Flagstaff Incognito

by Clyde Liffey

My foppish dress and effete manner are only a disguise, he assured her soon after they met. I’ve crossed the Mafia, major gangs including MS-13, even the NYPD.

She liked his hands.

After thirty years of marriage, he died in their bed. He never suspected that she didn’t believe him.

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

Clyde Liffey lives near the water.

Time Zone

by Nina Welch

The bartender at Zelda’s, est. 1955, is a time traveler. Eighty-year-old Betty enters the bar at twilight and magically turns 21. She steps out and she’s ancient. She goes back in and orders a martini from the handsome bartender and is intrigued by his questions.

“What do you know about life?”

“Not much, I’m only 21 or am I?”

“Do you have any sense of time?”

“What do you mean?”

“Time in between.”

“I feel strange.”

“Like time standing still?”

“Is this the in between zone?”

“Yes, do you want to come go with me?”

“Not out the front door.”

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

Nina Welch’s short stories, Green Lizard Lounge, What’s Your Opening Line, and Good to Go, have been published in Literally Stories 2024 Anthology. Her poetry was published in Rats Ass Review, Aaduna Press for National Poetry Month, and Girls on Film and Fandango-8 chapbooks. She graduated, Cum Laude, from the University of Arizona in 2001 majoring in Media Arts. She lives in San Clemente, California and is a contributing writer for the San Clemente Journal.

 

Not a Fairy Tale

By Guylaine Spencer

Close to a large forest there lived a young woman…

No, let me start again.

It wasn’t a forest. It was a city park near the waterfront … with weeping willows, a beach, and a children’s playground. There were walking trails, too, that used to be popular with all kinds of folks. These days, though, it was mostly only the “residents” of the park who came here.

The woman wasn’t young. She had to be at least fifty. She lived in the park under a tarp held up by giant recycling bins and pieces of lumber she’d stolen from the neighbourhood. Or “borrowed”, as she liked to say. She’d accidentally burned down her last tent and was waiting for another one to be donated.

One day, she was stumbling along the sidewalk and spotted the Glow. It was purple and pink and about the size and shape of a man’s body and it just hovered in the air a few inches off the ground, in front of a boring apartment building.

She’d seen the Glow before, in the same spot, but had always ignored it. Nothing good comes from following things like that, she thought.

But this day, she was feeling sorry for herself—even more than she usually was. She hadn’t been able to sell anything (or anyone) and therefore was missing her special medicine.

So, when she saw the Glow, she decided to walk towards it. And then she walked into it.

Immediately, things started getting freaky. She’d seen visions before but this was unreal. The walls of the apartment building disintegrated in front of her eyes. For a second, she saw a flash of concrete and metal rods and heard clanging and drilling and men yelling at each other. Then, as if she was watching a movie, she saw a pile of stone and brick rubble appear. Finally, the last image firmed up and she was standing in front of a brick building with three stories, multiple gables, and fancy wooden trim. A stone staircase led up to the front doors. A sign on the wall read: House of Refuge. Without thinking, she walked up the steps and stood on the landing, too afraid to knock.

Suddenly, the door swung open and revealed a short, stout girl dressed in a floor-length gown with an apron and cap that looked like it might be a costume for a play set in the last century.

“Yes?” the girl demanded. “Well? What do you want?” When the woman didn’t answer – speech seemed to have abandoned her – the girl repeated, “Yes? Who sent you?”

When the woman still said nothing, the girl sighed and said, “Alright, then, you can’t speak. Or won’t? Well, come along, you’re lucky, we have a bed. Someone died last night. I’ll take you to Mrs. Sturdy. She’s the house superintendent. She decides who can live here and who can’t. You look like a good candidate … I have to ask, though. Where did you get those clothes?!”

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

AUTHOR’S NOTE: This story was inspired by a building called the House of Refuge that used to stand near the waterfront at the foot of John Street in Hamilton, Canada. It was one of several buildings set aside for the poor in the early days of the city.

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

Guylaine Spencer’s fiction has been published in The New Canadian Stories Magazine, CommuterLit and Literally Stories. Website: https://guylainespencer.wordpress.com

 

The Call

by Celeste Budwit-Hunter

You sit on the edge of your seat during the call with Dr. Patel. “Recurrence,” “sarcoma,” “wait and see” swirl and melt into black. You Google the side effects of her promising new treatment and read “cytokine”, “neurological” — seven years ago, in the hospital room with faux wood paneling, you are just waking when you hear about seizures, sedation, intubation, how many days? They called your family, no guarantees you would wake up or be compos mentis when you did. Thinking clearly now, feeling the weight of waiting, you’ll be damned if you go down that road again.

━━━━⊱༒︎ • ༒︎⊰━━━━

Celeste Budwit-Hunter works for Johnson Space Center, where she edits procedures performed by astronauts and flight controllers. Having survived a rare cancer thanks to an unrelated donor, she celebrates life through photography, poetry, and hiking in the woods. Her writing has been published by Spider Road Press, Houston Writers House, in collaborations of Women in the Visual and Literary Arts, and upcoming in Synkroniciti.