Category: Fiction

Late Season

By Mark Wagstaff

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Earlier

Monday is fine to get a new job. To start over. Each day he filled applications. Life could be worse. He had somewhere to stay, it had a big view. Twenty-third floor, sweet view of the city. The business zones and tourist gyps, pocket-sized.

Warm for September, strength in the hazy sun. Crafting statements of suitability and refreshing his resume, he gazed between multiplied windows, across rail yards of long, grey wagons, to where the city burst like an emergency through the flat land. On the twenty-third floor, among gliding gulls.

Between the towers and the city, a fortified, rectangular block intrigued him. Too squat and fierce for apartments, a slab of layered windows and fussy turrets. A prison, floating alone on bare real estate.…

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Magic

By Edward Voeller

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Magic shoved his back-pack and carry-on onto the back seat of my idling Corolla, slammed the door shut, and jumped in beside me in the front—one fell swoop.

“Good to see you,” I said, and turned to face the stream of traffic passing on my side of the car. I’d stole only a quick look at Magic when he hopped in next to me. Jet-lagged face. No smile. A bit dejected maybe after having left his ancestorial homeland. But clean shaven now, and without the long hair and samurai-bun that he had when I dropped him at the airport ten days before. I was focused on the traffic out, watching to my left for an opportunity to slip into the steady parade of cars on the roadway leaving the airport terminal.…

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Compartments

By Lisa DellaPorta

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Memory foam never forgets. Sheets get washed, then wicked smooth by billowing backyard winds. But the indentations, the curves of a known, supine body, they never quite fade. Cleaning out Gran’s house, I was struck by the remnants of her shape in her newly vacated bed. Here she had lain for so many years, unable to make it down the stairs more than once a day, never venturing outside save for the occasional doctor’s appointment. While I was in college, she had called me once a week like clockwork, asking about grades and professors and what books I was being made to read. “Once a teacher, always a teacher,” she would echo into the phone with a throaty chuckle that still sounded like smoke despite several decades of tobacco sobriety.…

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A Shooting

By Ed Walsh

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We live out our lives here in Bogota, as people elsewhere. In the mornings when we wake, we look out at the weather; and we go to our offices and our shops and factories; we go to the cinema and we gossip with and about our friends, we have our lunch-breaks, and in the evenings we come home to our families, those of us who have families. On Sundays we watch soccer and swim in the ponds, we go to Mass and we eat in our favourite restaurants. We have our regrets and pleasures and we fill the city cemeteries.

We know about the stuff that the rest of the world knows about, the stuff about Bogota: the drugs and the gangs, the killings. We know about them, but they happen in the south of the city, in the poor areas, and most of us don’t live there.…

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The Bus That Couldn’t Slow Down

By Samuel Smith

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A big man with a small head steps towards the kerb and puts his hand out. A universal hand gesture, or so you’d think.

However, the driver chooses to ignore him and drive on, his face a pinch of shock as we pass, mere metres apart. There’s no way he didn’t see him, the guy was practically wearing the shelter, and the bus isn’t even half full.

I glance out of the back window and see his portly frame slowly shrinking. He’s still looking our way, hands on hips and head cocked in disbelief as though already mentally compiling the complaint.

It happens again a few days later. Same route, same driver. An elderly woman is hurrying to the stop as fast as her frail legs can carry her.…

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Cut and Run

By Nick Young

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Teddy Barnes let his eye roam over the interior of the trailer to make sure all the gear was where it belonged before shutting the double doors and snapping the padlock in place. He pulled a pack of cigarettes from the pocket of his shirt, shook one of the smokes free and lit up. A half-moon hung in the southwest sky and a light breeze stirred. Teddy relished these mid-June nights, cool and quiet after the noise and sweat of the club, so he relaxed while he smoked bathed in the cold white light of the parking lot’s single floodlamp. He was tired, a deep fatigue that followed long nights on the bandstand. He knew he could use some sleep, but at the moment he wanted a drink more.…

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Ten O’Clock

By Michael Nolan

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Robert’s voice at the end of the line, at the end of the world, said “an accident.” Molly heard little else. Her brain stuttered, catching only useless details, like “a car,” “coming home,” “no pain.” The fact was that Paul was dead. She hung up in the middle of a sentence.

She stared into the silent living room. Her cat was swatting threads of noon-time sunlight to the mat. Molly watched the dust puff and swirl. Then she began to laugh, a mad cackle that hurt her throat and sent the cat under the couch. Paul had died at ten at night, a far distant Himalayan night, this same day, long hours from now. It was God’s little joke. Paul wasn’t dead, not yet, not here, not for half a day.…

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