. She knew that beauty at that place was no longer a plaything. Sean could not comprehend her reasons, could not comprehend that more was not better, and, with her loss, he only grew more obsessed with the things that made her leave. 

            Sean did not tell Nancy these things on the day of his homecoming, or the next. In fact, he never called her again. He spent two days caring for his animals. He hung a bucket on the spout of an in-ground water pump, filling it on repeat until the water troughs in all the cages were full. He hand-fed hay to the Zebra, whom he had named Anne and never tried to saddle. She was his most recent purchase, bought only months after his macaques. In his advancing age, he found himself turning to vegetarians, recognizing the beauty in peace. He let the wolves, who he bought as pups and bottle fed, free all day. He had resisted the urge to name them Romulus and Remus. This was not Rome. Instead, they were named Canyon and Dakota—places he pictured them running wild. On his land, they stayed by his side like a shadow. He took the macaques to the trees lining his pond and watched as they climbed up the branches. He caught rabbits, raccoons, and even a deer in traps laid out in the forest, releasing them live in his corral so the tigers, lions, and bears could play at hunting. He stared at Charles for hours. 

These moments gave him comfort, but they did not make him whole. And his nights, which were sleepless, felt no different from the ones spent in the Ohio state penitentiary. 

On the third morning, he rose, showered, and grabbed his single action revolver and a pair of garden shears. He wrote a note and placed it in his dresser drawer with his remaining life savings, an amount that would have sustained his farm’s needs for maybe two weeks. The note read: To Nancy, I love you still, too. He opened the drawer as soon as he shut it and ripped up the note. Before he left the room, though, he replaced it with an identical one. 

Sean walked to the barn first and lead Anne out of the paddock. He gave her a small slap on her haunches and hoped she’d run far. He then went to his macaques, opening their doors. They were slow to move, still sleepy though the sun was well-risen. He waited by their cages until they exited and began to groom and play with one another. He smiled at them, remembering when they would hang on his arms as he walked his land. He moved on to the wolves. When he opened their cages, they first went to the other, sniffing and nuzzling, but, as always, they followed their master when he walked on. Once they sensed he was heading toward the bears, though, they hung back, watching as Sean cut gashes with his garden shears into the sides of the cage housing all eight of them. He opened the bears’ cage door, as well. He did the same to the lions’ cage. 

His final stop was for the tigers. Charles was pacing, pressing his fur up against the metal so that his hair poked out in a checkerboard pattern. Sean still loved Charles most. Sean opened the door to Charles’s cage—and to the cage of the 17 other tigers—and took one last look at Charles. Sean placed the revolver in his mouth and pulled the trigger. 

The police found his body after six hours. It started with an onslaught of calls: a neighbor trapped in his barn with a bear circling the wooden structure, a driver spotting lions lurking in the ditch alongside a country road, a farmer frantic as her horses were being corralled by wolves. Then followed the soundtrack of police radios updating the force that two macaques had been eaten, their bodies mangled next to the tiger cage; that closing the cage door on the lions that lingered inside was fruitless; that Officer O’Malley locked it only to find one escaped through a gash in the side; that the police had to shoot the lion 10 times to save their colleague. There were reports of multiple attempts to find Sean in his house or to find his body on the grounds. But the night that fell and the rain that fell and the fear that fell lead only to the realization that the police had no idea what lurked in the brush. It led to barricaded vehicles lining the drive. And, eventually, it led to a final tally: 18 tigers, 10 lions, 8 bears, 3 macaques, 2 wolves, and 1 man dead. The zebra, however, made it to the Ohio river and crossed one last time.


Nicole Grace is a writer, professor, and public interest attorney living in Chicago. Her published work can be found in Pigeon Pages, and her short story, An Ohio Massacre, was longlisted for The Masters Review Anthology XII Contest. When she is not advocating for clients or writing, she is likely covered in flour in her kitchen, watching movies at her local theater, or drinking in bars with friends.

Samantha Brooke

Red Sky at Night

'That's weird. What is it - some kind of weather phenomenon?' Liam asked over his shoulder, as he paused in his task of closing the bedroom curtains. His wife Angie was sitting on their bed, unclipping her diamond earrings and placing them carefully in the carved wooden jewellery box on her bedside table. At his words, she stood up carefully, cradling her baby bump as though it was the most precious thing in the world. Which - after fifteen whole, heart-breaking years of trying and countless gruelling, invasive procedures - it truly was. 'Come and have a look at this, I've never seen anything like it before.'

 'Let's have a look,' Angie stepped up to the window beside him, noticing that her husband was staring out raptly, as though he were hypnotised by what he saw out there. He blinked dazedly. She frowned, and then peered out herself into the dark night. She could not see anything even the slightest bit out of the ordinary. 'Liam - are you alright?'

 As she peered closer at him, she saw that he looked clammy, almost ill.

 'You've gone terribly pale. Are you sure you're feeling well?'

 'What - oh, yes. Yes, I'm fine.' He cleared his throat and blinked slowly again. 'I just feel a little bit sick all of a sudden, that's all. That light - ' He looked back out of the window, and up at the sky. But Angie could still see only a deep, inky blackness devoid even of the sparkle of stars tonight.

 'Go and get yourself into bed,' she ordered him firmly. 'I'll fetch you a glass of water from the bathroom.'

 'I'm alright, really. I'm supposed to be the one that's taking care of you, remember?'

 'Nonsense. I'm pregnant, not some kind of invalid. I'm perfectly capable of fetching a glass of water. Now do as you're told and lay down.' She used the tone of voice that she knew he could not argue with.

  'Okay, okay. You're the boss.'

  'That's right.'

***

He took off his slippers, leaving them carefully positioned right by his bed just as he did every night. He could hear his wife moving along to the bathroom. She was right, he really ought to just lay down and relax - but he could not help wonder about what that weird light was, where it was coming from. It was the oddest thing that he had even seen. It seemed to light up the entire sky...

  'Red sky at night...' he muttered to himself.

***

Angie stifled a yawn as she grabbed the squat plastic tumbler from beside the sink and filled it up from the cold water tap. The pipes banged and clanged loudly from inside the walls as they always did. She rubbed a hand over her gently swollen belly, and turned to begin making her way back into the bedroom. She was definitely ready to go to sleep. She loved being pregnant at long last but it certainly was quite exhausting...

  She had just made it through the bathroom doorway and onto the landing when screaming started up from right outside the house. It was a shrill, prolonged sound. The tumbler slipped from her fingers and fell, spilling water all over the carpet. Spikes of fear surged through her body.

 'Liam - ' she cried out. 'Did you hear that?' Her feet carried her automatically over to the landing window, and she moved aside the floor-length cream curtain hurriedly in order to peer out. 'It looks like there's some kind of a commotion happening out there.'

 She could see not just one but several figures moving around on the pavement down below, their figures illuminated by the stark neon glow of the nearby streetlights. The screaming started up again after a brief pause. Alarmed, Angie leant closer to the glass to get a better look, her breath misting the surface slightly. The sound seemed to be coming from a woman who was out there - she was laying on the pavement whilst a man stood over her, his back to Angie so that she could not see his face. She recognised him, anyway, though, from his distinctive hair - mostly bald on the top but with long, thin wisps of black hair hanging down from the sides of his head over his shoulders. It was Bob, a neighbour of theirs from across the street. And the woman on the ground looked like his wife Violet.

 Angie's heart thrummed rapidly in her chest, her mouth growing dry as she watched Violet - clad only in her velvet floral nightgown, try to scramble away from Bob, dragging herself along the pavement. She screamed again as Bob leapt upon her, his hands around her neck as he proceeded to squeeze the life out of her. The screams died away instantly in a pained gurgle -

 Angie could hardly believe what she was seeing. Nobody else seemed to pay the slightest bit of attention to the man who was violently attacking his wife - though more and more of the neighbours appeared to be spilling out of their homes and onto the dark, neon-lit streets.

 'Liam - ' she opened her mouth and shrieked, her fingernails digging into the wooden sill of the window deep enough to leave marks behind. 'Liam - come quick! It's Violet - she's in trouble! It's - '

 The words became lodged in her throat as another scream sounded from outside. And then another, this one from a different place. Angie frantically pressed her face even closer to the cold glass, trying to see what was going on out there.

 Frost glittered upon the ground - and carnage seemed to be breaking out all over the place. As she watched with wide, horrified eyes, she saw a car come screeching around the corner at breakneck speed, headlights blazing angrily. It swerved in a screech of tyres - deliberately ploughing into some of the people on the pavement. Bodies went flying, the ground becoming awash with blood. From where Angie stood looking down over the scene in paralysed horror, it looked like a dark, slick oil spill.

 Another movement caught her eye -

 A man - quite naked, with a dough white beer belly jutting out in front of him - was running down the street whilst brandishing a carving knife. He opened his mouth and began to yell - the words indecipherable to Angie's ears, but the absolute menace upon his face utterly unmistakeable.

 'Liam!' she screamed out in alarm. Surely he hadn't fallen asleep already? She wheeled around and ran as quickly as she was able to across the landing and towards the bedroom. She was breathless with panic, a palpating fear running through every inch of her body. 'Liam - quick, we have to phone the emergency services! There's something terribly wrong out there - people are... killing, and - and - '

 She burst into the bedroom - expecting to see her husband there, maybe scrambling out of bed with a panicked expression upon his face. But instead, the bed was quite empty. The duvet had been thrown carelessly aside, but of her husband himself there was no sign whatsoever. Fresh fear swirled within her, adding to her already immense state of panic.

 'Liam - where are you? Please - we need to - '

 She wheeled around, just as the bedroom door closed with a sharp snap. Liam had been standing behind it, and now blocked off the only exit from the room.

 'Liam - ' she waved a trembling hand over towards the window, feeling sick. 'There's something going on out there. It's bad - really bad. Everyone seems to be going crazy, somehow. They're attacking one another. We have to get some help, right now. Where's my phone?'

 She glanced around the room, forgetting where she had left it when they had come up to bed. But then she saw it - held in Liam's hand, along with his own. With his other hand, he reached back and locked the door without taking his eyes off of her. The loud click made her jump, and she found herself feeling more than a little bit unnerved by the expression upon his face. But he was surely just scared, she told herself. Everybody reacted to being frightened differently.

 'Good idea,' she panted. She then glanced over to the small window to check that it, too, was secure. 'I don't know what could have happened - but those people out there are extremely dangerous. I saw Bob strangling Violet - Bob! One of the sweetest people I've ever known, and it was like - like he's just suddenly a completely different person...' Sweat began to bead on her forehead as she rambled, trying to convey to him the true horrors of what she had witnessed happening out there.

 Liam, far from looking worried or afraid, simply continued to stare back at her with an oddly blank expression on his face.

 'Liam - come on... ' she moaned. 'Don't you understand how urgent this is? We need to make the call. Dial 999, now.'

 A strong sense of urgency was thrumming through her now, along with the panic. Why did he not seem to understand the seriousness of the situation? Finally, Liam shifted from his posture in front of the door - his movements stiff and unnatural looking, somehow. She felt a renewed flood of horror coursing through her veins as she watched him drop both of the phones down onto the floor. Then - without pausing at all - he kicked them, hard, one after the other, sending them crashing deep into the shadowy gap underneath the bed.

 Angie gaped at him for a long moment, unable to comprehend just exactly what it was that she was seeing at first. Time stretched on around her, and the terrible truth began to seep into her brain like a poison...

 Liam began to stalk across the room towards her, and she found herself backing away until finally her back slammed into the wall and she had nowhere left to go. She looked into her husband's eyes - and saw only a flat, expressionless abyss gazing back at her.

 More screams came from outside, cutting through the night air and reaching her where she stood. It was all so surreal - perhaps in a moment, she would just wake up...

 'Liam - ' her voice quaked, but she fought to keep it steady as she spoke to her husband once more. He did not respond to the sound of her voice. Beads of sweat began to trickle down his clammy-looking face. 'Liam - what's the matter? What are you doing?'

 He did not reply, merely drew back his lips into an animalistic snarl. The way that he was holding his body - taut with aggression - reminded her forcefully of Bob, outside, just moments earlier. She felt a deep, heavy dread settle into her body. 

 He lunged towards her then, and she managed to dart to one side just in time - a yell bursting forth from her lips. Standing beside the window, she watched as he veered around to come after her once again.

 She ran.

 Ran to the door, her fingers scrabbling to draw back the heavy, seldom-used bolt that Liam had just drawn across to lock it. But it was stiff and hard to move - and before she had even got it halfway, she felt his hands fisting into her long hair, dragging her forcefully back into the middle of the room. She screamed.

 He flung her violently to the floor and she gave a pained cry as she landed, hard, upon the surface. Sharp spasms of pain shot through her body, emenating from her spine and a terrible fear for the safety of her unborn child filled her with a primal rage. She scrambled up as quickly as she could, facing the man who was no longer her husband. Liam would never have done that - he would never do anything to hurt her or the baby...

 And so, she steeled herself, preparing to do whatever she had to do. Not for her own sake, but for her child's. She knew that her son or daughter's very survival was at stake.

 Liam raised a fist and struck her a hard blow across the face. She felt her lip split, blood bursting forth as she staggered backwards, grappling her hands out to try and keep from falling again. She needed something to defend herself with -

 Panting heavily, she looked around in desperation, with the slick, wet sensation of blood coating her chin. On the bedside table beside where she slept was a heavy, antique lamp that she had picked up at a car boot sale last summer. Her fingers curled around it, and she began to cry.

 'Please, Liam - don't, I'm begging you - '

 But he was beyond listening now, beyond reason. He snarled again, like an animal, spittle flying from the corners of his mouth. And then he yelled aloud - an angered, deranged sound that mingled with the screams still emanating from outside.

 'Bitch!' he cried, the words bursting from him like bullets, each one jolting her with fresh, quaking fear. 'You little fucking bitch! I'm going to kill you! I'm going to kill you and cut you up into little tiny pieces, and then I'm going to  - Ugh... '

 She had swung the lamp towards him with every bit of strength that she could muster, ripping the cord from out of the socket as she did so. It collided with Liam's skull with a sickening crack. Glass from the bulb exploded, shattering all over them both. And now it was his turn to stagger backwards, injured and confused.

 Angie gritted her teeth - and then she hit him again. And again. And again, and again. She did not stop until he lay in a crumpled and bloodied heap upon the floor. Unmoving. She stared down at him for a long moment, the adrenaline still pulsing through her body. Lifting a hand, she realised that her face was wet and couldn't tell whether it was with sweat or tears. Probably both.

 She didn't know how much time passed as she stood there, looking down at her dead husband. What finally roused her was a sudden sound coming from downstairs - what sounded like someone trying to break in through the front door -

 Her nostrils flared. She tightened her grip on the lamp once again - and then stepped over Liam's body and headed downstairs, prepared to fight to the death.


Samantha Brooke has been writing horror fiction for over a decade, ever since completing a writing course in 2012. Since that time, she has completed three novels, the most recent of which is currently being looked at by agents. She also regularly writes short stories and poetry for magazines and has had work published in both England and America. Her website can be found at https://samanthabrookehorrorstories.wordpress.com/ When not writing herself, she is also a short story competition judge on Reedsy.

Jessica Dylan Miele

The Sun and the Moon and the Flying Fish

On the longest day of the year, Bridger joined the world and the sun refused to sleep, making it the brightest night anyone had ever seen. A birthmark appeared like a burn on Bridger’s cheek; the parents couldn’t stop touching it, wondering if they should allow it.

The years passed, and the sun never left Bridger. Days were spent learning to run on grounds that were yellowed and thirsty. Nights were filled with steady, radiant dreams. 

One morning, as Bridger’s face turned towards the cloudless sky, the birthmark hurled itself into the air and turned into a flying fish, with one wing like a flag and the other a sail. As if trained by ribbons in the wind, the flying fish swooped in front of Bridger’s upturned nose.

“I have a message from the sun,” said the flying fish. “The sun wishes to give you a gift. What would please you the most?”

With both arms spread out wide, Bridger shouted, “Take away my breasts!”

And as the flying fish sped off to deliver the message, darkness came like a cinder shower spreading across the blue yonder. Bridger had never seen the moon before, but instead of admiring it, anxiety welled up inside their body so profoundly, they couldn’t see anything but the absence of the sun. 

With good news, the flying fish returned. Bridger was to lie down in a field of sunflowers, and wait. Not wanting to waste any time, Bridger set out in search of the tallest, yellowest flowers. They passed fields of wildflowers with tiny, glistening petals. It was still night time, but instead of noticing the perfect crescent moon, Bridger was focused on the ground. 

There, at last, was the party of sunflowers, gently swaying in the breeze, their yellow color so luminous they seemed to cast a light all on their own. Bridger waded through the field, settling themself on the dewy ground. They closed their eyes.

By the first kiss of dawn, they woke up. They could feel the lightness even before looking down at the smooth front of their brilliant body. Springing to their feet, Bridger took off running. They ran and ran, barefooted, bare chested, face beaming as they whooped with joy.

Breathless, they came to a halt at a cliff, hands on their knees, sweat glistening on their forehead. The ocean waves crashed into the rocks below. With a flourish, the flying fish appeared, delicate wings brushing against their nose.

“The moon has a message for you,” said the flying fish.

“Another present?” Bridger asked, panting.

“A request,” said the flying fish. “The moon would like to be acknowledged.”

“That’s all?”

“This is no time to be saying what is and is not all.” The flying fish’s wings beat a little faster. 

“The moon would like to be admired with everything you’ve got.”

The blazing sun radiated even brighter, and the air around Bridger wavered in the heat. Bridger wondered: How could I possibly admire anything else? But after a long while, the symphony of colors quieted down, and the dazzle of stars winked on in the darkness, joined by the cool, full moon.

Bridger stepped closer towards the edge of the cliff, as far as they dared to go. The moon looked so awesome, in a way that made Bridger feel uncomfortable. Was this really their first time? A breeze exhaled over their skin, rifling through their hair, and their eyes teared up as they struggled not to blink. Bridger raised their arms and cradled their head in the crooks of their elbows.

The moon, the moon. The glorious moon.


Jessica Dylan Miele is a writer and librarian living in Portland, Oregon. Her work has been published in numerous literary magazines including Coming TogetherGravel, Gingerbread House, and Buckmxn Journal.

Ray Miller

death and wine

Wine playing the role of Drink 

 

An acquired taste; bitter and unforgiving until it sets in. Originally: a replacement for water. 

 

Wine playing the role of Symbol 

 

Blown glass carafes. Screw-off caps. Manual aerators. Cardboard boxes. Specialized glasses. Candlelight. Cheap cigarettes. Sommeliers. Plastic spigots. The electric lightness of being tipsy. The radioactive freedom of being drunk. 

 

Wine playing the role of Birthblood 

 

No one cared that a thigh was a horrible place to be incubated. No amniotic protection—just pulsing veins, flexing muscles. No all-encompassing womb for warmth, no cradle. Heartbeat coming in indirect and distant. So much jostling about, with no cushion to dull the shake. 

Some believe that there’s an inherent trauma in birth, in being torn from safety into the cold maw of the outer world. It is the first reason for tears. 

Dionysus was born twice. Surely no one could have expected him to be sane.

The first time: separated from his mother for her foolishness, for asking a question that should not have been answered. Dionysus’ mother, just another in an unending line of beautiful, expendable mortals, had asked to see Zeus’ true form. His godly form, in its true glory. all light and heat. Surely, Zeus had known her vessel could not handle the sight. Perhaps that is why he showed her, despite knowing she would perish. It was a matter of pride. There are many matters of pride for gods. 

She did not bleed. Did not burn. Just turned straight from woman to ash. 

Zeus had known of her pregnancy, as well. Perhaps he only decided after the fact, upon seeing Dionysus’ tiny, desperately dependent form curled up amidst the black pile that was once his mother, to save the boy. And for all of Zeus’ male lack, decided to incubate the child in his thigh. The gods do not need reasons. They can live by their whims, justifying nothing to anyone. Remember, those with power are always right. 

The second time: Zeus decided Dionysus had been in there long enough. 

 

Wine playing the role of Vengeance 

 

Dionysus didn’t want a second difficult beginning. Birth had posed enough of a challenge. But life—if an immortal existence can deserve the word—had other ideas for him. 

The king of Thebes, and in fact the majority of his mother’s mortal family, refused to recognize his godhood, that he was son of Zeus, instead believing that Dionysus’ mother, who had died a pointless death he had never been allowed to grieve, had lain with a mortal man. Her absence, and Dionysus’ presence, were of no importance, and it was more convenient and far simpler to paint the woman a simple harlot than to accept the young man claiming to be her son as a god. 

But to Dionysus, this was no crime. It was a sin. Crimes are committed by humans against other humans. Sins are committed by humans against gods. And though Dionysus fumed at his own treatment, for his mother’s own family to cast her aside— 

Dionysus decided they must be punished—all of them—even the few who did believe. In making an example, what purpose is there if it is not grand? 

And so his revenge ensued: the sinking sun, the red of blood and precious stones, pulling on the loose threads of a city’s tapestry until it was just one long, lonely string. The women of the city beautiful in their wineless revelry. Dewdrops clinging to skin, intermixed with perspiration, a sacred elixir; a potion of freedom never to be drunk, but lived. 

And of course the blood, which of course spilled, urgently and furiously, upon the king’s attempt to pull the women from their spell of madness. And of course the royals’ acknowledgement, which, when it came, was not enough. Of course the remorse was not enough. It would never be enough. ‘It’ being nothing, everything. 

After the King of Thebes’ demise at the bare, dirt-crusted hands of the king’s own mother—a fitting end—Dionysus cast out the rest of the royals from their birthplace, in true godly fashion, a strategy echoed later by another popular divinity. It’s worth noting again that these royals were relatives of his late mother, and thus were his own family. His only living family, since we’ve already established that gods are not really alive. 

 

Some stories say Dionysus turned the royals into snakes—maybe that’s where said divinity got the idea to put one in that storied garden—but Dionysus did no such thing. To turn them into snakes would be to deprive them of their consciousness, their awareness of their deed, their concept of home. Home, then: tended gardens, carefully arranged stones, animals that did not balk at their voices. Home, now: a place to which they could never return. The weeds would overtake the flowerbeds, the stones would crumble, the animals would forget them and die. Life, now: endless wandering under a different fraction of sky, the memories soaked in lies. Their—his—lineage doomed to mediocrity. 

***

 

Wine playing the role of Facilitator

 

Morning will come anyway, so why not pass the night here? A bed is a bed. Warmer if someone else is in it, even if that someone is the short deliveryman from work, whose incessant requests she finally caved to this past week. She has been so lonely lately. So staggeringly lonely. 

The body heat is made hotter by the rosé from dinner. Bought by the glass—it seemed cheaper that way, at first, though much less so after six glasses between two people. Even if in unequal parts. You seem to like it so much, her date said. Let me just get you another glass. Oh, your glass is empty. Let me get you another. 

And she’s too hot now to keep her clothes on and maybe it’s because he’s turned the heater in the corner of the room all the way up but maybe she really does want to be naked with him. It’s hard to tell. Wine is the puppeteer, and she, a mere puppet. He’s smiling, has been for a while. Like a knight in a fairytale? No—more like the Cheshire cat, but wait, maybe the light in his irises isn’t being reflected from anywhere, and he’s lit from within— 

Sometimes darkness is so much warmer than light. 

 

Wine playing the role of Performance 

 

She missed the driveway on her first day, months back. The tasting house is hidden between two massive redwoods, their bark splintering and shadowing the ground below, the dark gravel path hardly discernible from the cracked asphalt of the road. 

She is used to the routine by now. She lays out a faux fawn skin as a tablecloth, one she’d brought in from home when her manager asked for ideas on increasing the rustic feel of the tasting room. The skin alludes to that human primitiveness inherent to hunting without the gunpowder or cracked bones or butchering that really comes along with it. The hairs feel wiry to the touch, as if they’ve never been tamed by anything. Of course, she knows they’re made of nylon. It’s not a crime; no one needs to know the truth. Perhaps the guests know, anyway, and everyone is colluding in the performance, and truth has never been the point. 

She fetches the bottles from the back of the temperature-controlled storeroom, lining them up ascending by year on the olive wood countertop. She waits until fifteen minutes before opening before slicing the array of cheeses, arranging them onto unwaxed boards before the wine bottles, suggesting pairings. She swats at the emerald cluster flies and wonders how something ostensibly beautiful can be such a nuisance. 

 

Wine playing the role of Death 

 

Perhaps Dionysus had a change of heart, though there have been whispers throughout the Pantheon that he doesn’t have one; only so many organs can incubate inside of a thigh. He decides to pay a visit to the old family line. 

He surveys the area out back: the tufted grass with its dry gaps of sepia, the swing tied to a branch with molding rope. The deck overlooks an evaporated creek, its waterless bed filled with rotting leaves. Brown, not black, not red. A gentler kind of death. 

The door leading indoors is slightly ajar. He pushes it open, setting the decorative plastic vines rustling on their rigid stems. The ever-ripe grapes shine under the light of the fluorescent ceiling bulbs. 

When she spots him she thinks he looks like her grandfather did in the Navy photo albums her own father used to show her every Veteran’s Day, except she can’t confirm this because she can’t seem to look directly at him; her vision cannot, or will not, focus on him. He catches her looking, or whatever she is doing. He nudges his way through the sparse crowd, who pays him no notice, to where she is standing near the counter. He leans one elbow onto the wiry fawn skin, and she thinks about how little pinpricks will be imprinted on his arm for several minutes once he moves. 

“Tell me about these wines,” he says. 

“Well,” she begins, still feeling like she is somehow being blinded though trying her best to conceal it, “we grow them here, well, not on these premises, but nearby, in Napa Valley. We pride ourselves for our small-batch production, to reduce waste—” 

“Now why would anyone ever waste wine?” he asks. 



She is regurgitating a script and she doesn't know what to tell him, doesn’t know whether the waste is from the production process or whether the wine itself is wasted. Somewhere past the range of her sight he smiles. Light needles into her vision. 

“I’m only joking,” he says. She pulls the corner of her lip into a smile. He leans forward, marvels at the moldy cheeses, the loose dried cranberries. His skin just barely brushes the corner of the cheese knife. He picks it up. 

“What a frivolous little thing,” he says. “It could never pierce skin without an entire arm’s weight behind it, and by then, it’s hardly the knife accomplishing the task.”

She says nothing. She is suddenly aware that her lungs are just empty space.

He’s still staring at the cheese knife. “I like frivolous little things,” he says. “Impracticality is a small step towards madness.” 

She finds herself laughing, though she doesn’t recall finding anything he’s said funny. Her eyes begin to water, just at the outer edges. 

“Have you ever thought about killing anyone?” he asks. 

“Once,” she says. She’s never consciously recognized it until now. 

“Who?” he asks. 

The words leak out of her. “Just this guy I went out with one time. I don’t think I really wanted to sleep with him.” 

“Did you think about how you’d do it?” 

“No,” she says. But in her mind the deliveryman’s back is against the heater. She’s holding a little cheese knife. 

He seems pleased. “Now which of these wines is your favorite? I’d like to try a glass.” 7

Normally guests are only allowed a sip’s worth, for tasting, but she pours him a full glass. Not to the typical one-third line, but to the edge, so full there’s a meniscus convexing above the rim, threatening to spill. Part of her wants to see it gush over the edge, waterfall onto the floor, like a long-dammed river finally freed. It would be her job to clean it up, but nonetheless, she wants. 

“Tell me about this wine,” he says. Before she answers, he begins to drink it.

“This, well, this is one of the vineyard’s classics,” she says. “Notes of citrus, without being overwhelmingly sweet, notes of earth without being overwhelmingly bitter.”

Her voice sounds far away from her. She keeps speaking. 

“The earthy notes—well, in some batches they’re metallic, almost. Like iron. Like blood. People say blood is thicker than water.” She swallows. Her breath snags on her teeth. “But it’s not thicker than wine.” 

He finishes the glass. The wine disappears into the darkness of his throat.

She blinks once and she can see him, now. His hair is spoked with gold. His eyes are completely empty yet entirely full. He is smiling as wide as the equator. 

“Where is home to you?” he asks. 

She doesn't want to tell a strange man where she lives, but she is compelled to answer.

“I—I live about fifteen minutes from here,” she says. It is a guesthouse she is renting from a new-money family. They kick her out on holidays and when their parents visit, but the rent is reasonable because it is under the table, their own home a rental with a sublease-barring clause. Their dog recognizes her, he doesn’t bark anymore when he sees her, in fact he canters up, his long ears trailing behind her head like flightless wings, puts his front paws on her stomach and maybe that is the closest thing to love she has felt in years. The family preferred their own decor and she had to get rid of everything she owned when she moved in, even the duvet she got as a gift in middle school, with its tattered edges and clip-art cherubs.

Until now, she has never thought about whether she considers it to be home.

“Interesting,” he says. 

She nods, at once full of glee and overwhelming sorrow. 

“Tell me something,” he says. “What do you think of yourself?” 

“I wanted to be a singer,” she says. Her eyes have betrayed her and she is suddenly crying. “I wanted to see a crowd below reaching their hands up for me, only for me, night after night after night.” 

He makes a quiet sound of contemplation and twirls his hair. He begins humming the first song she ever wrote. 

“Your life is so short, you know,” he says. “So mundane. So pointless.” 

She begins to laugh, so loudly and uncontrollably that her boss peers his head into the room and looks over at her. It is clear he thinks she is frightening her precious customer, and she’ll be scolded for that later, perhaps even receive a write-up, but really, does it matter? Has anything she’s ever done mattered at all? 

Others are looking, now. She has begun swaying to the rhythm of her own laughter. Tears are still leaking down her fire-hot cheeks. She stacks the cheese cubes and stabs them repeatedly. She runs her finger along the rim of the wine bottle and licks the little droplets from the labyrinth of her fingerprint. 

Then the man opens his hand and drops his glass. 

She looked down. The glass has shattered. Everything has shattered and the air of the room is tight around her shoulders. Her temples throb. 

 

The floor is chemically sealed, but the remnants of wine have begun seeping into it anyway. She could have sworn the glass was empty before it fell. 

“Why did you do that?” she manages to choke. She’s not sure if she wants to know the answer, or if she somehow already does. 

“Just to hear it break,” he says. “Just to hear it break.” 


Ray Miller (she/her) is a writer from California. She recently completed her MFA at Columbia University, where she was named a Felipe de Alba Fellow and served as the Managing Editor of the Columbia Journal. Her work has appeared in F(r)iction, JMWW, Stanchion Magazine, The Gateway Review, Moot Point Magazine, and elsewhere. She was a finalist in The Gateway Review's Annual Magical Realism Flash Fiction Contest, and her fiction has been nominated for the PEN/Robert J Dau Short Story Award for Emerging Writers.

Simon A. Smith

American Grizzly

Grandad’s visits grow more distressing. Like watching time-lapse video of seeds speeding toward sunflowers but in reverse. Each visit he’s a touch more ashen, wilted. One step closer to the dirt. It’s upsetting for my son, Lonnie, who at eight is smart enough to know that if Grandad quit the stimulants things might improve but not wise enough to comprehend his tenacity. None of us are.

I don’t leave them alone anymore. Lonnie’s too spooked. This leads to tragic confusion. He asks me to give them room but not so much I actually leave it altogether. 

Grandad leans down. He pats Lonnie’s head, leaving his hand there. He slides it down his cheek. Lonnie hesitates, and I swoop in. But then he reaches up and mirrors the gesture. He skims his own hand over grandad’s prickly beard. I’m unsure where such motions lead.

“I got in trouble at school,” Lonnie says, still grazing the whiskers.

“For what?” Grandad asks, his fingers skeletal glass.

He was handsome once. There’s a picture on my dresser. He’s standing beside a pickup truck, shirtless, woolly, an icy stare ten miles off. Rugged. Sixties era Paul Newman. An extinct breed. 

“He bullied someone,” I say, kneeling next to Lonnie. 

Now I know how he got that look. He lived through the kind of shit that turns a boy unsmiling in photographs. The kind he put me through. The kind I vowed to hide from Lonnie. What some perceive as stoicism is trauma.  

Grandad curves his hand down Lonnie’s cheeks, past all his soft, flabby skin, and finds his chin. He clamps it there, raises his eyes for inspection. “Guess they don’t make bullies like they did in my day.” 

I try tugging Lonnie away but he braces. 

“How’d your jaw get so hard?” Lonnie asks.

“Ever hear of a Ryoba saw?” 

“Huh?” Lonnie says. 

Grandad starts laughing but can’t finish. His emphysema flares. A sharp gasp followed by eruptive coughing. The hand drops from Lonnie’s chin. He stumbles into a corner where the convulsions continue. 

“What should I do?” Lonnie says. I think he’s asking me, so I pull him closer, but he squirms away, steps toward Grandad. “What should I do?” he asks again. 

“He can’t hear you,” I say. “It’s for the best.”

“What am I supposed to do?” Lonnie says, louder.

“You don’t want it.”

I hug him tight, but he wriggles. 

“You’re lying,” Lonnie says.

“His way is…” I can’t find the words.

“I don’t believe you,” he says. 

Grandad staggers. He backs against the wall, wipes the phlegm from his mouth. One massive breath, then silence. The floorboards creak. They’re old and need replacing. Tears seep from his eyes. They’re not emotional, but involuntary, pulmonary. He’d be the first to tell you. It’s incredible humans can spot the difference without even speaking. Separates man from animal. The truth is written there on his muculent face and whether I want it or not, Lonnie has his answer.   


Simon A. Smith teaches English to high schoolers. His stories have appeared in many journals and media outlets, including Hobart, PANK, Whiskey Island, and Chicago Public Radio. He is the author of two novels, Son of Soothsayer, and Wellton County Hunters. He lives in Chicago with his wife and son.

Oriana Siska

The Weight of Nothing

The box was surprisingly small. Henry’s parents meant it to be a gift or a peace offering. Just a piece of the whole.

The box was cardboard, dyed blue. Like a tiny shoebox. They probably assumed she would get an urn. Or bury it. Somewhere.

She looked at the box in her lap to avoid making eye contact with her therapist, Janet.

“Why do you want to give it back to his parents?” Janet asked.

Dana shifted in her chair, but she couldn’t get comfortable. “It’s hard to explain.”

Janet waited.

Dana sighed. It was a long, slow sigh. Her chest hurt like she couldn’t quite catch her breath no matter how deeply she inhaled.

“Have you opened the box?” Janet asked.

“No.” The box quivered in her hands. Dana realized she was afraid. For some reason, the Little Prince and his sheep came to mind, but the box the pilot drew for him had holes in it. There was no need for holes in this box.

But Dana knew, like Janet knew, that what she could imagine was probably better or worse than reality. So, Dana removed the lid and stared.

 

“There’s nothing in it,” she said quietly. Dana felt a peace she hadn’t felt in months. Like waking up from a deep sleep. “There’s nothing in it,” she said again, lifting her gaze to look at Janet.

Janet wrote on her notepad. There was only the sound of scratching on paper for a minute. “If there’s nothing in it, why give it back?”

Dana wondered. It was a good question.

In her hesitation, Janet asked, “Dana, is there really nothing in the box?”

The question caught Dana off guard. “Yes—”

“Show me.”

She looked at Janet. 

Janet looked at her.

The box was still open on her lap, the lid on the floor. She didn’t remember dropping it. Dana tilted the box to empty it into her hand. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Janet’s normally serene face suddenly tense, stunned.

Dana cupped her hand and held it out to her. 

 

“I’m holding nothing,” she said, her voice wavering slightly. “You would say it’s impossible to hold nothing. But you’re wrong. 

It is possible, and it’s the saddest thing in the world. At least, the saddest thing in my life. 

You’re looking at me like I’ve lost my mind. I probably wouldn’t be here if I hadn’t, at least a little bit.

And you’re thinking: it’s not nothing.

It’s Henry’s ashes.

But the thing is, it’s nothing to me.

What am I supposed to do with nothing?

This box, these ashes—they wouldn’t help me remember him. Just remind me that he’s dead.

His parents—they weren’t giving me a peace offering. They were handing me a punishment. A burden, shared. And I probably deserve it. They blame me for the car accident. And sometimes I blame myself too—if I hadn’t pointed—” her breath caught. “Well, you know. But I need to give it back. Because it’s too heavy, the nothingness.” 

Tears began to fall down her cheeks. This was usually Janet’s cue to say that it’s okay to cry. 

Instead, she put her notepad aside and reached out to her, holding Dana’s outstretched hand in both of hers, like a clamshell.

“Is it still too heavy now?”


Oriana Siska is a poet and writer living in Sonoma County, California.