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Sheepshead Review | Fall 2021

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<strong>Sheepshead</strong><br />

Manor


1<br />

House on cover orginally created by:<br />

officialpsds.com/spooky-house/ MrsTeresaJean


Welcome to<br />

<strong>Sheepshead</strong><br />

Manor<br />

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Editors<br />

Editor-in-Chief<br />

Advisor<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Assistant Managing Editor<br />

Layout Editor<br />

Merchandise Coordinator<br />

Social Media Editor<br />

Communications Team<br />

and Multimedia Editor<br />

Blog Editor<br />

Chief Copy Editor<br />

Assistant Copy Editors<br />

Brooke Poarch<br />

Dr. Rebecca Meacham<br />

JouLee Yang<br />

Brandi Charles<br />

Samantha Vondrum<br />

Kori Koehler<br />

Rosalindae Siegfried<br />

Hannah Abrahamson<br />

Tabatha Zwicky<br />

Shianne Draganowski<br />

Jair Zeuske<br />

Austin Votis<br />

Fiction Editor<br />

Poetry Editors<br />

Sidney Grady<br />

Abby Kaczynski<br />

Adriana Culverhouse<br />

Visual Arts Editor<br />

Nonfiction Editor<br />

3<br />

Sky Hunt<br />

Bruce Kong


Genre Staffs<br />

Fiction Staff<br />

Poetry Staff<br />

Tabatha Zwicky<br />

Brandi Charles<br />

Jair Zeuske<br />

Rosalindae Siegfried<br />

Kallie Knueppel<br />

Serena Siudzinski<br />

Nonfiction<br />

Staff<br />

Shianne Draganowski<br />

Austin Votis<br />

Hannah Abrahamson<br />

Visual Arts<br />

Staff<br />

Benjamin Morrison<br />

Zo Baker<br />

Gabi Enriquez<br />

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Table of Contents<br />

Visual Arts<br />

Too Bad for Us 11<br />

Misfortune, Misfortune 12<br />

Married to PTSD 13<br />

His Face in the Mirror 14<br />

What’s the Point? 15<br />

Electrified Man 16<br />

Clash of Colors 2 18<br />

The Happenings at Mystery Mountain 20<br />

Days Passing 3 22<br />

Seeing His Future 24<br />

The Alien Walkers 25<br />

Getting Lost in the Sauce 1 26<br />

Phoenix 27<br />

Abstract Portrait 28<br />

The Wind Gathering Ashes 29<br />

Untitled 30<br />

Rest Only 31<br />

Final Days 32<br />

The Utter Indifference of Time 33<br />

Immured 34<br />

Close Friends 2 35<br />

Streaming Video 36<br />

Vengeance Rising 37<br />

Wicomico County’s Unintended Pun 38<br />

Fiction<br />

Perdition 41<br />

Song of Scylla 42<br />

Within Sanity’s Stroll 47<br />

Even the Sun 50<br />

Honest Darkness 53<br />

Oracle 60<br />

The Door 5<br />

61


Poetry<br />

in the case of an unattended death 67<br />

Regional Rail 68<br />

Ms. Scarlet in the Study 69<br />

Etiquette of the Séance 71<br />

Six Feet 72<br />

Sestina for a Vampire 73<br />

The Horror 74<br />

Decomposing Reality 77<br />

The Cailleach 78<br />

Ghost in the Graveyard 79<br />

Deliverance 80<br />

Cry the Tempest Knight 81<br />

Complete Collection 82<br />

Apology for a Ghost 85<br />

Death’s Beauty 86<br />

The Wicked Ones 87<br />

Rumpelstiltskin’s Revenge 88<br />

Nonfiction<br />

Wax Baby 91<br />

Trapped 93<br />

Miasma 96<br />

Wolf Woman 98<br />

When the Candles Burn Low 104<br />

Papa Loves Mambo 108<br />

“I had no choice...I had to turn the page” 111<br />

Soul of Mine 112<br />

The Study 113<br />

Bo marks<br />

UW-Green Bay<br />

Submissions!<br />

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Editor’s Last Words<br />

Welcome, dear reader, to the <strong>Fall</strong> <strong>2021</strong> issue of<br />

<strong>Sheepshead</strong> <strong>Review</strong>, or, as we call it, <strong>Sheepshead</strong> Manor.<br />

Please don’t mind the cobwebs, and do try not to wander<br />

too far just yet.<br />

Ever since I was a little girl, I have adored the horror<br />

genre. Some people get a thrill riding roller coasters;<br />

others enjoy the rush that comes with launching over<br />

a cliff with little more than a cord to hold them back.<br />

Horror was—and still is—my blood-pumping, adrenalineinducing,<br />

spine-tingling escape from reality. I would often<br />

kick back and watch as my fears exploded on the pages<br />

and screen before me, excitedly anticipating the next<br />

creaking rocking chair, another music cue, the one last<br />

scare before the final flip of the page.<br />

It was this all-consuming rush that inspired this journal’s<br />

theme, In the Shadows, an exploration into all things<br />

that go bump in the night. It is my belief that horror is the<br />

perfect genre as it allows us as readers and writers to<br />

experience fear in its truest form without ever having to<br />

throw ourselves in the lion’s den. As creators, it is our job<br />

to sink our teeth into every aspect of life, both fun and<br />

terrifying, and to invite our audiences to take the journey<br />

with us. Horror begs writers and artists to ask not only what<br />

terrifies us, but also why and, more importantly, how can<br />

one ensure that our audience experiences the same<br />

shiver down their spine?<br />

Horror is the foundation for <strong>Sheepshead</strong> Manor, where<br />

every room opens a new terror-tory and you race up the<br />

stairs in the dark without daring to look back.<br />

The eagerness from my staff and contributors was<br />

contagious, and it bleeds into 7 these very pages. The


poetry piece “The Horror” beautifully captures the intensity<br />

of the genre through familiar settings, themes, and<br />

motifs found in modern slasher films via the lens of Black<br />

audiences. The visual arts acrylic painting “Immured” is a<br />

haunting piece that conveys a man trapped in the floor,<br />

trying to crawl his way out into the real world. This piece<br />

brilliantly captures the anxieties of the modern world and<br />

the struggle people face when they attempt to breakfree<br />

from the norm. “I had no choice...I had to turn the page”<br />

is a nonfiction piece that captures the power of horror and<br />

how it makes people stronger by forcing them to encounter<br />

the dark and unsettling.<br />

Thump, thump, crash.<br />

I would love to stay and chat, but the manor is dying to<br />

let you in. Watch your step now, for you never know what<br />

is lurking in the dark around here, and whatever you do,<br />

don’t look behind you. I do hope you enjoy your visit and<br />

find some beauty in the darkness to come.<br />

Goodbye (for now)...<br />

Brooke Poarch<br />

Editor-in-Chief<br />

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Visual Arts<br />

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W<br />

W<br />

Too Bad for Us<br />

Dave Sims<br />

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W<br />

Digital Canvas<br />

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W<br />

W<br />

Misfortune, Misfortune<br />

Miranda Rios<br />

W<br />

W<br />

Reduction print<br />

12


W<br />

W<br />

Married to PTSD<br />

Verity Langan<br />

W<br />

acrylic paints<br />

13<br />

W


W<br />

W<br />

His Face in the Mirror<br />

Malia Nahinu<br />

W<br />

W<br />

makeup and acrylic paints<br />

14


W<br />

W<br />

What’s the Point?<br />

Edward Supranowicz<br />

W<br />

W<br />

Digital Painting<br />

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W<br />

W<br />

Getting Lost in the Sauce 1<br />

Alora Clark<br />

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W<br />

Prisma Colored Pencils<br />

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Electrified Man<br />

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Dave Sims<br />

Digital Canvas<br />

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Clash of Colors 2<br />

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W<br />

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Edward Supranowicz<br />

Digital painting<br />

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The Happenings at Mystery Mountain<br />

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Sheilagh Casey<br />

Oil on Wood<br />

22


Days Passing 3<br />

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Edward Supranowicz<br />

Digital painting<br />

24


W<br />

The Alien Walkers<br />

Willy Conley<br />

W<br />

W<br />

W<br />

photography<br />

25


W<br />

W<br />

Seeing His Future<br />

Dave Sims<br />

W<br />

W<br />

Digital Canvas<br />

26


W<br />

Phoenix<br />

Weining Wang<br />

W<br />

W<br />

W<br />

Foam & Rubber<br />

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W<br />

W<br />

Abstract Portrait<br />

Hanna Wright<br />

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W<br />

Ink on paper<br />

28


W<br />

W<br />

The Wind Gathering Ashes<br />

Bill Wolak<br />

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W<br />

digital collage<br />

29


W<br />

W<br />

Untitled<br />

Rachel Coyne<br />

W<br />

W<br />

Acrylic<br />

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W<br />

W<br />

Rest Only<br />

Timothy Dodd<br />

W<br />

W<br />

oil<br />

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W<br />

Final Days<br />

Timothy Dodd<br />

W<br />

W<br />

W<br />

oil<br />

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W<br />

W<br />

The Utter Indifference of Time<br />

Bill Wolak<br />

W<br />

W<br />

digital collage<br />

33


W<br />

W<br />

Immured<br />

Lino Azevedo<br />

W<br />

W<br />

Acrylic<br />

34


W<br />

W<br />

Close Friends 2<br />

Alora Clark<br />

W<br />

W<br />

Relief Print from wood block<br />

35


W<br />

W<br />

Streaming Video<br />

Dave Sims<br />

W<br />

W<br />

Digital Canvas<br />

36


W<br />

Vengeance Rising<br />

Erik Suchy<br />

W<br />

W<br />

W<br />

photography<br />

37


W<br />

W<br />

Wicomico County’s Unintended Pun<br />

Willy Conley<br />

W<br />

W<br />

photography<br />

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Fiction<br />

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40


Is this not euphoria for those with hearts most vicious?<br />

First, sniff the wind like the reprehensible dog you are, savoring a scent<br />

most succulent and tainted with smoldering charcoal.<br />

Next, relish in the hot spell of the dragon’s breath on your face, flickering<br />

like how the miscreants adance in a blood-orange shade.<br />

Then, feel your toes around the ash, charred and blackened like the shores along<br />

the most poisonous oceans that this torrid universe has to offer.<br />

Finally, look upon the suffering of the others. They are ready to meet you.<br />

Well? Is eternal damnation not my finest work?<br />

Perdition<br />

41<br />

Erik Suchy


The first fish seems innocuous enough. Dante calls for me from the shore,<br />

his slight figure silhouetted against the sunrise. Fish often wash up on the<br />

beach, their briny corpses lying in the sun until Dante or I can be<br />

bothered to do away with them. I stumble outside, still half-asleep, to<br />

see him pointing at a small, dark lump at his feet.<br />

“Marlow,” he calls. “Look at this.”<br />

Dante nudges it with the side of his foot, and from under the sand three<br />

black tendrils emerge. I lean closer, squinting in the weak light. It appears that<br />

they have burst forth from the creature’s back, tearing the scales asunder.<br />

“Is it some sort of illness?” I ask him. “A parasite?”<br />

“I don’t know,” Dante says, and prods at the fish again. “It’s nothing I’ve seen<br />

before. I’ll have to ask the other men.”<br />

“Throw it back to the sea,” I tell him. “There’s nothing we can do for it.”<br />

He picks the fish up and tosses it. As it sinks below the waves I hear a keening,<br />

almost like the call of a gull. It’s carried by the wind, tickling my ears as it tousles my<br />

hair. I turn to Dante, a half-formed question on my lips, but he is already gone.<br />

I spend the day alone, as I always do. The fishing boats are a hard occupation,<br />

taking Dante away from dawn until dusk, but there are few other options. Someday<br />

we will leave, he tells me. Away from the nearby village, filled with dead gray<br />

houses and bitter people, away from the rocky shore. There are sunnier places,<br />

somewhere. It’s a nice thought. It keeps me company while I stitch by the window,<br />

hour after hour, and bake loaf after loaf of bread. I imagine fields and flowers, the<br />

sun on my face. Sometimes I imagine Dante with me; sometimes not.<br />

At dusk I am standing in the kitchen, dinner in the oven, when I hear it again. A<br />

gull’s cry, but different, stranger, as if the bird were singing underwater. I walk to the<br />

window and pull back the curtain. The pink sky reflects across the darkening water,<br />

a shimmering mirage, but there’s nothing else to see. It came again, the cry, but<br />

louder this time, as though it were right outside the window. I shiver, every hair on<br />

my neck standing straight. I’m startled by the sound of the door opening behind<br />

me. The sound cuts off suddenly at the exact same moment. Dante wipes his boots<br />

on the mat. He plants a kiss on my cheek. Through the window I see a light in the<br />

distance, a red glow. Or perhaps it is only the dying sun.<br />

The next morning Dante and I walk outside together at dawn and look upon<br />

Song of Scylla<br />

Brittany Grady<br />

42


the corpses of hundreds of fish upon the beach, each with their own shiny black<br />

appendages.<br />

Dante begins to lock the door at night. He hears it now too, the call, but it<br />

sounds more like a whistle now. Every night, like the sound of a passing train, it<br />

grows louder, then softer, then louder again, until it fades away just before dawn.<br />

Dante doesn’t like to show his fear but I can sense it in him, the growing unease<br />

with each passing morning, the mounting pile of dead fish outside. I want to<br />

comfort him, but his unease is earned, and it would only worry him to know I don’t<br />

share in it.<br />

I unlock the back door, once, while Dante is sleeping. I hear the rush of waves<br />

outside, the tide only feet from our house. There is the whistle, too, louder than normal.<br />

It sounds like a voice. Or perhaps it is a voice underneath it, a slow drawl not<br />

unlike the sound of the sea. It sounds like my name. Marlow. Like the way Dante<br />

whispers it in his sleep. Marlow. He only calls for me when caught in a nightmare,<br />

his fingers twitching against the quilt. Marlow. It’s a cry for comfort. I stand in the<br />

doorway and watch the waves. Eventually dawn arrives, and I must crawl back to<br />

bed before Dante awakes. I close the door behind me and the call fades away,<br />

the last tone melancholy, as if it’s sad to see me go.<br />

Dante still leaves for the boats every morning. There is too much work to do<br />

and he cannot abandon it to fear.<br />

He rubs at his red eyes, dragging his fingers across the patchy stubble on his<br />

cheeks. I wonder how much he slept last night. I wonder if he heard me leave the<br />

bed. “I’ll try to be back before dusk,” he tells me. “There’s no need to worry. It<br />

does not come out in the daylight.” I’m not sure who he is trying to reassure.<br />

I lie on the floor all day. I have chores to do, bread to bake, socks to mend, but<br />

all I can do is listen. I listen for the whistle, for the voice, for my name in the wind.<br />

But I only hear ordinary sounds, the call of seagulls, familiar and comforting, and<br />

the sounds of the tide. I close my eyes and urge the day to pass. I am impatient,<br />

but I don’t know what I’m waiting for.<br />

Dante returns before sundown, and we sit down to dinner. It’s only cheese and<br />

day-old bread, a few odds and ends from the pantry. He is upset with me, I know,<br />

but his mind is elsewhere, too distracted to even mention his displeasure. I clean<br />

up the table while Dante settles by the fire. When the last of the light disappears,<br />

we wait in silence, neither moving nor breathing. Then it begins. It is so quiet at first<br />

that I think it is only the ringing in my ears. A whistle.<br />

Dante sighs. He stands and pours himself a glass of whiskey. He drinks more<br />

than he used to.<br />

“It has to stop eventually,” he says. “I cannot abide by this, night after night.”<br />

“There’s nothing you can do,” I tell him. “Even if you were less afraid.”<br />

He will not meet my eyes. Instead, he grabs the bottle of whiskey and storms<br />

away to bed. I sit in the kitchen with my eyes closed, listening. The whistle has<br />

changed, the pitch rising along with the wind. Now it is almost a scream.<br />

43


Dante wakes me in the morning, his hand on the back of my neck. “This is the<br />

first time I’ve known you to sleepwalk.”<br />

I am on the floor, curled up under the window, one hand gripping the edge of<br />

the sill. I look up at him, his face pale and drawn.<br />

I stand and pull back the curtain. On the glass there are the faint outlines of<br />

eight small circles lined up in two rows, and there is something thick and transparent<br />

smeared underneath. My gaze drifts beyond the marks to the beach. All<br />

of the fish are gone—all of the hundreds of black tentacled bodies. All that is left<br />

is an indentation, a long drag mark leading from the edge of the water to just<br />

below our window.<br />

Dante reaches around me and pulls the curtain closed.<br />

“Do you want me to stay today?” he asks.<br />

“No,” I tell him. “Go. It only comes at night.”<br />

“For now.” He wants me to ask him to stay, to beg, to be afraid. I turn and<br />

button his shirt for him.<br />

“Go, Dante. I don’t need you.”<br />

He leaves without saying goodbye.<br />

Once he is gone, I pull a chair to the window and settle down to watch. I<br />

trace the marks on the window, over and over, as though I am hypnotized. I<br />

close my eyes and lean my head against the cool glass. Then I whistle.<br />

It is not a song. Just one long, unchanging note. I stop, out of breath, and<br />

then I hear it. An answering whistle, quiet but clear.<br />

I open my eyes. Through my eyelashes I see movement. Something slices<br />

across the surface of the water, breaking through the dapples of afternoon sun.<br />

It’s far from shore but moving closer. I whistle again; again, it answers. Something<br />

dark flicks upwards, as if in greeting. I place my hand on the glass in reply, my<br />

fingers splayed, and then it slides back under the water and disappears.<br />

The screaming starts before Dante comes home. He rushes in, cheeks red, hair<br />

disheveled, and drops to his knees beside me, still seated next to the window.<br />

“Close the curtains,” he tells me. “I told you, didn’t I? It’s not even dark yet.”<br />

“You don’t need to be afraid,” I assure him, but he closes the curtain anyway.<br />

“We should leave, Marlow.”<br />

I shake my head. How could I, knowing what I know?<br />

“What do you mean, no? We don’t know what that is.”<br />

“Exactly.” I smooth back his hair. “Why would you assume it means us harm?”<br />

“It only screams. All those fish on the beach, the way they looked. How could<br />

that be anything but menacing?”<br />

“Perhaps they were an offering.”<br />

He gapes at me, silent. He doesn’t understand, just as I feared. I take his hand.<br />

“We need to open the door tonight, Dante. As an invitation.”<br />

44


“Enough.” He slams his hand against the wall. “This is foolishness.”<br />

I do not reply. Instead, I stand and walk into the kitchen, Dante following at<br />

my heels. He watches me as I walk to the back door, the one that leads to the<br />

beach, and it is only when my hand is on the handle that he speaks.<br />

“Marlow, stop.” He holds out a hand, and I can see that it shakes. “Don’t go<br />

out there.”<br />

“Dante...”<br />

“If you step out there, I will bolt the door behind you. I will not allow you in, no<br />

matter what.” His lips tremble. “I mean it. Stay.”<br />

We stand there in silence, the only sound the wailing outside, and I know that<br />

it is not the time. I cannot leave him, not yet, at least. I take a step back, and<br />

Dante sighs.<br />

“I haven’t made dinner,” I tell him.<br />

“That’s alright,” he says. “Let’s just sit down for a while.”<br />

He sits at the table, his hands clasped before him as if in prayer.<br />

“Let me get you a drink,” I say, and before he can answer I am at the cabinet,<br />

the whiskey already in my hand. I pour it into a glass and hand it to him. He drinks<br />

it quickly and hands the empty glass to me for more.<br />

By the time it is completely dark the bottle is nearly gone. Dante slumps at the<br />

table, rolling the glass on its side—up and down, up and down—the sound of<br />

glass against wood mingling nicely with the cries outside.<br />

“Tell me something, Marlow.” He sits up, his eyes half-closed. “Why aren’t you<br />

frightened of it? I’d feel so much better if you were.”<br />

I do not know what to tell him. How can I explain the yearning I feel when I<br />

hear it, like a mother reacting to her baby’s cries? He would not understand it.<br />

The song isn’t sung for him.<br />

He stands up and walks to me, unsteady as a newborn doe.<br />

“Do you want me to leave?” Dante asks me. He leans close, his breath hot.<br />

“Or do you want to leave me?”<br />

I pour him another glass, the last of the whiskey drippling out in thick, wet<br />

drops.<br />

“I do not.”<br />

He swallows it, wincing as it burns his throat.<br />

“But I shall, if I have to.”<br />

He stares at me. There are tears in his unfocused eyes.<br />

“Sleep, Dante.”<br />

He takes a step towards me but stumbles, his knees hitting the floor. I gently<br />

push against his shoulder and he falls to his back. He opens his mouth once,<br />

twice, gaping like a fish, searching for words. But the whiskey does its trick.<br />

Dante is heavy. My arms already shake by the time I reach the door and throw<br />

it open to the cool night air. I hold him under the arms as I struggle across the<br />

pebbles, my feet slipping on the wet rocks, but still, he doesn’t wake.<br />

45


I bring him nearly to the water’s edge, where the sand is wet and heavy, and<br />

finally I release him. I wait. I don’t know what I am waiting for.<br />

There is movement just below the surface. A tentacle writhes slowly out of the<br />

water and reaches forward like a thin, black finger. It probes the sand, searching,<br />

until it brushes against Dante’s leg. It investigates the still body like a hound, prodding<br />

it from every angle, and then suddenly retreats.<br />

I see light in the water. At first, I think it is only the reflection of the moon but<br />

it’s too big, too red, glowing like hot coals. It is all fire, but I don’t sense anger or<br />

cunning. It wants. It desires. It is lonely, down where it swells in the dark. And it is<br />

watching me.<br />

“Take him,” I whisper. “But be gentle. He means so much to me.”<br />

The eye shifts, moving closer, and then disappears.<br />

The black appendage springs up, wraps around his legs, and drags him<br />

forward. Dante’s eyes flutter open as the cold water splashes over him, and he<br />

opens his mouth wide in a yawning, silent scream until the water rushes in and<br />

chokes him as he disappears.<br />

At first I think it has gone. I step forward, sending ripples across the glassy<br />

surface of the water, and it returns. I flinch when it touches me, but the touch is<br />

gentle, like a caress. I stand still as it wraps loosely around one ankle, then the<br />

other. The eye returns, now a dusky orange. A wail sounds across the water, first in<br />

anguish, then in celebration, a keening song. It does not call my name anymore.<br />

It doesn’t need to.<br />

The tendrils pull gently, and I allow them to guide me into deeper water, my<br />

feet shuffling through rocky sand. As the water hits my waist, my feet lift from the<br />

sea bed. I am cradled, held tightly by my legs, arms, back, even my head, as I<br />

float away from shore. I taste salt as I open my mouth to laugh, as I am carried<br />

out, out, out to sea.<br />

46


M<br />

ary had never seen so many people out and about in her neighborhood<br />

at once. Sure, she lived in an active city, but it seemed<br />

everyone on her street had decided to be outside: there was Mrs.<br />

Johnson from the house on the end of the cul-de-sac, and Matthew<br />

Case with his dog Piper, and even the adorable little H family, named for the giant<br />

wooden H that hung on their front door.<br />

True, it was a little jarring to see everyone out today since Mary considered<br />

herself a bit of an introvert. While she did know a lot about her neighbors just from<br />

observation, she’d never said more than a few words to any of them at one time.<br />

A simple “How are you?” and “Good!” repeated over and over again until they all<br />

either moved or died. But it was a nice day out today, so why shouldn’t they all be<br />

enjoying it? The sun is shining brightly, there’s a light breeze blowing just enough to<br />

ruffle her hair; it’s a serene and a peaceful Saturday. She’d been awake all night,<br />

hard at work, but by all definitions, it was a lovely day.<br />

Maybe that’s what causes Mary to step out of her shell a little bit.<br />

“Howdy neighbor!” She greeted as she approached Mr. Case and Piper. The<br />

little Shih Tzu tugged on her leash to get closer, happily licking at Mary’s palms as<br />

she crouched down to pet the pup.<br />

“Mr. Case?” Mary asked, tilting her head as she glanced up at him. The man<br />

was staring at her blankly, appearing almost frozen in place. He had one arm outstretched,<br />

looking to all the world like he was going to shake her hand.<br />

“Well, it was good to see you,” Mary hummed, reaching out to shake his hand.<br />

“You might want to give Piper a bath—she’s a little dirty.” She quickly dropped his<br />

hand and continued her leisurely stroll down her street as the man squatted down<br />

to pet Piper.<br />

The H family’s house was next, the beautiful front lawn covered in children’s<br />

toys—dolls and toy cars and colorful balls of all shapes and sizes. Mary loved observing<br />

the little H family with their young love and even younger children. It was<br />

sweet, if a little painful—a reminder of all the things Mary would never have.<br />

Now, though, the children laughed and squealed as they pushed each other<br />

on the tire swing hanging from the tall oak tree in their front yard.<br />

“Good morning,” Mary said gleefully, waving to the children as she approached.<br />

They hopped from the swing at the sight of her, shrieking joyfully as they<br />

Within Sanity’s Stroll<br />

47<br />

Dorothy Shytles


started darting around the yard in a fast-paced game of tag. Mary chased them<br />

playfully for a short while before stopping to catch her breath.<br />

“I’m not as young as I used to be,” she said, waving goodbye to the children<br />

as they threw their front door closed behind them, the wooden H on the door<br />

rattling.<br />

It’s Mrs. Johnson she happens upon afterwards, the woman tending her garden<br />

in a large sun hat to help keep her face from burning in the sunshine.<br />

“Mrs. Johnson, how are you?” Mary inquired innocently.<br />

“Terrible,” the old woman growled without looking up, ripping weeds from<br />

her perfectly–manicured flower beds. If Mary didn’t know better—and she<br />

did—she’d assume that all Mrs. Johnson ever did was yell at children to get off<br />

her lawn and terrorize the dandelions that just wanted to grow peacefully in her<br />

well-watered yard.<br />

“Why so terrible?” Mary asked, furrowing her brow.<br />

“It’s these stupid weeds,” the woman huffed, wiping her brow with her wrist as<br />

she continued to mostly ignore Mary’s presence.<br />

“Your yard is perfect,” Mary said, trying to stop the jealousy from seeping into<br />

her voice. Her own yard looked like the heat was slowly killing it, leaving it brown<br />

and wilting when compared to Mrs. Johnson’s own lush landscape.<br />

“Perfectly covered in weeds,” the woman tacked on, standing up and facing<br />

Mary as she continued, “and I’ve been kept up til all hours of the night because<br />

of that infernal noise you call music—” Mrs. Johnson cut herself off, gasping as if<br />

she had suddenly remembered something important she might have forgotten.<br />

“Well, I’ll leave you to it, Mrs. Johnson,” Mary sighed, brushing her hands on<br />

her pants as the woman moved back down to her flower beds. Mary wandered<br />

towards her own home, ignoring her neighbor’s indignant shrieks at being cut off<br />

mid-complaint.<br />

Mrs. Johnson had always had an issue with Mary’s music, the kind she and her<br />

husband had loved to play together before his early passing. The car crash that<br />

had happened just over six months ago had been sudden and painful for Mary;<br />

she’d never love again. Many of the neighbors had attended the small service,<br />

having loved her husband almost as much as her. He had always been the more<br />

outgoing one of the pair.<br />

She hadn’t yet reached her front door when several cars pulled up, their<br />

tires squealing on the pavement as they came to a quick stop. Several people<br />

stepped out of them, but the tallest man started walking towards her. She smiled<br />

politely at him.<br />

“Good afternoon, gentlemen, what can I do for you—”<br />

“Mary Williams, you are under arrest for possible first-degree murder of two<br />

individuals.”<br />

48


Oh, Mary thought passively.<br />

“You have the right to remain silent,” the man in uniform continued. “Anything<br />

you say can and will be held against you in the court of law. You have the right—”<br />

“What gave me away?” Mary asked him, not resisting in the slightest as she<br />

tucked her hands behind her back. He paid her no mind.<br />

“—if you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you. Do you—”<br />

“Of course,” Mary sighed. “I should have known. I know it’s important to tie up<br />

loose ends. But I just loved the little H family so much, you know?”<br />

The man who was speaking had fallen silent, having finished his monologue, and<br />

was listening to her. She appreciated his patience.<br />

“I figured I could leave them be. They didn’t come to the service because their<br />

youngest was ill—flu season and all that,” Mary said, muttering to herself, running<br />

her hand through her hair that was sticking to her face. “Not like Matthew and his<br />

stupid dog. Good Lord she was irritating, always yapping when people were trying<br />

to sleep,” Mary plowed on as the other officers started to herd her towards the<br />

vehicle. “And Mrs. Johnson, with her—”<br />

The man situating her in the back of the car stopped to offer her a rag for her<br />

hands.<br />

“Oh, thank you kindly, Mr...” the man paused in his act of shutting the door.<br />

“Miller,” he said hesitantly. “Officer Miller.” The car door closed quietly.<br />

“What a lovely name,” Mary hummed to herself as she scrubbed at the dark red<br />

stains on her hands.<br />

49


I<br />

don’t regret what I did, Your Honor. Beatitude is fine, after all. You would<br />

have done the same thing if you grew up like me, a girl from the sewers.<br />

But all of you top-dwellers are so full of yourselves, you forget us bottomdwellers<br />

exist. Not your concern, right? If you don’t see us, why should<br />

you care? Everyone out for themselves.<br />

I was born a top-dweller, you know. My dad was an engineer at the Air Filtration<br />

Plant and my mom was a telesurgeon. I can still remember our apartment in Sector<br />

108. We had access to the park on level 47. I loved going there. Sunlight—real sunlight—would<br />

come in through the tiny windows. I couldn’t see anything but I loved<br />

lying in those bright yellow squares. So warm. It was like I was glowing inside. That<br />

was the best hour of every week.<br />

I didn’t know there would be a day I would see my parents smile for the last<br />

time. When I was seven, dad took his own life. Couldn’t take it anymore was all the<br />

note said. To this day I can’t figure out what the signs were, whether he’d still be<br />

here if I had given him one more hug. Not even mom noticed. And perhaps she<br />

never forgave herself. To cope, she started taking extra sun pills. I saw her when<br />

she thought I wasn’t looking, and denied it when I asked her. Heliodor was her<br />

favorite. Extra potent. Could make you hallucinate for hours. HelioTech eventually<br />

pulled them off the shelves but not before they made their trillions and mom was<br />

an addict. She lost her job after almost killing a patient while high. No one would<br />

help. My grandparents were already gone. If there hadn’t been the one-child<br />

policy, we might have had aunts and uncles to depend on like in those old books.<br />

Friends and neighbors didn’t want to be accused of addiction, or worse, selling<br />

that stuff illegally. Hypocrites. Sure, a corporation can sell something addicting<br />

and that’s legal but some rando looking to make an extra coin is a criminal. What<br />

choice do people have? Sun pills are expensive. And sun booths only offer a minute<br />

of vitamin D.<br />

Mom became a laborer and the only place we could afford was a coffin home<br />

down in the Barracks. When the company downsized, Mom lost her job and we<br />

ended up in the sewers. I was eight. I didn’t know darkness—real darkness—until<br />

then. In Sector 108 we might not have had direct sunlight all the time and the Bar-<br />

Even the Sun<br />

50<br />

Eric Odynocki


51<br />

racks were a confusing maze of cages and doors lit in harsh LED but down there,<br />

in the sewers, we only had those flickering bulbs. At Curfew, I would lie down as<br />

close to one as possible so I could look at dad’s picture on his employee badge.<br />

It was the only thing I could slip out unnoticed during the eviction.<br />

The thing about the sewers is they lead to everywhere in the Trove: The Waste<br />

Recycling Plant: The Trash Compactor: The Composter. That’s how we survived,<br />

my mom and me. We’d sneak into those places and dig up what we could.<br />

Banana peels. Chicken legs. You could tell which chutes led up to the Outer Rim<br />

because that’s where the most delicious leftovers landed. One time I even found<br />

half of a strawberry cheesecake.<br />

About a year ago, mom and I were in the Trash Compactor picking out whatever<br />

we could. Winter was coming and the gales outside the Trove made the<br />

sewers draftier. Mom found a bottle of Heliodor. It had been years. We got our<br />

vitamin D pills—knockoffs—by trading with the other bottom dwellers. I told mom<br />

to put the bottle down. That’s when the Compactor turned on. We must have<br />

misjudged the compacting schedule. I yanked my mom’s arm, screamed her<br />

name, but she had already swallowed one. I was able to get out in time. The last<br />

I saw, she was just standing there, on top of a pile of trash, looking dazed at that<br />

bottle of pills.<br />

I don’t know how long I spent wandering the sewers. Sometimes I slumped<br />

against the wall and wouldn’t move. Other times my eyes burned from all the crying.<br />

At one point, I bartered for Heliodor. I sat and stared at the gelcaps glinting<br />

in the dim light of the bulbs. That was when I made my decision. I wasn’t going<br />

to die like a rat. Or end up like dad, like those suicides lying in the gutter, dead<br />

because they couldn’t take it anymore either, couldn’t take the darkness anymore.<br />

And I was tired. Sick and tired of seeing all those kids. Bow-legged kids in<br />

the shadows with crooked arms because broken bones never healed right. A lot<br />

of them were born in the sewers and would die there. But not me.<br />

So first I tried going to Assistance. Up top, I ignored all the stares along the<br />

way. Ignored how they covered their noses. At the kiosk, my case was denied.<br />

Because I couldn’t prove who I was. I dialed for a live agent. “Our funds are not<br />

for iDNA,” she said. One drop of my blood and five minutes of their time and they<br />

would have found my citizen number. But no, why spend tax dollars on bottomdwellers?<br />

So I went to Employment, said I could work as a waste collector, livestock<br />

groomer, anything. They said they couldn’t help someone who didn’t have<br />

a citizen number. And in any case, all jobs were full.<br />

It wasn’t fair. How was I ever going to get out of the sewers? What did I do to<br />

deserve any of this? Before I went under I passed a hologram that was talking<br />

about Beatitude Sherman. I stared at the feed. Heiress to trillions. The parties she


attended. The celebrities she was romantically involved with. Her home was a<br />

10,000 square foot penthouse in Sector 1. Both of us twenty-three. Such different<br />

lives. It’s so nice when daddy’s CEO of HelioTech.<br />

A childhood in the sewers teaches you a lot. Like I said, those tunnels lead<br />

everywhere. Even to the Air Filtration Plant. I used dad’s badge to sneak into<br />

his old office and unlock the computer. From there it was only a matter of time<br />

before I learned which vents go to the Outer Rim. Of course, when I found which<br />

penthouse was hers, I didn’t break in immediately. I waited. Learned her schedule.<br />

When the AI slept.<br />

I made my move at Curfew. It was dark in her room but my eyes were used<br />

to it. She tried to scream but I shoved a few Heliodor pills in her mouth. Knocked<br />

her out cold. And then I lived the happiest few hours of my life. I took a shower.<br />

I hadn’t felt hot water in fifteen years. I raided the kitchen. I got crumbs everywhere,<br />

ate spaghetti by the handful. I let the juices of fresh fruit drip all along my<br />

chin. I didn’t care. But the best was when Curfew ended. The time called dawn.<br />

Or morning. I’m not sure what the difference is, just that besides sun, those are the<br />

two most beautiful words I’ve ever heard. Dawn. Morning.<br />

I could not believe what I saw. Through those massive windows the blackness<br />

broke in half, the top half lighter—like wine—than the bottom half. I think the division<br />

is called horizon. And the upper part is the sky. And then I saw pink and orange<br />

and red. Colors I only saw on screens in school. And then I saw the brightest<br />

thing. It first peaked over the horizon and then slowly drifted up and up, all on its<br />

own. Turning the sky blue, exposing the scorched earth that, even in its emptiness,<br />

was stunning. And then I felt something I hadn’t in years. That glow. On the inside.<br />

I got so angry with the tears for blurring my vision.<br />

They say the sun goes down at some point. I never saw it. I didn’t even hear<br />

Security come in.<br />

I do have one last thing to say. I know the Law. I know the consequences for<br />

what I did. When the Council decides on how I’ll be executed, let it be by Exposure.<br />

That’s right, Exposure. So what if I’ll be incinerated the second I step outside<br />

the Trove? At least for that last moment, the sun will be mine.<br />

52


Jacob was ordered to leave before nightfall. Nobody trusted him at night<br />

anymore. He finished eating at the farmhands’ table, wiped the paste of<br />

sweat and sawdust from his brow, and walked to the hitching post on the<br />

property’s edge, where the travelers’ tethered mounts nervously tapped<br />

their hooves on the threshold of a vast and stygian desert. The farmer, Garner,<br />

watched him suspiciously from the kitchen window. Jacob noticed this and moved<br />

with hateful slowness so that his exit would come annoyingly close to the advent of<br />

dark.<br />

Drenched in the residue of his work and warmed by the mild tinder of his<br />

payment-meal, he departed. Miles ahead, the sun descended behind the sierra-knuckled<br />

horizon. He glanced back. The farm radiated in the distance, an infernal<br />

globe that exuded the demonic smog of bonfires, flickered with the shadows<br />

of winged creatures and whispered with the presence of faint, insignificant human<br />

life. He kept riding, the plug of a half-full stomach eroding with every trot.<br />

The moon peered over the highest peak, outlining its lithic lodestar and precariously<br />

orienting him in the desert void. He floated past prickly bushes and splintered<br />

elbows of stone, narrowly missed near-invisible craters, and leapt at every primeval<br />

howl that hurled through the boundlessness like blindly fired arrows. His horse<br />

paused to sniff the carcass of a pronghorn, but the sight sickened Jacob and he<br />

kicked the horse onward.<br />

After several dread-filled hours, he stopped, removed his hat, and squinted<br />

through the dense night. A pale button of light was pinned to the mountain’s lapel.<br />

He rode to the base of the incline, located at a thin and snaky trail cut back and<br />

forth across the climbing rock, and cautiously steered a path toward the roosting<br />

glint.<br />

Partway up the mountain, the track levelled into a platform. It was a pleasant<br />

spot: elevated, remote, and gifted with a clear view of the desert plain. There was<br />

a domicile up ahead, its flaxen gleam stamped upon the backdrop of gnarled<br />

rock. A shrivelled mass of juniper trees engulfed the glow, like protective fingers<br />

shielding a candle’s flame, so he couldn’t ascertain the building’s exact contours.<br />

There was a shed behind the thicket, as well as a slumbering chicken coop and a<br />

garden whose well-kept produce shone like jellyfish in the moonlight.<br />

He dismounted, hitched his horse to a twist of igneous rock, and ducked<br />

Honest Darkness<br />

53<br />

Owen Schalk


through the fragrant trees. The home was smaller than he expected; there were<br />

at least five strides between the trunks and the walls, and enough space above<br />

the ceiling to erect a steeple. One sylvan outlier had angled into the building’s<br />

upper corner, and forced the home to bend under the weight of its warped<br />

spine.<br />

He knocked upon the tilted door. It squealed open, and a frayed old man<br />

appeared before a shudder of firelight. He was draped in shabby burlaps, his skin<br />

was gnarled and chipped, and the silver mold that stubbled his jaw pulsed with<br />

the taut flickers of the flames. He was only as tall as Jacob’s chest; scratching his<br />

neck, he straightened, extending his spine and staring his visitor in the eye.<br />

“Evening, sir,” Jacob nodded. “Got any work?”<br />

The man’s gaze narrowed. He glanced inside furtively, and then turned back,<br />

pensive and distracted. He kept itching his neck.<br />

“I need somewhere to sleep,” Jacob added. “That’s all I’m asking.”<br />

“Hm,” the old man grunted. Slowly, his back bowed to its natural stature. He<br />

dropped his hand. “Yes, yes, okay. Come with me.”<br />

Jacob stepped back. The man scuttled outside, almost doubled over. His<br />

movements were wide and ungainly, as though hindered by some inner pain. He<br />

staggered as he led Jacob to the side of his home that overlooked the expanse.<br />

“Here,” he said, pointing to a large square window that faced the plain. “This<br />

is the window, see? I can look out while I eat dinner, or while I’m trying to fall<br />

asleep, and see nearly to the end of the world. Heh, I saw you coming, better<br />

believe that.” He gestured to a small black tree, no higher than Jacob’s shoulder,<br />

which had sprouted up the exterior wal—a half-grown sapling, frozen in demise.<br />

“But there’s this tree here, you see?” He swatted a branch dismissively. “An old<br />

cedar. Long dead. I don’t like it anymore. It’s a bleak sight, don’t you think? Despairing.<br />

It spoils my view.”<br />

“You want me to chop it down?”<br />

“No, no, no,” he asserted, waving his arms. “I want you to bring it back to life.”<br />

Jacob watched the man carefully, scouting for a hint of jest. When his seriousness<br />

persisted, Jacob rubbed his eyes, inhaled the cool, lucid mountain air, and<br />

said, “Well, I’ll try. But if I can’t manage it, should I chop it down?”<br />

The old man chewed his lip. After a moment, he shrugged. “I suppose. Yes,<br />

yes, if that’s the case, then I suppose it’s time. The axe is by the chicken coop<br />

if you need it.” He rounded the corner, scurried through the canted door, and<br />

appeared in the glass next to Jacob. When Jacob stared at him curiously, the old<br />

man rolled his eyes and waved toward the cedar. He leaned his elbows on the<br />

windowsill and watched.<br />

Jacob hesitated, then edged up to the tree. To avoid offending the man,<br />

he conjured an expression of intense concentration, and knelt. On a whim, he<br />

54


slithered a hand through the cage of splintered branches and placed his fingers<br />

around its brittle spine. The bark was flaked, scaly, strangely cold. It felt almost<br />

pathetic against the firm flesh of his palm. He tightened his grip and waited, struggling<br />

to guise his pantomime behind a façade of sincerity.<br />

Minutes passed. The night was quiet, as crisp and clean as onyx. As time<br />

went by, his fake cerebration gradually deliquesced into a genuine calmness,<br />

a real, unforeseen meditation. Without thinking, he kissed his other palm and<br />

slunk it around the trunk. The sensation doubled. The texture of the rotted cedar<br />

spilled through his palms, down his arms, and into his spine; it drizzled out his feet,<br />

hardened, and rooted him within an endogenous bubble of tranquility. He lost all<br />

sense of time, space, and personality.<br />

Far down on the plain, a single wolf yelped; a second later, a pack of lamentations<br />

careened through the night. His fantasy shattered. He gasped and broke<br />

free.<br />

“So?” asked the old man, his voice bulbous against the glass.<br />

“It’s gone,” he answered, rubbing his eyes. “There’s nothing I can do.”<br />

The man shook his head mournfully. “Well, damn it all.” He stroked his beard<br />

and said, “Eh, the way of the world, isn’t it? Get the axe. I can use the firewood.”<br />

Jacob looked at the frail, helpless tree, and felt a sadness for the task ahead<br />

of him. A bird jostled its nest somewhere in the juniper membrane, either taking<br />

leave or returning, and the entire net of branches shook with consternation.<br />

Glumly, he fetched the weapon and hacked the tree into a bundle of emaciated<br />

logs. He dropped them at the door and called: “Can you spare some water<br />

for my horse?” The old man grabbed the firewood and pointed outside the trees,<br />

to the chicken coop. Between a discarded knife and an anthill-sized stack of<br />

feathers sat a bucket, rimmed with dirty foam. Jacob examined its contents for<br />

a long time before scooping it up and delivering it to his horse, who guzzled its<br />

contents.<br />

He left the bucket there and dove back into the junipers. Midway through, a<br />

branch snagged his ear. It yanked. He winced, detached himself, and stumbled<br />

into the enclosure. He swore and pawed at the ripped pinna. Purplish sparkles<br />

slid down his fingertips. He cleaned his ear with a rag and entered the old man’s<br />

slanted, one-room home.<br />

The smell of roasting meat greeted him. He looked around. The floor was dirt.<br />

There was a bed on one side of the room, with a rusty shovel planted at its foot,<br />

and on the opposite end a wooden table and a squat iron stove. The table was<br />

next to the window, and from his seat the old man could monitor the flames,<br />

check the meal’s progress, or gaze into the darkness-flooded desert. On the wall<br />

above his chair hung an intriguing ornament, round and flat, like a plate, with a<br />

malachite sheen and a filigree of gold tracing its center.<br />

“Join me,” the old man said, nodding to the other chair. A tin mug of whiskey<br />

awaited him.<br />

55


“Thank you,” said Jacob, sitting. His eyes remained on the plate.<br />

“That’s much better,” the man grinned, indicating the window. “Isn’t the view<br />

so much nicer now?”<br />

Jacob looked through the glass and saw blackness. There was a thin dandruff<br />

of stars in the upper half, barely visible through the junipers. He nodded and<br />

sipped his drink.<br />

The old man snatched a metal rod and poked the base of the cedar logs,<br />

prodding a spark and a crackle. “Where’d you leave from, young man?”<br />

“Garner’s farm. It’s a short trek down the plain.”<br />

“I know Garner.” On a tray above the flames, pink meat sizzled grey. He extracted<br />

the rod and aimlessly nudged the chunks of chicken. “Doesn’t he let his<br />

workers stay the night?”<br />

“Usually, but it was a big job. Even the stables were packed.”<br />

“Hm…it’s not like Garner to turn a man away.” He jabbed the rod into the dirt<br />

and leaned back. “Headed somewhere in particular?”<br />

“Well, for a time I was thinking about going west. A friend of mine went over<br />

there to hunt scalps. He says the money’s good, but I don’t know if that’s for me.”<br />

“Too grisly?”<br />

“I think so. I’ve never killed before. I prefer simpler work. Farm work.” He<br />

dabbed his ear, and came back with a crust of dried blood. He rubbed it on his<br />

pants and self-consciously slugged his drink. “For the moment, though, I’m wandering.<br />

Trying to find a home I can settle for.” He met the old man’s gaze and realized<br />

with discomfort that he was being probed. His eyes floated upward, toward<br />

the ornament. “Where’d you get that?”<br />

The man turned, as though he’d somehow forgotten about his lone decoration.<br />

“A traveler gave it to me years ago. He told me it’s an ancient artifact.<br />

Thousands of years old.”<br />

“Is that gold?”<br />

“Could be. The fellow said it’s from Mexico. Maybe it’s Aztec, maybe it’s<br />

Mayan. He didn’t know, and I certainly don’t. Either way, the damned thing’s<br />

been around for centuries, if he’s to be believed.” He faced Jacob. His expression<br />

was different. The curiosity was gone, replaced by a stern suspicion. Jacob fidgeted.<br />

“Do you think he was telling the truth?”<br />

“I don’t know. I never met him.”<br />

“Do you value honesty, young man? More than anything else?”<br />

The auric tracery lapped hypnotically in the flames, its specks ranging like<br />

fireflies through an emerald twilight. “I’d say I do.” The green sank into a yawning<br />

tunnel above the old man’s head. It didn’t sparkle. The flames could find no purchase<br />

in its depths.<br />

“Hm.” He scowled, and bent to examine the meat. “Honesty is one of the<br />

56


57<br />

rarest qualities in the world. Sometimes I doubt it’s ever existed.” He rumbled his<br />

throat and spat into the maw of the stove, narrowly missing the tray. His saliva<br />

hissed. “You know, I used to think it was possible to stumble upon honesty. Before<br />

I moved here, I’d wander the streets of my town and ask to speak with the most<br />

honest man, hoping to restore my hopes for humanity. I realized, eventually, that<br />

it was an impossible task. See, if honesty almost definitely doesn’t exist, then how<br />

can you trust someone’s word when they send you after an honest man? Most<br />

likely they’re lying, or they’ve been deceived.”<br />

He sat back. A breeze flowed through the junipers. The membrane susurrated,<br />

and a smattering of dust scraped the window. “But after years of searching,<br />

I did find a man—one honest man, in a town of thousands.” He tipped forward,<br />

rapt by his own recollections. The closer he came, the less influence the flames<br />

held over his features. “Would you like to meet him?” he asked, a gloomy visage<br />

distanced from the light.<br />

Jacob searched the room nervously. “Is he here?”<br />

“Yes, he’s here.” He shot up, handed Jacob the rod, and scampered to the<br />

other side of the house. “Watch the meat.” With frenzied excitement he cracked<br />

his knuckles, snatched the shovel, and plunged its point into the dirt at the foot<br />

of his bed. The flames copied his fervor, undulating feverishly as he threw clod<br />

after lumpy clod into the middle of the room, sometimes with so much ferocity<br />

that pebbles ricocheted off the iron stove. A heap formed between them. Just<br />

as it rose above the bed’s height, he stabbed the shovel into the floor and fell to<br />

his knees. He thrust his hands into the hole, grimaced, and yanked loose a large<br />

rectangular chest.<br />

Jacob muttered a prayer. His grip on the metal rod was sturdy, defensive.<br />

The old man slammed the box down, tinkered with some latches, and tossed<br />

open the lid. He reached inside, seized an object with both hands, and lifted it<br />

into the tremulous firelight. Jacob lowered the rod. Between the old man’s palms,<br />

shadows licked the skull’s eye sockets, nasal cavity, and gnarled brown teeth. He<br />

turned the face toward Jacob and mimicked its smile.<br />

“Do you understand?” he asked, scrambling to the table with the skull in his<br />

hands. “The only honest man in the world. Do you get it?”<br />

“I…I don’t know…”<br />

“Darkness! Darkness is the closest thing to honesty in the world, and nobody<br />

knows darkness like the dead!” He set the skull beside them, in place of a third<br />

table setting. “Light is nothing but a magic show. It gives things shape in order to<br />

mislead, and people gullibly accept those shapes as reality, and this fake reality<br />

turns each and every one of them into a different kind of liar. But this…” He patted<br />

the stained cranium like a pet. “This is what honesty looks like. This is the only<br />

thing honesty looks like. Hand me that poker, the chicken is burning.”<br />

When Jacob didn’t respond, the old man plucked the rod from his grasp and<br />

flipped the chunks. Once they were cooked, he took two clay plates from the top


of the stove and evenly distributed the meat. Jacob chewed silently, eyes moving<br />

between the dangling artifact and the skull. Its cavernous eyeholes studied<br />

the nightscape contentedly.<br />

“I tell everyone that comes here,” the old man said, juices dribbling down his<br />

chin, “if you value honesty as much as you claim, you’d be more like the skull.”<br />

He slurped his whiskey. “You’ve gone awfully quiet. Got anything to say?”<br />

Jacob looked out the window and said, “That cedar…how long was it there?”<br />

“Long before I showed up. It was why I chose to build here. I liked how the little<br />

guy looked, nestled in with the junipers. It was like a cub curled up with its parents.”<br />

He shrugged. “Oh, well. Couldn’t be helped.”<br />

After they ate, the old man stacked their plates on the stove and topped off<br />

his whiskey. Jacob declined a refill. While downing the final sip, the man raised a<br />

finger and said, “It almost slipped my mind. Before you go to sleep, I want to give<br />

you something.”<br />

“Give me what?”<br />

He went to the chest, which he’d left open on the floor, and dug a tiny cylindrical<br />

item out of its depths. He returned to the table and extended his hand over<br />

the skull.<br />

“I give one to all my guests.” Jacob leaned forward. There was a pinkie-sized<br />

vial on his palm. It was filled with a murky amaranthine liquid, and plugged by a<br />

shred of burlap. “I make it from juniper berries. Did you know they can be poisonous?<br />

I ate a batch when I first got here and almost killed myself.” Jacob gingerly<br />

picked the vial out of his hand. “If you truly value honesty as much as you say,<br />

you won’t think twice about drinking it. You don’t have to do it right now—I’m not<br />

so vain that I need to see it—but in the future, after you’ve thought about what<br />

I’ve said.” Wordlessly, Jacob pocketed the poison. “Now, I’m going to sleep. You<br />

got a blanket you can throw down?”<br />

He nodded and retrieved his bedroll from the horse, which had passed out beside<br />

the drained bucket. When he returned, the old man was asleep on the bed.<br />

A tempest of snores clattered gracelessly up his chasmal gullet.<br />

Jacob sighed. He scanned the room exhaustedly: the hole in the dirt, the<br />

open chest, the mound in the middle of the floor, the skull on the table, the ancient<br />

plate. He wrung the bedroll broodingly. A moment passed, and he pulled<br />

the vial out of his pocket. A wind rattled the branches, scratched at the windowpane.<br />

He dropped the bedroll and crouched in the dirt next to his unconscious<br />

host.<br />

The cloth plug came out easily. He threw it aside and carefully positioned the<br />

vial above the man’s gaping mouth. Very gently, he tipped the opening forward,<br />

and a single droplet disappeared into the snoring pit. Jacob froze, waited, and<br />

added another drop.<br />

58


A minute later, the vial was empty. He leaned close and watched, curiously,<br />

as the old man’s throat closed and a mild convulsion pumped his chest up and<br />

down. The movement intensified. Seconds later his eyes flung open, blurry with<br />

blood, and his snores became grating wheezes of pain. The old man rolled toward<br />

him but Jacob moved aside, letting him thump onto the ground. He studied the<br />

man as he died in the dirt.<br />

Jacob stood, checked his ear for blood, and surveyed the home once more.<br />

The first thing he took was the plate.<br />

59


You stare at the ceiling, the black mold sprouting in the corner, seeping<br />

into the veiny fault lines that sprawl across the alabaster paint. Wrapping<br />

around the seam between wall and roof, a garden filled with<br />

cherub babies dance, mocking you, whispering, snickering. Their voices<br />

harmonize with the fan that is caked with the dirt of the past five decades, aqua<br />

net as a sticky base for the cigarette smog and fly carcasses. You focus in on a<br />

fly that’s twitching, clinging to life. Or maybe, it’s the breeze from the fan that<br />

momentarily revives the earthly being. Something wet hits you on the peak of<br />

your skull, sliding down the back of your neck and trailing down your spine until<br />

it finds a rest stop in the dimple of your tailbone. The micro hairs that cover your<br />

body stand straight as you realize how bitterly cold you are. A deep breath in<br />

and out to regain your composure releases a cloud of condensation. You look<br />

through the fog and remember when you were a child how you used to pretend<br />

to be a Mobster when it was cold enough on the playground, smoking a pipe<br />

and blowing it into the faces of your peers who failed to finish the job. Another<br />

drop taps you, is anyone home? You look up and stare into the face of a shower<br />

head, its last few tears pulled down by the weight of the atmosphere. It’s hard<br />

to move right now, but your eyes freely scan the bathroom–as long as a grown<br />

man’s wingspan and half that in width. The walls are finger-painted in red, a trail<br />

that spirals and cascades like the skies of Van Gogh. You stop, frozen. The cold<br />

has taken over your body solid as you stare at your palette covered in crimson,<br />

the clock behind her reading 3:32AM.<br />

Oracle<br />

Ally Gorenchan<br />

60


The Door has many rules. Do not look at the Door. Do not talk about the<br />

Door. Definitely do not talk to the Door, and if the Door itself talks, do<br />

not listen to its whispers. Do not open the Door, and do not go through<br />

the Door, not frontwards, backwards, sideways or any other way that<br />

could possibly be conceived of. In fact, do not go near the Door for any reason,<br />

and and do not breathe near the Door. A thousand little rules, for something that<br />

appears quite toothless.<br />

Its appearance then, to help with avoidance. It is a simple affair. The wood<br />

had been bright red once, but after an indeterminable number of years, the<br />

color had become faded and worn. White stone formed the frame, each irregular<br />

block stacked on top of another. It may have been pristine once, but is now<br />

yellowed and grimy with age.<br />

It was in the middle of nowhere, remembered by no one. The surrounding land<br />

was a fertile, overgrown sea of green. Here and there the crumbled remains of<br />

walls and buildings peaked through the foliage. The air hummed and buzzed with<br />

thousands of bugs. Except for the area directly around the Door. That small circle<br />

of land was completely and utterly dead, as if even nature knew to avoid it.<br />

But this is not the full picture. A door, a single surviving remnant of a long dead<br />

structure, surrounded by reclaimed ruins, is hardly cause for all these rules and<br />

superstition. Perhaps if there was something behind it, but there are no walls. The<br />

secret of the Door lies lies through it, not behind.<br />

It is a room, and it feels small and claustrophobic, despite the fact the walls<br />

cannot be seen. There is light, but it is difficult to say where exactly it comes from,<br />

and in any case it is not enough to illuminate the room. Only enough to extenuate<br />

the shadows. Any potential visitors would notice none of this. Their eyes would<br />

undoubtedly be glued to the creature that called the place home.<br />

He is called the Silver Prince, and his impressive bulk is held aloft by five arms.<br />

They stretch off into the darkness from different angles of his body. His eyes, of<br />

which there are seven, are locked on the Door, and have been for a very long<br />

time. Waiting for it to open. Waiting for prey.<br />

The Prince had not eaten in many years. Prey was on the other side of the<br />

Door, and therefore had to come to him. It would happen. It had to. It was how<br />

he himself had wound up there, after all; despite the rules surrounding it, someone<br />

always got curious about the Door. He had been lucky, and quick, and now<br />

The Door<br />

61<br />

Jason Hill


the space was his. Prey would find its way in. He would wait and wait and wait,<br />

and when he had all but given up hope, the Door would open. Either the prey<br />

would come in, or it would be waiting outside. This is how it has always been.<br />

The prince shifts his bulk, bracing with three arms on the clammy walls of his<br />

prison. With the fourth and fifth, he reaches out reverently to the Door. The hands<br />

came within a hairbreadth of the corrupted wood, but never actually touched<br />

it. The Door could not be opened from this side; even touching it was painful for<br />

him. Not as painful as the Doors’ refusal to open, of course. Not as painful as the<br />

hunger eating away at it from the inside. But painful nonetheless.<br />

But then, for a moment, pain. Blinding, searing pain, running up the Prince’s<br />

arms like a cleansing flame. He recoils in horror with an awful screech, and the<br />

room quivers in sympathy with its prisoner. Then the Prince realised what it meant.<br />

The Door had touched the Prince’s fingers. He had made contact, though he<br />

went no closer than was usual in his hourly pleas for succour. In other words, the<br />

Door had opened.<br />

Taloned fingers slipped around sun faded wood, and the SIlver Prince pulled<br />

himself into a world that was no longer green. Five eyes blinked under the glare<br />

of a sickly yellow light before taking in a scene that was almost more depressing<br />

than the room had been. Structures poked out of the snow like the ribs of a long<br />

dead colossus. The burned out remains were hundreds of feet tall, looming over<br />

the Door with barely constrained hostility. This was not a world of life, of prey, and<br />

it hadn’t been for quite a while. Which raised a very simple, but veryimportant,<br />

question: who opened the Door?<br />

No one had entered it, and no one was waiting. These points stuck in the<br />

Prince’s mind as he took a few tentative steps into the city. Eyes blinked and<br />

rolled in the weak sunlight that was still much brighter than anything he was used<br />

to. Maybe it was this that staggered him and kept his eyes cast low. Maybe he<br />

was too focused on the questions in his head. Either way, he did not see the eyes<br />

watching from the ruined buildings. Eyes that watched his every move with a feral<br />

hunger.<br />

They were human once, these ghoulish monsters. But time changes all things.<br />

They were cadaverous, their ribs poking through taunt skin. Mad eyes rolled in<br />

sunken sockets, and rotten teeth gnashed and ground in hunger. A hunger that<br />

was just as terrible as that of the Silver Prince, if not moreso.<br />

They came as one, a pack of nightmares that ripped and tore at the Prince.<br />

He tried to fight. When that did not work, he tried to run. And when running failed,<br />

the Silver Prince died.<br />

The ghouls ate well for the first time in ages. But as the food ran out, their eyes<br />

turned to the Door. Food had come from there. They did not quite know how, as<br />

noting could be seen on the other side, but they had all seen the Prince enter<br />

62


their world. Perhaps there was more food on the other side?<br />

The pack moved towards the Door. slowly at first, but gaining certainty with<br />

every step. The leader enters the Door, caution thrown to the wind at the prospect<br />

of food. He disappears as he crosses the threshold, but this does nothing to<br />

deter the rest.<br />

On the other side is a suffocating darkness, the dim light available to the Prince<br />

nowhere near enough for the newcomers. Unlike the world they left, the air is hot<br />

and humid. The walls are slick and close. There is a sound very nearly like the rumbling<br />

of a stomach. Unseen, the Door closes.<br />

63


64


65


Poetry<br />

66


67<br />

T<br />

August Wiegman<br />

in the case of an<br />

unattended death<br />

S<br />

from Aftermath: Specialists in Trauma Cleaning & Biohazard Removal<br />

Stage One: Autolysis<br />

aka self digestion<br />

Immediately after death,<br />

the body ceases breathing,<br />

becomes an autocannibal—<br />

cells rupturing and eating themselves<br />

from the inside and outwards.<br />

A shine may be present,<br />

the glistening of broken blisters on loose skin<br />

Stage Two: Bloat<br />

aka gas production<br />

Skin discolored, insects swarming,<br />

immense gain in size—<br />

Resulting bacteria, infestation, and mold<br />

may cause serious damage to a building’s structure<br />

as putrefaction leaks from every pore,<br />

every fissure, every blister<br />

Stage Three: Active Decay<br />

aka liquidization<br />

No one will ever find you.<br />

You hate this, don’t you?<br />

Your nails have left you, your teeth have fallen<br />

to the back of your throat<br />

Skin, no longer your skin, no longer skin—<br />

Eyes and mouth leaking putrid death<br />

You wish to escape, anyone would,<br />

and yet—<br />

Stage Four: Skeletonization<br />

aka your fate<br />

The skeleton’s decomposition rate is based on the loss of<br />

collagen and inorganic components, and so there is no set<br />

time frame in which skeletonization occurs.


Kryst Le Grif<br />

Regional Rail<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

Forward diving<br />

His body splashes onto the track<br />

Devoured by the pilot<br />

Succumbed to force<br />

Sucked under by inertia<br />

Swallowed through the uncarriage<br />

Blades slicing through him like butter.<br />

Metal and bone<br />

Butchered meat<br />

Limbs displaced<br />

Sliced<br />

Splattered<br />

Scattered<br />

Tumbling, rolling, spilling<br />

Crimson painted display of completion.<br />

A train delay that makes you late for work.<br />

68<br />

T


69<br />

T<br />

Corinna Schulenburg<br />

Ms. Scarlet in<br />

the Study<br />

So stunned they stand in a semicircle<br />

around it, the body, as it decants<br />

into the floral rug and gives the study<br />

a surgical feel, that glint of knife and glove.<br />

There is no one whose throat fills with blood<br />

that has not, at some point, been loved.<br />

We’re careless with it, she thinks,<br />

just as we’re careless with this, our hate,<br />

as if each person, even the worst of us,<br />

wasn’t the handiwork of a thousand tendernesses,<br />

now all undone.<br />

Well, he was a jerk,<br />

this fresh cadaver, he gave us all<br />

a quiver of reasons and it was only a matter<br />

of logistics, the when, the how, not the why.<br />

But who? She looks around: there’s his father,<br />

a turnip-faced man with hands like canned hams,<br />

who hated him for being smarter.<br />

There’s his mother, a bouquet of raw nerves,<br />

who despised him since that week of nights<br />

when he would not, could not, sleep.<br />

He’s sleeping now, if death is rest,<br />

and not a long fall into a starless box.<br />

There’s his wife, weeping like a sprung dam,<br />

keening like a bowed saw. Convincing,<br />

if you’re the kind to find grief reliable.<br />

She’s not. She’s wept over commercials<br />

and turned stone for the death of beloveds.<br />

Anyway, the wife, more than anyone, had<br />

had enough. He was loathsome in the ways<br />

that are common: coward, bully, hypocrite.<br />

But he also cultivated rare orchids<br />

of cruelty, of spite.<br />

So this was the night<br />

all that ended. The daughter also sniffles,<br />

though that could just be allergies.<br />

The friend is mumbling something,<br />

S<br />

maybe an elegy, or apology.


No, wait:<br />

they’re all turning to look at her. Why?<br />

Oh, the knife, the knife that’s in her hand,<br />

the one slick with more than blood.<br />

Well, that has nothing to do with this,<br />

she protests. I was trapped within<br />

some beast, she swears, some creature<br />

had swallowed me whole, sure as the wolf<br />

took grandma. It took me years to carve<br />

my way out. She looks down at the body,<br />

sees the cut from the nethers to the neck,<br />

how thin his skin, like a cheap costume.<br />

The wife nods, dries her eyes, refreshes drinks<br />

as father and friend drag the guts away.<br />

The wife offers her a gin martini, two olives,<br />

just the way she likes it. The mother<br />

talks about the weather. The daughter<br />

hands her a tissue to wipe the blade clean.<br />

70<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

T


71<br />

T<br />

Susen James<br />

Etiquette of the Séance<br />

1. You wanted séance. This is the real thing. But there are no<br />

guarantees. If Elsa, Gentile Roger, Ernest or your chosen entity<br />

desire to speak they will do so. Remember the spirit you wish to<br />

contact may not be interested in contact with you.<br />

2. My home is their home. You are the guest.<br />

3. Lights are dimmed for easier visualization. Bright flashes startle<br />

them. Photographs & videography are forbidden.<br />

4. They are to feel at home, to cackle croon moan mutter rumble<br />

thunder stutter pant or purr. They may stink smoke warble<br />

squawk caw squeal spit grunt gargle garble squeak hum or<br />

bleat. They may finger fondle or vibrate, but not molest.<br />

5. Do not call them ghosts, ghouls or such dirty fingered insulting<br />

monikers as phantoms. Refer to them as friends or family. In the<br />

spirit or presences are also acceptable, but they may prefer you<br />

call them the names they themselves identify.<br />

6. All of my pretty presences speak English. (& often several other<br />

tongues) Once they begin speaking you must be respectful &<br />

remain seated & silent until they quiet.<br />

7. Do not be alarmed if they outcling you (follow you home by clutching<br />

to your clothing). They miss the warmth of human skin & may<br />

try to burrow in. (You may feel them spoon you in bed). Usually<br />

they disperse within a week. If you are extremely uncomfortable<br />

ask that they leave you. Spirits only come to those who summon.<br />

(Consciously or unconsciously).<br />

You have been extended this invitation, consider before you accept.<br />

You will abide by the rules or be asked to leave!<br />

S<br />

For the housebound, séance may be conducted by telephone<br />

847.555.1213 or E-mail Ursula@spiritmail.com


Gratia Serpento<br />

Six Feet<br />

Bury me six feet<br />

Six feet<br />

Deeper<br />

Six feet<br />

Til I’m knocking on<br />

Hell’s door<br />

Down with the sinners,<br />

Six feet more<br />

The freaks, the dead<br />

Down till the screams<br />

Wash out my dread<br />

Bury me six feet<br />

Six feet<br />

Six feet more.<br />

72<br />

S<br />

H.S.<br />

111111111111<br />

T


73<br />

T<br />

Cristina Legarda<br />

Sestina for a Vampire<br />

Three coronary arteries supply blood to the heart,<br />

muscle of our emotion, servant of our fear.<br />

When we are small we learn to be afraid of the dark<br />

from shadows provoking that flow of blood<br />

forward, sending us running toward desired<br />

shelter, away from ghosts, from demon possession.<br />

S<br />

No one suspects an angel of possession,<br />

so when you arrived, I didn’t run. My heart<br />

quickened instead sensing invisible wings, desired<br />

nothing but time in your haloic glow, entirely free of fear<br />

and suspicion. Nothing sinister–no cape, no blood<br />

on your hands, no pallor, nothing dark<br />

anywhere around you except the deliciously dark<br />

thoughts in my head that suddenly took possession<br />

of me, black reflections flickering in your light eyes, hot blood<br />

arising in our secret parts, the heart<br />

of one against the other pounding, the rush of fear<br />

giving way to the joy of being desired.<br />

With unsurprising arrogance you were sure I desired<br />

that brush of lips across my neck, my dark<br />

tresses so easily caressed aside to expose, I fear,<br />

a hollow of flesh all too ready for possession.<br />

You saw my pulse there, a secret my heart<br />

couldn’t keep; just under the surface, the coursing blood<br />

drawing you in. Make no mistake: I will suck your blood<br />

too. I caught a glimpse of your fangs, of what you desired–<br />

no, hungered for, in the depths of your heart.<br />

In the secret chambers where your blood flowed, the dark<br />

thing you longed for was ultimate possession,<br />

not just body and blood, nor desire, nor fear,<br />

but love–you dared to want my love. Fear<br />

me too, prince of darkness, let not your blood<br />

rest easy, for my love is more powerful than possession;<br />

it will swallow us whole, bury us alive, desired<br />

ecstasy with no possibility of breath, a drowning in the dark,<br />

the madness of surrender, the ravished, battered heart.<br />

My love, I no longer fear what I once desired<br />

because I see my blood pouring out, thick and dark,<br />

when at last I have the self-possession to drive a stake through your<br />

heart.


Wendy M. Thompson<br />

The Horror<br />

Not even the part when<br />

they hear the creak<br />

mumble<br />

hum<br />

shriek<br />

moan<br />

and walk towards the sound.<br />

Stupid curiosity and youthful invincibility are<br />

the leading actors (both white), supported by<br />

unattractive hesitation, C-cup summer highlights,<br />

and nerdy-needing-to-be-accepted only black person.<br />

They are all supposedly in high school but look<br />

deadass in their thirties.<br />

There’s a<br />

kitchen full of knives<br />

a jeep full of gas<br />

a shed full of guns<br />

but they decide empty-handed to follow busty<br />

softcore blonde who, acting like she’s never seen<br />

a horror film before, asks,<br />

“Did you all hear that?”<br />

(You’ve watched this scene unfold hundreds<br />

of times and holler back, “Oh my god, you already<br />

know that’s the killer. Run away! Run away!”)<br />

Even the one black character who deserves to die<br />

just for going on a no-cell-phone-service-having<br />

camping trip with a group of white kids who<br />

he barely knows and who scream the “n” word<br />

while singing their favorite rap song acts like<br />

400 years of evading slave catchers is not an<br />

inheritable trait as he willingly and trustingly<br />

turns to frosty lip gloss who looks even more<br />

frightened at the enhanced banging<br />

clawing<br />

whimpering<br />

growling<br />

74<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

T


75<br />

75<br />

and cry-whispers,<br />

“Oh my god, guys, tell me you heard that.”<br />

T<br />

Not even the part when<br />

they go to open the closet<br />

attic<br />

basement<br />

front door<br />

and your hands become tiny branches in front<br />

of your face, thickets weaving layers of underbrush<br />

over your eyes, giving you glimpses of the gore;<br />

a barrier between your beating heart and<br />

the moment they figure out that it’s behind them<br />

when they suddenly turn around.<br />

Not even the part when<br />

(When the white girl’s hand reached for the knob,<br />

you hollered for their lives, “Oh my god, don’t go<br />

in there! Y’all gone die!”)<br />

they split up and run into the woods<br />

warehouse<br />

abandoned cabin<br />

haunted factory<br />

each body now a prey,<br />

each hiding spot now a grave,<br />

each neck now a copper river,<br />

each chest now an open cavern.<br />

The killer, an off-season tourist, meanders<br />

through the meat and tendon, photographs bones<br />

before vandalizing them. No ranger for miles to<br />

stop him from posing on top of delicate arches<br />

and trampling over all that is natural and beautiful<br />

and pristine.<br />

(“They are so dumb,” you say to the rest of your<br />

mostly black, five person viewing party,<br />

to the popcorn,<br />

to the guac.)<br />

Not even the part when<br />

S<br />

the rest of them are dead except for one who falls<br />

over her own feet in a scene that started off


promising, both legs synchronized.<br />

An innocent teen running away.<br />

The killer who is somehow always too slow,<br />

lugging a heavy, bleeding axe.<br />

He won’t catch her at his pace but then somehow<br />

she forgets how to run. One foot in front of the other<br />

becomes<br />

one foot falling into an ankle,<br />

a knee bowing outward,<br />

a calf refusing to stand,<br />

her legs sending her body careening<br />

into a pile of leaves or<br />

freshly overturned dirt.<br />

(You hiss at the screen, “Don’t look near your<br />

hand!”—it isn’t a root but someone’s partially<br />

buried leg.)<br />

Because, of course, it’s always the woods<br />

it’s always dark<br />

it’s always the white girl who trips and falls<br />

whenever white people go wandering off<br />

before/during/after swimming<br />

in the infested/infected/contaminated lake.<br />

No, not even the part where the worst thing<br />

happens to the worst character<br />

with butcher knives<br />

and meat hooks<br />

and saw blades<br />

and parasitic alien spores<br />

can compare to the tremble on the lips of a white<br />

woman ready and able to convict and execute an<br />

unarmed black person in the middle of nowhere/everywhere<br />

minding their business<br />

using a loaded officer on the other end of her iPhone.<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

This corroboration between citizen and state<br />

is nothing short of Broadway ready:<br />

her tears the opening line,<br />

the street her stage,<br />

the officer and the gun her props,<br />

(y)our body, the finale, a smear of blood on the pavement.<br />

T<br />

Everyone in the audience watching, asks,<br />

“Who was the monster?”<br />

even though they all saw it coming.<br />

76<br />

76


T<br />

77<br />

James Piatt<br />

Decomposing Reality<br />

Arriving in the gray hours<br />

of an iron colored, and eerie night,<br />

bloody metallic symbols<br />

covered with rusting<br />

contractions screamed across<br />

people’s minds causing a terrifying agony.<br />

Glass poems written in scarlet ink<br />

became shattered by metamorphic<br />

hammers pounding words<br />

of apprehension into shattered synonyms,<br />

causing dark allegories<br />

to become lost inside the weariness<br />

of their decomposing minds.<br />

While staggering into a cemetery,<br />

images of broken tombstones<br />

in a field of unknown graves<br />

entered their consciousness<br />

and trails of terrified tears<br />

melted into the cemetery’s soil<br />

filling it with fear, and anxiety.<br />

The people sensed something horrible<br />

being awakened, and<br />

sharp pangs of foreboding<br />

started piercing their collapsing minds<br />

in a fit of decomposing reality.<br />

Then something grabbed their<br />

decomposing minds,<br />

pulling them under tombstones where<br />

their names were etched in blood.<br />

S


Calista Malone<br />

The Cailleach<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

Clouds circle Edinburgh. On some corner in Leith,<br />

he and his mate post up against the pawn shop. Red joggers<br />

bunched at the ankles, red zip-up dashed with oil from the chippy.<br />

A cigarette flipping from finger to finger, unlit, watching women<br />

as they make their way home just before the city street lights<br />

flicker on. They whistle when one gets too close, walks a little faster,<br />

looks up at them with eyes in a needle. A woman,<br />

with skin that’s never seen the sun, pulls her cart behind her, full of granite,<br />

cooled and collected somewhere around Ben Nevis, or so the sign<br />

on her wagon says. Maybe to make a new countertop in the kitchen<br />

of some posher’s flat. Maybe to make a sculpture<br />

of some Celtic deity in on the Georgian side of the city.<br />

One of the mates, finally lights up, flicking ashes at her feet,<br />

sighs,<br />

can you believe this old crow, hauling rocks across town?<br />

Watch this, he says. Louder he says, Hey hen, gimme a smile.<br />

She looks up, eyes like ash and grins, blood lining her teeth,<br />

yellowing the sharpening canines beneath her lips.<br />

78<br />

T


79<br />

T<br />

beyond bedtime<br />

children venture<br />

into the exotic dark<br />

under summer constellations<br />

firefly morse code<br />

horde of mosquitoes<br />

benign suburban danger<br />

Joseph Kerschbaum<br />

Ghost in the<br />

Graveyard<br />

agree to the rules<br />

all players start safe<br />

they don’t stay that way<br />

lamp post home base<br />

countdown together<br />

until mock midnight<br />

hunt the spirits<br />

boys & girls disperse<br />

into thick dark<br />

stumble across lawns<br />

lose sight of safety<br />

alone in the night<br />

ghosts shaped like kids hide<br />

behind bushes & trees<br />

lurk around corners<br />

wait to be<br />

found then pounce<br />

S<br />

hear a rustle<br />

see a shadow with white eyes<br />

warning scream<br />

ghost in the graveyard!<br />

scatter panic<br />

terror gives chase<br />

running laughing<br />

sprint back to base<br />

not fast enough<br />

someone is tagged<br />

lost soul<br />

doesn’t return home<br />

begin again<br />

count hunt run<br />

one by one<br />

all children<br />

turn to ghost


Jim Ross<br />

Deliverance<br />

For reasons reason cannot know<br />

we were the ones he wanted to kill<br />

and he would have,<br />

had I let him.<br />

I stashed the kids in a closet, in<br />

cabinets, hoping to outsmart<br />

the fragile frantic mind of a<br />

man child gone amuck.<br />

I told him, when he looked around,<br />

they were playing in the gym,<br />

as they should be even now.<br />

Disappointed, he shot me then.<br />

Some say If I’d carried a gun,<br />

if all teachers did, not just me,<br />

we’d be less vulnerable,<br />

and I’d still be alive, and so’d the kids.<br />

But the thought of shooting off every<br />

unfamiliar face, as if being new,<br />

or being an outsider is somehow<br />

a kind of a crime, rather than<br />

a new beginning,<br />

offends me so<br />

I’d rather take a dive.<br />

In the end, the same bitter<br />

and grasping questions<br />

are asked again,<br />

and again, as if<br />

to numb the living.<br />

Do not ask for whom<br />

the bell tolls:<br />

it’s not for me.<br />

This one’s on you.<br />

80<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

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T<br />

81<br />

Mindy Mensen<br />

Cry the Tempest Knight<br />

Darkness falls and kills the light,<br />

Sunlit shadows fade to night.<br />

Stars will hide as thunder crashes,<br />

Monsters come when lightning flashes.<br />

Sounds of things you dare not see,<br />

As silently it comes for thee.<br />

Rain falls like ice to sting the skin,<br />

And so, the beast must rise again.<br />

The howling wind brings voice and breath,<br />

Un-life that will not bow to death.<br />

The whirling clouds part to reveal,<br />

Eyes that glow and pierce like steel.<br />

Spine-numbing echoes shake the trees,<br />

As shapes appear in twos and threes.<br />

These are the monsters of the mind,<br />

That bars won’t trap, and chains won’t bind.<br />

They haunt a life embraced at death,<br />

And taunt him as he gasps for breath.<br />

Forgetting things that were before,<br />

He rides the storm along the shore.<br />

He lies awake, finds truth in sleep,<br />

And in his dreams, he learns to weep.<br />

A human spark that’s all but gone,<br />

Yet fading like a dying swan.<br />

Night by night he’ll watch the sea,<br />

And dream of things that cannot be,<br />

S<br />

‘Til all alone he waits on shore,<br />

To ride the tempest — evermore…


Grace Priddy<br />

Complete Collection<br />

Everyone I saw had orbs of color.<br />

I loved the colors:<br />

blue, brown, green, silver.<br />

I wanted, no, I needed<br />

to have all of them,<br />

all of the possible sets.<br />

Each contributor was a stranger.<br />

I plucked and scooped and placed.<br />

None of them saw it coming.<br />

It started with the two girls,<br />

patiently waiting on their food.<br />

At first, they didn’t want to help,<br />

but all it took was a push into the wall<br />

and a roll down the alleyway.<br />

I never even broke a sweat.<br />

Lapis lazuli and jade,<br />

This was the beautiful start<br />

to my vast collection.<br />

The next few were difficult,<br />

the mailman and my neighbor’s dog<br />

both gave the same whimpering cry.<br />

I found Neptunes at the supermarket,<br />

Plutos at the local church,<br />

then Jupiters in the coffee shop.<br />

When I saw my own reflection,<br />

in the window of that coffee shop,<br />

I knew what I had to do.<br />

Dazzling blue to magnetic grey,<br />

I required one more pair,<br />

and did not need to look far.<br />

82<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

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T<br />

83<br />

Staring into my bathroom mirror,<br />

I gazed upon the emerald forest<br />

and the unforgiving sea.<br />

I observed my features,<br />

admiring the riveting colors.<br />

It was the last time.<br />

Taking a clean melon baller,<br />

the metal one from the kitchen drawer,<br />

I plunged it into my left eye.<br />

I ignored the pain as I yanked and jabbed.<br />

It burned as I lifted a serrated knife<br />

and sliced the ball from the optic nerve.<br />

The sea was gone.<br />

I sat down my tools,<br />

smiling at the bleeding hole in my head.<br />

Taking a rest on the toilet,<br />

I made eye contact<br />

with the golden moon.<br />

She watched as I tugged.<br />

She observed as I placed.<br />

She was then going to witness the end.<br />

I slowly stood,<br />

not wanting to faint from blood loss,<br />

not when I was almost there.<br />

Washing my hands with warm water<br />

from the once white porcelain sink,<br />

I took a steady breath.<br />

S<br />

I picked up the melon baller,<br />

feeling sticky blood rush down,<br />

covering my shaky fingers.


I then drove the scoop into the sclera,<br />

pulling the eye from the socket<br />

with a newfound force.<br />

After severing the nerve,<br />

it was done.<br />

I dropped the forest into isopropyl alcohol.<br />

Closing the jar,<br />

I followed the cool tiled wall<br />

to the closed wooden cabinet.<br />

I placed the forest and sea onto the top shelf.<br />

I assumed the others watched in jealousy,<br />

my new audience.<br />

Coolness ran down my face.<br />

I could only guess that it was tears,<br />

adding a salty flare to my stinging sockets.<br />

I sat on the chilly floor, in front of the jars,<br />

surrounded by darkness,<br />

taking in a deep breath of blood-scented air.<br />

84<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

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T<br />

85<br />

Adam Tavel<br />

Apology for a Ghost<br />

She only haunts the second floor in fall<br />

when business slows, when August tourists wilt<br />

and shuffle home. The cape seems wider then,<br />

retirees and widowers, the sort<br />

of folks who wake at dawn and keep our den<br />

pristine. They watch their salt, get no calls,<br />

and crossword through the week. The best ones sport<br />

their L. L. Bean. We think her husband killed<br />

her in the tub. Pills first then blub. That’s just<br />

what the former owner said, of course. It’s tough<br />

to trust a thing revealed at settlement.<br />

We chose new paint to match her gown. The rust<br />

from sea-spray scrubbed away. There’s nothing rough<br />

except her moan. Your key has been unbent.<br />

S


Laura Austin<br />

Death’s Beauty<br />

The moon shimmers on the lake<br />

as my eyes peel wide<br />

my limbs wont move<br />

yet my heart races like the wind<br />

how can this be what I see as<br />

I look upon a myth and my death<br />

and drool strings from fang to lip<br />

my blood thunders to be released<br />

from my still living veins<br />

as though it could take refuge soaking<br />

into the soil as my body dies<br />

hiding from the truth even my mind<br />

refuses to accept<br />

shaggy fur that would otherwise<br />

be beautiful coats my murderer<br />

and a tail wags with anticipation<br />

gleeful at the feast before it<br />

she howls louder than my protests<br />

then lunges for my throat<br />

I go still<br />

and all I can do is think<br />

werewolves aren’t even real...<br />

86<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

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T<br />

87<br />

An ancient story.<br />

Imagine it this way:<br />

not the old woman,<br />

but the children<br />

running from another woman<br />

they swear to be evil.<br />

(Perhaps she is, but<br />

perhaps she only<br />

asked them to set the table,<br />

toss out dinner scraps,<br />

something simple to ease<br />

her heavy burden.)<br />

Jo Angela Edwins<br />

The Wicked Ones<br />

Here they come<br />

on pinched feet weary<br />

from treading half a mile<br />

on the forest’s green floor<br />

to arrive at what<br />

this lone earth mother<br />

built with sweat and sugar<br />

and an eye for the loveliest<br />

gumdrops, here, just far enough<br />

from busybody villages<br />

and the clatter of tins and gossip.<br />

And what do they do<br />

but help themselves<br />

without an ask or a curtsy,<br />

imagining, like so many<br />

pampered children, that everything<br />

they find belongs to them,<br />

that all the work of old female<br />

hands is good for nothing<br />

if not filling their shining hungers?<br />

S<br />

Is it any wonder they climbed<br />

willingly into her silver roaster?<br />

Is it any wonder they thought<br />

her wide-bellied stove<br />

a glowing bedchamber<br />

made warm just for them?


Cassandra Sigmon<br />

Rumpelstiltskin’s Revenge<br />

Black arches crawl across the sky,<br />

Devouring the stars like caterpillars.<br />

Shadows scrape stone.<br />

The imp climbs to the lullaby.<br />

Cold winds tiptoe under the sluggish moon,<br />

Circling slowly like scattered killers.<br />

The staircase creaks,<br />

Grating like bone.<br />

He drops the bloodstained moonbeam on the bed,<br />

Closes her eyes and whistles a Fae tune.<br />

Her baby squeaks.<br />

A straw-spun cloak of gold surrounds her head.<br />

88<br />

S<br />

111111111111<br />

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89


Nonfiction<br />

90


t<br />

Wax Baby<br />

91<br />

Stefanie Fair-King<br />

M t<br />

ichael Henry left this world the day after he came into it. His tombstone<br />

is etched with the dates Nov. 9 - Nov. 10, 1956. In bold letters<br />

carved at the top of his marker, the word “Baby” is announced. If he<br />

had lived, Michael would have been my uncle, my dad’s older brother. I never<br />

met him, but I remember him. The story of Michael was the first ghost story I ever<br />

heard.<br />

Michael’s mother, or Grandma as I called her, lived in Kansas, a state that<br />

when viewed from above appears to be a giant’s quilt, an endless patchwork of<br />

wheat and sunflower fields. My parents divorced when I was young, and every<br />

summer my brother and I would fly from Texas, where we lived with our mom,<br />

to Kansas where our dad and his side of the family lived. After the divorce, Dad<br />

moved back in with his parents into a small gray house outfitted with plush living<br />

room furniture draped with knitted blankets, side tables covered with dollies, and<br />

shelves lined with knickknacks—tiny anthropomorphic creatures carved from<br />

wood or assembled from seashells with googly eyes behind wire glasses. The<br />

kitchen housed olive green appliances, and the refrigerator hummed and ticked<br />

in a comforting rhythm. In the evening the kitchen filled with the aroma of meats<br />

and vegetables battered in flour or cornmeal and drowned in sizzling grease. I<br />

helped Grandma make the most scrumptious chocolate cupcakes. She taught<br />

me to seal the moisture in each mini cake by filling all the nooks and crannies of<br />

the paper wrapper with the homemade icing.<br />

Grandma oozed sweetness. She was a petite woman with short hair which she<br />

colored auburn with a box of Clairol hair dye. Smoker’s lines framed her thin lips.<br />

Her signature phrase, “Aww, heck,” was accompanied with a smile that made<br />

little crinkles at the corners of her eyes. She also said, “I seen” instead of “I saw,”<br />

but I knew better than to correct her grammar.<br />

She considered it her duty to educate us kids on the hardships her generation<br />

had endured. Fresh out of school for the summer and ready to play, my brother<br />

and I would have to be pried away from the TV or backyard and coaxed into<br />

the dining room for another lesson in Grandma’s personal history. I ached to get<br />

back to the rope swing in the backyard, and sensing my frustration she’d say,<br />

“This is important.” She told us about how she grew up in some kind of underground<br />

house called a dugout, which to my mind was akin to the kind of dwelling<br />

cave people had lived in. As a baby, she didn’t have the luxury of a crib—her<br />

bed was the bottom drawer of a chest of drawers. Back then, as soon as kids<br />

could walk, they were expected help out, unlike my brother and I who were paid<br />

if we did optional chores at Grandma’s. We recorded any cleaning we completed<br />

on a little notepad attached to the wall. I doubt there was a notepad


yline<br />

t<br />

attached to the dirt wall where my grandmother grew up, one where she could<br />

write her name if she completed a chore, and I bet she never expected to get<br />

paid for helping out.<br />

I found out about Michael during one of Grandma’s lectures. She set the<br />

scene, explaining how she was asleep one night when she woke up coughing,<br />

choking. “The sheets had wrapped around my neck,” she said, demonstrating<br />

with her hands clasping her throat in a mock strangulation gesture. “I looked over<br />

and I seen this baby right under the window.” This baby, she explained, looked<br />

like he was made of wax, and when she looked at him, he began to melt. She<br />

didn’t say what color he was, but in my mind’s eye he is golden wax with a buttery<br />

sheen, casting a yellow glow into the dark bedroom. I imagine his waxy form<br />

like a candle dribbling beads of wax in reverse, the droplets pooling upward. She<br />

explained how the puddle of wax the baby melted into swooshed right up and<br />

out the window.<br />

I thought of Grandma’s bedroom with its fluffy brown carpet and flowery<br />

bedspread covered in cotton candy pink and blue hydrangeas. The room no<br />

longer seemed cozy, but eerie, like the wax baby had left behind a thin layer of<br />

paranormal dust that blanketed the room. Grandma explained how she’d had a<br />

child that died when he was a baby, and that she believed the wax baby to be<br />

that child, a boy named Michael. Grandma had seen Michael in her bedroom<br />

four decades prior to her telling me about it that summer when I sat wide-eyed<br />

listening to her story, believing every word.<br />

I felt sorry for Michael. What was a one-day-old baby doing wandering the<br />

afterlife alone? I grew up hearing that if a baby dies, then that little soul just gets<br />

back in line to be born into the world. Round two. I was shocked to learn that<br />

a baby could be left to his own devices, to go back and haunt his mother as a<br />

melting wax baby.<br />

Years later, Grandma and Grandpa moved to a large house out in the<br />

country and Dad bought their little gray house from them. After they’d taken<br />

down their decorations and shelves, perfect outlines of what was removed<br />

remained: the wallpaper had yellowed from years of Grandma and Grandpa’s<br />

smoking and left crisp impressions of what had once hung on the walls. And that<br />

wasn’t the only impression that remained long after Grandma and Grandpa<br />

moved out. The window in Grandma’s room still held a psychic outline of Michael<br />

beneath it. That eerie room became my brother’s when he chose to move in with<br />

our dad. The window under which Michael melted was covered with a gun rack<br />

which housed a row of shotguns. The window was no longer visible. Nevertheless,<br />

any time I entered the room, I eyed the area with suspicion, on guard against any<br />

potential wax babies appearing under the window, cautious of Michael coming<br />

back to haunt my brother and me, the nephew and niece he never met.<br />

92<br />

t


t<br />

Trapped<br />

Victoria Wittenbrock<br />

t<br />

S<br />

ilence. The best word to describe that day. Not a tranquilizing, calming,<br />

peaceful silence. An eerie, sinister, disconcerting silence. Not in the<br />

way that one might venture outside on a Sunday morning to find that<br />

the usual noises of the hustle and bustle of the city are calmer, and there is a<br />

sense of serenity set in place by the sound of running water in the nearby creek<br />

or crickets chirping in the distance. Silence that occurs in the scene of a horror<br />

movie to generate suspense before the long-anticipated jump-scare flashes<br />

across the screen as the speakers emit a high-pitched shriek or deafening boom.<br />

Little did I know, things in my own life were about to go boom as well.<br />

My father and I sat in the living room of our condo together, just the two of us.<br />

A father-daughter fishing trip my senior year of high school. Likely our last one before<br />

I abandoned my family to travel across the country the next year to pursue<br />

my college career.<br />

I laid on one side of the couch, my father on the other, my feet stretched<br />

across his lap. I was reading a book and he was on his laptop catching up on<br />

some work. I took a brief intermission from my novel to stare aimlessly out of the<br />

window. The sky was menacingly grey with clouds. I realized to my dismay that<br />

it was still lightly raining. Not quite hard enough to elicit the typical pitter-patter<br />

sound of rain cascading onto the roof, but just hard enough to be an inconvenience.<br />

Typical mid-October weather, I thought. It was at this moment I began<br />

to ponder the peculiarity of how not even the fire was crackling like it normally<br />

seemed to. Even the monotonous clicks on my dad’s keyboard seemed gentler<br />

than usual as he typed away.<br />

Another hour or so wasted away and although the storm clouds continued<br />

to loom overhead, the rain dissipated, and the forecast seemed promising. My<br />

father and I had gotten restless; we had succumbed to the unrelenting, inescapable<br />

cabin fever. We loaded up the fishing gear and clamored into the truck,<br />

preparing to head out for a few hours of fishing in one of the streams just outside<br />

of town.<br />

We journeyed about 30 minutes or so beyond the confines of the little<br />

mountain town. We turned off the main highway onto a little mountain backroad<br />

that one of the town locals my father had become recently acquainted<br />

with told us about. The car lurched back and forth as we trudged along. In retrospect,<br />

I am in awe of how strong the suspension must have been.<br />

The sage brush along the sides of the narrow path occasionally scraped<br />

against the sides of the vehicle. Of course, my dad was more than willing to sacrifice<br />

his truck for the opportunity to snag an impressive trout. The path gradually<br />

got hairier. It started as we came across small puddles that he took extra care<br />

93


yline<br />

t<br />

to maneuver around. The farther we ventured out from the highway, however, the<br />

more viscous and treacherous the mud became. I could feel it squishing out from<br />

underneath the tires.<br />

Eventually, we reached the creek. The fishing was decent, but I most enjoyed<br />

the bonding time with my dad. As time moved along, we decided that our misery<br />

from our frostbitten hands and stiff backs outweighed the thrill of reeling in a fish.<br />

The fish must have had the same experience because just as our apparent zeal began<br />

to diminish, they became less than compelled to bite.<br />

Before we began our departure, I asked my dad if I could drive back to the<br />

condo. I had recently obtained my driver’s permit and felt I had become very<br />

confident behind the wheel, a feat I was eager to display. He reluctantly agreed. I<br />

snatched the keys and turned them in the ignition.<br />

The series of events that was about to unfold would have an effect on me so<br />

prevalent that they would change my perspective on the world forever. I stepped<br />

on the gas and instantly knew something wasn’t right. The tires spun and the engine<br />

revved, but the car failed to do the one thing it was built to do—move. My<br />

dad advised me to stop, and he got out of the car to investigate. The wheels had<br />

been digging into the mud and we were stuck. He instructed me to roll down my<br />

window so I could hear him yell. When he began to push, I was supposed to step<br />

on the gas. Nothing worked. After about 30 minutes of trying in vain to jerk the car<br />

free, we came to the gut-wrenching conclusion: we were stranded.<br />

Darkness began to envelop the surrounding areas. I glanced through the<br />

frost-covered windshield and realized that I could visibly see the fog moving<br />

steadily towards us from the field of sage ahead of us. Within minutes, the car and<br />

everything as far as the eye could see would be veiled by a dense layer of fog and<br />

impenetrable darkness.<br />

At this point, my father called his friend who lived in the area to ask for<br />

much-needed help. Predictably, he was away on a camping trip two or so hours<br />

out of town.<br />

In the meantime, I sat patiently in the passenger seat, but as time wore on, I<br />

began to grow worrisome. Having nothing to entertain me allowed my mind to<br />

wander.<br />

To conclude our series of comically unfortunate events, it began to snow. At this<br />

point I had come to accept our fate and while my father was frantically searching<br />

for a solution, I began to devour the bag of beef jerky I had scrounged up from the<br />

center console. I had hoped we wouldn’t be there much longer because that had<br />

meant I only left my dad with two sticks of gum to survive.<br />

As this trivial thought crossed my mind, my heart stopped. My fingers tapping on<br />

the dash stopped. I stared straight ahead into the distance. I didn’t even have to<br />

look over to realize that my dad had frozen too.<br />

94<br />

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t<br />

There, about 100 or so yards in the distance, was a light. My initial hope was<br />

that it was the headlights of my dad’s friend coming to our rescue. In my heart, I<br />

knew it was too early for him to have made it back. The light had been radiating<br />

out of a flashlight. As it grew closer, a figure appeared.<br />

My dad and I sat in silence, fixated on the dark shadow of a man sauntering<br />

ominously straight towards us with an awkward gait. Once he broke 25 yards, a<br />

tall, dark figure dressed in all black emerged from the fog line into the stream of<br />

our headlights. I could just make out his heavy rain-slicker and obnoxious rubber<br />

boots. Beside him he was dragging a heavy-duty metal chain.<br />

This moment made the scenes from cheesy teenage horror movies seem far less<br />

cheesy.<br />

As he approached the car, I reached for my dad’s hand, and he said, “I see<br />

him.”<br />

He began to roll up the window.<br />

I said in an attempt to lighten the mood but with an air of genuine panic, “He’s<br />

gonna kill us.”<br />

His reply was, “I know.”<br />

I looked at him with utter horror and squeezed his hand harder than I ever<br />

thought possible. I was not expecting to hear those words come out of his mouth.<br />

I had turned to my father, as every little girl does at some point in her life, seeking<br />

comfort and solace. I looked to him to reassure me that everything would be alright.<br />

That was not the case. He was as equally terrified as I had been.<br />

The man slunk to the window with one hand in his pocket, the other holding the<br />

large metal chain. We had nothing to defend ourselves with besides a couple of<br />

fishing poles, some dead trout, and an empty beef jerky package, none of which<br />

would place us at an advantage to a clearly experienced, psychotic, serial killer.<br />

He knocked on the glass. My heart dropped. My father rolled down the<br />

window about an inch.<br />

To our relief, the man slid a business card through the crack and explained<br />

that he was a tow truck driver that patrolled the area at night looking for people<br />

to pull out of the mud. He saw our headlights from the road and figured we<br />

needed help because, who else would be crazy enough to be outside under<br />

those conditions. To our utter embarrassment, we discovered that we clearly were<br />

not the only ones to be caught in this situation before. Turns out, the chain would<br />

come in handy towing us out of the huge hole we dug ourselves.<br />

Ten minutes and $600 later, we were out of the mud and on our way back to<br />

town, my dad behind the wheel this time.<br />

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byline<br />

95


Miasma<br />

96<br />

Sidney Grady<br />

t<br />

“It was worse for the poor. They stayed in their homes, and being without help<br />

of any kind, could not hope to escape death. They died at all hours in the streets;<br />

those who died at home were not missed by their neighbors, until they noticed<br />

the stench of their putrefying bodies.<br />

The whole city was a sepulchre.”<br />

T<br />

Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron<br />

he dead of winter gives way to lively spring. This is the way it has always<br />

been. This year, we track less mud on the sidewalks. Lights off in<br />

the office, in the classroom; doors locked at the mall, but we need to<br />

eat. We warily eye the woman next to us in the pasta aisle, stifle a cough. Empty<br />

aisles, empty shelves. It’s quiet, even here, and we do not linger long. The guy at<br />

point-of-sale will touch our canned beans and hand soap just after us — because<br />

he must — and we will imagine someone tossing him a fiver and some pocket<br />

change for his service.<br />

Anyone with a bit of luck on their side would stay home and labor through a<br />

screen in their shoebox apartments and answer another email and watch Oscar<br />

nominees sing at them in solidarity from the unused display offices in their ugly<br />

McMansions and maybe feel the claws of something rage-hot and rotting and<br />

ancient threatening to climb up out of their throats and their skin and their eyes<br />

and eat the bastards whole and answer another email and maybe take their<br />

lunch outside today, if the weather is kind.<br />

“The unfortunate husbandmen and their families, bereft of doctors’ or servants’<br />

care, died day and night, not as men,<br />

but rather as beasts.”<br />

Disease does not discriminate — I know, I know — but the crowd of scientists<br />

shouting, “We don’t know! We don’t know why the poor are dying in higher numbers!<br />

We don’t know!” has got me thinking. The Red Death — like a thief in the<br />

night — crashed Prince Prospero’s party eventually. The ebony clock tick tick ticks<br />

for all, and so on. I know, I know, but Poe failed to consider the science of the<br />

glorious future — there is always a pill or a potion, if you can pay.<br />

“They walked around carrying flowers or fragrant herbs, which they held to<br />

their noses,thinking that it would provide some comfort against the air which<br />

reeked with the stench of the dead<br />

and dying.”<br />

A strange new holy-day ritual. Unemployment must open on Sunday for a<br />

reason. Are you working? How many hours? How much do you have? How much<br />

do you need? How many hours can you work? Why aren’t you working more? Are<br />

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you looking? Why aren’t you working more? Are you sure? Why aren’t you working<br />

more? Are you sure? Are you sure? Confess. Repent. Buy dinner (not dessert). No<br />

cake on the government’s dime. Eat and rot alone.<br />

“Citizen avoided citizen, neighbors lost all feeling for each other.”<br />

EAT THE RICH has never been literal, but I imagine it anyway. Imagine steak<br />

knife sawing and fork stabbing. Imagine blood-soaked and filthy and laughing and<br />

the house is on fire and you’ve broken all their shit. Imagine the taste of meat. Now<br />

eat.<br />

“After 2 weeks of multiple health screens and asking everyone to quarantine, I<br />

surprised my closest inner circle with a trip to a private island where we could pretend<br />

things were normal just for a brief moment in time.” 1<br />

Medieval plague doctors stuffed their beaks with flowers and herbs — the scent<br />

would protect them from miasma, or the bad air that carried disease (almost had<br />

it). Imagine a murder of black-cloaked bird-monsters descending on your village.<br />

Imagine dying under their faceless gaze. Imagine watching them flitter and float<br />

uphill to your lord’s castle, to his pleasance. Did it thrill them? The peasants? Did<br />

they snicker in joy, thinking of their lord writhing and bleeding and swollen and shitting<br />

himself to death? His blood turning black? When the churchbell tolled, were<br />

they hungry for his flesh, poisoned and rotting, filthying his bed, his silks and furs?<br />

They were already dying anyway. Imagine if someone had taught them to write.<br />

“What if we just cut off the unemployment? Hunger is a pretty powerful thing.” 2<br />

It’s true. That’s why the guy ringing up my groceries was even there, why no<br />

noxious black cloud ever stopped the shelves from being stocked or the packages<br />

from being delivered. The miasma is invisible, untouchable. Not there until it is, until<br />

it clogs your throat and lungs and suffocates you in your own burning. And, hey,<br />

maybe it won’t. We’ve all played the lottery before; we know how these things<br />

work. But the hunger: we all need to eat.<br />

“They only feed a military dog at night, because a hungry dog is an obedient<br />

dog.” 3<br />

Obedient to the hunger, yes. Even the dogs will eventually figure out who<br />

starves them.<br />

1 Kim Kardashian West, Twitter, October 2020. Happy 40th.<br />

2 Laura Ingraham, Fox News, August <strong>2021</strong><br />

3 Jon Taffer, who received approximately $60,000 dollars in “Paycheck”<br />

“Protection” “Loans” from the government for his “small business”. I guess<br />

he was hungry. Fox News, August <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

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97


Wolf Woman<br />

98<br />

Kathryn Engelmann<br />

t<br />

In the sleepy mountain community of Ridgway, Colorado, there are no<br />

secrets. There are roughly eight people per square mile, and most people<br />

have a half-hour commute minimum to get to work. In a town like<br />

Ridgway, where the days coast by like ships on glassy water, people stir<br />

the stillness with the salacious juices of rumors and whispers.<br />

“Did you hear that so-and-so got pregnant? She’s only sixteen–I wonder who<br />

the father is. I bet we won’t see her in church for a while.”<br />

“Oh, I hear the dad is some druggie from Montrose. Not surprising, really. Her<br />

poor parents never could keep her in check.”<br />

“What about that new family that just moved into Solar Ranch? What do you<br />

think of them? They’re from Chicago, if you can believe it! What on Earth are they<br />

doing out here?”<br />

“Witness Protection, I bet. They don’t have any family nearby.”<br />

And so on.<br />

There are, of course, rumors that are universally accepted to be true. For example,<br />

Log Hill is haunted.<br />

Nearly all of the residents in that area of town have experienced some kind<br />

of paranormal phenomena. It could be the loneliness of the place playing tricks<br />

on the mind. Log Hill is a heavily wooded mesa looming over Ridgway Valley.<br />

The only way into Log Hill from the town below is County Road 24, an ill-maintained,<br />

winding mountain road, many of its guardrails rusted to oblivion or taken<br />

out entirely by an unlucky driver.<br />

No one is entirely sure why Log Hill is haunted, but as you might imagine, the<br />

citizens of Ridgway have concocted a long and muddled history for the place,<br />

ranging from the tragic to the absurd to the horrifying. There are some who<br />

believe Log Hill Mesa was not a natural formation, but a burial mound constructed<br />

by the true citizens of the land thousands of years ago. Others believe there<br />

are monsters–Bigfoot-esque to shadow beast-y–that call amongst themselves at<br />

night, rustle garbage cans and open windows, and generally create a spooky<br />

nuisance for those who reside there. And there are some true stories of unfortunate<br />

accidental deaths that contribute to the lore of ghost hauntings: a boy,<br />

inexplicably flung from his car and run over; a young man who, while riding in the<br />

back of a pickup truck, fell to his death into the ravine along County Road 24<br />

after the truck hit a pothole.<br />

It takes a special kind of no-nonsense person to live in Log Hill. There’s no time<br />

to worry about ghost stories when you’re trying to stay on the icy road right at<br />

the place where three people slid into the ravine the night before, or think twice<br />

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about the not-human, but also distinctly not-animal sounds coming from the forest<br />

when you’re chopping wood to keep the stove burning.<br />

My Aunt Kathy was one such no-nonsense person. She would watch an episode<br />

of the BBC’s Pride and Prejudice miniseries, enraptured in Colin Firth’s tortured longing,<br />

and in the next instant, shoot and kill a family of rabbits perusing her garden.<br />

She was always direct, stern, and at times, more blunt than a situation called for,<br />

but her eyes and voice betrayed a calming kindness.<br />

Aunt Kathy’s house was far from the main road into Log Hill. First, there was a<br />

dirt path hidden in a thicket of scrub oak and overhanging tree branches. If your<br />

car managed to brave its way through the mess, you would then have to identify<br />

the proper hole in the fence. We were warned that one of the neighbors was<br />

trigger-happy, and if you strayed past his hole in the fence, he’d only give you one<br />

warning shot. After identifying the proper fencehole, you’d make your way from<br />

clay and dirt onto gravel and wind your way through a series of towering ponderosas<br />

before reaching a long, straight stretch. At this point, the log cabin-style<br />

house came into full view, its splendorous gardens cheerfully defying the rocky,<br />

unforgiving soil behind tall deer fences. It was a difficult place to find, even if you<br />

had been before. As such, Aunt Kathy never had an uninvited human visitor. Given<br />

the difficult terrain, hidden pathways, and the potential of being shot by the hermit<br />

neighbor, it was nearly impossible to find her house by accident.<br />

***<br />

In the summer of 2008, Aunt Kathy found herself saddled with the task she hated<br />

most in the world: watching her grandchildren’s pet dog, Sophie. Aunt Kathy never<br />

particularly liked any animal, except perhaps for an outdoor cat or two, and Sophie<br />

was a uniquely infuriating dog. She was a lab mix who had spent more time at<br />

the vet clinic than in her own backyard because of her penchant for eating things<br />

that were not meant to be eaten. Rocks. Paint chips. Whole, unopened tin cans.<br />

Fencing, both wire and wood. Recently, Sophie had developed a taste for the fertilizer<br />

Kathy used for her gardens, and had managed to dig, tear, and eat her way<br />

past the deer fencing and into the many beds of delicate, fickle plants that Kathy<br />

had spent years tending.<br />

Kathy had contemplated, many times, getting rid of Sophie. There were only<br />

two things preventing her from doing so:<br />

1. Her grandchildren adored Sophie. They had called Kathy every evening that<br />

summer to ask how Sophie was doing while their family renovated their house.<br />

2. Sophie, despite her evolutionary shortcomings, was a bit charming. Kathy<br />

would never openly admit it, but she had appreciated the friendliness and clumsy<br />

affection the dog had shown her over the past few weeks.<br />

That summer had been an unusually hot one. Even the wild horned toads hid<br />

themselves from the sun, coming out only in the evenings and early mornings to<br />

bask. Kathy had worried for the safety of her garden, and, to a lesser extent, for<br />

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Sophie, who would have happily burned the pads of her feet off if it meant getting<br />

to dig at the gardens again.<br />

One July day, an early afternoon thunderstorm cooled Log Hill enough for Kathy<br />

and Sophie to venture outside. Kathy placed her cellphone in the side pocket of<br />

her cargo shorts, knowing that her grandchildren would call soon to inquire about<br />

Sophie’s dietary decisions of the day. She eyed Sophie sprinting gleefully into the<br />

miles of forest behind the house. Maybe today would be the day Sophie’s complete<br />

lack of instinct would get her lost.<br />

With a shrug, Kathy made her way into the gardens, listening for Sophie as she<br />

tended to her poor, bedraggled flowers.<br />

She faced the house as she worked, listening to the familiar sounds of Sophie<br />

artlessly navigating her way past low brush, small cactuses, and loose rocks. Kathy<br />

could almost hear the cars from the road. Wait–car, singular. It must be someone<br />

visiting the neighbor.<br />

Wait–the neighbor doesn’t have visitors.<br />

Kathy stood up and turned to face the long stretch of driveway. The sound of<br />

the car came closer, and then the unmistakable sound of tires crunching through<br />

gravel. The gravel on her own driveway.<br />

Kathy paused for a moment. Did she invite anyone over that day? Was her<br />

husband coming home early from work? It couldn’t be him–it didn’t sound like his<br />

truck. It was a small car, by the sound of it.<br />

And by the look of it. A small, beat-up coup slowly came into view and made<br />

its way all the way down the long driveway. Aunt Kathy described it to me as a car<br />

she had never seen in the States before–it reminded her of the tiny, boxy European<br />

cars she had seen when she visited Ireland.<br />

Cautiously, Kathy pushed past the deer fence and out of the gardens. She<br />

could see the driver now.<br />

Kathy had lived in Ridgway for over twenty years and knew everyone in town,<br />

and most everyone’s extended family who had come to visit over the years. The<br />

old woman who sat behind the wheel, squinting at Kathy through thick glasses,<br />

was a complete stranger. Her greasy grey hair fell in loose coils around her thin,<br />

wrinkled face.<br />

As Kathy approached the car, she felt a deep shiver run from her heart all the<br />

way through her spine. Instinctively, she took a small step back. The woman laboriously<br />

opened the door, cracking it just wide enough for Kathy to see that her body<br />

was contorted into the entire space of the front two seats of the car. Suddenly,<br />

Sophie charged from the woods behind the house, barking ferociously, murderous<br />

eyes fixated on the strange woman.<br />

Kathy leapt to intercept Sophie and just grabbed her collar before the strange<br />

woman slammed the car door shut.<br />

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“I’m so sorry about the dog. She’s never been like this before–let me just put her<br />

inside.”<br />

The strange woman’s gaze fell on Sophie, who responded by yanking, snarling,<br />

and barking with all her might. It took Kathy a good several minutes to wrestle the<br />

dog into the house. When she returned, the woman smiled, unperturbed, and<br />

cranked down her window.<br />

“That happens to me a lot. Are you the one selling wolf pups?”<br />

Kathy did not immediately know how to answer. The woman’s unexpected<br />

statements and demeanor sprung multitudes of new questions in her mind. Keeping<br />

a healthy distance from the car, Kathy asked:<br />

“I’m sorry, wolf pups? Is that what you said? No, I don’t have those.”<br />

“Oh, that’s odd. I found this flyer here–” The strange woman leaned all the way<br />

to the passenger side window to reach into her pocket, where she fished out a<br />

crumpled piece of paper. “Yes, here it is. See this flyer? It appears to have your<br />

address listed.”<br />

Kathy surveyed the flyer. It did, in fact, list her address. And it promised a<br />

healthy 90% wolf pup to anyone with $1500. Kathy told me that she had never<br />

heard of anyone in Ridgway raising and selling wolf pups. To her knowledge, a<br />

wolf dog of that strain was illegal in the county, and it’s unlikely that someone<br />

would have advertised an illegal wolf-selling business with a flyer.<br />

“That is my address. I think whoever made this flyer must have made a mistake,<br />

but I don’t know of anyone in this area selling wolf pups. I think your best bet is to<br />

call the number on the flyer. Do you have a cellphone?”<br />

“No, I don’t, actually–silly things don’t work for me.”<br />

“Oh.” Kathy chalked it up to the woman’s age. “Would you like to use mine?”<br />

Kathy pulled her phone from her pocket, noted that it had three out of five<br />

bars of coverage, and was fully charged. She handed the phone to the strange<br />

woman, who stretched out an unusually long, thin arm to grab it. As she dialed the<br />

number, Kathy surveyed more of the woman’s features. Her fingers were long and<br />

thin, and her nails, which appeared to be natural, were nearly an inch long, and<br />

roughly filed into points. She wasn’t wearing any jewelry. No wristwatch. No makeup.<br />

She looked as if she had just come from a funeral, or maybe (as Kathy put it)<br />

she was a Goth–she was dressed in black, wearing an old-fashioned long-sleeve<br />

dress with black lace ruffles at the wrists and throat. The strange woman was also<br />

wearing an absurdly ornate hat–its wide brim curled against the frame of the car<br />

door, and black feathers spilled from every possible surface, as if an entire murder<br />

of crows got caught in her hair. Holding the phone at the very ends of her fingertips,<br />

she put it up to her ear.<br />

“Oh, sorry dear. It looks like your phone is dead.”<br />

“What? That can’t be right–are you sure you know how to use it?”<br />

“Quite sure.”<br />

Kathy took back her cell phone, dumbfounded, and held it to her ear. No ring<br />

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tone. She flipped it shut and then opened it again. The screen was completely<br />

black–the low battery icon didn’t even appear–and after several attempts to turn<br />

the phone on, Kathy concluded that the batteries must have been completely<br />

drained.<br />

“Well, sorry about that. That’s weird–I could have sworn it was fully charged<br />

before I gave it to you.”<br />

The woman’s eyes shifted behind her glasses. Kathy hadn’t had the chance<br />

yet to get a good, close look at the woman’s eyes, which had almost no whites,<br />

except at the very corners.<br />

“Hmm. That’s exactly what I was talking about. Cell phones just don’t work for<br />

me. Could I use your landline?”<br />

Kathy walked back toward the house, where the sound of Sophie’s barking<br />

rang more frantically through the walls. With concerted effort, she edged her way<br />

past Sophie, who had tried to dig and eat through the door to get back outside.<br />

Large pieces of wood lay scattered in the entryway. This fucking dog, Kathy<br />

thought. She’d figure out what to do about the door (and, likely, Sophie’s stomach)<br />

later–the longer that strange woman stayed in her driveway, the more her<br />

nerves felt like exposed piano wires. She quickly scaled the steps up to the living<br />

room, where the home phone was docked in its base. She grabbed the phone,<br />

ran down the stairs, and shoved her way past Sophie, who leveraged all of her<br />

weight to block Kathy from using the door.<br />

Once Kathy maneuvered past Sophie and closed the front door behind her,<br />

she walked back toward the strange woman’s car.<br />

“Could you dial the number for me, darling? I imagine that will help. I have<br />

the flyer here.”<br />

Kathy punched in the number, dialed, and listened to confirm that the phone<br />

was ringing. Then, she handed the phone back to the strange woman. The woman<br />

held the phone against her ear using her fingertips, cocked her head, and then<br />

closed her eyes.<br />

“This one’s dead, too.”<br />

“No way, that’s impossible! I just dialed the number and I heard ringing myself.<br />

We never leave the home phone out of its base, so it’s fully charged–”<br />

The strange woman twisted herself halfway out of the driver’s side window to<br />

hand the phone back to Kathy. For a brief moment, Kathy felt the woman’s icy<br />

fingertips against her hand during the transfer. She listened to the phone again,<br />

and this time, there was no sound. The faint green light behind the buttons had<br />

disappeared completely. The home phone, too, was dead.<br />

“Well.” That was all Kathy could say for a moment. She shook her head and met<br />

the strange woman’s gaze. An instinctual, icy fear darted through her heart. She<br />

imagined this was how it felt to be stalked by a wild animal.<br />

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“Look. Neither phone seems to be working, and I don’t have any wolf pups<br />

here, as you can see. I don’t really think I can help you out here.”<br />

The strange woman’s gaze lingered on Kathy for what felt like ages. Finally, she<br />

spoke.<br />

“Alright, I’ll leave. I’ll see if I can find the place on my own. Thank you for your<br />

help so far–I’m sorry to have been a burden to you.”<br />

The small car sputtered back to life, and the strange woman drove back down<br />

the driveway. Kathy listened as the tires moved from gravel to dirt. In the very instant<br />

those tires turned back down the path to the main road, the phone in Kathy’s<br />

hands began blaring a busy signal. She looked down to see the familiar green<br />

glow of the buttons, and the battery power restored to full. Shaken, she fished into<br />

the side pocket of her cargo shorts for her cellphone. She flipped the phone open<br />

and searched for the battery icon. Fully charged.<br />

Kathy took a steadying breath, walked back to the house, and let Sophie out.<br />

Initially, Sophie searched and smelled every square inch of the driveway, gardens,<br />

and the area round the hole in the fence. Once she was content that the intruder<br />

was gone, she leaned heavily against Kathy’s legs, shaking and licking her lips.<br />

When Aunt Kathy told people about the Wolf Woman, she was surprised to<br />

learn that she was the only person in Ridgway who had seen her. Some people<br />

questioned if she was telling the truth–it can get lonely on Log Hill, after all, and it’s<br />

nice to have a story someone’s never heard before. But Kathy wasn’t a liar. Nor<br />

was she prone to believing ghost stories, or any of<br />

the monster stories folks would sometimes tell around their firepits.<br />

When Kathy told me about the Wolf Woman, it always struck me as unusual<br />

that a woman with such a strange car would not have been noticed by anyone<br />

else in town. Furthermore, how could she have been comfortable in such heavy,<br />

dark clothing on an eighty-degree day? Why were her irises so strangely large?<br />

Was she wearing contacts? But if so, why would she need glasses? It’s a memory<br />

that haunted me in the years that I lived in Ridgway, and even more so when I<br />

eventually lived in my Aunt Kathy’s house. Sometimes in the early morning hours,<br />

when I couldn’t fall asleep, I would hear–or, maybe more accurately, imagine that<br />

I heard–a sound deep in the woods, almost like a wolf, and nearly human, piercing<br />

the cool stillness of the dark.<br />

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103


When the Candles Burn Low<br />

t<br />

104<br />

Callie S.Blackstone<br />

When I was young, I had a small social circle because I was an awkward<br />

girl with a temper. I found that some of the people I best<br />

connected with were interested in ghosts, just like I was. We traded<br />

urban legends and stories we read on angelfire websites with requisite black<br />

backgrounds and gifs of dripping blood. We approached our world through the<br />

lens of the paranormal. Everything was a potential sign from the dead.<br />

For some reason, none of us could obtain a copy of what we considered a<br />

“real” Ouija board at the time—the cheap Hasboro produced “game.” I<br />

became known for creating homemade boards. I’m not sure I deserved the<br />

infamy—I only wrote out the alphabet and numbers on a piece of paper. After<br />

my friends and I worked each other up with ghost stories, we would “get on” the<br />

board. We took it very seriously.<br />

We were, after all, students of the occult—some of us knew more about<br />

this topic than those we learned about at school. We were familiar with the<br />

various popular theories about the how the board worked—that those using it<br />

became possessed or that they subconsciously moved the planchette themselves.<br />

We also knew that many people believed that the board was a hoax, but<br />

we were confident that our experiences with it were valid.<br />

We met several characters on the board. One was a woman who told<br />

us she lost several children to influenza. Another was a supposed serial killer<br />

who claimed to have buried a victim in the front yard of my mother’s 1960s-era<br />

condo. As we grew older the “spirits” were more titillating. They suddenly started<br />

to verbalize the sexual desires we were all having for one another. We took all<br />

of these messages seriously without considering the likelihood or convenience of<br />

their claims.<br />

As I entered adulthood, I discovered it was not what I expected it to be.<br />

I did not easily transition from an angry, lonely kid to a satisfied, popular adult.<br />

With the realization that adulthood is not a cure all, I began to lose hope. The<br />

world was no longer as magical and mysterious as it once was. My brain continued<br />

to store an unsubstantiated amount of theories about ghosts and historical<br />

hauntings. But, despite the fact that I wanted to, I found I could no longer<br />

believe in them as I once did.<br />

I eventually found paganism, which opened a path to something bigger<br />

than myself. But, I stepped on my pagan path hesitantly. I had difficulty believing<br />

in anything—ghost or deity. My rituals were hesitant attempts to connect with<br />

something bigger than myself. I struggled with my faith. The afterlife and ghosts<br />

were still too far out for me to consider.<br />

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Things changed when Jared died.<br />

Various people in my life had died before. They were older and suffering from<br />

complicated medical conditions. While these deaths were tragic, they were expected<br />

and appeared to relieve them from pain.<br />

Jared was different.<br />

I saw him in my first college class. He was tall and thin with brown hair and<br />

glasses that obscured his eyes. He sat rigidly. He spent the majority of the classes<br />

in silence, periodically providing answers that were so insightful they were devastating.<br />

I was intrigued—the whole class was. I sat behind him and watched him,<br />

treasuring every word. Each one was a precious clue about the handsome, intelligent<br />

young man.<br />

Over the years we both worked on our school’s literary magazine and we entered<br />

a tentative friendship. We would go to art galleries and movies. My chatter<br />

was more often than not met with a cold silence. I often felt he was judging the<br />

drivel I was spewing.<br />

Later I would learn that Jared was not judging me. He often remained silent<br />

due to social anxiety. Over the years, we opened up to one another and became<br />

close.<br />

After college, Jared moved south for graduate school. During his first semester<br />

we had a huge argument. It was an awful fight, and we stopped talking to each<br />

other for a year or two. I didn’t care. He was an amazing young man who had become<br />

one of the only constant people in my life. I was confident we would overcome<br />

our fight and he would be a part of my life forever. Eventually, we begun to<br />

text each other again. We took hikes when he came home from school, his athleticism<br />

carrying him farther on the trails than I could ever go. Things were awkward<br />

and uncomfortable at times but they were getting better.<br />

Until they weren’t.<br />

I learned of Jared’s death one morning while I was getting ready for work.<br />

I saw an ambiguous Facebook status that insinuated something negative had<br />

happened to him. But, I already knew what happened to him deep in my heart.<br />

My gut instinct was confirmed when I learned that Jared had shot himself in the<br />

head.<br />

I was in such deep denial that I flatly told my boyfriend, went into the bathroom,<br />

and continued getting ready for work like nothing happened. When I<br />

got into my car that morning, the first song that came on was a popular pop<br />

punk song. The lyrics consisted of a young man’s suicide note.<br />

Something changed inside of me that day. I am still not sure what it was,<br />

exactly: a light switch got shut off, a candle burned down to nothing. Perhaps<br />

that was the last day I carried hope. I had grown up thinking things would get<br />

better in adulthood. I had grown up thinking our souls would carry on after we<br />

died. I had believed that Jared would always be in my life. Then he was gone.<br />

Before Jared died, I had been fostering my newfound paganism. While I<br />

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had still been skeptical, I allowed myself to explore my faith and take pleasure<br />

in the experiences I was having.<br />

After Jared died, I struggled with my paganism for several years. I wrote numerous<br />

rituals to honor Jared on Sabbats. I would adjust the symbolism so it was<br />

appropriate, no matter the season. Yet the day would approach and I would be<br />

unable to act. I vacillated between feeling frozen inside and sobbing endlessly. I<br />

could not return to my newfound path until I was able to conduct a ritual honoring<br />

Jared. Yet, it seemed to be an impossible task.<br />

One time of year was especially important to me: Samhain. My childhood<br />

belief in ghosts had not returned, and I was still frozen inside. I was not sure where<br />

I thought Jared was, but I needed to try to connect to him. I knew that Samhain<br />

was when the veil was supposedly at its thinnest, and I could not lose any chances.<br />

I needed to know he forgave me for our argument and my betrayal. I needed<br />

to apologize for overlooking obvious cries for help. Overall, I needed him to know<br />

that despite how alone he felt in those last hours, and despite the fact that we<br />

were just rekindling our relationship, he was deeply important to me. I needed to<br />

sing his praises — if he couldn’t know them in this life, I wanted him to know them in<br />

the next.<br />

Samhains came and went. I created charms to attract Jared, beacons of<br />

light to shine on him beyond the veil and draw him to me. I finally purchased a<br />

Hasboro copy of a ouija board, still too skeptical to invest in a more expensive,<br />

pagan-made spirit board. I broke the cardinal rule of Ouija and sat at the board<br />

alone late at night, waiting to hear something. Anything. The planchette never<br />

moved.<br />

I went to self-proclaimed mediums. I attended a spiritualist seance in Salem,<br />

Massachusetts. I attended ghost tours of New England’s historically haunted<br />

homes and eagerly anticipated the gallery readings that followed the events. I<br />

went to other pagans who charged fees for their supposed abilities to connect to<br />

the other side. The rational part of my mind doubted that people seeking exorbitant<br />

money and publicity for these skills had the best intentions. Yet, every time<br />

one of them stated they sensed a young man in the room, I became rigid and<br />

carefully listened to each message. I added them up hoping they would equal<br />

Jared. They never did.<br />

At a dead supper, someone who didn’t know Jared gazed at his picture<br />

and said my friend had benign messages for me—he wasn’t suffering, he cared<br />

about me. None of the messages were specific to Jared and I found that other<br />

event attendees received what were essentially the same ones. I craved a genuine<br />

connection with Jared so badly, but my rational mind found issues with each<br />

generic message I received.<br />

It has been years since Jared died. Things have gotten easier in that the grief<br />

and ache have dulled. But in my body and soul is still a question, a longing, a<br />

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need for connection. Some grand and obvious show that provides closure. Unfortunately<br />

becoming an adult means understanding that very few questions have<br />

obvious, neat answers.<br />

I still attempt to reach out in a myriad of ways every year, but the freshness of<br />

grief has declined. As time passes, evidence continues to build against me—there<br />

are no responses to my attempts to reach out. There may never be.<br />

One Samhain, I began constructing an ancestor altar for Jared. It was extremely<br />

painful to take his photos, poetry, and letters out of storage. But I constructed<br />

the altar as a way to honor the handsome, intelligent man I had cared about so<br />

much. As I constructed it, I had to acknowledge that Jared may never respond to<br />

me. I wondered who such communications would serve anyway. His life had not<br />

been an easy one. Long before his death he relied on various unhealthy coping<br />

skills to get through the day—he starved himself, cut himself, and abused alcohol.<br />

He often felt isolated and he blamed this on his belief that he was fundamentally<br />

defected on some level. At the end of his life, he had left an unhealthy relationship<br />

and was trying to deal with the aftermath. But, it became too difficult for him, and<br />

he felt he could only answer life’s questions with a gun.<br />

That Samhain I arranged Jared’s photos on my wall. Even after my belief in<br />

ghosts waned, I had considered myself an expert on the subject. I could have<br />

a conversation about different types of ghosts, spirits, and hauntings at length. I<br />

thought about the pain Jared had suffered throughout his life. I knew that some<br />

believed death is a release from pain. I knew that others believed some spirits<br />

fester in their suffering after they die. I thought about which was likely for Jared, a<br />

man who had spent so much of his life hating himself and trying to cope with that<br />

hate.<br />

I still think about Jared often. I light candles for him at my ancestor altar. I miss<br />

him deeply, and I am not sure I will regain what I lost inside when he died. While I<br />

would still deeply appreciate some communication from the other side, I now<br />

have new priorities. Wherever Jared is, I simply hope he is at peace. Resting.<br />

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Papa Loves Mambo<br />

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108<br />

Tricia Gates Brown<br />

R<br />

oughly five years ago; late-summer day under a New Mexico sky,<br />

the blue of which rivals all sky. Blue like taffeta. Like a French painter’s<br />

dream of sky—which is what lured painters to Taos in the 20 th<br />

century to eventually become the “Taos School,” setting stage for<br />

an influx of artists and intellectuals including the likes of Georgia O’Keefe and<br />

D. H. Lawrence. I drove out of Taos where I’d retreated to an adobe, pond-side<br />

casita on a farm, attempting to mend my heart with beauty, art, and spicy-good<br />

food. Early that year, my then-husband had left our marriage in the midst of personal<br />

crisis—a blind side departure that nearly shattered me. But not quite.<br />

That day the highway carried me north into Colorado and across to Four<br />

Corners where New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and Arizona share a geographical<br />

hip bump. I was on a pilgrimage of sorts, to sleep over in Cortez, Colorado,<br />

the childhood hometown on my maternal grandmother (whom I and the family<br />

called ‘Nana’), en route to Four Corners. I was unprepared for the experience<br />

I encountered.<br />

Driving into Cortez I headed for Nana’s girlhood home, but instead of finding<br />

her 30s-era State Street neighborhood, discovered a 1970s off-ramp. Disappointed,<br />

I photographed two houses remaining from Nana’s era before turning toward<br />

Cortez’ Main Street that features buildings from her childhood. Training my<br />

imagination on Nana, I pictured her walking those streets as a girl. I felt closer to<br />

her than I had in decades—since her death. After parking on a downtown side<br />

street, I strolled to Nana’s high school, a building as rundown and defunct as an<br />

old drive-in; and as I ventured, kept her ever on my mind.<br />

Though Nana and my maternal grandfather (who we called ‘Papa’) were pivotal<br />

in my earliest years, they had lived a full-day’s drive from our family for most<br />

of my life. I hadn’t been close to Nana until her waning months. Through my time<br />

in middle school, my siblings and I shared short visits with Nana and Papa only<br />

once a year.<br />

Which turns me to the beginning.<br />

At the time of my birth, my father was a naval officer stationed in the<br />

Pacific. Overwhelmed and lonely, with toddler and baby in tow, my mother<br />

moved to her parents’ home where, in my first year of life, Nana and Papa<br />

were ancillary caregivers. I especially bonded with my grandfather. Warm<br />

and affectionate and effusive, Papa was an inwardly and outwardly beautiful<br />

man. Apparently when I was old enough to crawl, I propped myself on the<br />

sliding door, crying as he went off to work—already attached to his magnetism.<br />

With the dark features and coloring of his ancestors from southern France<br />

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(northern Spain?), Papa could have passed for Hispanic, his smile brilliant as New<br />

Mexico’s sky. In fact, he’d resided in the Land of Enchantment for several years as<br />

a boy.<br />

Nana and Papa were deeply in love and loved to dance. They went out<br />

dancing; they danced to records in their front room; they danced at their golf<br />

club. Somewhere exists a photo of Papa dipping Nana in a dramatic move not<br />

long before his death. Their life was not without challenge, as Papa hid an anxiety<br />

condition that crippled him in certain respects, and a since-childhood heart condition<br />

that stole his life in his 50s. And Nana ran out her days waiting to join him.<br />

In her 70s, Nana developed colon cancer, coming to live with my parents for<br />

care and help with treatments that ultimately failed; and it was in this stage that<br />

she and I bonded. Nestled into the corner of her tiny grandmother apartment was<br />

a hospital bed, and on a handful of occasions I sat alongside that bed brushing<br />

her hair, grooming her nails, or simply talking. I was 23.<br />

When I visited Nana’s childhood home roughly twenty years later, it felt like<br />

a historical pilgrimage more than a personal one. My roots interested me; roots<br />

I might have in a place where my ancestors had roots. I wondered if the place influenced<br />

them in ways that conferred influence on me. The curiosity was abstract,<br />

impersonal. So as I walked around the abandoned schoolhouse where Nana<br />

attended high school and felt a chilling, overwhelming sense of something spirit-y<br />

bearing down on me, something I would describe as a presence—the presence of<br />

Nana—I was not at all prepared. It felt heavy. Eerie. Charged. Unexpected. Certainly,<br />

I was not seeking it out. Since I’d never experienced such a thing, I wouldn’t<br />

even have known to seek it out.<br />

I immediately felt incredulous. Why would Nana—Nana’s presence, her spirit—have<br />

been closer or more present to me there than in any other place? She<br />

had not lived in Cortez since her childhood and as far as I know, had no special<br />

attachment to the town throughout her life. I had not known her there. Yet, it did<br />

seem, suddenly,that she was with me. Despite what I felt, however, I was—as I<br />

said—incredulous. The words: You’re gonna have to be more obvious, passed<br />

through my head. If, in some strange never-before-experienced way, Nana was<br />

making her presence known to me, I was going to need something more.<br />

After leaving the school grounds, I headed for downtown. Strolling through<br />

blocks of historic buildings, I visited a fabric store in a building that housed the<br />

post office in Nana’s day, buying fabric to craft a table runner for my mom. I then<br />

headed to find a meal. As it was happy hour, the Loungin’ Lizard pub drew me<br />

with promise of a G & T. During the 1930s, in Nana’s high school years, the ‘Lizard’<br />

building was home to the local soda fountain. Though the space had been refurbished<br />

in many ways, it still featured the ornate early-20 th -century ceiling tiles Nana<br />

would have seen when looking up, perhaps giggling with her friends or flirting-up<br />

the soda jerk.<br />

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As I spent an hour at my table, sipping my gin and tonic and enjoying a Reuben,<br />

I noted the music playing conspicuously in the background.It was an 80s/90s<br />

mix, mostly rock—everything from Journey to Dire Straits, the classics of my high<br />

school and college years. At one point, after I’d sat a good while, I gazed up at<br />

the 1930s ceiling and thought: I’m going to tell the waitress my grandma grew up<br />

here. Then just after this—out of the blue—started a song in such stark contrast<br />

to the preceding playlist that I immediately noticed it. And the incongruous song<br />

that blared through the speakers was the early-50s Perry Como tune “Papa Loves<br />

Mambo.” (Remember, Nana and Papa loved to dance.)<br />

Now, could this mean something? And what could it mean? For me, it did<br />

mean something. What it meant, I was not entirely sure. But I did at the time, and<br />

continually in intervening years, see it as something ... meaningful. The occurrence<br />

of that song, at that moment and in that place, felt playful. Was some—something—in<br />

the universe—playing with me? Was Nana saying, Yes, I am here? Was<br />

she conferring what I had asked for—the something more?<br />

Though this incident occurred a number of years ago, I have not written about<br />

it and have relayed it to few people—to avoid subjecting the experience to<br />

dismissal as coincidence or worse. But I felt my dead grandmother near to me,<br />

communicating with me. Perhaps for no other reason than at that time, I was<br />

open. I was focused on her in a particular, unique way. Leaving the mystery<br />

right there is enough for me. Perhaps it is enough for you too.<br />

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111<br />

“I had no choice...I had to turn the page”<br />

Nicole Kemp<br />

t<br />

It started with Danny. King’s Overlook Hotel hung from my brain, cliffside,<br />

like an entity demanding recognition. It waited for me. A dark<br />

mass bidding me to enter. I faint, like Danny. The doctor calls it syncope,<br />

but for me, it’s a transgression from this world into another. We<br />

both come back to concerned faces of well meaning people who thought<br />

we were dead...for a moment. I’ve learned to feel it come upon me. A wave<br />

of unconsciousness.<br />

When I turned thirty-three, I was pregnant with my second child. A receptacle<br />

for life, but my world was disintegrating around me. My mother was diagnosed<br />

with a rare form of leukemia. My best friend and piece of the puzzle<br />

that held my dreams together, a vision of peace and comfort. I imagined my<br />

children growing up baking bread with my mum, knitting, and taking long<br />

convoluted walks to the library for mountains of books we could not carry. Four<br />

years of pain; she endured treatments, exhaustion, estrangement from the<br />

living. I had to help her pass on from this world to the next, like a harbinger of<br />

death. We wait for death like we wait for babies, she always said.<br />

Depression closed in around me in the form of a house. Paralyzed by my<br />

thoughts, I was unable to get out. My legs immobilized, I could not run from<br />

monsters and ghosts. Hit by the pandemic, my mental restriction became truly<br />

physical. I started reading horror, science fiction, anything to help me make<br />

sense of the dystopia around me. I could not escape to an idyllic world, it was<br />

too far removed. I could no longer stand romance, the sickening sweet fruit<br />

we save in our fridge until it rots and is no longer recognizable. Life felt more<br />

like a Shirley Jackson novel.<br />

Horror makes you face the macabre, unsettling, forces we have no control<br />

over. But I need these stories. I need the moments of courage and heroism.<br />

I can visit the house we all know is there. I can open the door, walk down<br />

the corridor. There will be monsters on the other side. It will take fortitude and<br />

gumption to turn the page toward agony and despair. But I will be able to<br />

Feel...Myself....Here....Now. And know I will be able to breathe again.


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112<br />

Rosalindae Siegfried<br />

The beat pulses in my ears like a fishbowl effect gone wrong, my<br />

heart strung up tight in my chest with string.<br />

“Don’t be afraid,” he says.<br />

It’s dark back here and I feel safe in the shadows. Invisible<br />

dust in my lungs, I choke when I catch a glimpse of light seeping underneath<br />

the curtain’s edge. I’d rather die than be enveloped in the bright hotness of<br />

that crisp light, so I stay where I am. Back against the shimmering tulle and<br />

warm velvet hung up on racks with masks and hats close by, their blank faces<br />

smiling because they know why I came here to join them.<br />

“They’re waiting.” He urges me to come forward. The masks keep smirking.<br />

For a moment I think that maybe it won’t be so bad if I feel it.<br />

After all, I eventually will have to, and so I should get used to it while the<br />

choice to enter its reach is still mine. But then its fingers curl from underneath<br />

the curtain, slowly, in tendrils and patterns that flit and flicker with the breeze<br />

of a nearby fan. They beckon. I gag on the musky smell within these fabrics<br />

and drapes.<br />

“You are being ridiculous.”<br />

Insulting. The textures seem to consume me further each second. I push<br />

against them and walk forward, reaching the curtain itself, and the light shies<br />

away from each Mary Jane. Coward.<br />

I’ll be fine.<br />

My tongue is heavy in my mouth, but I push this from my mind along with<br />

the curtain from my view, closing my eyes. I take a breath and they reopen.<br />

The applause brings me back to this moment, and the glass prison I’d been<br />

hiding behind seems to fade.<br />

That’s when I see her waiting for me, exactly where I’d left her, alone, but<br />

a presence demanding to be seen—to be admired by anyone who laid their<br />

eyes upon her. And it’s now that I realize I don’t need to worry. Not one soul in<br />

this auditorium is looking at the player. They are looking at the instrument, anticipating<br />

the sound of her melody. I am only the channel to which her music<br />

travels through the strings.<br />

“You’ve got this.”<br />

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The Study<br />

113<br />

Rowan MacDonald<br />

t<br />

October 1999.<br />

I can’t sleep. Another restless night spent lying in bed staring at the ceiling.<br />

I don’t want to go to school the next day. I roll over to check the time.<br />

4:00am.<br />

Hmmph. A few more hours and I have to be up for school.<br />

I dread the thought.<br />

My room is pitch black, apart from some old glow-in-the-dark star stickers<br />

adorning my bedroom wall. Their ability to glow is slowly diminishing, along<br />

with my ability to withstand too many more sleepless nights.<br />

I close my eyes, in one last vain attempt at sleep.<br />

What’s that?<br />

I can hear a faint noise coming from downstairs. The study is immediately<br />

below my bedroom. I can just make out the sound of typing.<br />

Who the hell is on the computer this time of night?<br />

I open my eyes and continue listening. I subconsciously begin holding<br />

my breath in an effort to be as silent as possible. The sound of typing from<br />

the computer downstairs becomes more distinct and increases speed.<br />

Is Mum up late working from home?<br />

A mouse is being furiously clicked, as if someone is becoming impatient<br />

for a webpage to load.<br />

Puzzled, I grab my flashlight and tiptoe out of my bedroom into the<br />

hallway. The rest of the house is dark and still. It’s silent, apart from the<br />

frenetic touch-typing from downstairs.<br />

I approach the landing at the top of the stairs and abruptly swing my<br />

torch down into the study, illuminating the desk and computer.<br />

Nothing. No one. Complete silence. No more typing. No more clicking.<br />

These sleepless nights were clearly getting to me.<br />

***<br />

December 1999.<br />

The mysterious typing had begun featuring on a regular basis. It was<br />

typically happening between the hours of 4 and 8am. Like that first event<br />

in October, I set out to try solve the riddle, but came up empty each time. I<br />

resigned myself to the fact I was probably going insane.<br />

My parents often worked from home in that downstairs study. Neither<br />

of them was ever in that room during these incidents. Most of the time,<br />

everyone else asleep in bed. I kept things to myself. The last thing I needed<br />

was being admitted to a psych ward.<br />

I found myself hesitating before stepping into that room. It was always


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so cold, but I assumed it was due to its downstairs location. My parents often<br />

argued in that room and seemingly transformed into different people. I assumed<br />

it was due to work being stressful.<br />

Unfortunately, I had to do homework and a computer was increasingly required.<br />

I felt uneasy with each keystroke, almost as if something (or someone)<br />

was watching me. One day, the ceiling light in the middle of the room began<br />

flashing.<br />

Fast. Strobe-like.<br />

I wasn’t taking any chances in this damn room. I briskly got up and walked<br />

towards the door, while keeping my eyes fixated on the spontaneous nightclub<br />

taking place.<br />

BANG!<br />

The light globe exploded violently, sending shards of glass flying across the<br />

room.<br />

I hated homework.<br />

***<br />

May 2000.<br />

I was sitting eating a bowl of Coco Puffs for breakfast, when I heard Mum<br />

yell out from the top of the stairs.<br />

“You’re not down there on that computer already?!”<br />

I froze.<br />

I ran.<br />

“What? I’m just here, Mum. I was in the living room having breakfast<br />

and watching cartoons.”<br />

Mum looked puzzled.<br />

“Really? I was certain I heard typing coming from downstairs.”<br />

She had heard it!<br />

I was amazed she had heard the sounds too. We both stared down towards<br />

the study.<br />

Empty.<br />

I felt a wave of emotions roll over me; relief, bewilderment, terror.<br />

My sister heard the commotion and was sleepily walking down the<br />

hallway towards us.<br />

“What’s going on?” she asked.<br />

“Mum just heard typing from the computer downstairs. She thought I was<br />

down there–I wasn’t. I have been hearing typing for months!”<br />

My sister turned slightly pale.<br />

“I have been hearing that typing too! I thought I was hearing things.”<br />

I jumped up and down in excitement. I couldn’t believe it. All three of us<br />

had been hearing it, yet keeping it to ourselves.<br />

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In the space of 5 minutes, I had gone from contemplating what to bring<br />

with me to the psych ward, to having my experiences completely validated.<br />

I was not alone.<br />

***<br />

April 2001.<br />

We had grown to live with the phantom typing emanating from the study–<br />

after all, it wasn’t every day. I started wishing I possessed the same ingenuity<br />

and gadgets that Kevin McCallister did in Home Alone.<br />

That would help me solve this for sure.<br />

Our parents’ arguments had increased, culminating in them getting a<br />

divorce. Strong emotions and negativity ran throughout the house during this<br />

turbulent time. The typing episodes became more frequent.<br />

Mum had mentioned the Ouija board fad that took place during her<br />

school years of the 60s. Naturally, and perhaps foolishly, 12-year-old me<br />

decided this was how we would solve the mystery. I set it up.<br />

“Is anybody there?”<br />

The planchette moved a little, but nothing significant. My sister and I were<br />

convinced the other was moving it anyway. All I got out of the experience<br />

was an intense fever dream later that night, which left me feeling particularly<br />

nauseated.<br />

A few weeks later I was at home by myself. It was nighttime and I was reluctantly<br />

downstairs, on the computer.<br />

The fears one is willing to overcome, simply to talk to a crush!<br />

Everything was going well, despite my occasional feeling of unease.<br />

And then it happened–the thing which resulted in me never being alone<br />

in the study again.<br />

From nowhere, I suddenly felt (and heard) a very sharp intake of breath,<br />

directly behind my right shoulder, near my ear.<br />

I never ran so fast in all my life. I leapt multiple stairs at once, in my haphazard<br />

attempt to escape whatever evil presence had suddenly made itself<br />

known.<br />

I shut myself in my bedroom, clutched my dog for comfort, and waited<br />

for someone to arrive home. My heart raced as I hid under the bed covers.<br />

Soon after, my parents’ divorce was finalized and we listed the house for<br />

sale.<br />

I wasn’t exactly sad to say goodbye to my childhood home, nor the evil<br />

touch-typist with the breathing problem.<br />

***<br />

August <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

“Hey! Did you know the old Hammonds’ house was recently sold?”<br />

My sister had developed a recent interest in real estate. The Hammonds<br />

were a lovely old couple who had lived next door to us during childhood.<br />

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“No, I wasn’t aware of that. Mrs Hammond was such a friendly lady.”<br />

“Yes, like a second grandmother.”<br />

My sister continued browsing the real estate ads online.<br />

“Oh wow, check it out! The Donaldson’s house has just been listed for sale<br />

too.”<br />

“No way! What are the chances both neighbours sell-up just weeks apart?”<br />

“Probably slim,” she replied. “Let’s go for a drive.”<br />

We jumped in the car and made the familiar journey back to our old<br />

street. It had been many years since either of us had ventured to this part of<br />

our hometown.<br />

“Does this street somehow seem smaller to you?” I asked.<br />

“I think it’s just because we’ve grown bigger.” my sister laughed.<br />

The “sold” sign in front of the Hammonds’ house came into view. We slowed<br />

down. From here, we could also see the side of our childhood home and some<br />

of the backyard.<br />

“Oh wow,” I muttered.<br />

The garden of our childhood home had completely overgrown.Trees and<br />

vines were out of control ,and the grass had reached mammoth heights. It<br />

had deteriorated dramatically and more resembled a combination of mental<br />

illness or poverty than it did childhood memories.<br />

It was sad to see. The woman who purchased it from us had clearly let it go.<br />

We sat in the car soaking it all up.<br />

“You know, what if that presence and its typing have sent that woman<br />

crazy?” I asked.<br />

“I guess it’s possible,” my sister reflected. “Maybe she doesn’t have anyone.<br />

We were lucky. We had each other.”<br />

“Yes. We have each other.”<br />

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