Nightingale & Sparrow

Category: Prose

  • To Carry a Stone

    To Carry a Stone

    Jordan Brown

    Wisconsin.

    I miss the smell of her hair. Greasy and warm, archaic, like something discovered, smelling of dirt or bones or first love. Her hair is like silk, satin, some smooth ribbon, soft and gentle as it falls from behind her ear. She tucks it back again, and what I would do to tuck it for her. To feel it slip behind her ear, hold my palm against her neck, and smile as she lifts her eyes. It’s late summer of 2016 and I’m thirty-one years old. I haven’t drunk a drop or done drugs in over two years. It’s not bad really. 

    I left Amanda or lost her, I don’t know. It doesn’t matter. But I got my driver’s license back and I got this room and I’m going to school again in the fall. I’m really trying to do my best, I’m trying to do things different.

    My room is in the basement of an old building just off campus in Oshkosh. Built in the style of Spanish Renaissance, it’s made from old stones and light-colored mostly tan brick. It is three stories tall and has apartments that run from six to eight-hundred dollars. That’s more than I can afford but the ad I saw said, “Ask us about our sleeping rooms.” So I did—three hundred for a big room with a rug in the middle and a fridge, a bed, a dresser, couch, chair, table, more chairs. I lost a lot of things on the way to sobriety, so here I am, plus a desk and a hot plate and a bookcase and I think it’s a pretty good deal.

    There’s a slick, rich floor underneath the rug, some fancy cement from Italy full of chips and colors. Two of the walls are just plaster, and on the other side of one is this lady who’s always in bed. It’s right against the wall and I can hear her there, all the time, and I can’t help but wonder if this has always been her life.

    There’s a toilet and a shower in the hallway, and a slop-sink down in the laundry room where I can wash my plate and my cup and my pan. That’s all fine with me except that I have to go by this other lady’s room to get there. Her name is Kim. She stands behind her door and swears at me or about me as if she were talking to someone else. 

    “That goddamn kid, in and out, Jesus Christ. What the fuck,” she says. 

    I guess she’s used to Debbie who hardly goes out in the hallway. When she does and I see her there, not in her bed but standing up, wide-eyed like she’s looking real hard at something behind me. She’s friendly. 

    “Hi Debbie,” I say. 

    “Hey,” she says. And then her eyes kind of bug out and she smiles so her teeth show.

    But Kim’s not like that at all, she hurries to get back in her room and I never get the chance to try to be nice. I don’t want to live here anymore so I put in a notice and I got a different apartment that I move to next month. In the meantime, I’m going west with some buddies and we leave tomorrow morning so I guess Kim will always think I’m bad.

     

    Minnesota.

    Four crows are on a telephone pole as we head to the border of the state. The clouds are layered like an oil painting, blue to white and back again. A silo stands up against the fields and sometimes it seems that if I blink or sneeze this could all crack apart, like a wooden frame falling to the floor. The paint-crusted canvas would be left flapping stiffly in the breeze. I think about the smell of her hair again, and the feel of it under my nose as I kiss her forehead and her freckles burn beneath my lips. 

    A little stream runs under the highway like a bead of sweat down her back. It’s easy to miss. The pine trees are lined up and skinny to the top. I anticipate that the waterways will widen as we go west and maybe some magic will be revealed. As we get toward the Mississippi, the scrappy bushes turn to thick ferns and the trees fill out but when we finally cross the river, I see that it’s just a bunch of water.

     

    North Dakota.

    When it’s my turn to drive, everyone goes to sleep and I’m left with nothing but thoughts. It’s after midnight, it has been storming for hours, and there’s construction on the road. We rented a car that is big and fast and heavy—it’s nothing like my loose old minivan at home. It makes me nervous, and so do the rivers of rain around me, running through the ditches. The traffic barrels and cut up concrete that narrow the lane make me nervous too. Lightning flashes, now so far in the distance of the night that it lights up stretches of fields farther than I thought I could see. 

    I try to remember the last time I saw her. I think it was in the doorway of her grandmother’s house after she left rehab. We didn’t know what to say so we stared at each other. And then I held her, my hand against the thin cotton of that yellow dress, sweat sticking it to the small of her back, fitting her to me. 

     

    Montana.

    When the sun comes up, I see that things have changed. Hills are all around me, small bumps on the horizon turn into large rocks and plateaus. Sometimes I see these dead trees, black and broken. I can’t look away and when the car hits the shoulder of the road again, my friend wakes up to find me steering with my knee and hanging out the window, trying to take pictures.

    On the far side of the state, we stop and camp near a great wide river. It’s shallow and I walk into it, my pants pulled up to my calves. I find a flat stone under the surface, smooth and soft like the palm of her hand. It calls out to me and I pluck it from the water and put it in my pocket, like a little secret. I fish a dollar from my pants and leave it at the bottom of the river under a larger rock. An offering to something, an exchange maybe.

    In the morning we find out that Brandon lost his wallet sometime last night. He thinks it was when we stopped for firewood. Everything about this trip depends on his credit cards. Brandon calls the local sheriff and I roll my eyes. The chances of someone finding and returning his wallet seem one in a million. It’s unlikely that we’ll find it either, but we look anyway and discover a twenty dollar bill in the grass near the on-ramp. Taking this as a sign, we spend hours walking up and down the highway, him on one side, me on the other. I keep going across the bridge, hundreds of feet above the river we camped next to. I can see the rocks in the shallow water, they look like grains of sand so far below me now. I don’t want to do this anymore. They look so soft. I take off my hat and hold it over my face and breathe in, deeply. Just the smell of hair makes me think of her. Brandon comes running up the highway, his cellphone in his hand. The sheriff called. Someone found his wallet. One in a million.

     

    Idaho. 

    I’m happy to be in the back seat again. The mountains are incredible and it feels like the earth has opened up. Every road is the edge of a plate, on the edge of a table, and I can’t tell if my hands are shaking or just my heart. We won’t be here long. I remember now, the last time I saw her. We were naked together, on the couch in her new apartment. She was lying on top of me and we were sweaty and sad to see each other again. Then, standing in the doorway, was the man she left me for. 

    “What the fuck is this,” he said. 

    I got up and scurried into the bathroom. I must have taken my clothes because I don’t remember worrying about that, just putting them on monotonously, like I’d done this before. I had done this before, been naked alone in someone else’s house, hiding, while she tried to explain it all away while her lives intersected. Standing alone, embarrassed, frightened, thinking. Thinking now what? I went into the living room and I stood between them. He was still in the doorway, blocking me.

    “I don’t suppose it would make me feel any better to hit you?” he said. 

    I thought about that, thought about my answer. “I don’t know,” I said. “That’s up to you.”

     

    Washington. 

    We’re staying in a hotel that was built in the ‘70s and the gal at the front desk acts like that was a long time ago. I think this is the best bed I’ve ever slept in and I don’t want to leave it. The sheets are thick and cool, the comforter calm and heavy. They lay over me like darkness and I feel so safe. Before we left on this trip, I met someone new. When I get back home, I’m going to go out with her because I’ve decided to open up. I can talk myself into anything. We have a lot in common, but she’s much younger than me and quietly hopeful. Maybe she’s got a past too. Maybe we’ve all got stones in our pockets.

    Jordan Brown

  • little girl we lost two days old

    little girl we lost two days old

    Britton Minor

    Responding to the poem “Annabel Lee” in ninth grade felt urgent, even though I struggled at first to understand its meaning, and had been hesitant to call attention to myself by asking my teacher, “What does sepulchre mean?”

    Familiar. Like a scent on the wind, or a face you can’t forget. 

    “Sepulchre” felt visceral and would eventually stick to my consciousness like a piece of chewed gum smushed against the underbelly of a table. I recognized this word, I just didn’t know why. 

    Tall for my age; tall enough to see inside the casket.

    Inside the funeral home, eight-year-old me is on tip-toe. An alternative memory has me waltzing my bravado right past the white Jesus on the wall and peering inside the raised rectangular box, reacting just as indifferently toward my grandfather’s dead body as I had to his live one. 

    Another recollection (the kind people have when they know themselves pretty well and have done some therapy) reveals a clenched heart and stinging tears pinched back. 

    Puffed, buttoned, cream-colored satin lined the dark wood casket and inside lay a man I only remembered as a quiet, chair-sitting person who always had a whole coconut sitting next to him. He ate his peas with a knife and opened letters vertically. But these are pieces of knowledge, not actual memories. 

    I was young and he was old—he was eighty-two when I was born, and ninety when he died. Too young to know their history, my mother’s and his. I was also too young to know that my sweet, skinny, donut-making grandmother had endured more than her share of an angry man. Forty years of sobriety had not erased the hell my grandfather had put his family through, but neither had it erased, one can only assume, the memories of little girl we lost two days old

    This is where my sympathy lies—in a great stone sepulchre of generational history, memories and feelings—of sadness and forgiveness and love.

     

     nevermore: adverb. At no future time; never again.

    “I order you gone, nevermore to return.”

     

    Pain never works so well—it’s not possible to send it off. Yet Poe’s dark love, the way he painted his feelings onto the page so vividly, allowed me to place my own history of loss into Annabel’s tomb, to feel less alone in a world that had already pulled me close to far too many caskets.

     

    sepulchre: noun. A place of burial, tomb.

    “To lay or bury in or as if in a sepulchre.”

     

    Over a hundred years ago, after the Influenza Epidemic of 1918, my grandmother placed a thin locket of blonde hair, labeled and tied with string, into a small, pink cardboard pill box—a tiny sepulchre, her baby’s memories floating on the sea of her ever-aching heart.

    Britton Minor

  • The Post

    The Post

    Dorian J. Sinnott

    I’ll never forget that post at the far end of the field. It was old and rotted, wood splintered from years of weathering. Father said they used to tie horses to it after the plows returned at dusk. But we never saw any plows, nor any horses. All we saw was the post, and the circle of dirt around it where no grass ever grew.

     

    I was only seven when the Fitch family agreed to take us in. I’ll admit, I was terrified at first. The gray, dreary orphanage had become so homey over the years, and looking back, it was all I had come to know. But for you, I know it was different. You were nearly twice my age, and memories of a world outside the walls were still fresh. You longed for freedom. All of us did. But there was something about the farms and fields that brought fear to my young heart. There were no streetlights around, no cars, no people. It was nothing like our temporary home in the city. On the farms, there was nothing but darkness. Silence.

    On our first night at the Fitch home, I remember that silence. The stillness. There was no laughter from other children, no sirens in the distance. And there was no you. For the last three years, after the caregivers had turned us in for the night, you’d always let me sneak into your bed. But now, for the first time, I was alone.

    Your bedroom was on the opposite end of the farm house, and the lack of light kept me from venturing the halls. The shadows were far thicker than in the city, heavy and foul. Endless. For the first few months, you’d tell me they weren’t anything to be afraid of; that shadows thrived out in the country, no different than flickering office lights in the city. But I was convinced otherwise.

                    There are shadows in the halls, I’d tell you. Ghosts in the walls.

                    Yet the only time you believed me was when I told you, there’s a monster in Father’s heart.

     

    Before we came along, Fitch lived alone. He was a widower, his wife and young son passing from what he claimed was illness years before. He was always so quiet. Sullen. You told me it was grief; that having children in the house again most likely reminded him of his life before, perhaps even of his own son.

    I know you tried. You tried with every bit of your might to comfort him, to please him. But the kindness was never returned.

      Fitch made it clear to us that we were merely coming to live on his farm as extra hands—workers. He said the crops were full in the summer, and by winter, we’d be strong enough to do chores and manual labor. Me, on the other hand, he had time to wait on. And so, for that first summer, from sunrise to sunset, you’d be in the fields. Watching. Learning.

    At first, you didn’t mind the chores. But as soon as autumn began to rear its head on the crest of dying summer, so too did the beast. Fitch’s stone-like exterior grew darker. More gruff. And that’s when the shadows fell heavier on the house than before.

      I noticed only a few bruises at first, hidden under the sleeves of your flannel shirt. But as the weeks went on, they became darker. Deeper. Soon it was more than just on your arms. I spotted them on your back when you undressed in the late evening. And on your cheek. You’d always been the stronger of us—after all, you were the big brother. But I remember the tears. You tried so hard to hide them behind your puffy and irritated eyes. Pain poured out when it couldn’t withstand any longer. And so did heartbreak.

    Even when there were no more crops to tend to as autumn began to fade into dreary winter, Father would have you in the fields. Learning. I’d watch from the frost covered windows. He’d stand over you, barking orders, having you dig. The frozen earth wouldn’t budge as easy as it had in the summer, and your cracked and blistered hands trembled with every attempt you made. 

    You had no coat; only your thinly worn out flannel shirt was left to cover you as you drove the shovel harder to the ground. I could see the tears pricking at your eyes again, even from behind the glass. With every failed attempt, Father only got more impatient. Angrier. I shielded my eyes when his demands became louder, and he grabbed your shoulders.

     

    One night I managed the courage to slip into your room. Through the shadows and past the door to Father’s room. We knew he was usually fast asleep once the last light of day had vanished. A bottle of gin usually helped with that. I remember sitting at the foot of your bed that night, watching you with weary eyes. I wanted nothing more than to be away from the farm. To be back in the bleak orphanage.

    “It’s not Father’s fault, Freddie.” Your words were soft. “I know he’s sad. He drinks. It’s not his fault. I… I just need to work harder.”

    “But there are shadows,” I’d say again. “Shadows in the halls. Ghosts in the walls… And there’s a monster—”

                    “I know,” you’d say. “A monster in Father’s heart.”

                    You shifted under the covers, wincing from the marks left behind by your lessons. With a sigh, you glanced back at me before ushering me to my room.

    “It’s called grief. That monster. He misses his wife. His son…”

                 I stopped in the doorway. “Bill… is he ever going to actually adopt us?”

    “Next summer, maybe. If we work hard.”

     

    Every day as autumn faded, you were back outside digging. I’d grown tired of watching from the window. I knew the routine well. It was always the same: you’d struggle with the shovel, barely breaking the frozen dirt beneath you. Then the words would begin, and the shouting, and the lashing. 

    It took until the first week of December for you to dig the hole as wide and deep as Father wanted it.

    For a few days after that, the chores stopped. Father retired to his room and only made himself known for dinner. We spent the days together like we used to, playing board games and laughing over old memories. That was the first I’d seen you smile in months.

    But your smile vanished just as quickly as it returned. You came to my room one afternoon, pale, with a look of dread on your face. I remember asking what was wrong. Are you sick? You told me we needed to leave. Back to the orphanage—anywhere.

    I didn’t ask why. I didn’t get a chance to. You tossed a box of photos on my bed, silent. When I asked where you found them, all you could muster was, “wall”. 

    Ghosts

    I fingered through the photos, carefully taking note of their contents. Children. So many children. About your age. All the photos weren’t on the farm, however. They were photos taken at various orphanages and children’s homes. All children taken in for “work”. But what caught my attention was the fact that they all had been crossed out. Thick, black marker struck across their faces. As if they were unworthy, and must be forgotten.

    “W-where are…?”

    I didn’t know how to finish my sentence. Even at a young age, I knew very well what was going on. It was then my fingers stopped on the final photograph. The photo of Fitch’s wife and young son. The marks were old, but the ink was still dark and thick across their faces. Thicker than any of the others.

    You wasted no time in gathering a few items in a knapsack, then waiting for dusk. At first, you told me to stay and wait, that you’d be back with help. But I begged to go with you. I pleaded. When you finally gave in and agreed to let me come along, your plans were foiled.

    Father stood in the doorway, having overheard everything you proposed. His eyes were red and irritated, most likely from drinking, and his tone was deep. He called you an ingrate for wanting to run away, after all he had done for you. For us. How we were never going to be worthy of being his children. How no one had ever been worthy of being his children.

    He dragged you outside through the cold night air. He shoved you to the ground before the hole you dug and threw the shovel beside you.

    “Dig.” Was all he said. “You keep digging until I say you can stop.”

    And so you did. You dug harder and deeper than ever before. Your calloused hands split open, staining the shovel in a sticky red. But you never stopped. Not until Father watched the sun rise over the fields. And then, he stepped in and yanked the shovel away. I couldn’t hear what he said through the tightly shut windows, but he stared at you—so closely—and I saw you flinch.

    Once again, I watched as he dragged you, further into the fields. To the post.

    Father always told us to never play near the post. He said it wasn’t safe, that the ground there was weak and we might fall through. He said, that’s why the grass never grew around it. Weak spots.

    There were tears rolling down your cheeks as you begged him to forgive you. Yet, Father didn’t listen. Using the thick leather reins from a horse the farm no longer had, he bound your hands to the post. You squirmed and pleaded, wrists burning as the tight binds dug deeper into your skin with each movement you made. Your blood smeared against the wood—and for the first time, you noticed that yours wasn’t the only one. The post was more than just withered and splinted. It was stained in blood. Through the cracks, old and soiled.

    After Father took you to the post, I never saw you again.

    He told me that you were to stay out there all day, all night, as punishment. That this was the only way you’d learn your lesson. That you’d be strong. Strong for next summer. He told me you would be untied when morning came, and so I waited. I watched out my bedroom window, until the darkness flooded the fields, and there was nothing but blackness to stare back at me.

    At dawn, you were gone. The leather reins had been removed, and you were nowhere to be found. Father was up early, making coffee, mixing it with his gin. He didn’t speak a word to me, and his expression was stoic. I went into the fields that morning, hoping that you had escaped in the night; that you had cut the reins free and gone to get help like you promised. But in the chill of the winter air, I felt the sting of solitude. I knew you weren’t coming back.

    Father joined me outside not too long after that, with a wooden post in hand. He carried it over to where you dug the hole the night before—only now, it was filled back in. He secured the post into the dirt, and then hammered it down, deep, with the shovel. When he finished, he wiped his brow, and looked at me for only a moment.

    “Don’t play near the post, my boy,” he said. “The ground’s weak. You might fall through. Couple years’ time, I bet the grass won’t be growing.”

    At nightfall, I waited for Father to fall asleep before taking my knapsack and leaving the house. The shadows and darkness were thick as I crossed the field, careful not to tread near the posts, in case the soil dragged me under. I must have been silent, or Father under a heavy gin-induced sleep. He never woke, and he never looked for me.

    I traveled as far as I could before I was picked up by an older couple. They told me I looked as though I’d seen the devil. At this point, I’m not sure I hadn’t. 

    It’s been almost twenty years, and I’ve moved back to the city now. I’ve always felt comfort in those lights and sounds. The shadows are few and far between. 

    I’d read in the papers some time back that children had gone missing near an old farm. Something about them being found buried in mass graves. I tried not to think of it. But still, sometimes I stay up late thinking about you. About the cold air that night. About the shadows, the ghosts, and the monster. And I still think about the farm. Graves. About Fitch. But, more than anything, about that post. The one at the far end of the field, old and splintered. The one where the grass around it never grew.

    Dorian J. Sinnott

  • Windows of Stone

    Windows of Stone

    Birdy Odell

    We visited the old stone house on a sunny day at the end of autumn.  The weeds had grown long in what was left of the yard and my skirt swished through the stalks catching now and then on burrs and thistles.  I was wearing an authentic skirt from 1905, fitting for the film we were about to shoot.  

    My daughter was about 14 months old.  We were there to re-enact the story of the house.

    From the highway, the house had looked beautiful and solid in the morning light but as we got closer it was apparent that all that was left was a shell.  The door frames were rotted and peeling, the wooden floors thick with dirt and remnants of cobwebs hung from the rafters like lace. All of the windows were broken or missing.   All except the windows on the south side. Those had all been filled in with stone, for good reason.  

    The story went that the house was once owned by a young family.  They were new to the area and excited to put down roots. The kitchen window looked out over the train tracks.  The woman liked to look at the train rushing by. Perhaps she dreamed of climbing aboard and going on an adventure.  Her husband was only too happy to oblige her. They had a young daughter just over a year and a half old and life was good.  

    One day the young mother was rinsing linens in a washbasin just outside the back door.  Her little daughter was contentedly trying to ‘help’ by shelling peas. A difficult task for tiny fingers.  But she was determined. “I’ll be right back,” said the woman, and she went inside to leave the basket on the counter.  She’d hang the linens to dry on the clothes horse when the little girl went down for her nap.

    The woman felt the rumble of the train in the floorboards beneath her feet.  She’d pick up the baby and go to wave at the engineer. Or if it was a passenger train, to all of the travellers on their way to the city.  She was about to step back outside when something caught her eye. A flash of white. Likely a bird but she glanced out the window to be sure, hoping it wasn’t a deer or some other poor creature caught on the train tracks.

    What she saw was a horror she would never forget.  A jagged scream tore itself from her throat. The baby was on the tracks toddling in front of the rushing locomotive, her white dress standing out in the sun. She was smiling, unaware of the beast huffing behind her, bellowing steam and about to devour her whole. That was the last time the young mother saw her baby girl alive.   

    She couldn’t bear to look out the windows after that.  ‘Never again,’ she told her husband. He covered the windows on that side of the house one stone at a time.   

    We were there to re-live those moments.  The tracks were no longer in use. But as I stood in the derelict house in my antique skirt, pretending to hold a basket of linen and watched my baby girl totter down the tracks,  I felt sick to my stomach. She was never in danger. Her father was right beside her, just outside camera range, but the story had become all too real. As soon as they had the shot I snatched my baby up and clung to her.  Two mothers, two daughters, separated by time with only the love for our babies in common. 

    We went to a cemetery afterward to film the scene of the mother at her daughter’s grave.  I wandered through the rows until I found a child’s headstone. I knelt in front of it and the tears flowed easily.  I wondered if time had played one of her cruel tricks and if the tears I was crying were even my own or that of a young mother who never recovered.   

    I never saw the film.  A copy was promised to me but never appeared.  It’s just as well. 

    The house still stands, and where the light shone through, there is nothing but stones.

    Birdy Odell

  • Silhouette

    Silhouette

    Larissa Reid

    It had been years since she’d been in the woods in midwinter. She arrived late one afternoon, long after any walkers had gone home. She moved as quietly as she could over the ground, placing her feet carefully so as not to disturb the stillness with the snap of twigs. Her toes were cold, close to numb. Her cropped dark hair melted into the shadows in between the trees, leaving her pale face stark against the backdrop.

    The trees were short and not too tightly packed together. Their growth had been manipulated over centuries by the prevailing winds along the coast. Their limbs brushed against her as she diverted from the main path, moving deliberately through the oakwood.  

    At the burn, she stopped. The sound of the water was muffled, enclosed beneath a thin coating of ice. Bubbled air-locks created patterns across the frozen surface. A flicker at the corner of her eye made her turn her head, and she watched as a black and white wagtail hopped across the stones a few yards upstream. 

    Concentrate, she told herself firmly, picking a route across the water. She placed one foot onto the first stepping stone, which was covered in jagged pins of ice. Something glittered just out of reach, caught underneath in the middle of the burn. She hesitated on the edge of the bank for a moment, her fingers involuntarily moving, itching to pick at the ice and release its treasure. But this was a moment’s weakness, and it vanished as quickly as it came. She moved on, stepping lightly on the stones to cross the stream.    

    She rubbed her hand across her mouth, removing the last traces of red from her lips. Now that her hands were cold, she suddenly found herself missing the feel of another’s in her own. This was not the first time she’d admitted to feeling a little more for him than she first expected.

    She thought she planned it all perfectly. It was never meant to be anything more than a trap, the perfect seduction. 

    A pink dusk was falling as she climbed upstream towards the old mining path. Here, the ground was well-trodden – folk must have passed by here only recently, she thought, as she placed her own feet into far larger boot prints. It was strangely satisfying to destroy the perfect imprints of boot soles with her own feet, pressing down the regular battlements of mud with each step. She slowed her pace as she rounded the next bend, holding her breath. Familiar though it all was, she wasn’t quite sure what she might find ahead of her after so many years of neglect. 

    When she first came here it was the height of summer. A thick, hazy afternoon, buzzing with insects and full of bird chatter and the rustle of small creatures. She remembered the feel of warm, soft grass between her toes as he urged her off the path, ducking under branches and pressing through the patches of ferns that had sprouted up in the forest clearings. 

    He seemed reluctant in his task, nudging her gently onward rather than pushing. She could turn on the charm, of course, she knew that. But it seemed pointless – it wasn’t like he could do her any real harm, not here. 

    The vibrant green of the forest was all-consuming; every shade, every shadow took on a deep green tinge, shimmering in a heat haze as though they were underwater. Sunlight broke through in places. She had hoped to stumble across a sunbathing adder – she knew he had a fear of snakes and it might have given her a chance to vanish into the woods she knew would protect her. 

    Instead, she turned to him and smiled. 

    Her attempt to disarm him failed, she saw that in an instant. There was simply no need to try and change his mind – he’d done that himself already. As he gazed at her with soft, pathetic eyes, a ripple of pleasure shot through her. The sheer satisfaction of being able to manipulate at will, the simple delight of seeing someone – male or female – reduced to putty in her hands. It gave her a thrill like no other.

    She thought for a moment that she might offer herself to him – not in gratitude, of course, but rather to ensure he would never tell the truth when he returned. But something about his thick, hairy upper lip made her squeamish, and sweet though he was, she figured she’d caught enough of him in the net already – no need to subject herself to something unpleasant if there was no need. 

    In hindsight, she thought she played the innocent schoolgirl rather well. She handed him the wild rose she’d been twisting round her fingers as they walked, and placed a firm but sweet kiss on his neck. Then she turned and ran, a flash of yellow skirts disappearing into green, black hair melding with the shadows. 

    That was before. Before everything changed, and summer sunlight faded into memory. Now she wasn’t a day older, but she considered herself at least a little wiser.

    Looking up, she stopped. The corner of the cottage had come into sight, nestled in the curve of the path. It was utterly derelict, chimney stacks pulled down to rubble under the weight of tangled ivy. The weak evening light played tricks on her, reducing what she could see to two-dimensions, a series of flat outlined images on paper. The trees, in silhouette, appeared cut from black card and stuck down on the surface of the sky, the house taken from the pages of an old book. 

    She stood, ever alert. Nothing moved.  

    Her toes ached with the cold. She replayed the events of the afternoon once more in her mind, fire and flame warming her, his skin against hers. As she walked up to the cottage doorway all their voices floated in on her memory, each one easily distinguished without her needing to see their faces. Dead for many years, yet still clinging to her return. They knew she was here. The broken slats on the front door were splintering in the elements. Her hand reached out, careful to push without hurting herself. 

    Among the fallen leaves, evergreen ivy, and wrought-iron bed frames, she found what she was looking for. Lifting it she was once again surprised at its weight. The glass was hazy, its frame pitted with rust marks, and a large diagonal crack ran across it from top to bottom. It didn’t matter—she couldn’t see herself in it, anyway. She carried it carefully across the room, stepping over gaps in the rotting floorboards to set it gently on its hook on the wall where it belonged. 

    Before she spoke, she took the lipstick from her cloak pocket and reapplied it. She fished out her comb and tugged it through her hair, smoothing out the curls that were stubbornly returning in the cold air. 

    He told her what she wanted to hear. Satisfied, she blew him a kiss before heading back out into the dark, revelling in the latest pleasure he had given her. Ready to begin again.

    Larissa Reid

  • Dangers of the Trade

    Dangers of the Trade

    Mitchell G. Roshannon

    For many years now I have made my living creating joy from thin air, at a carousel. Giggling children grin at their mothers while traveling in circles on horseback. This may be the only time any of them set foot on a stirrup or saddle. 

    I have often wondered if there is something horrifically magical about all carousels, or if it is only this one. It’s an old carousel, horses carved in the 19th century entombed inside a protective building with a long sloping ceiling. Supportive bars push upwards towards a spade-like decorative hanger that encompasses the contrived internal structure. It’s much like standing underneath a spider. 

    During its day, the carousel was much to behold. “The last beating heart of an era,” it was called, beautiful and awe-inspiring with brass furnishings that sparkled in the sunlight, bright colors spun pleasantly. When the sunset and the brightly colored bulbs were all extinguished for the night, the darkness of the carousel allowed a different view. The horses’ eyes followed me and their mouths seemed to scream in pain, the reigns pulled too tightly. The carvings seemed almost sinister. That scene followed me to my dreams. 

    I dreamt of watching the carousel from across a covered bridge. The carousel was ablaze, spinning, and the screeching whinnies of hooved creatures echoed, the silhouettes licked by oranges, yellows, and blues. Some of them itched slightly and changed in position as if they were trying to escape. But they were still wood, their hooves still nailed to the floor for children’s pleasure. Children could be heard giggling, dreaded giggling at the pain of other living things for their own amusement. 

    The dark side of joy, I thought to myself. I meant to say out loud but in this world, my lips wouldn’t move, they were forced silent. I was meant to watch, not participate. The horses quickly turned to ash and a heart murmured, stuttered, and stopped. 

    I awoke. Drenched in sweat, I checked my surroundings and listened closely for whinnying. I heard nothing but the normal ticking of the clock on the wall of my small loft, placed near my bed to lull me to sleep. I remained up, drinking tea and listening to the Victrola until dawn. 

    “Just comes with the trade,” I said to the rising sun. I continued onto another day at the grandest of rides, the carousel.

    Mitchell G. Roshannon

  • Honey of Andromeda

    Honey of Andromeda

    Jieyan Wang

    Even though the sun had not risen over the horizon yet, the sky decided to stop raining. I once read somewhere that dawn was supposed to scare the clouds away, but it seemed that the water was determined to continue clinging to the air. I tasted the moistness on my tongue as I sat up in my bed. It was as bitter as cinders.

    Up until I was eleven years old, my mother woke up before the bees did and gathered the dandelion flowers in the field to make a bouquet to put in the center of the dining table. The fluffed-out yellow of the petals glowed countered the closed darkness of nighttime. She was the type of person that thought of life as a teeter-totter—always in need of balance.

    Then my mother grew old and needed to sleep. She told me to wade through the grass to find the dandelions before the honeybees rose to drain their life-giving nectar out. As I stepped out in my flip-flops, feeling the wet grass between my toes, the hives’ low buzz rang through the fields. Here was something that I liked about the bee farm: even while unconscious, it filled the world with dreams.

    I plucked the dandelions from the ground one by one. I looked up at the sky and saw the stars with their chilling lights. It seemed to me now that the universe was the same as that night when my twin brother, Eli, crawled through my window, pointing his finger out and upwards. Time had not passed since the day that the women brought me into the room with his corpse and told me, “Weep. He was half of your heart.” And my cheeks sagged with sogginess.

    A damp breeze brushed past me, and I thought that my face was filled with water again. I clasped a full bouquet between my hands. The blossoms overflowed between my fingers. The sun began to peek over the horizon. The buzzing grew louder, vibrating in my bones.

    While I walked back, perhaps I should have kept my mind clear. Maybe I shouldn’t have lost myself in the water. Because when I stepped through the door, my mother was awake even though Dan, my little brother, was still snoring. She had a scrunched-up look on her face that said that she was going into town. I said with a laugh, “Are you getting tired of this old place?”

    Which turned out to be the wrong thing to say because I had forgotten that my mother and I had to visit our fertilizer supplier every three months to bargain for our next order. She needed me by her side, a young one who was savvy in modern-day society.

    It might’ve been the feeling of betrayal that welled up inside of me, but my rebelliousness exploded. I told her that Dan and I would stay. She looked at me as though I were crazy and asked whether I cared about our honey or not. I asked if she thought that she was too incompetent to manage the supplier herself, or worse: if she thought that her daughter was too immature to take care of the house for the day. And this was what punched us. The truth was that I was too immature for her. Since I was born, I was too prone to getting lost in myself. I held onto things that I should’ve moved on from and cried even when I didn’t need to. I was not a perfectly balanced teeter-totter. I thought about Eli every morning when I went to pick out the dandelions and my mother never noticed. She moved on. She didn’t think about these things anymore. She drove forward in life.
    ***
    My mother knew my stubbornness well enough that she didn’t attempt to persuade me to go to town. Or maybe she just chalked it all up to teenage hormones. She kissed my hair and promised me that she would be back by tomorrow. Then she left, trusting me to take care of Dan. There wasn’t anything to worry about—I’d been home alone with him many times before, but right then I wondered if she’d given up on the both of us. If she’d thrown up her hands and said fine, these are the type of children that I have.

    Outside, the sun gave the sky a soft golden tint; the world was growing bold. Then I heard a muted crying and knew that Dan had woken up. He was crying because the summer daybreak had shaken him awake before he was ready.

    I cradled him even though by now he was too big to be cradled. I sometimes forgot that children could grow. Children were like plants: they were once a mere seed. This might’ve been an idea that Eli would have enjoyed, but for now, I tried not to think of him. It only made things worse. I leafed my hand through Dan’s tufts of chestnut hair and promised him that I would make him pancakes even though I was in no mood to make anything at all.

    The pancakes that I made for Dan were undercooked, but he didn’t notice because I had slathered a generous coating of butter on them. While we ate, I read him Goodnight Moon, which did not turn out well since he reminded me that he only liked to listen to stories before bedtime. I closed the book, my hands sweating slightly while saying of course. He looked at me with those startling brown eyes of his, and I could feel him judging me. I swallowed and asked if he would like to collect honey with me. Would that make him feel better? He agreed and we went outside.

    We put on our beekeeper clothes, heavy white suits mesh to veil our faces. Sweat trickled down my spine. The grass was no longer wet but aridly verdant. Honeybees, with their flashily yellow-and-black bodies, littered the flowers. On the way, Dan kept asking me questions. Where is Mother? What day is it today? Why is the sky blue? To which I answered to the best of my ability: Your mother is in town. It’s Saturday, the day when everybody should be sleeping, including you. The sky is blue because it’s a bastard that doesn’t want to be any other color.
    It did not take long for us to reach the hives. They were in wooden boxes, fitted perfectly into flat panels. I lifted off one lid. Immediately, the buzzing filled my skull. The swarm crowded the inside, crawling over each other. All of the bursting chaos contained within the perfect order of the hexagonal combs. I reached down with my gloved hand and pulled out one of the panels.

    The honey trickled out of the comb and into the bucket that I made Dan hold for me. It was thick and milky, resilient in the blazing sun. When it was empty, I put the panel back. I saw the largest bee—the queen staring at me. They always watched their subjects.

    Dan followed me as we moved from hive to hive. He asked questions, but I didn’t remember my answers to them. Twice he said that his arms were too tired to carried the bucket. That should’ve been a sign that we had been outside for too many hours. That and the unbearable heat beneath my suit. But we kept going. Everything became a blur of wings and suns and queens. I looked down at the hive and thought of all of the honey as a never-ending ocean of molten sugar. It pulsated around me, coating my throat. All of it, the world, was drowning. The earth was but an inconsequential insect, and the last thing I saw was a plump, omniscient queen staring at me with her bottomless eyes before my mind went black itself.
    ***
    The air was so, so vast. It was cold and it was quivering from the might of its own heart. Its blood was woven from apricots and ashes. I drank it all in. It burned my tongue.
    ***
    Some time later, I opened my eyes and found a little boy looking at me. He was fair and skinny. He patted my cheek, calling, Are you okay? His voice reverberated through the smoke.

    I tried to stand up, but the world was spinning too fast. All I knew was that there was a searing pain splitting my stomach. Bees wriggled all over me. I was a sack of nectar.

    The boy held the bucket of honey over my head. Then he screamed, Lily! I didn’t realize that I had forgotten my own name until he said it. He asked me if he should call the doctor. I said that I was fine. I just needed to go home.

    I leaned onto him as we treaded back. Before we went inside, he had to remind me to swat off all the bees before going inside. Right, I said, Thank you for the memo, darling. I had never called him darling. His name escaped me.

    I sat down and drank water. It was useless because I began to cry. Rivers poured through my eyes. The boy attempted to calm me by putting ice on my neck. It froze my skin.

    Eventually, I stopped crying and the world stopped wobbling. Dan’s name drifted back to me. I told him not to worry because all I had was a heat stroke, which was true. He listed his head with the kind of skepticism you only see in an adult who truly understand what is going on. Right. Because Dan wasn’t that young anymore. He had grown to my shoulder height.

    I ordered Dan to bring me the pot. Dutifully, he retrieved it, and despite the bulging feeling in my forehead, I poured the honey in and stirred. It was only then that I understood the significance of the amount of time we had left before our mother came home. When I was still in middle school, I sat on our porch and watched the seasons go from spring to winter. I inhaled the pollen of March and the snowflakes of December. Now I wondered how I managed to do that without crushing my spine.

    When all of the honey was portioned into jars, Eli visited me. I knew that I shouldn’t let him in. My mother had trained me against that. But he swam through the cloudy sugar. I knew what he thought of it—it was the Milky Way, filled with millions of stars. We used to lie in the fields at night and count the lights as if they were wishes. He had a book in his lap, one that told him about the monstrosity that was the universe. The two of us were a peculiar pair. I, a farm girl. He, an astronomer. The night that he sat on the windowsill telling me that there was a comet rushing through the heavens, his green eyes startled me enough that I thought he was a wolf. Which made us run even faster down the stairway to catch the glorious meteor. Now, as I looked into the deepening twilight through the window, I was the same person who heard a thump behind her and found her brother face down, head cracked and still gripping the railing.

    I now approached the window and pressed my face against it, gazing up. Eli was the one of us who could fly. We were one heart split into two at birth. He taught me how to dream. How to see beyond the farm and into the macrocosm. In a fit of rage, I thought, Dan. You could never replace Eli. It’s your fault that you are not Eli.

    I’m sorry, Dan, for not being a good sister to you.
    ***
    I woke. I didn’t remember much about what had happened before I fell asleep except that I had tried to read Dan Goodnight Moon again but my head was too scrambled for the words to make sense. The boy’s head was under my arm. I tried to shove my love for him into the spot where he clutched my wrist.

    The first rays of sunlight peeked out. There was something whimsical about them, the way that they flowed over the fields with their high-flying rosiness. I crept down the hallway to the dining room, where the dandelions from yesterday sat. In all the confusion, I lost track of them and now they appeared, staring at me with their fiery eyes.
    Slowly, I slipped on my beekeeping suit to venture out. There was the buzzing again. Only this time there wasn’t the humidity. The boxes where the bees lived were chambers of mystery. They were alive in the face of death.

    I lifted the top off the closest one. Inside was the honeycomb universe. The eternal dripping waxes swirled into colossal galaxies that soared through spacetime. All of the little cells brimming full with possibility. The indifference of the colony as they became asteroids diving in and out of emptiness. And lastly, the queen. The grand overseer. She looked up. I inhaled.

    I asked her, Is it lonely, being the ruler of the macrocosm? She replied, I see you’ve come a long way, child. Your way of asking questions is the same direction in which the cosmos spins around itself. I said, Will you be kind to Earth? Will you be kind to us? She did not answer. Instead, she stared, daring me to answer the question myself.

    Before I opened my mouth, the sun rolled over the edge of the field. The dandelions! I had to get them before it was too late! I put the lid back, shutting the queen into her universe. I scrambled on the ground to grab whatever dandelions I could, dirt and roots and all. Several bees landed on me. I ran towards the house.

    My mother was in the dining room. Her hair was greasy. Her tired hand lay on the old dandelions from yesterday. She told me that she had just made it back from town and everything with the supplier was fine. But then she paused and looked at me from head to toe.

    I knew that she was in awe with me. Bees looped around my head in a halo. I stood with a handful of dandelions, offering them to my mother like a religious sacrifice. Energy rushed through me. The queen gave me the power to defy gravity. I was the Princess of Chaos. And now, as my mother scolded me for bringing the bees into the house, I realized that she was the essence of the constellations. The lumbering heart that fed all the voids in everything and anything that was in existence. Her face was elemental, something close to fear itself.

    Dan called for our mother from down the hall, and I pierced the air with my invincible call. I was in flight. I was unchained. Thank you, Eli, for telling me who I am.

    Jieyan Wang

  • he felt infinite

    he felt infinite

    Anushka Bidani

    His eyes were squinting with concentration, fingers firm, upper torso stoic; as he tried to make his tongue and nose kiss. “But alas! some things are not supposed to ever meet,” his sister cried, as he huffed and panted with a lack of air. He was breathless; he felt alive. The clouds were waving at him, the waves running towards him; he felt infinite, like he could stretch his arm up and taste the stuffing of the cloud- the best in the market, he presumed, but he couldn’t understand why, “Why can’t the waves run towards the clouds, instead of me?” She giggled, her lips spilling music playing symphonies on this dry, summer day, “I told you, kid: some things are never supposed to meet.”

    But he felt infinite, even if his tongue could never taste the flesh of his nose, he felt infinite, like no matter how much he stretched towards the Sun, or no matter how many sandcastles tumbled and settled in the hollows of his feet; he would always have more to fill.

    He felt infinite, and magic was created as dried up logs crackled flames and old flames downed cold beers and rumbled with tales of ages past.

    Time is not infinite, but he could be.

    Anushka Bidani

  • Phoenix

    Phoenix

    Lisa Lerma Weber

    When I was thirteen, I played a game with my cousins as we sat around a campfire, the waters of the Gulf of California lapping at the sleepy shore. Our parents had gone for beers at the closest bar, leaving the older boys in charge. I don’t know whose idea it was, but we decided to light matches, then put them out on the delicate skin of our inner arms and pale thighs. The point was to see who was toughest, who could put out more matches without wincing or crying.

    I don’t remember if we crowned a winner, just that it wasn’t a challenge to me. Sure, there was a split second of pain, but it was nothing. Nothing like the pain of hearing my parents heated arguments or watching them burn the bridges to each other’s hearts. Nothing like the pain of discovering violence was an inheritance in my family, that it seared the pages of our history. Nothing like the pain of loneliness I so often felt, an ember carried away on the breeze, searching for a forest to burn but quickly distinguished.

    Fast forward five years and I played a similar game. Only this time, it was cigarettes. The pain lasted longer and left angry red blisters on my forearms. Again, it wasn’t much of a challenge for me. One of the guys I played with later regretted having played. He said it was stupid and he couldn’t understand what compelled us to do it. Maybe it was the beer. Maybe it was the boredom that permeated the air in that god-forsaken desert town. Maybe it was all the questions burning inside me. Why did I scar myself? Why did I feel the need to prove my strength? And who was I proving it to? Everyone else? Or myself?

    They say everyone has a devil inside. And I wondered if mine looked for ways to make itself known. Or if maybe I wanted to release it, to be free of its scorching punishment. Or maybe it wasn’t my demons, but just me punishing myself.

    Now I am older and I know my strength—and my weaknesses. I know that like the phoenix, I have risen from the ashes of the lost soul that I was. I won’t deny that I still feel the need to prove my strength. I won’t deny that I still fight the urge to punish myself. But now, I can stare into a fire, watch the flames dance, and not want to join them.

    I still have a fire inside. But it burns with passion. It burns for my husband and son. It burns for the people who will read these words and find some measure of hope. It burns for everyone searching for some warmth in this cold world.

    I still have a fire inside. But I also know the cooling waters of love. And so I rise.

    Lisa Lerma Weber

  • Remember to Drink Water

    Remember to Drink Water

    Lynne Schmidt

    I’m sad to say I can’t remember the first time I met him. I’m possibly more saddened to admit I was disappointed the second time I met him. But by the end of the second time, I can say I was sad to see him go.

    So the third time I knew I’d see him, I sit in a summer camping chair under a screened canopy and watch the road like a lover waiting for a letter from the mailman. I worry I may not remember him again.

    I’ve only seen him in the winter, not the summer heat and sun. But then a boy in a dark t-shirt emerges from a car with a baseball cap on, and my heart jumps into my throat with the force of a sprinter. I know him the second I see him.

    Though there are people all around me, I rise from my seat, step down from the platform my chair is on, exit the gate. I take two steps, each one makes my smile more uncontrollable, like my face could actually split in two. My walk bursts to slightly jogging and throwing myself into his opened arms with the speed an accuracy of a football player. Most guys fall over when I do this. He doesn’t.

    “Hi!” I say when he puts me back on my feet.

    He smiles. “Hi.”

    “I only know one other person here beside Mat and Becky. So I might latch onto you. This is your warning.”

    We walk back to the party together. I’ve already had a beer before he arrived. As we walk in, a guy in a blue polo who’d given me the first beer offers me another. As he tries to talk to me, I glance as my friend sits down.

    Be careful, he mouths. I can’t usually read people’s lips, but he made sure I see him.

    I reply with a questioning look, but he’s already turned away. In response, I take the beer from Blue Polo, thank him, and head toward my friend.

    “What was that warning for?” I ask.

    “I don’t know him. I don’t have a lot of respect for guys who just feed girls drinks,” he says.

    I take a sip, processing his words. Blown away by the simplicity, the protectiveness. I haven’t eaten much. This is my second beer. I’m a lightweight. “Thanks,” I say.

    For a few moments longer, it’s just the two of us. “You have a spider on you,” I say.

    His body stiffens. “Kill it. Get it off me!” The panic in his voice is unmistakable.

    I give him a look, cup my hands around the little resident, and place the spider on the wooden fence before making my way back. “Scared of spiders?”

    He points to his nose. “Only since one took a small piece.”

    I look close. Sure enough, there is a small crater on one of his nostrils. I chuckle. “Well, you’re safe now.”

    His friends surround him. I expect to fade into the background like I do with most of my friends and all of my family. Instead, side conversations were started; with a red-haired woman about snowboarding, a tall man with a tongue ring about my gloves being his paintball team’s colors.

    I finish my beer.

    “You should drink water,” he says quietly under the volume of the other conversations.

    Instead, I get up to pee and my head is spinning. He’s right. I need water.

    Near my return, he brings up water again. Then says, “How much have you eaten?”

    I smile the way fucked up girls do, I tell him, “I’m fine.”

    We convince his friend to make me a hot dog. He has me drink another bottle of water.

    An older gentleman I don’t recognize interrupts us. “What you’ve been doing the last hour? That’s marriage,” he says.

    We make eye contact. I stop moving, desperate for his response. He shrugs, still watching me. “It’s not so bad,” he says with an easy smile.

    I smile and look away before he can see how hot my face is.

    He’s here. I’m drunk. People are friendly. I try to give him space and socialize with people I don’t know. One gets an electric fly swatter. I convince this person to touch it until it shocks him. He jokingly swings it at me. I run to my friend, who’s standing with an older couple.

    Without a word, and without asking permission, I link my arm through his. He doesn’t stop the conversation he’s having, but looks sideways at me. He doesn’t move away, doesn’t change his body at all, so I continue holding on. We stand like that, and I nudge him though he’s clearly in the middle of talking. At an appropriate time, he tilts his head toward me so only he can hear me. These small side conversations are as though we’ve created our own little world, and I want to live here orbiting his galaxy.

    “They were trying to electrocute me. I save you from spiders, you save me from creepy guys.”

    He nods with a small smile and resumes the conversation without missing a beat. I’ve held on to him long enough. My arm slips back through his and rests at my side.

    “You need to eat,” I whisper in a tone mocking his earlier suggestion.

    “I’m fine.”

    “No. You made me eat. You eat, and get me a beer.”

    I bounce around the party awhile before returning to him. Eventually, he eats a hot dog and hands me a beer. If it weren’t for him, I’d be hammered right now. Instead, I’m buzzed and happy.

    I stand beside him, like I’m welcome or I belong there. Somehow, whether it’s gravity or magic, I stand too close and my leg rests against his. Instinct tells me to pull away, but something else dares me to stay. I stay. So does he.

    One second goes by, then another. Heat flashes through my body. I press my leg a little harder against his to tell him I notice, to allow him to move away from me. Instead, he reciprocates the gesture, pressing back into me.

    Did he just push back? Did I imagine this?

    To test this, I relax the tension in my leg and begin to separate. If I’m not mistaken, his weight shifts. His leg follows mine. My heart threatens to burst out of my chest and into his hands.

    Every cell in my body is daring me to move closer. To see what else, where else, I’m allowed to push against.

    “Are you two dating?” the woman in the couple asks.

    The moment, our legs touching, rips away like shattered glass. We chuckle. He answers, “No.” The tone in his voice suggests this isn’t the first time someone has asked today.

    I want to kiss him. I notice how tall he stands beside me. The small piece missing from his nose, the tiny imperfection in his teeth.

    I want to kiss him.

    He glances at me from the side. How often has he been watching me today?

    I take my beer, thank him again, and venture off again.

    It’s closer to nighttime. Most everyone has left. I’ve somehow managed to piss the future bride’s best friend off but I’m not 100% sure how I managed to do that.

    He gets ready to leave. He’s called me a bitch, jokingly. I’ve spit water at his face and he laughed. This could be everything I’ve ever wanted and I don’t want him to leave.

    We make plans for the morning. He wraps me in his arms and before I’m ready lets me go, gets in his car and drives away.

    I go inside and I curl up alone on a loveseat. I don’t sleep. My knees hurt, a boy I barely know is on the human-sized couch. It’s too hot.

    So I fixate on the moment where my leg was pressed against his.

    He runs his fingers through my hair and pushes his lips against mine. He holds my hand.

    He….
    He….
    He….

    And I fall asleep with his invisible hands touching me.

    Lynne Schmidt