The Birthday Gift

by Huina Zheng

“You waste money,” Old Li said, pointing at the blue-wrapped birthday gift in his son’s hands.

“You spent far more on my education,” Ming replied.

“That’s what parents are supposed to do,” Old Li said, weighing the box with a satisfied smile.

“Then I made sure today’s gift follows the proper path,” Ming said.

Lao Li laughed as he unwrapped it.

“Thanks to your year-round drills, no days off, and the countless belts you broke on my back, I finally got into medical school,” Ming added, his tone as casual as discussing the weather. “You always said studying is the only proper path.”

Old Li’s smile froze.

A brand-new smart study tablet lay on the velvet lining.

“Latest model. Complete parental-monitoring functions,” Ming said, leaning in to power it on. The screen lit up with course lists. “I’ve enrolled you in a senior-college intensive program. Daily check-ins. Weekly exams…”

Old Li stared at the notification flashing: Today’s Required Lesson: Algebra I. His fingers trembled.

“You always said one should learn for life,” Ming said, gently pressing the lock button. “Now it’s my turn to keep you on the proper path.”

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

Huina Zheng is a writer and college essay coach based in Guangzhou, China. Her work appears in Baltimore Review, Variant Literature, Midway Journal, and other journals. She has received multiple nominations, including for the Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net, Best Small Fictions, and Best Microfiction.

 

The Yard Sale

by Robert Runté

The pre-teen nephew was put in charge of the yard sale table, while inside the adults haggled over the better furniture. The nephew had arranged the collection of worthless vases, knick-knacks, and rusty tools on the table, along with the contents of the kitchen drawer. The ancient ivory figurine was probably worth six figures, but the family had dismissed it as some plastic Halloween trinket.

I was more interested in the metal chest the boy was using as a bench.

"How much for that metal case?" I asked, pointing.

"There's no key for it," he told me. "We're gonna break it open later, to see what's inside."

"Oh, I can tell you that," I lied. "He used it to hold a combination of sand, cat litter, and salt. For the driveway each winter."

The boy nodded. "That's why it's so heavy, then."

"I'll give you a twenty for it."

"Why do you want it?"

"It snows on my driveway too," I said, indicating a random door down the block. "I liked your uncle's idea of having a sandbox out by the driveway. And it will remind me of him."

"You were friends?" the boy asked.

"Neighbors," I said. That should be safe. Close enough to be friendly, but not enough to have come up in conversation with family.

The boy shrugged. "Sure. Why not. Everything has to go somewhere." He stood up.

"My car's just there," I said. "If you could help me carry it that far?"

"Why the car? I could carry it to your house, easily enough." He nodded at the house I had indicated earlier.

"Oh, thanks, but winter's still a month or two off. I'll put it in storage until it actually snows."

"Sure."

Together, we manhandled the chest into the trunk.

"Hey," he said as I started towards the driver's door.

I jumped a little, afraid of what he might ask.

"Yes?"

"Aren't you forgetting something?"

I looked back at the table. It was tempting to go back for the ivory, but I couldn't risk it. There was a chance someone would mention it to the family, they would realize its value, try to track it down, find me.

"I don't think so. I just wanted the, uh, sandbox."

"My twenty," the boy said.

I laughed. A little too loud, I suspect, given my nerves. Stiffing the kid would have been unnecessarily memorable, almost as bad as buying the ivory.

I reached into my wallet and pulled out a bill.

"I'm sorry. I'm getting forgetful in my old age.

"It's okay. Uncle was like that, too."

Which reminded me, I'd better get gas before heading out for the woods. Running out would be the sort of careless mistake I'd been making lately. God, what else did I need? A shovel from a hardware store.

As I drove off, the lad gave me a friendly wave.

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

Robert Runté is Senior Editor with EssentialEdits.ca and freelances at SFeditor.ca. A former professor, he has won four Aurora Awards for his literary criticism and currently reviews for the Ottawa Review of Books. His own fiction has been published over 130 times, with several reprinted in "best of" collections.

 

The Pogo Stick Boy

by Jenny Morelli

He woke this morning confused, disoriented; crawled from bed, threw on yesterday’s clothes, fresh socks, summer sneakers, and ran out the back door, past his mom.

"Slow down!" she yawned, then "Eat something!"  but he didn’t respond, just picked up his pogo stick to hop down the street as his neighbors hollered "Good Day, Sir Pogo Master," amused with this, the only child on the block, and he bounced along the yellow line from one curb to the other, into the neighbor's yard higher, higher, higher; up and over tall trees and low clouds, up and up into space before dropping again, ears popping, stomach plunging, until at last, he reached his street, long shadows revealing dusk had arrived.

He pogoed his return home until forced to stop for the strange man that appeared before him, falling from his toy as he looked up, up, up at the top-hatted fellow, eyes full of awe.

"There you are," the man said, to which the boy replied, "Here I am," to which the man replied, "You missed so much," to which the boy replied "So did you," then the strange man stroked his lopsided, gray-speckled beard.

"How do we fill it in," he asked, "all that lost time between you and me?"

The small boy shrugged, took the man’s hand, and together, they strolled down the street, backward, of course, so they could watch their ends meet in the middle. 

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

Jenny Morelli is a NJ high school English teacher who lives with her husband, cat, and myriad yard pets. She seeks inspiration in everything and loves to spin fantastically weird tales. She’s published in several print and online literary magazines including Spillwords, Red Rose Thorns, Scars tv, Bottlecap Press and Bookleaf Press for five poetry chapbooks.

 

Off the Wall

by William F. Smith

Detective Pierre LaRoche was tired but jubilant as he trudged up the steps leading to the top of the old castle's parapet. For years, he had been hoping to arrest the notorious jewel thief Jules Bijoux, and now the moment of triumph was imminent.

After Bijoux stole gems from several celebrities at the Cannes International Film Festival, LeRoche pursued the miscreant to this remote ruin near Vence. The Inspector was confident that Bijoux was carrying the jewels, so now the rascal was trapped. But why had Bijoux run to the top of the tower when the old, worn staircase was the only way up or down? LaRoche shook his head and slid his revolver from its holster as he took the final three steps up into the sunlight. His squinting blue eyes surveyed the area. There was no conceivable hiding place and there was also no Jules Bijoux!

"Sacrebleu," LaRoche muttered. "C'est impossible! I myself saw the rogue go up the stairs just moments before I mounted them. Yet he is not here!"

The Inspector raised his eyes as he heard a voice from above. "Au revoir, Rocky, mon vieux." LaRoche saw Bijoux smile and wave as he peered down from the basket suspended from the hot air balloon that was drifting rapidly toward the Italian border.

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

William F. Smith's stories, humorous verse and photographs have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Mike Shane Mystery Magazine and Reader’s Digest. His stories have been included in several anthologies.

 

December 3, 2025







 

The Laughing Class

by Huina Zheng

At 8:20 a.m., just as the first-period bell faded, Teacher Chen’s piercing voice filled the classroom. Since becoming their homeroom teacher in fourth grade, she had called them “stupid,” “disgusting,” and “brainless,” though to parents she insisted that “strict teachers produce top students.”

Lan, as class monitor, sat upright with a serious expression. It was her duty to set the example. Yet inside she bristled. She disliked this teacher, and even more, the endless scolding.

Let something happen. Make her stop, she shouted in her head.

She kept her back straight, for lowering her head was not allowed; she kept her hands on the desk, since hiding them below would only invite more fury. Teacher Chen, gesturing as she lectured on discipline, knocked over her water cup. Tea spread in widening circles across the podium and dripped to the floor. Lan pressed her lips tight, but her deskmate Ling let out a snicker. Instantly, the room caught fire: muffled giggles swelled into loud, unrestrained laughter. Lan joined in, her voice rising until it drowned out Teacher Chen’s scolding.

Teacher Chen’s face darkened. “Quiet! Be quiet!” she shouted. But the class only laughed harder, their voices rattling the desks and spilling into the hallway, storming into the next classroom.

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

Huina Zheng is a college essay coach and an editor. Her stories appear in Baltimore Review, Variant Literature, and more. Nominated thrice for both the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net, she lives in Guangzhou, China with her family.