Chivalry

That fucking guy is indestructible.

He had to be on PCP or something. Shit was crazy.

There were eight of us. Tommy was our leader. His neighbor Lisa came to the basketball court with a bruised lip and black eye, put us all up to it.

She was a cool chick, used to buy us beer. I’d seen her boyfriend Todd before, driving a piece-of-shit Camaro. Looked like he stepped out of an ’80s butt-rock video. Faded tats climbing through his sleeveless shirt. Curly mullet. What a joke.

I figured it wouldn’t take too long to put him in his place and get back to our game.

Tommy told us to go home, grab our shit: baseball bats, billy clubs, knives. Anything we could find.

We rolled up on him behind Twin Peaks, the elementary down the street.

We gathered near the playground, pounding our fists and looking tough.

As we rounded the portables Todd came into view, lying on the ground. Looked like he was taking a nap. We should have rushed his ass, but Tommy held us back.

“Hey, Todd!” he shouted.

The son of a bitch rolled over and his eyes locked mine. Then he scanned the crowd. I could tell we were in for it.

“You hit Lisa.” Tommy snarled.

Todd sat up. I caught his eyes again. The whole thing felt like shit.

Tommy went back at him, “Hey, Todd, what the fuck? You hit Lisa or what?”

The rest of us did our best to act the part, stand our ground.

Todd stood up, finally coaxed out of his daze. He laughed.

“She send you pussies after me?”

Tommy didn’t budge. “We’re gonna fuck you up, man. You can’t hit a woman.”

“Who you calling a woman?” Todd shot back.

Tommy took off. I glanced at his younger brother, Johnny, who was two steps behind. By the time I turned back, everyone had rushed in. I eased into the fray a few steps behind but ready to beat some ass.

The eight of us converged and Todd fell into a fetal position on the asphalt. Pipes, bats, clubs and fists battered him in all directions. I kicked as hard as I could, over and over and over.

I found a bare spot on the side of his head that no one else was working on and I punished it with everything I had. We beat and smashed and pummeled every inch of his fucking body.

Then, after it felt safe, we stopped. I was short of breath, overwhelmed. Others smiled. We gave way to see what was left.

After a few seconds, Todd climbed to his feet. His mouth and head were bleeding, but his face was surprisingly spared. He laughed.

“Is that all you got?” he asked. “Just a bunch of little-ass kids. You think that fucking whore likes you, Tommy? You think you can satisfy that bitch? I’m a man, you little fucks. Remember that.”

His last comment brought with it a spit of blood. As he wiped his mouth clean with his arm, a grin followed. Tommy charged in for Round 2, the pack on his heels.

Another beating ensued, yet more violent and obscene. Bones broke. I was working the ribs this time. His body gave way with every kick of my Reebok. Tommy pounded with a six-inch steel baton he stole from his dad’s dresser.

I caught an elbow in the eye on someone’s recoil. It stopped me for a moment but I returned, pounding that fucker with every ounce of my soul.

Just about the time we thought he must be dead, we stopped.

Our bruised fists clinched, we offered reassuring glimpses to each other that the job was done.

Then Todd stirred. He rolled over, and stood.

“You fucking pussies,” he said.

All of us were in a daze. Tommy stared in awe.

Todd moved slowly, but sure of himself. He wobbled back to his feet and flashed his white teeth through a river of red blood. I stared in disbelief and caught Todd’s eyes again. They were empty. But yet he stood, and mocked us.

“Her and all her little fucks,” he said. “An army of fucks. She gets a man, and sics the puberty club on his ass. What a fucking bitch.”

I looked at Tommy. He just stared.

Todd wobbled some more, smiled. Blood seeped out his ears, his head, his eyes. He smiled.

“C’mon,” Tommy said coolly. “This guy’s had enough.”

We all agreed and walked away. I glanced back and saw Todd stumbling into the woods. His left shoe had come off in the melee and he was holding it in his hand, walking unevenly as he bounced from tree to tree and spit blood. Then he disappeared.

When we got back to the trailer park, Lisa was waiting with a couple of twelvers. I held a cold one to my eye. Conquering heroes, we played dice games and drank like kings all night. Tommy put his arm around Lisa. They kissed.

Two weeks later, Todd was back. Rolling in his Camaro, he stopped in front of the basketball court on his way to Lisa’s house and waved.

The eight of us waved back.

Kenny Via tries to write as much as possible, but usually plays video games instead.

Animal Rescue

A shadow fell across my desk.
I looked up to eyes shining bright with tears.
What’s wrong?
I woke to a man standing in my doorway, I was being robbed.
Oh my

Days went by, I’d go look in on her and worry.
Morning, night, morning, night . . . the tears stayed.

While visiting her, my phone chimed.
Pictures. Puppy pictures. Several puppies.
How strange the universe is.

Look. Want a yappy dog to warn you when someone is about?

Yes, yes I do.
But . . . I have to go away for holiday, then I work, and have things to do.
And I live high up, I have cats and sometimes I have to . . .

Shhhhhhh, I will watch little dog.

Little dog arrives. Little dog is funny. Little dog is very loving.
Little dog adores new mistress. Little dog makes mistress laugh.
Mistress adores little dog. Mutual adoration.

And the tears subside, the laugh is more, a cocoon has opened.

From tears to laughter in such a short time. From the love of a little dog.

We, at this house, believe in rescue.
Not only of animals.
Sometimes, people need rescue too.

Midge Culver, animal lover. Serial honeymooner. Loyal friend to self.

Maybe

Today I cleaned
and had a glass of wine
and took a bath
and read a book
and talked to my husband about who would pick up the kids.

I have a luxurious life
because I have enough money
and food
and a roof over my head
and some time,
not enough time.

I have enough time to clean the house
and take a bath
and read a book
and drink a glass of wine,

but

I do not have enough time with my husband.

Or maybe I do.

It’s hard to tell.

He is no longer doing very well in his art classes,
but maybe that is not indicative of his brain’s status,
except that it probably is.

I do not have enough time to grasp what is happening,
because something else is always happening
and I have to attend to the newest thing that is happening.

I do not have enough time to write,
there is never enough time,
because there are no words for the loss I feel
for the boy I knew
who was left in Iraq
and replaced with a man
who will probably forget who I am before I am very old.

I laugh about it though.
I tell him it is a good thing he married someone he knew as a teenager,
I tell him he will remember me –
but he will not understand why I am so old.

Or maybe he will not forget.

Maybe when he has forgotten 1 + 1
(some days I wonder if he has,
math is hard – even the facts he knows by rote memorization),
he will still know who I am.

Maybe he will never forget me or our children,
just like he will never forget Iraq.

Maybe when he dies,
his soul will finally be at peace,
in Iraq,
with his friends who wouldn’t come home.

Maybe he doesn’t have a soul,
maybe he lost it or maybe he never did,
maybe none of us do,
so maybe when he dies,
he will go back to being part of the universe,
part of Iraq,
part of the enemy combatants,
part of the energy and life force and dust we are all made of.

Maybe he should have married someone who knew about souls.

Maybe a wife like that,
a wife who prays,
a wife who knows about souls,
a wife who is saved,
could save him.

I know better.
I know we cannot save anyone.
We can only save ourselves
and offer ourselves as a crutch to others who are trying to save themselves.
We can hold cups of water on the sidelines of the marathon,
but we cannot run the marathon for anyone else,
we can only cheer.

Or maybe not.
Maybe I am just the wrong kind of wife,
the kind who cannot save,
the kind who can only watch helplessly
as the marathoner leaves the path to run with his demons.

Maybe there is a wife who could follow and beat the demons back.
But I think they would probably eat her.

 Marie Mulling is a mom, wife, caregiver, cancer survivor, and libra.

Shards

I dropped a plate and it smashed,
Tiny pieces everywhere.
I swept. I mopped. I vacuumed.
But still tiny shards find their way
out of crevices and into the bottom of my feet.

I had a dream about you,
after all these years.
I ran into you at a dinner party.
We chatted cordially and
when the evening was over
I handed you my business card so
we could do that thing where
you pretend like you’re going to be in touch

and also, a little bit, to show off…
“Look how well I’m doing, after all, without you.”
You looked at the card in my hand and, in my dream,
in front of all these strangers you said
“I am not making space in my closet,” and, in my dream,
in front of all these strangers
I screamed “Fuck You!”

I wanted to feel relief, and pride
that I had come back at you like that.
But instead I felt embarrassed.
After all this time,
after all I’ve done,
I’m still angry
and I still miss you.

Kati Irons is a librarian, writer and accidental poet. She lives in Tacoma with her exotic zoo of small house pets.

I Want

To live is a conscious decision
And of all the days life gives, we are foolish with so many
Time is lost, spent, time . . . is wasted

For what is time but one’s very soul
The soul which cries to live, be free and love
The soul which aches at loss, grieves with pain
To know that each day, death creeps closer

And therefore, not by choice, it has become time itself
Trapped, restrained, silenced
Abused, misused and disrespected

So I choose.
I choose to live!
I choose love!
I choose freedom!
I choose to be heard!

My soul will not repent
My soul will not regret
My soul will go forward, victorious
Knowing deeply that once it lived, it did not stop
Once it embraced, it did not release
Once it loved, it was forever
And forever, holds no company with time

Genevieve Pardo thinks she’s a writer and sometimes gets away with it.

Soul Sister

Wiley Adams strode down the sidewalk, hands shoved in his pockets, head down, his shoulders hunched, like he was walking in a January gale and not a May breeze. His twin sister walked with him, keeping pace with him just as she always had, every day of Wiley’s life even though she’d been stillborn. Wiley wasn’t sure what she was –ghost, angel, hallucination. She hadn’t changed must past thirty even though he just celebrated sixty-five last November, and what hair he had left was white while hers was still dark and full, and the skin on his face was permanently creased with the lines of joy and sorrow while hers remained smooth from a life unlived. But it didn’t matter; she was always there. And right now he just wished she would go away. She wasn’t saying anything now, but Wiley knew she wanted to and because Sunny was Sunny, he knew she would.

Wiley walked faster knowing it wouldn’t do him any good.

“I’m glad you didn’t drive today. The way you’re walking, there wouldn’t be a cat or a squirrel or a pedestrian safe,” Sunny said casually.

Wiley ignored her.

People drove by and honked and Wiley waved and smiled out of reflex, but he wasn’t paying attention to who they were. It really didn’t matter. Everyone in town knew Wiley.

“What are you going to tell the kids?” Sunny asked.

“Nothing.”

“Nothing?”

“There’s nothing to tell.”

Sunny laughed. A normally soothing sound, today it grated on Wiley’s last nerve.

“From what I heard, there’s plenty to tell,” Sunny said.

“It’s none of your business, Sunny,” Wiley mumbled as he waved at another passing car. He’d gotten very good at speaking in low tones without moving his lips. Sunny insisted on being spoken to like a real person and not thought at like some specter.

Wiley rounded the corner for the straight away home and stopped dead, Sunny blocking his path.

“I think it’s very much my business, Wiley,” she said, a mischievous glint in her gray eyes.

“Well, it’s not,” Wiley said and walked right through her.

A few steps later, she appeared by his side looking annoyed.

“I hate it when you do that,” she said.

“I know. That’s why I did it.”

“Frustrating to the very end.”

Wiley winced at the word “end”. Sunny smiled and shook her head. At the end of the block, Wiley turned up a broken concrete path and mounted the cement steps only to turn and sit heavily on the wooden slats of the porch. Sunny sat next to him, weightless. Wiley rubbed his face, scrubbing it like he was trying to improve the circulation to his brain (and he kind of was) before looking out at the neighborhood. Everything was green and sweet, blooming and new.

Everything except him.

“He said terminal, Wiley. You do know what that means, right? The man wasn’t talking about airports, you know.”

“Yes, I know. I know what terminal means. I’m not an idiot,” Wiley said without looking at her, hands together in a prayer pose, index fingers bouncing on his lips as he spoke.

“You know he was talking about you, right?”

“Yes, Sunny. I am not stupid.”

“Oh.” The smell of lilac drifted on the silence between them. “Just acting then?”

Wiley got to his feet and stomped into his house, slamming the front door.

Sunny stayed on the porch.

 

She was still there, right where Wiley left her, when he came back out hours later. He sat down next to her, tired physically and exhausted emotionally. Wiley tried to rub some life back into his face while his sister sat serenely next to him.

“Tell the kids?” she asked.

“Yeah.”

“How’d they take it?”

Wiley laughed; a bitter sound that brought tears to his eyes. He blinked them away.

“Luke didn’t say much. Natalie said plenty. They’ll both be here tomorrow.” Wiley looked at Sunny. “I could have used you then, Sunny, on the phone with my kids.”

“Just because you didn’t see me or hear me doesn’t mean I wasn’t there. You know that.” Sunny smiled at him. “I heard every word you said. Or rather, every word the doctor said, since you just repeated him verbatim. You refuse to believe it, don’t you? Won’t put it in your own words and say them out loud because then it might make it true. Well, I hate to say it, Wiley, but it is true. Every last word of it, no matter whose words you use.”

“I repeated what the doctor said because I don’t want there to be any misunderstandings.”

“Seems to me that the only one that’s struggling to understand this is you.”

“I understand it perfectly fine.”

“Uh huh.” Sunny leaned back on her elbows, stretching her legs out on the steps. She smiled at her brother, passive and serene.

Wiley’s blood started to boil.

“I do, Sunny,” he said, keeping his tone even. “I really do. I just happen to disagree, that’s all.”

“Oh, I got that,” Sunny said with a little laugh. “You disagreed so loudly that I thought they were going to call the cops. We’ve never been to jail before, Wiley. I was kind of excited.”

Her nose wrinkled in delight.

“Well, we’re not going to jail, Sunny. And I’m not . . . .”

A surge of energy, like an electrical shock, sent Wiley to his feet. Fight or flight. He needed to get away from that last, unspoken word. He dashed down the few remaining porch steps, hit the concrete walkway, and rounded on Sunny.

“You’re a pain in the ass, you know that? Sixty-five years you’ve been with me, talking to me, appearing out of nowhere, making me look like a crazy person.” Wiley realized he was gesturing wildly and talking loudly to no one, proving his last point a little too well. He got himself under control, shoving his hands in his pockets, and acted like he was contemplating a construction job on his porch. “But you know what’s most aggravating about you? You didn’t age. I got older and you stopped. You look like you’re thirty, but the way you dress, like you’re one of those kids from the high school hanging out uptown at night.”

Wiley stomped up the stairs and looked down at Sunny.

“That’s not how it was when I was thirty and that’s not how any of the girls I knew dressed back then. You look like a tramp.”

“A tramp? In jeans and a t-shirt?”

“A tramp.”

Sunny disappeared and Wiley stepped back, nearly losing his balance on the steps.

She reappeared on the porch wearing a pair of high-waist, bell bottom trousers and a busy floral printed buttoned down shirt tucked into them. Her usually shorter, straighter, darker hair was now lighter, longer, and feathered.

“Is this better?”

Wiley blinked as thirty years of past smacked him in the face. It felt like just yesterday that Sunny looked like that every day. When did she change?

When did he?

Wiley blinked again.

“That’s not funny.”

Sunny laughed. Wiley huffed, anger building in his stomach. He could feel it start to creep up his throat, like magma in a volcano. He wanted to explode like one, too. He stared at his dead sister’s smiling face, every muscle in his body tense; his veins hard with a rage so intense that he could have torn a house down with his bare hands and still had energy to spare.

“Do you want me to say it?” Sunny asked, unaffected.

And like a ghost, it was gone. All of it. Her words took it right out of him. All that anger disappeared like a vapor and the loss of it made him weak. Wiley stumbled to sit on the porch. He put his head in his hands. Without needing to see it, he knew Sunny now sat beside him again. He felt her presence just as well as an amputee felt a missing limb.

“You know why I stopped getting older, Wiley?” Sunny asked gently.

Wiley didn’t look at her; he just shook his head.

“Because that’s when you stopped getting older.”

Now Wiley looked at her, like she was the biggest idiot he’d seen since the doctor. She shrugged off his look.

“It’s true. Oh yeah, you’ve gained some wisdom in the years since then, amazingly enough and present circumstances excepted.” She looked passive as Wiley’s look hardened. “And of course your body kept aging. Nothing can stop that. But when you think about yourself, in your own mind, you’re still thirty, thirty-five. It’s the mirror and the occasional ache and pain and old man problems that disagree with you. You never got past thirty because that’s when your soul felt its best. And since you didn’t get past that point, neither did I. You can’t even imagine me as an old woman. You can hardly believe that you’re an old man.”

“I’m not that old,” Wiley said as he looked back out at the neighborhood. His voice didn’t even convince himself.

He leaned his elbows on his knees, his hands clasped together under his chin.

“You want me to say it?” Sunny asked.

“No.”

“I’m going to.”

“Don’t.”

“You’re dying, Wiley.”

Wiley closed his eyes and clenched his jaw, forcing the tears back where they came from. Those three words were the worst he’d ever heard, even more devastating than when he’d been told that Celia was dead. Maybe it was the guilt that went with them.

“You are dying, Wiley Adams,” Sunny said again, almost cheerfully, and Wiley opened his eyes. “I don’t know why you won’t accept that truth from anyone’s lips but mine, but there you go. You’re on your way out.”

They sat in silence while Wiley tried to find his voice. When he did, it was barely there.

“It’s because you’ve never lied to me,” he said finally.

“That’s because I don’t have to.”

“I don’t want to die.” Hands still clasped together, Wiley rubbed a knuckle over his bottom lip.

“Nobody wants to die, but we all do it anyway.”

“I know. I can’t.”

Sunny stared at him. “What do you mean you can’t? Why not? It’s not because you’ve had an unfulfilled life. I was there for the whole thing. It was the only life I had and it was great. It’s all downhill from here, brother.”

Wiley waited until he was reasonably sure his voice would be steady.

“I’m afraid.”

“Of what?”

“Of what’s on the other side.” A tear slipped down his cheek and he swallowed the flood. “I don’t know what’s on the other side.”

He looked at Sunny and she smiled with tears of her own glimmering in her eyes.

“Me.”

Wiley smiled even as he cried. The wind changed, picking up and bringing with it the smell of rain. The sun faded behind the incoming clouds.

“We should go in. There’s a storm coming,” Sunny said, her voice lighter than the scent of the impending shower. “Bring on the rain.”

 

Natalie arrived at ten the next morning.

“Where are the kids?” Wiley asked, kissing his daughter hello. Neither one of them looked like they’d slept much.

“At school.” Natalie walked into the living room and put her bag in the nearest chair. “Tom can handle them while I’m gone. I notice you didn’t ask about him.”

“He’s not as fun as the kids.” Wiley smiled at his daughter and the smile he got back was strained at best. He followed Natalie into the kitchen. “Your brother’s coming, too.”

“Yes, I know. I told him to. We’ll see how long it takes him to get here even though he lives twenty minutes away and I live three hours away.”

Natalie poured herself a cup of coffee, black, and sipped it while looking out the kitchen window. Wiley stood in the doorway, hands in his pockets, and watched her. All business just like Celia had been when she was upset. And alive.

“Let me just take care of what needs to be done now,” she’d say. “I can go to pieces any time, but this needs to be done first.”

“What are you smiling at?” Natalie asked, looking at him suspiciously.

Wiley shook his head. “Thinking about your mom. How much you act like her sometimes.”

Natalie pursed her lips together so tightly that they almost disappeared and her eyes narrowed.

“Ah, like that,” Wiley said with a little laugh. “I know that look.”

He sat down at the kitchen table.

“Dad, we can be wistful and sappy later. Right now, we need to get some things straight.” Natalie sat down with him at the head of the table. “There’s no sense in waiting for Luke anyway. He’s useless.”

“Your brother is not useless,” Wiley said, parental-sternness firming up his voice. “He’s just not you and it drives you crazy. Always has.”

Natalie looked away and sipped her coffee, put in her place for the time being.

Wiley got up and poured himself a cup. He opened the cabinet above him, pulling out the sugar and a manila envelope. He tossed the envelope on the table in front of Natalie and put the sugar in his coffee.

“What’s this?” Natalie asked, looking the envelope over for identification.

“My will and whatnot,” Wiley said. He stirred his coffee. “That’s why you’re here, isn’t it?”

“You make me sound like some kind of gold digging ghoul. I just wanted to make sure everything is in order and Luke and I know exactly what’s going on.” Natalie took the papers out of the envelope. “Everything was a mess with Mom. We had no time to prepare. If the doctor is right,” Natalie glanced at him, “then we should get everything straightened out and settled right now.”

“I agree,” Wiley said, sitting down again with his coffee, but this time across from his daughter. “Then we can get all sappy and wistful and nostalgic.”

Natalie looked at her father, not quite a glare, but hard enough. He just smiled and drank his coffee. Her look softened and she stared at him until he finally said, “What?”

“It seems that you’ve accepted this,” she said, uncertain. “Resigned yourself to it. I don’t know if I like that. You were so resistant to it yesterday. Why the change?”

Wiley stared at his coffee. “Talked to your Aunt Sunny. She made me see reason, just like always.”

A delicately strained silence settled in the kitchen. Wiley drank his coffee. Natalie looked over the papers, brows furrowed and mouth pinched. The front door banged closed.

“Hello!”

“In the kitchen, Luke,” Wiley called and his son appeared before he could finish the sentence.

“Hey, Dad.” Luke kissed his father on the bald part of his head. “Natalie.”

“Luke.” Natalie didn’t look up.

“Sorry I wasn’t here sooner,” Luke said, heading for the fridge. “But I-”

“Got hung up being irresponsible, lazy, and inconsiderate?” Natalie finished, still not looking at her brother.

Luke glared at her. “At least I’m not uppity to the point of tactless.”

“Oh, good. It’s going to be one of those visits. I thought we were going to leave the wistfulness and nostalgia until later,” Wiley said. He got up from the table. “You two duke it out and read over my will and stuff. Then you can duke it out with me. I’ll be on the porch.”

Wiley sat drinking coffee and waving to neighbors, no kids and no Sunny, just him and the morning, an hour slipping by on the porch. It was peaceful at first, when his mind was blank. But inevitably he started to think. Not about his death, exactly, but about how it would affect his children. Natalie and Luke weren’t close. If they even loved each other, neither one of them knew it. They sure didn’t show it. Natalie the control freak and Luke the sometimes-too-free spirit; they were the Odd Couple without the laugh track. Coming from a close family, going through life with Sunny, Wiley couldn’t understand them. He couldn’t understand how the two of them couldn’t find themselves on the same side once in a while. He couldn’t understand why they didn’t fight harder to find some common ground, fight harder to be friends. Or at least acquaintances.

Right now, Wiley was the only thing left in the world keeping the two of them connected and as soon as he died, they’d drift apart.

He sighed and got to his feet, not wanting to think about it anymore.

Wiley went back into the house, following the still, winter chill into the kitchen.

“You changed the will,” Natalie said before he even crossed the kitchen threshold.

Neither of the children looked too pleased, though the furrows in Luke’s forehead weren’t quite as deep as the ones in Natalie’s.

“Yes, I did.” Wiley ignored the looks of his children and got another cup of coffee.

“Why? Aunt Sunny tell you to?” Natalie asked, not bothering to hide her contempt.

“Natalie, love, I’m not dead yet. I can change it again if you’d prefer not to have anything to do with it.”

Luke snorted a laugh.

“I changed my will two years after your mother died,” Wiley said, moving to stand at the head of the table. “The will you saw was what your mother wanted. This is what I want. If she doesn’t like it, I’m sure I’ll hear about it soon enough.”

“I don’t like it,” Natalie said, looking up at him. It reminded Wiley of the family discussions held to keep the peace between Natalie and Luke when they were kids. Celia insisted on the diplomatic approach to dealing with sibling rivalry. Too bad it never seemed to work.

“I didn’t expect you to,” Wiley said. “But it’s done. I suggest you live it. It’s not like I have to.”

Luke smirked and Natalie pinched her lips together, sighing through her nose.

“Dad, that’s a terrible thing to say,” she scolded.

“Terrible, but true,” Wiley said. He was feeling pretty good today, physically anyway, but there was something weary in his voice. “I know you guys came here to get things straight now so you don’t have to worry about it later, though it wouldn’t shock me in the least if Natalie disputed the will in court just as soon as I’m cold.” Natalie looked away. “And I’m sure you wanted to see how I’m holding up, too. Well, it’s all there in the papers. Everything is paid for and everything’s divided, and I’m holding up just fine. We’ve got some time before I start to go downhill.”

“You’re not going to fight it at all, are you?” Luke asked. The look on his face suggested that he already knew the answer.

“Nope.” Wiley put his coffee down on the table. “I’d rather give my money to you guys than some doctor who’s just going to shoot me up with a bunch of toxic crap that’d probably end up killing me anyway. No, I’m taking the man at his word. He says they can’t do anything for me, so I won’t ask them to. I’ll settle for comfortable. And here,” he said, finger drilling the top of the kitchen table. “In this house. If I’m going to die comfortably, then I’m going to die at home, in my bed. Don’t you even think of taking me to a hospital. I’ll haunt you both if you do.”

Luke chuckled, eyes a little wet. Natalie burst into tears.

Finally.

 

Wiley relaxed in bed, reading glasses on and book open, but he’d been on the same page for half an hour. The clock ticked to midnight. A tingle rippled over his skin and Wiley looked to his left, unsurprised to see Sunny reclining next to him. She still wore her t-shirt and jeans even though Wiley was in his pajamas, more than ready for bed. She smiled at him.

“That went well, didn’t it?” she said.

Wiley rolled his eyes and took off his reading glasses. Sunny laughed.

“Natalie’s grown into a controlling little thing, hasn’t she?” she went on.

“She’s always been very organized and in control,” Wiley said with a sigh. “She gets worse when she’s upset. Just like Celia. You know that.”

“She gets worse when she’s around Luke.”

Wiley looked away, silent.

“And she’ll probably get worse with Luke when you’re gone.” Sunny smoothed her hands on the bedspread. The wrinkles stayed in the fabric. “Your will is only going to make it worse.”

“She’s got some time to get comfortable with it,” Wiley said.

“She won’t.”

Wiley shrugged. “That’s not going to be my problem.”

“That’s a good attitude to have. Too bad you don’t really have it.”

Wiley put his book and his glasses on the nightstand. He rubbed his eyes. He could fool his kids, and on occasion he could fool his wife, but he couldn’t fool Sunny. Never. He still tried, though. Wiley thought Sunny might be disappointed if he didn’t.

“Celia’s been trying to make Natalie and Luke get along since the day Luke was born. But they’re too different, I guess. And I don’t think they really want to.” Wiley sighed. “Celia didn’t want to leave anything to Luke because of that rough patch he went through. She didn’t trust him after that. He broke her heart, you know. She wanted Natalie to be in charge of everything and Natalie was more than happy with that. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that Natalie would use that against him, to punish him for all the pain he caused.”

“Well, if you figured that out without me, then it must be pretty obvious,” Sunny said.

“Exactly.” He smiled and shook his head. “After Celia died, I decided that Luke deserved a second chance and I was going to trust him. Celia went to her grave crying over that boy, unable to see how far he’d come since he hit bottom. It hurt Luke. It still does. I couldn’t do that to him, no matter how badly he hurt me. So, I changed the will.”

“Don’t you think the children deserve this explanation?”

“I’ll tell Luke. Soon. I’ll wait to tell Natalie.”

A sleepy silence settled in the room. Wiley felt his eyes start to pull closed.

“Natalie didn’t hold up quite as well as Celia used to,” Sunny said, a pleasant statement of fact.

“No, but she was good. She just needs some practice. She’ll get it with her kids.” Wiley yawned.

“Oh, yeah. She’ll get her fair share.”

Wiley’s eyes stayed closed. “Mmhmm.”

“Natalie and Luke will come together,” Sunny said, her words echoing as Wiley fell deeper into the well of sleep. “You did the right thing. You’ll see. They’re not as far apart as you think they are.”

Sunny shut off the light.

 

Wiley woke up in his bed on his last day. He didn’t have many working parts left. He was past his expiration date; he could feel it in the parts of his body he could still feel. Natalie and Luke were with him and sometimes a nurse, but Sunny never left, even sitting with him in his dreams. He talked to her openly now. He didn’t care who was in the room. The kids fussed over him, but Sunny talked to him, lying on the bed next to him and walking him down memory lane.

“Do you remember that time, it was around Thanksgiving I think, you got mad at Mama and Daddy for ignoring you and you took off and ended up in the Miller’s almost empty pool?” Sunny laughed. “You almost caught your death then, stomping all of those floating dead leaves. You showed them, boy.”

“Best temper tantrum I ever threw and I had to wait until I was sixteen to do it,” Wiley said through dry lips. The kids stopped asking him what he was talking about days ago.

“Yes it was. Do you remember what I said that night?”

“You said-” Wiley licked his lips, but it didn’t help any. “You told me that everyone else in the world could walk out on me, but you’d never leave. You’re my sister and you’d never leave me.”

“I never did.”

“No, you never did.”

Natalie and Luke exchanged worried looks, Natalie laying a hand on Luke’s arm and Luke patting it, before Luke slipped a sliver of ice into Wiley’s mouth. It melted too fast for his liking and he asked for another one. Luke obliged while Natalie watched. Wiley had never seen his two kids closer. The last few weeks, they started to act like loving siblings instead of bitter enemies. It was a shame he couldn’t stick around longer and enjoy it.

Sunny nudged him.

“Come on, Wiley. It’s time. It’s past time.”

“Okay. I suppose.” Wiley forced his eyes to focus on his children for the last time. “Natty. Luke. Come here.”

Both of his children obeyed, coming to stand at his side.

“Gimmie a kiss and then get out of here. I need to talk to your Aunt Sunny alone.”

“Dad-”

“We’re not-”

“Don’t argue with a dying person. It’s rude and it probably breaks some laws somewhere. Now kiss me and go.”

They did, a little teary and with a lot of reservations. Luke closed the door behind them.

“All they’re going to have is each other. I think they’re getting that now. They’re going to be okay,” Sunny said.

“Yeah.”

“You did good.”

“Yeah.”

“Ready?”

“No.”

“Wiley.”

“I can’t do it, Sunny. I can’t die. I can’t leave them. They’ll be orphans.”

Sunny sighed at his last-second panic. “Would you rather outlive them?”

“No,” Wiley said, tears leaking out of his eyes. He was surprised he had so much moisture left in his body.

“I didn’t think so.” Sunny smiled. “Ready now?”

“No.”

“Wiley.”

“Sunny, I don’t know how to die.”

“Oh, it’s really simple. You just close your eyes, relax, and let go.”

Wiley closed his eyes. Relaxing was easy enough; he wasn’t prone to being a tense guy anyway, and he was so full of pain medication that he really had no choice. But he couldn’t let go.

“I can’t,” he said without opening his eyes. “I can’t let go.”

“Sure you can. If I could do it before I was born, you can do it now. Here.” Sunny jostled him a little as she settled into a better position next to him on the bed. She took his hand. The warmth from it radiated up his arm and he squeezed, touching his twin sister for the first time that he could remember. “I’ve got you. Now on the count of three let go, okay?”

“Okay.”

“One . . . two . . . three . . . .”

 

Christin Haws is a writer without a day job and easily stalkable at her blog, Kiki Writes About.

Who Am I?

I am a girl.
I am complicated.
I am tattooed.
I am sweet.
I am addicted to coffee.
I am simple.
I am funny.
I am sarcastic.
I am warm.
I am afraid.
I am patient.
I am in love with Reese’s.
I am single.
I am listening to music.
I am happy.
I am a reader.
I am lonely.
I am certain people don’t know the real me.
I am fiesty.
I am friendly.
I am bisexual.
I am sassy.
I am opinionated.
I am beautiful.

Stacy Nelson lives north of Seattle and when not walking her dog or reading a trashy novel in a bubble bath, flirts with the idea of becoming a writer.

 

Four Things I Found

A paper poppy. At the back of his desk. He wore it home in his lapel. He told me about his favorite uncle who’d been in the war. He curled the stem around a yellow Ticonderoga pencil (number 2), then slipped the flower off the pencil and handed it to me to wear as a pinky ring. I took it off and put it on the kitchen counter while I prepared dinner. When it got wet, the flower left a red stain.

Coffee mug. In the dishwasher. Handmade pottery, blue and white glaze. We had purchased two in a shop in Cape May during our first weekend together. Identical mugs. When one broke in the dishwasher, he said it was mine that broke. Who loaded the pot on top of the china? The cast iron enameled pot?

A wallet. On his bureau. The leather was stretched and worn smooth, thin. An old driver’s license. A photo of me smiling. He stopped carrying it, he told me, because one of his friends was mugged and lost all his family photos. He never cut up old credit cards. He kept them in this wallet with a few receipts, phone numbers in pen and pencil on the back of the receipts. I could phone them all, one after the other.

An empty bottle of Ambien. Top shelf of the medicine cabinet. No refills. “What’s this?”
I asked when I found the pharmacist’s bag in the trash. I should have asked to see the bottle and counted the pills. He’d pour himself a drink every night when he got home and another at dinner. Skye vodka from the freezer. Red jug wine kept in the fridge. He said it was good for the heart.

Teaching creative writing at Drexel University, Miriam N. Kotzin writes fiction and poetry. Her collection of flash fiction, Just Desserts, was published by by Star Cloud Press (2011).

Airline Food

One summer, I believe it was between my freshman and sophomore years in college, I worked making airline food. I understand it’s hard to imagine that there are people who make that food. Who actually get up in the morning and get dressed and drive to a location wherein airline food is created, but it’s true.

Of course, this was back in the days when airlines still served food, even in the deepest depths of coach; hot food delivered on little TV dinner trays. These were also the days you could meet arriving passengers at the gate, and you didn’t have to take off your shoes to go through security, and box cutters were considered a perfectly reasonable thing to carry on a plane. So, you know, trade-offs.

The first thing you should know about making airline food is that Henry Ford was right: you can make anything on an industrial line. Cars? Ham & Cheese? It all works. I would stand there at my station and dish stewed apples into the tray as it rolled by, or place the congealed ham & egg “omelet” next to the biscuit, or the olive and cherry tomato in the salad. (This was before United figured out olives were costing them a billion a year and stopped serving them. It was the OLDEN DAYS. Also, everything was in black & white.)

The other thing you should know about airline food, at least how it was back then, is that regardless of the quality of the food, it all came from the same place. All the airlines contracted with this company (Marriott) to make their food. So if you were convinced that United’s food was far superior to Delta’s food, this may well have been true, but they both came from the same place. In addition, First Class food was made next to third-class rations. I’m not saying the quality was the same. I’m saying that the same people in the same kitchens would be producing, side-by-side, very nice and very craptacular food. It was a bit of a mind fuck.

Of course, First Class had its own “stations” where the food was assembled by presumably highly-trained, First-Class-caliber line workers. Being new and essentially transient, as most college students are, I was assigned to the Delta station, cabin class. Stations had about 4 or 5 people plus a lead. There were two ladies at my station: one from Puerto Rico who spoke excellent, if highly-accented and excitable, English, and one from Iran who spoke no English, who hated each other like East & West Coast rappers. (This was before East & West Coast rap.) Their hatred was amazing, considering there was no shared language, nor even a shared cultural animosity. As far as I know, there’s no Gaza Strip-type issue between Puerto Rico and Iran.

Most of the fights seemed to stem from control over the clean rags left at each station. There was always a box of clean rags every morning, enough to use to clean spills or wipe the station down, but not enough that each person working at the station could have “their own.” The first few people at the station would always grab a rag and tuck it into their waistband, and if you weren’t Johnny-on-the-Spot, you would miss out on your opportunity to have “your own” clean rag for the day. It caused a lot of ill will. One time Miss Puerto Rico threatened Miss Iran with a knife over a rag. She got sent home for the day, but she was back the next. Workplace security had not been invented yet.

Some days when I’m feeling particularly uptight over some work-related B.S., I try to remember the rags. It’s just a dishcloth, people. No need to knife anyone over it.

Of the two ladies, I preferred the woman from Iran even though I could never really talk with her. We communicated with facial expressions and smiles. Occasionally she would slip a treat from the line into my pocket, a cookie or a biscuit. She’s the only person I ever met who thought I needed fattening up.

Miss Puerto Rico was a talker, the sort of person who sort of claims you as a friend and before you know it you’re hearing the endless stories. My daughter wrecked my car. My landlord killed my dog. My (expletive) husband and his (expletive) girlfriend won’t move out of the garage. I was a young and impressionable audience. I might have even loaned her money once, nothing much, like a $20 or something. Whatever it was, it was worth it just for her sheer entertainment value.

Of course, this was back in the day when a pack of cigarettes cost 99 cents. The world was a happier, simpler place then.

Kati Irons is a mild-mannered librarian by day and scribbler of the ridiculous at night. She is currently homeless on the web, although she does have an ancient blog, where you may be able to read some of her classic works if they are not too encrusted with dust. 

An Old Man in a Dry Place

This is how the magic happens: The highway winds on and on through the endless desert and dulls the senses, and you begin to think there’ll be nothing more to see but windshield scenery for the next 2,500 miles.

Then someone, usually your wife, says she needs to avail herself of a bathroom, and you pull off the road at the next exit. You turn left, cross over the freeway and ease into the truck stop, realizing with belated chagrin that it’s no longer a truck stop at all.

The moon is nearly full, hanging voluptuously on the terra cotta rim of the Cady Mountains, as if waiting patiently for Ansel Adams to snap the shutter. Your son is pissing on sagebrush beneath a palm tree, and your wife is looking for cover amid a river of garbage at the back of the boarded-up building.

And then a spectre enters stage left, riding in on a red tricycle and looking like a defrocked Santa Claus. His fathful mutt follows hard on his heels.

We’d left Tehachapi 109 miles ago, and the desert has been in full glory for 100 of those. Cactus, sagebush, creosote dominate the foreground while brownrock mountains rise north and south. On the edge of Barstow, we crossed over the Mojave River, a broad plain of dried mud, a dirt waterway.

Now we’re in Newberry Springs, as fetching a wasteland as you’ll find in the bleak western desert. We’re 2,457 miles west of Wilmington, N.C., which means we’ve been on I-40 for 97 miles, since the first sign that greets you when you hit the interstate is “Wilmington, NC – 2,554 miles.”

“Do you know the Lord Jesus Christ?” he says in a voice slurred by the brain damage he suffered in a 1968 car accident.

There’s something vaguely ominous about a bicycle-riding prophet materializing out of the wasteland at twilight. Without warning. It almost makes one question his ontological assumptions.

Harry Hugunine, 62, grew up in Vestal in New York’s Southern Tier, about 150 miles east of Portville, home of the one and only Terry Mosher. He was a woodsman until the wreck robbed him of his balance, dexterity and worldly insouciance.

Harry politely asks for a bowl so he can give his dog, whom I believe is called Pal, a drink from the water jug he totes in the basket at the rear of his cycle. We oblige, of course. He says everything changed for him on that March day 43 years ago. Prior to the wreck, he says, he called his mom and told her his plans.

“I told here ‘I’m not coming home. I’m going to join the Marines and go to Vietnam,’” he says. “She said, ‘Harry, you get home right away get on your knees and pray, or the Lord will have you on your back.’”

Next came the terrible wreck at 94 mph, at least I’m pretty sure he said it was 94 miles per hour. Wouldn’t you know it, when Harry emerged from the accident a broken but unbowed man, he was lying flat on his back.

“I woke up nine weeks later,” he says. ”I’d been on my back for nine weeks. I couldn’t even talk for a while.”

He’s been out here since early 1970s, bouncing from one desert outpost to another as the decades unraveled.

“When I first got here, I was the only man in 100 square sections of land,” he says. ”I tried to leave the desert twice, but it keeps pulling me back.”

Out here in the desert, the surreal is just part of the natural order. We bid Harry adieu, thanked him for his time and returned to the ceaseless monotony of the interstate highway system.

Mired in an epic rut, imprisoned by inertia, drowning in a sea of ennui, John Wallingford, Becky Breslin, their son Max and cat Lester hit the road in a 22-foot motor home monstrosity. Follow their ups and downs as they traverse the countryside at unclesamsbackyard.wordpress.com.