Monday, 6 July 2026

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The Oxo Bears by Sarah Swatridge

Pink Champagne!

‘What are you making, Mummy?’ my three-and-a-half-year-old daughter asked.

            ‘A bear,’ I replied and cast on more stitches.

            ‘Another bear!’ she exclaimed, ‘You keep making bears and they’re all for other people. You never make me a bear.’

            I put down my knitting needles and wool carefully so I didn’t drop a stitch. Then I picked up my little girl and held her on my knee.

            ‘You have a box full of teddies and toys in your room. I didn’t think you wanted any more teddies.’

            ‘But you keep making the same teddies for someone else and they must have a box full of teddies that all look the same.’

            ‘These bears,’ I tried to explain, ‘are for children who don’t have any toys…’

            My daughter’s eyes were wide at first and then the disbelief took over. ‘Don’t be silly, Mummy – everyone has toys.’

            I hoped she wouldn’t say, ‘you just have to ask Father Christmas,’ because I would have found that difficult to answer.

            Instead, I reminded her of a television programme we’d seen of children playing in the street with stones. I don’t know how much she took in. I thought of changing the subject but it seemed like a good opportunity to impress upon her that she was a lucky child and some were not so lucky. It’s never too early to learn.

            ‘The bears are for children who are in hospital. Doctors find that children who have a teddy to cuddle and to take home with them, get better more quickly than those who don’t have anything to hug or play with.’ My child nodded. Sometimes she was three, going on thirty, with her knowing looks and wise comments.

            Quite suddenly she got off my lap and disappeared up to her room, which was more like a small branch of Hamley’s. I left it at that and took the opportunity to knit a few rows. I’d made several bears now and only needed to glance at the pattern to reassure myself that I was on the right lines.

            A short while later, my daughter appeared at the door with an armful of assorted toys. I was about to remind her that she already had two boxes of toys downstairs at the moment, when she smiled up at me and asked if the children in the hospital would like these toys, too? A lump came to my throat.

            ‘Oh darling, I’m sure they’d love your toys and it’s very kind of you but won’t you miss them?’

            ‘I have lots of toys and it’s my birthday soon,’ said the mature little voice.

            ‘Well, perhaps we could give these to the driver when he collects the bears,’ I suggested.

            ‘Don’t the children get toys for their birthdays?’ she asked innocently. I felt we were getting dangerously near Father Christmas again.

            ‘Darling, this is Bobbin – surely you want to keep him?’ At this, her determination melted. Yes, she would keep Bobbin and the small blue bear that Granny had given her and the one that looked like a space monster, but the poor, sick children could have the white bear, the Rupert bear, the spotty bear and the one that had a plastic face and was half bear and half doll. I’d never liked that one either!

            ‘I’ll put them in the bag and keep them until it’s time for Mr Robbins to load up his lorry again.’ She nodded, clutching Bobbin, close to her.

            ‘You can put them with the Oxo bears,’

            ‘Oxfam bears,’ I corrected, remembering where the original knitting pattern had come from.

            Two retired teachers collected things, loaded them into a van and drove over to Bosnia themselves. I felt happy about this because I knew that everything really did go to the hospitals, orphanages and schools that they were intended for.

            There were no middle-men, no red tape, no huge organisation with staff to pay; just Mr and Mrs Robbins who made their journey once a year and took it as their holiday. And the photos – well, I admit I shed a few tears. It was a wonderful, heart-warming feeling to see a child hugging a small knitted bear; it could have been one that I’d knitted only I’d have given him a smile.

            I recalled my aunt saying once when the news was on that you never see people in hand-knitted jumpers or wrapped in blankets made from ninety-six crocheted squares. I had to agree, but now I’d seen this child with her bear. Her Oxo Bear. It was enough to keep me knitting.

            My aunt called in a few days later. She had three Oxo Bears: Bear Right, Bear Left and Stark Naked! I chuckled and put them in the bag under the stairs. I soon finished my latest bear – they don’t take long – it now had that, in my opinion, essential happy face.

            ‘That one’s called Boxer after Granny’s dog,’ said my daughter. She’d become quite attached to Boxer, who was dressed in Barbie pink. I made up my mind that if she wanted to keep it, she could, at least until the next lorry went and she’d grown out of handmade teddy bears.

            In due course Mr and Mrs Robbins called round to tell us that they were off in a few weeks and to ask if we had anything for them to take. I produced the bags from under the stairs, one stuffed with Oxo Bears and one of donated toys.

            My daughter duly unpacked the bags and lined up all the bears on parade to have them inspected.

            Mrs Robbins knelt down and looked very carefully at each in turn.

            ‘Oh, what a lovely smile…I do like this one’s trousers…which one is your favourite?’

            She was introduced to Boxer. ‘Is Boxer coming with us, or staying here with you?’ asked Mrs Robbins tenderly.  Boxer was thrust into her arms.

            ‘He’s to go with you and you’re to give him to a sick child who likes pink.’ Instructed my little one. ‘He gets a bit travel-sick, so he needs to sit with you at the front of the lorry.’ The cab of the lorry had always held a fascination.

            A month or so later we waved them off with a reporter and photographer from the local paper. He photographed them in the cab of the lorry; we’ve got the picture and Boxer can be seen quite clearly looking out of the window on top of a pile of maps.

            About three weeks passed; then we received a postcard from Boxer saying that all the girls liked pink, but he had found a special little girl and was very happy.

 

This story was originally published in Home & Country Magazine December 1998.               

About the author


Sarah Swatridge writes short stories for women’s magazines worldwide. She now has a collection of twenty uplifting short stories called Feel-Good Stories along with her large print novels available in libraries and online. Visit www.sarahswatridge.co.uk and sign up to her monthly one page newsletter. 

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Sunday, 5 July 2026

EmergencebyTim Tobin, Bittersweet Cocktail

 

Emergence

 

The eerie sound of waves from the bay, the darkness of the night, the emergence of moonlight all saddened an already strange evening. The lapping sound from the concrete bulkhead was lost as two lovers held hands and kissed gently.

 

Far too soon she broke the embrace and released his hand.

 

'So, you’re  really leaving,' he said.

 

'I have to. My job, my career, my future, are in New York.'

 

'It could be our future,' he replied, an entreaty really. A plea for her to find a way.

 

'I could find a job with NYPD. I’m a good cop. Certainly they could use me.'

 

The woman chuckled softly. 'You, a big city detective? You’ve never even been to the city. Out here you’re the big shot. In New York, you’d be just one of two thousand detectives. Here in Cape Town is where your future lies. Someday you’ll be chief of police.'

 

The man brushed way a tear and stifled a sob. The moon slid behind a cloud and the night drew dark and ominous again. Hope ebbed from his soul. His love was actually going home.

 

Over the past month they had used up all the words. From the chance meeting at the funeral of her childhood friend, to a cup of coffee, to morning jogs together, his loneliness melted away.

 

The first time they made love, he said her name and became a whole man for the first time.

 

Neither of them was surprised when he proposed but her other life held her back. 'Sure,' she thought to herself, 'I can find a job here.' But the excitement of the city called to her. Her position as an assistant vice president to the CEO of a two billion dollar corporation offered her power, prestige and, yes, money.

 

After the proposal she walked the avenues of the small town. She smiled at the bungalows surrounded by white picket fences while children ran, played and laughed in the park. She tried to imagine a life in this small piece of Eden.

 

'The wife,' she thought, 'of the police chief of a force of 5 officers.' She almost said 'big deal' to herself but swallowed the thought because she did love him.

 

Yet.

 

She closed her eyes and flashed forward five years and watched her toddler, maybe two, splashing in the bay, seeing a house smaller than her apartment, and a 8 year old pickup in the driveway.

 

'Damn! Love is supposed to conquer all.'

 

The flashback took her by surprise. Four years of college, two more years to get an MBA and still she had to settle for being a secretary to a minor department head. Her ambitions in life drove her hard. She became the 'go to gal.'

 

'Yes I can,' she told them. 'Of course I will. Whatever you need, whenever you need it.' The young guns in the corporation noticed her and they called on her for help which she gladly gave. Promotions came more and more frequent. Her salary skyrocketed.

 

Now she was considering throwing it away for a guy she had known for a month.

 

Her reverie melted away when he touched her arm. 'Come back to me.'

 

She touched his hand and started up the path to the parking lot.

 

'I thought we had something,' he said more to the bay than to her.

 

The evening breeze blew her response across the water, 'I did too.'

Abou the author

  

Mr. Tobin has a degree in mathematics and is retired. He writes in various genres including science fiction, horror, speculative, and westerns. Most recently, CultureCult, The Broken Spine, Paragraph Planet, and The Marbled Sigh have published his work. 

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Regift by Steve Marc Gerson, apple juice

 

“How you doin’, Marie?” she asked, ignoring the more pressing questions, like since Jim died, since the kids moved from Abilene to God knows where, since Marie’s life had emptied like an apple tree, all of its fruit plucked in the Fall.

“Ha,” Marie laughed like air filling a flat tire.  “I’m working at the thrift store off 23rd and Elm.”  She paused, pushing a strand of thinning gray hair behind her right ear.  “It ain’t too bad, three days a week, minimum wage and commission, given my limited work experience and my GED, having left school at age 17, pregnant with little Johnny.  I get to see people dream.  Clients come in with their used and torn clothes, hoping for a big consignment.  Customers come in, checking all the coat pockets for a lottery ticket, hoping for a big win.”

“What’s next, girl?” she asked.

“Yeh,” Marie laughed again, this time like a windchime dancing in spring breezes.  “That’s the question, ain’t it.  What’s next?”  Marie removed her glasses to wipe a smudge, pausing to clear her view.  Life holds its secrets close like a dollar fortune teller at the state fair, turban askew, crystal ball purchased wholesale online.  “I’ve got the start of a plan,” she said cryptically. 

Marie would visit Jim.  She’d weave through the headstones like a needle sewing threadbare cloth, renewing its tatters, stand over his marble grave, and remember his gifts:  love, kindness, care.

Around his gravesite, Marie saw the winter’s brown grass turning green in the beginning of spring.

about th euthor

 

Steve Gerson writes poetry and flash about life's dissonance. He has published in many journals plus his six chapbooks: Once Planed Straight; Viral; And the Land Dreams Darkly; The 13th Floor; What Is Isn’t; and There Is a Season.  

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Saturday, 4 July 2026

Saturday Sample:Face to Face with the Führer by GIll James, filter coffee

 

London 1976

She looked at the young man curled up in the doorway. He seemed to be sleeping peacefully, at least. She would try her best not to wake him. She must get inside though. This meeting was really important.

It was getting worse. It showed up more at this time of day anyway. They got lost in the crowds as the day wore on. Somebody should do something.

This one looked about the same age as she was then. Goodness, something like this –  or worse – could have so easily happened to her.

It wasn’t as bad, now, as it had been then. Not yet. It was similar enough though. It was as if it was all starting over again. Nobody had really believed it was going to happen back then either.

Could she do this? Well, she’d have to try. Gingerly she stepped over him. This sort of thing wasn’t so easy any more. She cursed. Why did people have to get old?

He stirred slightly. The smell was awful. Then, to add to the bad body odour, he farted. It was a bad one and suggested an upset stomach.

No wonder with the sort of food he probably has to eat.

She fumbled in her handbag and found her purse. She slipped out a large note, looked over her shoulder to see that no one was watching and posted it into his begging tin. He nodded and grunted.

Don’t you dare spend it on drugs or alcohol, young man.

She knew she shouldn’t do it, really. There were systems in place to deal with these people but they just weren’t working fast enough. She’d always preferred a more direct method. Wait for the authorities and you’d wait forever. Sometimes you needed to stop them anyway. The authorities aren’t always right.

She pushed open the door. In seconds the world of the young man was left behind. Now she was in the plush foyer of the five-star hotel where she was to meet the reporter. She recognised the soft notes of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons – wasn’t that Spring playing? Nice.

She sat down on one of the overstuffed armchairs. Goodness, the carpet was so thick here and the parquet area round the reception desk so polished.

She watched some of the guests going up to the desk. All furs and smart shoes. Not her scene really. Not anymore. She smiled to herself. Actually, though, no less than she deserved after all of that.

A waiter, all in black and white, made his way over to her. “May I help you, madam?”

“Can you bring me a pot of black coffee, please?”

“Certainly, madam.”

She was getting into her stride now. Yes, she would be able to tackle that reporter, she was sure.

The coffee arrived. She took a sip. It was very good. This was the life most certainly. Now then, what should she tell him when he arrived? 

find your copy here 

About the author 

T  

Gill James is published by The Red Telephone, Butterfly and Chapeltown.  

She edits CafeLit and writes for the online community news magazine: Talking About My Generation.

She teaches Creative Writing and has an MA in Writing for Children and PhD in Creative and Critical Writing.    

http://www.gilljameswriter.com  

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