Over Maudlin Street

December 4th, 2023

by DJ Tyrer

[this is the second in the three part series–
read Top Hat from the beginning, here]



The last train of the day from Cambridge into Liverpool Street was late and Osric Child was practically jogging as he headed out of the station and sought a cab.

“Maudlin Street,” he told the driver as he sank down into the lumpy seat. “Number 42.”

“Right you are, guv.”

Osric hated London.

They passed the tiny church of St. Erkenwald and pulled up outside his sister’s house. It always struck him as odd that the church was named for some obscure Saxon saint when the street itself was clearly named after Mary Magdalene. Where was her church?

“Keep the change.”

The sky overhead was grey and cloudy as he stepped out onto the pavement.

He knocked on the door and his sister opened it.

They were twins, but in no sense identical. Where he was fair and tall, she was short and dark.

She was still in black in memory of her late husband.

Osric hadn’t liked the man, but he couldn’t fault her for her devotion.

“Come in.” She directed him into the study.

A moth was butting against the light above his head.

“How was Berlin?”

She raised an eyebrow. “How do you think? A real mess. One day, they’ll draw a map which shows just who owns what, save visitors a fortune in bribes and headache pills. Oh, sit down, sit down.”

He did. “You know why I’m here?”

“Drink?”

He shook his head. “Well?”

“So, the worm turns and commences to devour itself?”

“Just give me what’s mine.” He held out his hand.

With a soft huff, she unlocked her desk drawer and took out the Leaden Seal, held it reverently in her hands.

“This should’ve been mine…”

Osric shrugged. “Dad wanted me to have it.”

“Dad never understood what it represents, what it can do. I had it in Berlin. I saw Verethan.”

Sniffing, he shrugged and said,” I leave the truth of it for others to surmise.”

That elicited a hollow laugh.

“You sounded just like Dad, then; he was always using that line.”

He shrugged again. “Can I have it?”

“Fine.” She thrust it into his hand. “But, it will come to bite you, you know that.”

“I don’t know what I know, any more.”

She frowned just a little. “You’ll see. You will see. The Seal shows you things, reshapes your dreams. Sooner or later, you’ll wish you’d left it with me.”

Osric closed his eyes; his head hurt, and, for a moment, he thought he saw a desert road stretching out to infinity before him.

He stood and stumbled for the front door.

The moth watched him go.

It knew.




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Top Hat

December 3rd, 2023

by DJ Tyrer

Roseate Skies
(publishing Dec. 3rd)
Over Maudlin Street
(publishing Dec. 4th)
For Others
(publishing Dec. 5th)


Roseate Skies

Dawn had given the skies a rosy glow that matched the end of Robert Loxley’s cigarette. Ash fell from it and disintegrated against the steering wheel.

Jazz it up with Top Hat Records, came the jingle on the radio; another lousy advert.

Robert reached out and punched buttons, found another station. It had been better back when radios had dials – the music was better and you could find the channels that lurked in the spaces in between.

Where did they lurk now?

He pulled into the parking lot of the Apple Blossom Motel and switched off the engine.

The name was surely a joke; he doubted there was ever any apple blossom in the entire county, perhaps even the entire state, it was so damn dry. But, Julianne paid him a good wage to come in, once a month, and exterminate the rats and roaches that called it home.

There were three other vehicles in the lot besides his pickup, but nobody in sight. He didn’t blame them. This early in the morning, he’d rather be in bed, but Julianne liked the job over and done with early, before customers arrived. If any did. Some days, the place was dead.

Robert headed for the reception. No sign of her.

He dinged the bell on the desk and waited.

Dinged it again.

“Hey, Julianne, you there?”

She’d probably had a bad chilli.

He scribbled a note on the pad by the phone, grabbed the keys off the board and headed off to bug bomb the rooms that were empty, whistling tunelessly as he prepared his ordnance.

There was still no sign of Julianne when he returned the keys to their places on the board.

“Hey, Julianne, you back there?”

Robert went through her office to the door of the private washroom; it was ajar.

“Knock, knock! I’m coming in.”

Empty.

Weird.

There was something written on the mirror above the basin in lipstick.

He hoped it was lipstick…

Ylloj.

What the hell did that mean?

It kind of looked like Spanish, but not any word he’d ever heard, and he’d heard some pretty wild ones.

Where was Julianne? Something was screwy…

He looked at the word one more time, then went back out into the lobby. The whole place was too damn quiet.

Three keys missing from the board. Three cars in the lot.

Three guests, maybe more.

By now, there should’ve been movement, sounds, but the cars were still there and the place was still as a crypt. Nobody came here for a honeymoon. No honeymoon was that quiet. Something was off.

Robert headed for the first room. The door was ajar.

“Housekeeping,” he called as he slipped inside.

Nobody. An open case on the bed, a scatter of clothes, but nobody, no reply.

He went into the bathroom.

He’d half-expected it, but it still made him shiver despite the heat: Red letters on the mirror glass.

Osbertha.

What was that supposed to mean? A name? A place?

He ran to the next room, stared at the mirror.

Nahterev.

The third and final room.

Berlin.

It was the only word he knew and it still meant nothing to him.

It was like a scene out of some crazy horror flick.

He ran back to his pickup and pulled out of the lot, sped down the endless desert road.

The skies overhead were blue, now, a vibrant azure, clear and perfect.

Sand kicked up as he raced away, the radio screaming at him, his mind murky and fractured, the smell of the bug bombs lingering on his jacket.

The roaches watched him go.

They knew.





Over Maudlin Street

The last train of the day from Cambridge into Liverpool Street was late and Osric Child was practically jogging as he headed out of the station and sought a cab.

“Maudlin Street,” he told the driver as he sank down into the lumpy seat. “Number 42.”

“Right you are, guv.”

Osric hated London.

They passed the tiny church of St. Erkenwald and pulled up outside his sister’s house. It always struck him as odd that the church was named for some obscure Saxon saint when the street itself was clearly named after Mary Magdalene. Where was her church?

“Keep the change.”

The sky overhead was grey and cloudy as he stepped out onto the pavement.

He knocked on the door and his sister opened it.

They were twins, but in no sense identical. Where he was fair and tall, she was short and dark.

She was still in black in memory of her late husband.

Osric hadn’t liked the man, but he couldn’t fault her for her devotion.

“Come in.” She directed him into the study.

A moth was butting against the light above his head.

“How was Berlin?”

She raised an eyebrow. “How do you think? A real mess. One day, they’ll draw a map which shows just who owns what, save visitors a fortune in bribes and headache pills. Oh, sit down, sit down.”

He did. “You know why I’m here?”

“Drink?”

He shook his head. “Well?”

“So, the worm turns and commences to devour itself?”

“Just give me what’s mine.” He held out his hand.

With a soft huff, she unlocked her desk drawer and took out the Leaden Seal, held it reverently in her hands.

“This should’ve been mine…”

Osric shrugged. “Dad wanted me to have it.”

“Dad never understood what it represents, what it can do. I had it in Berlin. I saw Verethan.”

Sniffing, he shrugged and said,” I leave the truth of it for others to surmise.”

That elicited a hollow laugh.

“You sounded just like Dad, then; he was always using that line.”

He shrugged again. “Can I have it?”

“Fine.” She thrust it into his hand. “But, it will come to bite you, you know that.”

“I don’t know what I know, any more.”

She frowned just a little. “You’ll see. You will see. The Seal shows you things, reshapes your dreams. Sooner or later, you’ll wish you’d left it with me.”

Osric closed his eyes; his head hurt, and, for a moment, he thought he saw a desert road stretching out to infinity before him.

He stood and stumbled for the front door.

The moth watched him go.

It knew.





For Others

Tales of Verethan by Donald Tulloch,” said Harry Bull, pipe flaring as he laid aside the book. “Very rare.”

Julianne steepled her fingers, tried to ignore the stuffed marmoset that was gazing down at her with glassy eyes from a high shelf.

“But, that’s not why you came here, is it?”

He produced another book.

A kitten skipped playfully about her feet.

Songs of the Singing Stone by Georgiana Fay.”

She leant forward, body tense, eyes predatory.

He almost expected her to lick her lips.

She didn’t, but she did nod.

“I located it in a used bookstore in Berlin. To be honest, I can’t quite see the appeal of it.”

Harry looked down at the kitten, which had commenced playing with the lace of one of his shoes and nudged it away with his toe.

“Please, Jezin, not now.”

It yowled up at him in displeasure and he shook his head.

“A rather dull book of rhymes for children.”

“It’s what I want,” she said.

He shrugged and removed the pipe from his mouth and tapped it out upon the head of a stuffed dodo that stood upon the floor beside his seat.

“Well, if you’re sure…”

“I am.” She smiled. “I am.”

“Then, it’s yours; if you have what I want.”

“I have.”

“The real thing?”

“As real as anything in this room.”

He smiled. “Quite.”

“Trust,” she said, slowly, “is a virtue seldom afforded to those such as we, but, on this occasion, I believe we can trust one another.”

Julianne lifted a tall hat box from the floor and place it upon his desk; he slid the book across to her. Jezin the kitten continued to dance about their feet, while ash trickled slowly down onto the dodo’s beak.

Picking up the book with reverent grace, Julianne studied its cover, which showed a lonely standing stone upon an area of grassy moorland. It was just as she remembered from her childhood, or possibly dreams of a life she had yet to live.

Harry opened the hat box and took out a top hat and span it in his fingers, examining its sheen.

“Yes,” he breathed, “this is the one.”

He placed it upon his head.

“You should read the story in there of Mr Top Hat,” he said, steepling his fingers and smiling a wide and predatory smile.

But, Julianne wasn’t listening.

She was staring at the book, the standing stone seeming the stretch off into infinity like the dark surface of a road beneath a clear and perfect azure sky, a motel at its side.

It was strange how it seemed so real…

“Are you jolly?” Harry asked and reached out towards her with long and slender fingers.

“No,” she said, “but, Mr Jolly should be here, soon.”

She looked up at him and smiled.

“I like your top hat.”

He smiled back, but he wasn’t Harry any longer.

The dodo watched him go.

It knew.

Once.

Ends






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2024 FLASH SUITE Contest is now live

December 2nd, 2023


And our first publication is tomorrow, Sunday, December 3rd.
Go straight to the contest.

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Meet the Finalists of the 2024 FLASH SUITE Contest

November 26th, 2023


Including our Defenestrationism.net tradition of an image of our authors’ favorite chair.
(more chair photos to come)

DJ Tyrer dwells in Southend-on-Sea on the north bank of the Thames and is the person behind Atlantean Publishing. DJ has had flash fiction published in such places as Alder and Ebony (Iron Fairy Publishing), and Apples, Shadows and Light (Earlyworks Press), issues of Sirens Call, and Tigershark, and on Cease CowsThe Flash Fiction PressSpace Squid, and Trembling With Fear. DJ Tyrer’s website is at https://djtyrer.blogspot.co.uk/

e rathke writes about books and games at radicaledward.substack.com. A finalist for the Baen Fantasy Adventure and recipient of the Diverse Worlds Grant, he is the author of Glossolalia, the lofi cyberpunk series Howl, and the space opera series The Shattered Stars. His short fiction appears in Queer Tales of Monumental Invention, Mysterion Magazine, Shoreline of Infinity, and elsewhere.

Robert Kibble lives west of London with a wife, a teenage son, and a cornucopia of half-finished writing projects.  A few have been published over the years, which – it has to be admitted – is very pleasing.  If only a less creative day job wouldn’t keep getting in the way, he’s sure it would be more.  You can find him on @r_kibble on Twitter or at www.philosophicalleopard.com where you’ll find more short stories, links to his novels, and musings on why zeppelins don’t ply the skies.

Jen Ross Laguna is a Chilean-Canadian writer-editor and former foreign correspondent, who has also spent more than 15 years working internationally for the United Nations. Seven years ago, she relocated to her husband’s country, Aruba to take some time off to write, and stayed. Her poetry appears in Better Than Starbucksthe other side of hope, descant, Last Stanza Poetry Journal and an anthology by The Poet Magazine; and her short stories in Latin American Literary ReviewMslexia MagazineLatineLitThe Pine Cone Review, Isele MagazineGlobal Youth ReviewArlington Literary Journal and Evocations Review.

Chris Cottom lives near Macclesfield, England, and once wrote insurance words. One of his stories was read aloud to passengers on the Esk Valley Railway between Middlesborough and Whitby. Others have been published by Bournemouth Writing Prize, Ellipsis Zine, Free Flash Fiction, Flash 500, FlashFlood, NFFD NZ, One Wild Ride, Oxford Flash Fiction, Retreat West, The Centifictionist, and elsewhere. In the early 1970s he lived next door to JRR Tolkien.

Jennifer Weatherly is a writer local to the DC area, and previously spent the last several years in Richmond, VA. It is the reader’s guess as to which of those cities inspired her entry. She uses her days engaging in the ancient profession of freelancing (also writing), and digs a good hike in her spare time. Occasionally she blogs about that – plus other subjects – at jenweatherly.com.

E.E. King is an award-winning painter, performer, writer, and naturalist. She’ll do anything that won’t pay the bills, especially if it involves animals. Ray Bradbury called her stories, “marvelously inventive, wildly funny, and deeply thought-provoking.”
She’s been published in over 100 magazines and anthologies, including Clarkesworld, Daily Science Fiction, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Short Edition, Daily Science Fiction, and Flametree. Her novels include Dirk Quigby’s Guide to the Afterlife: All you need to know to choose the right heaven, which was translated into Spanish, and several story collections. Her stories are on Tangent’s 2019, 2020-, and 2022-year’s best stories. She’s been nominated for a Rhysling, and several Pushcart awards.
She’s shown paintings at LACMA and painted murals. She also co-hosts The Long-Lost Friends Show and Metastellar story time. She spends summers doing bird rescue and winters planting coral in Bonaire. Check out paintings, writing, musings, and books at: www.elizabetheveking.com and amazon.com/author/eeking

Shannon Brady is a fiction writer who specializes in fantasy and
horror, but is always excited to branch out into other genres. Her
previous works can be found in such publications as Dark Peninsula
Press, Jerry Jazz Musician, Queer Sci Fi, Werewolves Versus, and Third
Flatiron Anthologies. When not writing, she can be found reading,
baking, and playing video games.



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Announcing the Finalists for the 2024 FLASH SUITE Contest

November 19th, 2023


Publishing Daily All December Long


Top Hat
by DJ Tyrer
December 3rd-5th

Crow 
e rathke
December 6th-8th

Half Life Connections
Robert Kibble
December 9th-11th

Fragments of My Father
Jen Ross Laguna
December 12th-14th

Good and Faithful Servant
Chris Cottom
December 15th-19th

Nature Always Finds a Way Through
Jennifer Weatherly
December 20th-25th

3 tales of Rapture
E.E. King
December 26th-28th

Final Stop
Shannon Brady
December 29th-31st

FAN VOTING
January 1st-13th

Winners Announced
MLK Day (US), January 15th




contest goes live next Sunday
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Submission is Now Closed for the 2024 FLASH SUITE Contest

October 13th, 2023

Finalists will be announced on site in early November.

The entries so far are amazing, and we can’t wait to publish our 8 favorites
across November and December.
The winners will be announced MLK Day (US) which is January 15th.

Submission is Still Open for the 2024 Lengthy Poem Contest until January 1st

Submission for the 2024 !Short Story Contest! is closed, and will open in May

If a contest is not open for submission, we will discard your entry unread
— we won’t even reply with snarky comments,
which is half the fun of our publication, anyway.


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And the Winners of the 2023 !Short Story Contest! are…

September 4th, 2023


Never one to waste a moment:

the Grand Prize winner is
“Blood” by D’vorah Shaddai

and the Runner-Ups were
“Blood Curse” by Muhammad Musa
&
“Where the Wild Things Were” by Garth Upshaw.



How the Judges Voted
Each grand prize vote is worth two runner-up votes.
(click here for more on how we judge)

Glenn A. Bruce:
Grand Prize: “Where the Wild Things Were”
Runner-Ups: “Best Barista in a Time of Spiders…”
& “The Genome is Greener on the Other Side”

Aditya Gautam:
Grand Prize: “Blood”
Runner-Ups: “Where the Wild Things Were”‘
& “Blood Curse”

Lady Moet Beast:
Grand Prize: “Blood Curse”
Runner-Ups: “What Goes Around”
& “Blood”

Fan Vote: (click here to view all the results)
Grand Prize: “Blood” (30.42%)
Runner-Ups: “Best Barista in a Time of Spiders…” (13.74%)
& “The last five cigarettes” (12.70%)





Back to the 2023 !Short Story Contest!

The 2024 FLASH SUITE Contest
is now open for submission.

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Mi dispiace tanto

September 3rd, 2023

By Gaurav Bhalla

The only two Americans staying at the hotel were holed up in their sea-facing room, even though they were leaving the next day. It was raining. Both were thinking the same thought—wish I was alone. They had come to Italy because their marriage counselor had suggested a vacation. “Get away, may help you get a different perspective, look at each other differently.” With only a day to go, that perspective had yet to materialize; would have to wait for the next vacation, or the intended separation.   

The wife stood at the window looking down on a green table dripping wet. A few hours ago, a cat was crouching under that table, trying to make herself round and small so the rain wouldn’t drench her.

Kelly wanted that cat. She didn’t know why, but she wanted it. She had gone down to get it. The padrone had sent the maid after her with an umbrella so she wouldn’t get wet. But by the time she reached the table, the cat was gone.

Sprawled on the bed, her husband was reading a book. “Still thinking about the cat?”

“I wanted that cat so much. I wish it would come back.”

The husband yawned.

“Forget it. She isn’t coming back,” he said, his words muffled.  

“I wish it would. It couldn’t be any fun being a cat in the rain.”

She looked back to see if her husband was listening. He wasn’t. He was reading.

Kelly left the window and made her way to the dressing table. Something she saw in the mirror made her grimace.

“I’m tired of my short hair. I wish I had long hair that I could pull back and wear in a bun. That would be fun.”

Still sprawled out, the husband stretched.  

Kelly continued, “Fun, fun, fun—I wish I could have more fun. Buy fun clothes. Dance the tango. Eat mangoes. I really wish there was more fun in my life.”

Kelly caught her husband looking at her in the mirror. If he had heard her, he didn’t show it.

“And I want a cat. Now. I want a cat. If I can’t have long hair or any fun, I can at least have a cat. I must have a cat. Now.” 

“Oh, shut up.”  Finally, she had got him to stir.

She left the dressing table and went back to the window. The square was empty. All the cars and people had left. It was still raining.

Everything—the bronze war monument which attracted visitors from all over Italy, the tall palm trees, the green grass and the green benches in the garden, the gravel path—everything glistened in the rain. The brightly colored facades of the hotels looked scrubbed clean. Under the awning of the café across the square, a waiter retreated into the wall to save his cigarette from the rain.

The sea was coming in, frothing as it broke on the shore. Kelly liked the hunger with which the sea consumed the beach. She liked how the beach yielded itself to the sea’s passion. She liked how the sea and the beach lusted for each other. Watching the sea and the beach meld and separate, again and again, was a spiritually erotic experience for Kelly. She thought back to a steamy, hot night, a few days after they’d arrived, when she had shared the experience of the frothy sea with her husband. But he couldn’t relate to either the erotic or the spiritual elements of her experience. For him, it was just ebb and flow; the sea came in, the sea went out. She remembered how she had wanted to punch him. They were on vacation, she was aroused to the point of spilling over, and all he could think of was sating her lust with a sermon. She remembered turning her back on him and pleasuring herself; fingers in, fingers out, her way of saying who needs you. But she didn’t think he got the message.

The rain had thinned to a drizzle. A single light came on in the square. It was getting dark.

Someone knocked at the door.

“Avanti,” Kelly said, and turned to face the door. Her husband turned on his stomach and propped himself on his elbows to see who was knocking.

It was the housekeeping maid. She stood in the doorway, holding a big tortoiseshell cat tight against her body.  

“Excuse me, signora,” she said, “the padrone asked me to bring this for you.”

Kelly grabbed the cat and hugged it.

“For me? A cat? I have a cat, I have a cat,” she chanted, twirling with girlish delight. “I don’t care if I can’t have long hair, I have a cat. I don’t care if I can’t buy new clothes, I have a cat. But I still want to tango, still want to eat mangoes.”

The maid had not seen this girlish side of Kelly; she smiled.

“You should thank him,” her husband suggested.  

“I must thank him … I must,” Kelly said and ran into the hallway.

“But he’s not there, signora.”

“Not there? How can that be? He just sent me this wonderful gift,” she said, stroking her kitty. The cat purred. “I want to thank him.”

“He had to catch a train, signora.”

“A train? But he lives in town.”

“Si, signora. His mother is ill.”

A moroseness sulked across Kelly’s face. “But we’re leaving tomorrow.”

“I will thank the padrone for you,” the maid said, tightening her face.

Kelly patted the maid’s hand and returned to her room. The maid shut the door and left.

“What are you going to call it?” her husband asked without looking up from his book.  

“I don’t know,” Kelly said, without looking at her husband.

Hugging the cat, she returned to the spot where she was standing when the maid had knocked on the door. More lights had come on in the square, but they were dim, making the square look darker and more distant. Lights were also on in the room, she wished they weren’t.

Kelly stroked her kitty and thought of the padrone. She liked him. She liked the way he made her feel important. When it was raining, he had sent the maid with an umbrella so she wouldn’t get wet. When the cat in the rain was gone before she could reach her, he sent the maid again, this time with a European Shorthair so she wouldn’t feel sad and empty.

She liked that he was older, she knew he was wiser. His old heavy face, his big hands, reminded her of her father when she was little, made her feel secure.

Thinking of the padrone, Kelly went down. The lobby was dark, his office was empty. She hugged her kitty and imagined him standing behind his desk, greeting her. He was a very tall man who stooped when speaking with others as a gesture of courtesy. Seeing him, even if only in her mind, made her happy. She hoped he would magically emerge from the darkness so she could thank him, but he didn’t.

She thought of going back to her room but decided against it. Instead, she stepped out in the courtyard into the lavender-scented night air. The thought of leaving without thanking him troubled her. Made her feel small. Inadequate. And she didn’t like feeling small, didn’t like feeling inadequate. She went back inside and wrote him a note on a letterhead bearing the Padrone’s name.

Mio caro padrone, I wanted to thank you so much before leaving. But you are not here. I wanted a cat; you gifted me one. I will never forget your kindness. Grazie. Grazie. Grazie. I will call you. Con tanto amore, Kelly.

Her husband woke up when Kelly entered the room. “Stop making a racket, come to bed.”

But Kelly didn’t want to come to bed. Stroking and cuddling her kitty, she alternated between reclining on the couch and looking out of the window. She barely slept that night. Not even a catnap. But her kitty did, enjoy a few catnaps. After one of those catnaps, the cat wriggled free and jumped on the floor. Kelly wanted her back, but the cat wanted to roam. She circled the couch, then walked toward the window and leaped on the window ledge. Kelly marveled at her kitty’s grace. If only she could be as graceful ice-skating. She rose from the couch and joined the kitty at the window.

The kitty moved away from Kelly. She didn’t want to be held.

The sky was getting brighter. One by one, the lights in the square went off. Kelly thought of the day ahead. They were booked on the 9 a.m. train to Rome, and from there on the 14:40 Pan Am flight to New York.

Her chest tightened at the thought of leaving. She wanted to stay longer but had failed to think of even a single way of extending her holiday (Kelly liked holiday better than vacation; more romantic). Still, she was glad she tried.

The alarm on the bedside table rang. It was 5:30. Her husband rolled over, turned it off, and continued sleeping. Kelly decided to pack and get into her travel clothes. She liked wearing loose-fitting shirts and pants while traveling. The cat followed her into the bathroom while she was showering and returned to the window ledge when she came out to dress.

Kelly’s stomach gurgled as she buttoned her shirt. She liked to eat early on days she traveled. Since the kitchen didn’t open until eight, she had placed a special order the previous night for breakfast at seven—American-style French toast, crispy bacon, and cappuccino. Her husband didn’t eat breakfast; he started his day with several cups of black coffee. 

As she moved to the window ledge to cradle her kitty and head down to the cafe, she noticed a man entering the garden carrying a bag, an easel, and a small folding stool.

An artist? So early? Kelly was surprised. Artists usually rolled in later in the day.

She watched him as he made his way to a bench with its back to the rising sun. He set his easel directly in front of him, his palette of colors, brushes, and sketch pens within easy reach to his left. Next, he opened the folding stool and placed it to the right of his easel.

Kelly wondered what he was going to paint.

The artist bent down and unzipped the bag. A small dog jumped out. It was a Maltese. Kelly knew the breed. Her best friend had a dog just like the one running circles around the bench.

The artist tapped the stool with a wooden ruler. The Maltese jumped onto the stool and smacked its lips in anticipation. The man rewarded him with a biscuit, which the dog devoured. The artist tapped the stool again. The well-mannered Maltese sat up erect and held his pose.

Oh my God, he’s going to paint the Maltese.

Ignoring the gurgle in her stomach, which had now grown to a growl, Kelly scooped up her kitty in her arms and ran down the stairs, through the lobby, and into the garden. Startled at seeing a woman holding a cat running toward them, the Maltese began barking and jumped into his master’s lap, knocking the artist’s mug of brushes and pencils off its perch.

The artist was furious. Kelly apologized profusely. “Please forgive me. I can explain. I’m here for a very important reason.”

The artist glared at Kelly, and waved her off, Vamoso.

“Please, signor, please. A quick portrait of my kitty and me and I’ll leave. I must thank the kind man who gifted me this cat, and since I can’t thank him in person, I would like to thank him with a portrait of my kitty and me.”

“OK, come tomorrow,” the artist snapped, strutting his best spaghetti western imitation.

“Tomorrow? No, today.”

“Today?”

“Today. Our train leaves at 9, we’re leaving the hotel by 8:30.”

“8:30?”

“8:30.”

The artist looked at Kelly as if she was kooky. “Even God can’t paint you a portrait before 8:30,” he snarled, tapping his watch.

“You’re right. God can’t but you can,” Kelly shot back, unfazed. “I’ll pay you double.”

Kelly had a history of playing the money card on international trips; it had served her well. She hoped it would today too.

“Ah, double money,” the artist said, looking at his well-worn shoes and patched clothes. “I wish I could say I’m not for sale, but I am.” Looking at Kelly with hapless honesty, he held up three fingers.  

“Triple?” Kelly asked.

The artist nodded.

“OK, three times it is.”

The artist set to work. First, he gave his dog another biscuit and put him back in the bag. Next, he seated Kelly and her kitty on the stool. But the cat wouldn’t sit still. She didn’t want to be held. She was curious about in the Maltese in the bag, whose barking was peeling the duvets off those still lazing past waking time in bed, in the apartment buildings and hotels around the square. The artist gave up, pulled out his Polaroid from his bag and took three quick photos of the cat. He took Kelly’s photo too, all the while mumbling and complaining, and pointing to his unoccupied stool.  

“Want to name the portrait?”

“Si, signor. Kelly and Sophia.”

“I’ll see you in the lobby at 8:15.”

“You’re a godsend, signor,” Kelly said, and hugged the artist.

“Don’t expect a da Vinci,” the artist said, waving Kelly and her kitty away.  

“I know you’ll do your best,” Kelly said and jogged back to the hotel. The growl in her stomach had become embarrassingly loud.  

The artist reached the lobby five minutes before the promised time. Kelly was waiting. He held the painting up to sunlight and said, “It’s not a da Vinci, but …”

“You’re right, signor. It’s not a da Vinci. But da Vinci would have been pleased.” Kelly clapped heartily to express her gratification. The portrait had heart, had soul—had connected with her heart and soul—more than what she had hoped for.

She handed the artist an envelope. “Triple.”

The artist accepted the envelope and saluted Kelly with it.

Then she gave him two carry-out bags from the hotel’s restaurant and said with a flourish worthy of a British butler, “Breakfast for the signor and his Maltese.”

The artist bowed and said, “You are very generous, signora.” Then he winked and held up his right hand, fingers and thumb flared. “Next time I’ll charge more.” 

Kelly laughed.

Buon viaggio.” The artist waved and left.

Kelly had the portrait. All she needed now was a note.

P.S. Padrone, I hope you like the portrait of the kitty and me. I like it a lot.

Since I couldn’t thank you in person, I had to find another way. I named the kitty Sophia, after my favorite Italian actress, Sophia Loren. Grazie.

She gave the portrait and the note to the housekeeping maid, who promised to give it to the padrone the minute he returned.

After reaching New York, Kelly called the padrone on the Monday he was scheduled to return. But the padrone wasn’t back yet, he had extended his stay by a week; his mother needed additional medical attention.

A week later, Kelly called again. The padrone was expecting her call, but he was not at his desk. He was resolving a guest complaint. Kelly recalled the gravitas that covered the tall padrone’s heavy face when he handled guests’ complaints. She felt her cheeks flush as she remembered the lenity with which he had settled her complaints.

Thirty minutes later, the padrone called back.

“Padrone, is it you? Is it really you?”

“Si, signora, it is me. Thank you so much for the painting. Bellissima. How did you know Sophia Loren was my favorite actress?”

“I knew, I just knew.”

Mi dispiace, Signora, I …”

“No, no, padrone, it is I who am sorry.” Kelly cut the padrone short. “Mi dispiace tanto. I’m so sorry, padrone.”

“Why, signora? What happened, why so sorry?”

“You gifted me a cat. She’s sitting here in my lap, makes me so happy, makes me feel so important. But I’m so ashamed, so embarrassed.”

“Why, signora? Why so ashamed, why so embarrassed?”

“Because … mio caro signor … I like you so much … but I don’t even know your name.”


Winners of the 2023 !Short Story Contest! will be announced tomorrow.

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But yet 30 hours left to Vote, 2023 SSC

September 1st, 2023


You read correctly. 30 hours.


All the judge votes are in, and
with over 2,000 Fan Votes cast

— THAT’S RIGHT, over TWO-THOUSAND–

one story has a substantial lead, HOWEVER
the following three are within 50 votes of each other.
Only two of these three will receive
Fan Voting Runner-Up votes.


Fan Voting closes at 11:59 Eastern Standard Time
on Saturday, September 2nd
(that’s TOMORROW)
— !SO VOTE NOW!
and VOTE OFTEN.

VOTE
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The Turning Point

August 31st, 2023

prologue in five parts to the short film “Blood Run”
by Chantelle Tibbs

PT. V

I’m sure you’ve seen bags go over heads in many movies. I promise you the experience of it is much more horrifying than Hollywood could ever portray. The lack of oxygen and the darkness are only the tip of the iceberg. It’s being handled and not knowing where to punch, who to kick. The sounds around you that you can’t quite make out and the realization that even if you do it won’t change anything. I felt myself shoved into a vehicle. I heard an engine start and made the choice to count the turns. Four left turns, two right, one slight right and then a complete stop. I braced myself for the worst. 

When the bag came off my head I was sitting in the front passenger seat of a sedan parked at a park staring at Dee Stanley. Jen’s voice boomed from the back seat. 

“You wanted Dee, you got her. “

More like she got me. 

Dee’s eyes locked with mine. They were black as ever. 

“There he is.” 

Dee pointed to a couple walking in the park arm in arm. 

“Who?”

I asked. My voice sounded far weaker than I wanted it to. 

“Look closer.”

I peeled my eyes off of Dee and stared harder at the couple walking. It was Dan and his wife whose name briefly escaped me. It hit me that I never pictured the two of them together. They looked like highschool lovers arm in arm, laughing. She was beautiful. A sinking feeling came over my heart. I felt ugly. 

“I knew he was married. What do you want from us?”

“She’s glowing.” 

I looked down at her stomach instinctively as the two grew closer to the car. She was pregnant. 

Dee reached into her pocket. I jumped. She pulled out two bottles of what seemed like medicine. Upon looking at them closer I could see they were prenatal vitamins. 

“She’s pregnant?” 

I didn’t know what else to say. Why did Dee have prenatals? Why was Dan’s wife pregnant? What the fuck was going on?

“Recognize these?”

Dee handed me one of the bottles. As I read the label I could see they were the prenatal vitamins I had been taking before the miscarriage. The same purple label and wholesome white letters wrapped around the bottle. I opened the bottle and poured two of the white capsules into my palm. 

“When you got them did they have a safety seal?” 

“I don’t know.” 

Dee handed me the second bottle. I opened it quickly. Silver foil covered the top. I peeled it back without having to be asked and pushed through cotton until I reached two gigantic sized, green tablets. My heart began to pound so hard I couldn’t feel myself breathing. 

“What is this?”

“It’s a prenatal vitamin. The white capsules, the ones he bought for you, are not.”

I tried to open the car door. It was locked. Panicked, I tried the handle again. Dee put her hand on my shoulder gently. I brushed it off aggressively. 

“Get away from me! Let me out! I want…what the fuck is this? What are you doing?”

Dan and his wife were long gone. I figured if I called out for help they could turn back. Maybe someone else would hear me. I needed to make it out of the car. I screamed as I felt Jen’s hands from the back seat cover my mouth. I tried biting her to no avail. Dee moved in close to me. Her eyes pulled me into her. 

“I take no pleasure in telling you that Dan was drugging you with a compound that would terminate any pregnancy along with your own life. It’s a miracle you are alive ma’am.”

Her voice carried a silent reverence and an overwhelming pity I couldn’t ignore. She was telling the truth. 

I jangled the car door until it suddenly opened, spilling me out onto the curb. I fell twice trying to get up. I heard the car doors open and close behind me. Looking around I could see we were alone. I tried to scream but nothing came out. My breathing heavied as I panted and puffed out long deep breaths in a rhythmic fashion. Dee and Jen walked up and stood over me. Dee’s hand once again touched my shoulder. I let it. Her hand was grounding and warm. It brought me comfort. I looked up at her with childlike eyes. 

“It was a girl.” 

I felt nothing. 

“No one’s going to let him get away with this.”

Jen chimed in. She sounded horrified. It hit me that it must be the first time she was hearing what Dee had just told me. 

“I want to die. Please?”

Jen walked off over to the car. I heard her kick something and mumble to herself. 

“I can fix it so you never have to feel this way again. But I need your help.” 

“Help?”

“I want Camille.”

“What?”

“Blay Reyes’ niece, I want her.”

“She disappeared. No one in my office has been able to find her.”

“Where are they keeping Blay  and the other women with symptoms?”

A blood chilling scream rattled my rib cage as I howled into the night. Dee knelt beside me in the grass. I let her hold me. 

“I can help you strike him down in the worst of ways. I know you’re hurting but look around you. How long have we all been hurting? How long is too long? Some things are fate. The time is right. Help us. Help me. Give me Blay. She will lead us to Camille and what that woman carries in her blood will make it so that we will never find ourselves at the bottom of the food chain again. 





Read the Turning Point from the beginning.
Fan Voting is still open for two more days
to close Saturday, September 2nd, at the EST Witching Hour

Join us for Mi dispiace tanto, a short story by Gaurav Bhalla 
on Sunday, September 3rd.


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