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Call Me Mary

Fiction by Ali Mckenzie-Murdoch

My feet prickle and the orange fish in the water dart and glint, flocking to gorge on my dead skin, crisscrossing tracer bullets in the illuminated tank. The nibbling tickles like the bubbles in the glass of cava in my right hand. I lean back into the petrol blue cushion and stroke the white piping covering the seams. There’s a lighter band of skin around my ring finger. I slide my hand under my thigh where I can’t see it and look into the fish tank below my chair. Red frangipani flowers float on the surface of the water, fleshy lips parted in a sigh.

I wandered into the Aqua Bliss Fish Spa after walking from my hotel to Passeig de Gracia. I never do this kind of thing and I thought all those years of pounding the beat had made me tough, but police issue footwear is more comfortable than sandals. 

An assistant helps me lift my legs out of the water and leaves me to relax in a dark leather club chair after drying me off. This is the ‘Extravagance Treatment’ highlight, a thirty-minute foot massage washed down with a second glass of cava. After the fish pedicure, I can’t eat another tapas of anchovies, but I’m always game for a foot rub and some bubbly. My eyes close, the swish and splash of water and bubbles lull me, a whisper of pear drops wafts past, warm hands cup my feet.

Hola. Soy Maria, says a voice, an English twang to the vowels.

Forgive me if I don’t open my eyes, I mumble to the girl sitting at my feet. She anoints them with oil, pressing her fingers deep into the soles, pulling and spreading my bones, pinching and kneading my sore muscles. Argh, I let out a moan, half-human, half pussycat. This is the most relaxed I’ve been since the divorce. A week in Barcelona seems a good way to start spending my share of the settlement.

There’s a smell in the oil I can’t quite place. It carries me to gilded altars, the chill of a darkened pew, a priest swinging a thurible suspended from chains. The swirling smoke of incense rises in the air. Is it myrrh or frankincense? I’ll have to ask the girl. When I open my eyes, all I see is the crown of her head. Her thick strawberry blond hair cascades over her shoulders, hiding her face but I make out a snub nose sprinkled with freckles. There’s something familiar about her complexion, her accent, and then I remember. 

The thick locks of hair, more reddish in the daylight of the spa, appeared dull blonde under the strip lights in the police station. As if she hears the click of my memories falling into place, she looks up and recognises me too. After she witnessed the man murdered, we had to help her reinvent herself elsewhere, but not before she told the world what she had seen. Unlike the men who scattered and ran, who lost faith, who betrayed him, she stayed and spoke up. I remember throwing a rough woollen blanket over her head before we ran from the squad car and snuck her through a side door of the courthouse. An armoured vehicle as big as a snowplough thundered past, flanked by a full police escort, sirens blaring. Our decoy worked. Then we wrenched her from her life and erased all the traces. 

So this is where she ended up, but I know better than to say a word. Her eyes are the colour of the Aqua Bliss Fish Spa. As we stare at each other, they fill with tears.

I want to ask her about her new life, how she can make friends without a past she can share, her life in danger if anyone identifies her. Her eyes quiver and a silver droplet falls on my foot. I want to reassure her she’s safe, but the threads knotted in this tapestry of lies keep me quiet. Bowing her head, she wipes away the tears from my feet with her hair.


Ali Mckenzie-Murdoch is a UK dancer who lives in Zürich, Switzerland with her husband and son. Her work has been published in El Pais. In between running her dance studio and writing, she enjoys lifting heavy weights and wild swimming.

Autumn

Poetry by Corinna Underwood

Through a lonely, stagnant year
I’ve missed the changing seasons,
passing only from silent chill
to stifling porous heat;
tired of banging around in a hollow drum.
Suddenly storming with unexpected tenderness,
my lips become unstitched.
At last I have stories untold.
I am turning with the leaves,
not falling but slow-drifting,
so, catch me in your arms,
I am coming home to stay


Corinna Underwood is a British author currently residing in Rome, Georgia. Along with poetry, she writes short stories and novels in the magical realism, mystery, and horror genres. Visit www.ambiguousmedia.net.

Don’t Bury Me Alone

Poetry by Nancy Machlis Rechtman

I don’t want to die
Alone on a bare floor
And have a stranger come upon my body
Lifeless with eyes wide open
Wondering why no one was there
To say goodbye.

And I don’t want my soul to hover
Watching those I loved wracked with grief
Saying all the things I longed to hear
When it would have meant something
But it’s too late
Like missing a plane
Or a train
Because you forgot your ticket
But instead, you forgot your words.

Don’t bury me in the cold, hard ground
Where gravediggers struggle to make headway
Their shovels slamming into earth like steel
That refuses to yield space for a wooden box

Where visitors might feel obliged to stop by once a year
To shed a few tears
And dust off a headstone
And maybe leave some flowers that will soon wither and die.

But instead, scatter my ashes by the ocean where I’m home
Where the waves lap gently at the sand
And the sun warms the soul
Where I can drink in the life that I’ve left
And no longer feel alone.

I will be there in your dreams
You’ll hear me in the wind
And maybe if you think of me
You’ll find I’m in your heart.


Nancy Machlis Rechtman has had poetry and short stories published in Paper Dragon, The Thieving Magpie, Quail Bell, Goat’s Milk, and more. She wrote freelance Lifestyle stories for a local newspaper and was the copy editor for another local paper. She currently writes a blog called Inanities at https://nancywriteon.wordpress.com.

Salsa y Reggaeton Went Silent

Poetry by Gigi Guizado

Salsa y reggaeton went silent
No soundtrack to my dreams

Don’t know what it means…
My soul was lonely

I surfed
and thought moonlight becomes you

drawing me closer
as if I were the tide

You have trouble sleeping too
Don’t know why…

Sometimes you make my heart sing anew
like light sparkles on the water

Or hips, feet, arms entwine
keeping time on the dance floor

Don’t see you much anymore
in and out like the radio

on a country road

Your rhythm stays with me
like the shore recalls the sea

Moonbeams shine on all things
solid, liquid, no matter the distance

More faithful than sound
face in the sky sings his silent lullaby

Sandy-eyed memories rock me to sleep
Dreams are the drumbeat of motivation


Gigi Guizado is an actor, writer, and theatre translator based in Las Vegas. Her micro-plays have had productions or staged readings in San Francisco, Las Vegas, and London, UK. Her poetry and translations have been published by Adelaide Literary Magazine, Another Chicago Magazine, and Asymptote Journal.

Three Scenes in Sunlight

Nonfiction by Bonnie Demerjian

Mother and Child

I hold in my hand a creased black and white photograph, Mom holding infant Me. We’re both smiling for the camera, my father the cameraman, perhaps? With squinting eyes and open mouth, I was a picture of pure delight. Mom smiling too, her long dark hair in plaits and pinned up, a most unattractive style, but fashionable in the 40s. There we pose on that sun-filled afternoon before a house, its white planks brilliant in the clear light, a light as uncomplicated as our smiles.

How often I’ve studied this moment in its informal, close-knit sweetness. At times I’ve felt it a pang, knowing that the innocence of that captured instant was soon, very soon, to be shattered by adultery and divorce, not once but twice. So unknowing we were that day. And what about the photographer, certainly the man I was to meet only years later and the instrument of heartache. What did he know as he pressed the shutter?

I took the picture up another day not long ago. This time, instead of musing on impending pain, I saw, with a flash of insight, wordless uncontaminated love, only love and the miracle of our braided existence. An immensity of stardust commingled in we two. A moment, like that, so brief, so intense, will never come again, but, like the deep tolling of a massive bell, keeps on sounding.

Love   

We met just before hitchhiking became life-threatening. Our college was on a hill several miles above town. There was a bus for those of us without cars, but of course it never ran when you wanted to get away from campus. So, we walked out to the road and stuck out a thumb. What? Me worry?

A few cars went by and then an aging MGB, a red sporty thing, pulled over. I had seen the driver in orchestra. Later, he told me he had been eyeing me too from the trumpet section lined up behind the cellos. Trumpets didn’t have a lot to do while the string players sawed through their parts and they, they were always guys, had plenty of opportunity to check out girls.

So, on a clear spring afternoon, with a breeze from the distant glacier-hollowed lake fresh on my face, I hitched a ride down the hill to town. I wasn’t afraid and even a little intrigued. After all, I had been aware of that evaluating look behind my back. The beer we shared that day, with the small searching talk that followed, are lost to time, but that brief ride marked the first mile on our lifetime journey.                

This Place

I’m standing in the field behind the barn, that matriarch of the farm. She’s over a century old, red, of course, and looming three full stories. It’s a pleasantly hot late summer afternoon in this place, familiar and dear since childhood, home to grandparents, mother, and, for a time, to me. There are sprawling evergreens nearby, scenting the air with their piney aroma, trees planted by my grandfather to succeed his aging orchards. The Senecas had orchards here, too, before they were driven away. We found their flinty arrowheads and smooth grinders when the soil was turned. Dried weeds whisper softly in a light breeze. It stirs the dusty scent of grasses flavored with a hint of warm tar from the road nearby. This time of day the birds are still and only a few desultory crickets scrape away at my feet.

I’ve come today with a purpose, for this place will soon enough be sold, destined for an unseen future. I say goodbye to the barn, dim and faintly redolent from barrels of cherry brandy, product of a damaged crop, we savored long ago. Farewell to the farm house, the gray and sagging sheds, the creek bubbling to the lake in cheerful conversation. Today I raise my face, lift arms, and give thanks to all who lived and worked this land and for all the years I’ve tramped its acres. This unassuming farm, its fertile soil and deep wells, embraced and nourished many lifetimes, so, speaking for them all, I stand in a golden moment tasting of gratitude and sadness.


Bonnie Demerjian writes from Alaska. She has written as journalist and as author of four books about Alaska’s history, human and natural. Her emerging poetry and flash work has appeared in Alaska Women Speak, Tidal Echoes, Bluff and Vine, and Blue Heron Review.

Because The Wind Is Rising And This Week There Was A Microburst

Poetry by D. Dina Friedman

Live in the layers/Not on the litter

Stanley Kunitz

I.

Carcasses of trees severed from roots fog the forward path. We step over branches with browning

leaves, chilled in the poison breath of the wind. 

II.

Soon the trunks will be shredded for lumber to keep the machinery of the world running. My friend

so desperate, he might send his daughter over the bridge alone to face the guards at the border.

III.

How do we hold ourselves up when we’re paper puppets in the wind? Where my friend waits to

cross, the river is rising and the litter swirls. On my beautiful side of the planet, the trees and wires

are down. I am helpless to help him.

IV.

I picture my friend and his daughter in my home between the mountain and the river, eating hot

tomato soup and looking out the window from their quarantine to admire the tree whose limb

plunged in the microburst, barely missing the roof.

V.

The forked branch landed by the front door, its crown of red leaves blocking the path. We thought

we had an antidote for locked borders. We thought underneath the trunk of a uniform, a pathway to

a softer heart.

VI.

The children whirl through the muddy camp like litter between layers of heartless words that leave

no space for a sun drawn with a green marker on a scrap of paper grabbed from the gale.

VII.

Who am I to hug a dying tree? To smile because the sky is blue and the sun is shining? It’s shredding

day. I’ll make tomato soup and freeze it for sparser times, then march the papers to the truck that

splits them into litter, spaghetti in the wind.


D. Dina Friedman has published widely in literary journals and received two Pushcart Prize nominations. She’s the author of Escaping Into the Night (Simon and Schuster), Playing Dad’s Song (Farrar, Straus, Giroux) and one poetry chapbook, Wolf in the Suitcase (Finishing Line Press). Visit her website: www.ddinafriedman.com.

Reflections of the Rio Grande

Poetry by Tiel Aisha Ansari

You have walled up my free-flowing waters, trammeled me with rip-rap and rat-rotten levees; you entomb me under asphalt and throw bridges across my back

You have trapped out the beaver that shaped my watershed, the salmon that climbed me into the land

You ditched and filled, drained and overbuilt, the wetlands that cushioned the blows of my wrath, my wrath flooding against the lands around me

You choke me with nitrogen runoff and mats of green algae, suck out fresh water and give me salt to drink, you drain me to dust and dead fish

But I swear I hold no malice, need no revenge, claim no sacrifice. Stop bringing me
children to drown.


Sufi warrior poet Tiel Aisha Ansari has been featured by Measure, Windfall, and Everyman’s Library. Her collections include Knocking from Inside, High-Voltage Lines, Country Well-Known as an Old Nightmare’s Stable, The Day of My First Driving Lesson, and Dervish Lions. She hosts Wider Window Poetry on KBOO Community Radio.

Life’s Revenge

Poetry by Hugh Blanton

Maybe I didn’t give life what it wanted.

All of those things I was supposed to do –
get married – have children –
get a mortgaged house –
vote –
I refused to do and now
life wants payback.

Maybe if I’d worked overtime –
maybe if I’d given up my day off –
maybe if I’d pursued a career
instead of keeping a job –
I wouldn’t be in this mess.
Poverty is the punishment for
my fecklessness.
Life tried to teach me a lesson –
I took it as a challenge to refuse to learn.

It was all set up for me to participate –
schools – churches – Kiwanis Clubs –
but my Emily Dickinson-like
passion for solitude kept me from it all.
That – and my love of bottom shelf whiskey.

Like a cat with a mouse –
life drops me at the doorstep of its master.


Hugh Blanton grew up in the hills of Eastern Kentucky and now lives in San Diego. His work appears in The American Journal of Poetry, The Scarlet Leaf Review, As It Ought To Be and others. His book A Home to Crouch In was released in April (Cajun Mutt Press).

Fight for Bedtime

Nonfiction by Haley Grace

As a kid, bedtime was so exciting. Right before my eyes closed I would imagine flying dragons and dancing princesses. I drifted away to thoughts of bursting colors and beautiful designs.

As a teenager, the fairytales disappeared but my imagination still soared! Only instead of castles, it was faded blue locker covered hallways that smelled of old books and musky cologne. There were no flying dragons but bright yellow school buses with torn off lettering lined up outside. I would drift away to the false reality of an 80’s movie, where butterflies flooded my belly when my crush kissed me before the credits rolled. 

Now I am an adult, or at least in the eyes of society. There are no fairytales in my dreams. My brunette, blue eyed, 80’s curly headed crush is facing the other direction; avoiding a conversation we’ve had a million times. That place between sleep and awake is now where tears flood my eyes. It’s where ideas of doubt, fear, and anxiousness dance in my head. Imagination is now taken over by the fuzzy sounds of the TV I’m not really listening to. The only thing I’m dreaming of is a cigarette because nicotine cures a clouded mind.

No one tells you there is no imagination before adult bedtime. You slowly learn about stiff tension between you and your partner from a fight you swore you would never have. And a racing mind of questions. And lists impossible to complete. 

Maybe this is all inevitable.

But if you can: Fight for the dragons. Dance with the princesses. And let the kaleidoscope of butterflies take over as you kiss that curly headed kid.


Haley Grace is an Appalachian raised LGBT+ emerging voice just getting her start in writing. She graduated from West Virginia Wesleyan College with a degree in Communication and Literature. She is working on her Masters in School Counseling and enjoys writing about her adventures, heartbreaks, and observations of life.

Perfect Teeth

Fiction by David Patten

Elliot is far from a novice. He’s battled marlin in Florida, landed bluefin tuna off Prince Edward Island, fly fished for days in the Louisiana Marshes. Now he has come to Peru, on the hunt for species unique to the iconic Amazon waterway: peacock bass, redtail catfish, arapaima, piranha.

Six in the morning, mist rising from the surface, the chatter of tropical birds and primates from the dense rainforest flanking their small boat. It’s long and narrow like a canoe, Elliot perched at the bow clothed in khaki, boasting zippers and Velcro and hidden pockets only an angler would wear. At the stern, hand on tiller, Santiago guides the craft through the still waters, as the old man has done for decades.

Santiago maneuvers them into a horseshoe pool off the main river. It’s sheltered by overhanging branches that shed pods into the water. It’s a feasting ground. Elliot baits his line and stands astride the bench for balance.

The first two times the bait is gone, either slyly taken or slipped off. Elliot packs it tighter around the double hook and casts again. This time the line goes taught, the carbon fiber rod doubling in on itself, threatening to snap. Elliot reels and pulls, reels and pulls. Mantenlo tenso, says Santiago. Keep it taut.  

The fish is strong, angry. A fighter. It breaches in a commotion. Breathing hard, Elliot brings it toward the boat. Es piranha, says Santiago reaching for the landing net. But Elliot raises the rod too soon, the frenzied ball of muscle arcing at him. Instinctively he holds out a hand, Santiago’s ten cuidado, be careful, a fraction late. With the violent precision of a steel blade, the piranha removes Elliot’s index finger at the mid joint.

Elliot’s mind can’t process what he’s seeing, stalling the shock and pain. The piranha thrashes in the boat, gasping. The disturbance has caught the attention of an alligator on the far bank. Santiago watches it slide into the water. Mantener la sangre en el bote, he tells Elliot, wrapping his hand in a small towel. Keep the blood in the boat.


David Patten is an educator living in Colorado. He enjoys reading and creating short fiction. He is looking to expand his audience.

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