Category: Short Story

Spawn

By Sean McFadden

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“Take me fishing,” Sherri said. “I’ll fish you under the table.” She scrunched up her face and nodded, agreeing with herself. “Let’s hit Skokie.”

“Here I was hoping you could drag me out to brunch followed by hours of thrifting.”

She lit up. “Brunch!”

“No.”

“Thrifting?”

Nolan wondered why he still used words. “Where to?” he asked. “Skokie or Lake Michigan, at Belmont? Or your dad’s?”

“Skokie. Or brunch.”

“Nobody said brunch,” he said.

Sherri arched an eyebrow. “You keep pronouncing the word wrong. It’s ‘jasslight.’ Skokie.” She won.

North of Chicago, pretty far north of Skokie, even, was a designed chain of lakes called Skokie Lagoons. Longtime Potawatomi marshland prone to flooding, the lakes were carved out in the largest Civilian Conservation Corps project ever undertaken, from 1933 to 1941.…

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Tom Jefferson’s Break

By Richard Birken

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Tom Jefferson’s mind careened from liberty to human events and every which way, so he took a break from his declaration drafting to go shopping.

Tom loved clothes, as all the finest men do, and he especially loved books, but when he got to the marketplace he wanted a little more of the bustle of common humanity. That was the whole point, after all, and a little elbow rubbing would clear his mind all the better.

He headed to the noise of the auction block. It was a slow day, but there were enough lookers and buyers assembled to occupy him. He shook some hands and said hellos and chatted a bit.

Then his attention turned to the block. A beautiful specimen had been led up, looking strong, healthy and young.…

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A Thread of Sky

By Aidan Alberts

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A thread of sky breaks through the trees. Meriwether Lewis, Captain of the Corps of Discovery Expedition, strides out of the shadow and into the light. Raising his free hand, he shades his eyes and overlooks a great grassy plain. The Captain can see the sapphire Missouri River snaking toward the snowclad southern mountains.

He turns his attention to vast flocks of young geese. The birds have become completely feathered in all areas except for one crucial spot.

Their wings still lack the feathers needed for flight.

Descending the hill, Captain Lewis plans a hike to the bend in the Missouri that he had spotted from above. Rounding a boulder, there are at least one thousand buffalo grazing and drinking on the river.

Captain Lewis stands his 1792 Contract Short Rifle upright on the western wheatgrass.…

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Revenge Fastball

By Eric Sentell

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My life changed with a boring car ride. “Dad, the film isn’t ready,” I said from the backseat. “Want me to put it together?”

Three more hours of driving separated us and Springfield, Missouri, and I wanted to watch film of the other teams in the Midwest Showcase tournament at Hammons Field, not YouTube videos of big leaguers breaking down swings and pitching mechanics. Been there, done that.

“Nah,” my dad, and coach, replied. “No need for you to spend your time on that, I’ll do it when we get to the hotel. You could watch some pitching mechanics videos.”

I frowned at the back of his shaved head and looked out the window. Dad had uploaded video clips to the Dreamz Teamz app, and technically, me and my teammates could watch them.…

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What You Wish For

By Kenneth Kapp

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G. R. was dreaming if you could call it that. It was more of a nightmare. He knew he was a caterpillar. He could get around, but the immediate stages before left a lot to be desired. In his dream he was tied up by some bratty kid in a weird contraption slowly turning over and over: one side he’s up: a tiny egg stuck on some shitty leaf and then it flipped and he’s a pupa stuck inside his own shell. Talk about the mother of nightmares. And he’s a little runt to top it off. Oh, I’ll get even. Just wait until I wake up and come out of my cocoon. Tsetse flies will be considered chump change.  

He heard it again and again.…

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Bomma

By Koushiki Dasgupta Chaudhuri

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Jui’s paternal aunt, Bomma, had been a hoarder for as long as Jui could remember. The dull maroon single-door LG refrigerator would sag and droop under the weight of expired ketchup bottles, moldy slices of Amul cheese and steel tiffin boxes filled with the month’s leftovers. Bomma was not someone who threw or gave away anything. Boxes of sweets offered for Ma Kali’s puja would be relegated to the bottom shelf and swiftly forgotten as she was insanely diabetic. Their housemaid Asma’s special mutton biriyani would ferment for days on end after she had had one bite and found the meat too hard to chew. Stray mayonnaise and chilli sauce sachets would accumulate by the dozen on the rickety brackets of the fridge door. Every once in a while Asma would attempt to perform a cursory clean-up and be rewarded with choice words for her trouble.…

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Three Thousand and Sixty Eight

By Cesar Ruiz

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The sun shines hard on the thick blades of crabgrass whose roots carve deep into the hard dog-pissed soil while the seven year cicadas play high, heavenly strings in search of a dying mate. In the speckled shade of a young cedar elm a small day old bird has fallen from its nest and is crying. The freshly mowed grass is crying too; one million blades cropped to the shoulder on one fifth of an acre and then a brown stained fence between another stiff fifth and they are all drowned out easily by the low fierce whir of dark green ac units cooling homes spaced as evenly apart. Every home with the same brown fence, every home with the same grey driveway, every home with the same blue sky, every home with the same small elm planted, and it will be twenty-five years and three new owners before children swing from the branches.…

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