Tuesday, 20 January 2026

Golden Light by Jeff Ingber, Masala chai

Saturday struts in all blue sky and cut-grass sweetness, imploring Manoj to change his mood as he plops onto the Honda’s front seat. ‘I should be standing on the first tee now,’ he mutters. ‘Taking Ajeet’s money after I blast one past his ball.’


Priya slips into the passenger seat and settles in, spine tall, shoulders loose. A long braid sways as she shakes her head, and a gold stud at her nose flashes briefly in the morning light.

‘One session,’ she says. ‘That’s all I’m asking.’


Manoj catches his reflection in the rear-view mirror, seeing glimpses of his father in the set of his jaw, the hardening around eyes the dull brown of over-steeped tea. He snorts. ‘Just because I’m Indian, doesn’t mean this is for me.’


‘It is for you,’ she shoots back. ‘You barely sleep, you drink like a fish, you smoke like a chimney, and you’re angry all the time.’


‘Funny,’ he retorts. ‘That’s exactly how every well-adjusted adult I know lives.’

Priya doesn’t match his grin. Instead, she exhales slowly through her nose, the way she does when she’s a half step from giving up on the conversation. ‘Last week, you yelled at Sanaa for finishing your ice cream. You scared her. And you scared me too.’


His daughter’s face flashes—wide eyes, trembling lips, near tears. Priya had pulled him aside afterward. This isn’t who I married!


Priya edges away, enough for him to feel the distance, and stares vacantly out the window. In this bleak silence, Manoj starts the car and pulls out of the driveway. He clings to one consolation: his golf shoes and clubs are in the trunk. If he plays this right, he can make the back nine with Ajeet. 

*

A lotus unfurls across the front door of the Essential Wellness Center. Manoj snickers. Of course. Nothing says inner peace like a flower that grows out of mud. 


As he steps inside, a low, shimmering hum spills from a Tibetan singing bowl, the sound lingering. In a corner, an altar the size of a bedside table glows with framed gods, flickering diyas, and a small Buddha. Passing by it, he’s struck with the impulse to apologize for the chaos rattling around in his head.


He slips off his loafers and, at the request of a pastel-colored sign, deposits his phone in a basket. The moment it leaves his hand, a mild strand of panic ripples across him, like he’s surrendered the one thing tethering him to the world he understands.

A staff member directs him into a sage-green studio painted with swooping murals of trees. The air smells heavily of sandalwood and citrus—Priya’s idea of heaven. Mats rustle. Soft voices murmur. 


Kathy King enters barefoot in loose cotton pants, gray-streaked hair waterfalling to her shoulders. Manoj watches her glide across the floor. To his surprise, her toenails are painted a defiant red—like embers that would set this tranquil place ablaze. Her smile warms the room. He mutters a ‘hello’ and flumps his mat onto the bamboo floor.


A part of him envies people who walk in here unguarded—people built for calm. There was a time when he was one of them, in the days when silence between him and Priya meant comfort, not distance.


Manoj counts. Eight other people, all women. It’s like he wandered into a book club he wasn’t invited to. They offer polite glances, but he senses their curiosity—the lone man, the skeptic, the one who looks like he’s passing a kidney stone.


He lowers himself onto the mat. It squeaks, embarrassingly loud. Each woman sits erect, hands folded neatly in her lap, appearing as if she’d received a yoga instruction manual at birth. Manoj tries to mirror them, but within seconds, a dull ache blooms in his lower back. 


He fights the urge to topple sideways. Kathy spots this. ‘It’s not necessary to have a perfect posture,’ she coos. ‘Whatever’s comfortable.’


Manoj slouches into a more bearable position. Kathy’s eyes sweep the circle. An easy, practiced affection coats her voice. ‘Good morning, everyone. I’m so glad you’re here. For the next thirty minutes, we’re going to allow the body to settle, and let stillness rise on its own.’


He resists the urge to roll his eyes. Stillness. That’s Priya’s territory. I used to meet her there. 


‘We’ll begin with guided breathing to help ground the body and quiet the mind. Remember, there’s nothing to fix. No one to impress. You don’t need to be ‘good’ at this. You only need to be willing to show up just as you are.’ 


Just as I am? That can’t be right. But fine. I’m here. 


‘Let’s begin. Close your eyes—’


Suddenly, Kathy whips her head and sneezes into her elbow. The sound cracks through the hush. Manoj almost smiles. Finally one flawed thing in a space trying too hard to be holy. 


‘Close your eyes, or lower your gaze if that’s more comfortable. Take a deep inhale… and then gently exhale. Let your breath flow naturally, not forcing anything.’ 

On his first inhale, Manoj’s chest rises too sharply, the air catching on a jagged corner inside him. On the exhale, he feels a stubborn grip around his breath, like he’s bracing for a blow he can’t see.


He holds in the next gulp of air, unsure of the rhythm, until breath sputters out of his lungs. Thoughts ricochet—golf, his inbox, Sanaa’s frightened face, Priya’s stare out the car window. 


Out of nowhere, his father’s voice echoes: Weakness invites disrespect. 


Manoj stiffens. He imagines himself standing up and racing out of the room while muttering some excuse. 


But not wanting to face Priya’s wrath, he stays. He breathes in… and out. After what is to him an eternity, he feels stress uncoiling, thread by thread—a misfire in the machinery of his resistance. Rather than disappear, the noise in his head finds a rhythm he can follow. 


Kathy’s voice drifts to him. ‘Bring attention to your body. Feel the mat beneath you. Let yourself soften into that support.’


Soften? I'm about as pliable as a cinder block


‘Feel the top of your head.’ Manoj searches for sensation, but finds only static.


‘The forehead… the eyes… the jaw… notice if you’re holding tension.’


He realizes his jaw is clenched as if bracing for impact. The awareness alone makes the tightness untenable, and his jaw slackens, like a muscle waking from a long sleep.


Manoj peeks open his eyes to see Kathy watching him. ‘The shoulders,’ she continues, seeming to speak to him directly. ‘Are they creeping upward? Let them relax.’


Having put himself in obedience mode, Manoj drops his shoulders. How long have I been wound like a spring? No, don’t read into it. This proves nothing. 


Yet the slight relief is undeniable. 


‘The belly… the hips… the legs… see if you can sense what’s present.’ 


He senses plenty: a throb in his hips, a tingling in his right foot, a tender spot beneath his ribs. His back still aches, but the pain has a shape now—a thin line to the left of his spine instead of a fog obscuring the whole. And underneath all that, the mat is more solid, the floor supporting him in a way he didn’t expect. Even the air feels less cloying. 


After she reaches the feet, Kathy pauses. ‘Again, I invite you to sit comfortably and close your eyes. Your hands should rest where they want to rest.’ 

Manoj lays his hands on his thighs and drums his fingers reflexively before taking note and stopping. 


‘Let the breath lead the mind. Every inhale anchors you, and every exhale makes a little more space inside. Follow the breathing. Nothing to fix. Just notice the coolness of the air as it enters the nose…’


He sucks in air. Okay, maybe a little cool. Hardly a revelation.


‘…the warmth as it leaves.’


Hadn’t thought about that before. When was the last time I noticed anything this ordinary?


‘The rise and fall of your chest. The belly expanding.’


Manoj draws in a longer pull of air. Under his sternum, there’s a sensation like a latch giving way.


‘If your mind wanders, which it will, that’s okay. Gently guide your attention back to your breath. Just try. There’s no gold medal for meditation.’


His mind is wandering. To what’s for lunch. To the idiot who left his footprints in a bunker last week. To the client emails he’s been avoiding. To how ridiculous he probably looks sitting here like a confused tourist.


‘Always come home to the breath.’ 


Come home to the breath? What would it feel like to be at home in something so basic? 


A quiet settles like a thin layer of frost. A throat clears. Someone shifts. Manoj exhales, and his ribs widen more than he expected. There’s a hint of warmth under his skin like someone cupping a match to shield it from wind, a tingle in his fingertips like the return of circulation.


‘Inhale peace, exhale tension.’


Peace? Manoj almost shakes his head. Sanaa’s recoil replays in his mind—her shoulders lifting like she was bracing for impact. He recalls how she had stopped greeting him at the door every evening. 


Another inhale. He pictures Ajeet teeing off with Raj, a new club member whose middle name is Obnoxious. Ajeet wouldn’t think twice about it. He never thinks twice about anything. Manoj wonders when he started needing the distraction more than the friendship. He returns to the simple rhythm— in, out, in, out—because it’s the only thing that isn’t pulling away from him. 

A car horn blares outside, sharp enough to make Manoj’s shoulders flinch. ‘If a sound arises,’ Kathy instructs, ‘let it pass through you like wind moving through a curtain. No judgment. Just sound. Presence.’


Time ambles on—thick, syrupy—until Kathy’s voice surfaces again. ‘Send kindness and love to yourself. Then extend it to others. Even those who have hurt you. Even those you struggle to love.’ 


Love myself? I’m not sure I even like myself. 


Manoj’s mind slips unbidden to Mumbai, to monsoon rain rattling on the tin awning of his childhood home, a thick earthy smell wafting from the cracked courtyard. He sees a boy with knobby knees and perpetually filthy feet, dashing headlong into puddles as if joy were a thing he could outrun and catch. Where did that kid go? 


Pressure builds behind his eyes, and tears form. His throat tightens, the swallow catching halfway down. 


Minutes trickle by. A thin flow of awareness moves through him, a breeze waking dust in a forgotten corner. He blows out air even more slowly. It loosens the slivers of regret and hurt he’s kept cemented in place. He wants to push them down, burying them under noise and sarcasm. But there’s nowhere to hide.


Kathy rises, dimming the high hats until the studio melts into a pewter gray. ‘Now visualize the golden light within you. It’s there, no matter how deeply hidden. See it radiating from your heart, expanding outward.’


The instinct to clamp down and armor up flares automatically. But the silence grows roots. And as Manoj breathes, the stubborn resistance in him continues to erode.


Barely noticeable at first, tremor travels from his fingertips up his forearms, and into his chest. The more he focuses, the more it grows—ribs slackening, throat unhooking. The light brushes against resentments he pretends aren’t there, fears he won’t name. For the first time in years, his breath arrives whole, unbroken.


‘Imagine this golden light filling your body with calm.’ 


The light swells, and with it comes the memory of his mother’s hand moving slowly over his hair, the steady rhythm she used when he came home bruised or humiliated. He smells cardamom and onions clinging to her sari, the warmth of the kitchen still on her clothes. ‘Bas,’ she would murmur. ‘Enough. You’re safe.’


The comfort presses into him—clashing with a hardness sealed inside, grief he’s kept locked away for years. He flinches, instinctively pulling back. But the light doesn’t recede. It stays, patient and unmoving, waiting for him to settle.

The light pulses again. Sanaa climbs onto his lap without hesitation, her delicate hands gripping his shirt. 


The glow expands, opening rooms inside him he hasn’t entered in years. His father stands there—arms folded, eyes appraising—approval measured and scarce, disappointment swift. The old lesson hums beneath it all: endure without complaint or be diminished.


‘Stay with the light. Stay with the breath. Stay with this moment.’


Illumination throbs like a second heartbeat. Priya rises once more in his mind. The early years of their marriage, when she tucked homemade lunches into his briefcase every day. How she would— 


‘Bring alertness to your body.’ Kathy’s voice slips in, gentle but firm.  Notice any sensations. Notice the air on your skin.’


More time slips by, but now the minutes aren't long. ‘When you’re ready, gently wiggle your fingers and toes. Take one final deep breath… and as you exhale, slowly open your eyes.’ 


When Manoj lets his eyelids flutter open, his gaze meets Kathy’s. She smiles knowingly. ‘Carry this peace with you. Even in the busiest moments, know that this stillness is always available.’


A final, mellow chime from the singing bowl reverberates. Kathy bows her head and presses her palms together in front of her heart. ‘Thank you for practicing today,’ she whispers. ‘Namaste.’ 


‘Namaste,’ the class murmurs back. 

*

After a few beats of silence, there's the shuffle of mats being rolled up and bare feet padding out of the studio. Manoj lingers, feeling fundamentally different. Even his thoughts move more slowly, no longer tripping over one another for attention.


The reflex to dismiss it—placebo, temporary, nonsense—flares automatically. But the calm doesn’t retreat. It stays with him as he steps into the hallway, where Priya waits with arms folded, bracing for whatever version of him will emerge. 


‘How was it?’


Easy responses float to the surface— some dry joke, an aimless shrug meant to keep everything shallow. He suppresses them. The words aren’t ready, so he reaches for her hand instead. Her fingers tense on contact as her eyes search his face. Then her hand relaxes, a cautious unspooling of hope.


As they walk outside, golden sunlight pools around them. Priya nods toward the car. ‘Drop me off at home before you head to the course?’

The familiar escape tugs at him. Instead, he draws in a deep breath, letting it expand within him, and gives Priya’s hand a squeeze. ‘I’ve got a better idea.’


About the author

Jeff Ingber is the author of books, short stories, and screenplays, for which he has won numerous awards. He’s had his short stories published in various journals and magazines. You can learn more about his works at jeffingber.com.

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Monday, 19 January 2026

The Nineteenth Hole by Jane Spirit, a glass or two of a new white Rioja

Bob’s funeral had been meticulously well organised, but that would have come as no surprise to anyone who knew Marcia. On a bright morning in April her husband of five years had been commemorated, then incinerated. His ashes had been collected and would be scattered in the copse by the eighteenth tee of the beloved golf course that abutted their home. Permission had been forthcoming for the scattering when Marcia had spoken to the club chair about the creation of a new small pavilion in memory of Bob.

As Marcia had thought fitting, the order of service had been printed with a warm invitation to all those attending to celebrate Bob’s life over a buffet in the club house; a place that Bob had spent many happy hours since moving to the village when he married Marcia. When she had issued that invitation, Marcia had not anticipated that the crematorium chapel would be so full of mourners, very few of whom she recognised. She had sighed inwardly in relief that she had not scheduled an elaborate eulogy for Bob; just some hymns, a tasteful poem or two, and then the committal. From an alcove, she watched as the congregation from the crem meandered into the club house. Fortunately, she had ordered much more food than she thought would ever be needed, expecting that any leftovers could then be quietly distributed to weary golfers frequenting the ‘nineteenth hole’ in the coming days.

Nonetheless, Marcia felt bewildered by the range of the mourners who continued to funnel through the modest entrance lobby and into its main space where the buffet and drinks had been set up. The range of ages was perplexing. Marcia had assumed that most of those coming to the funeral would be of Bob’s generation. She had also expected them to be well dressed in an unassuming manner. Instead, she had noted some flamboyant colours amongst the throng. And then there were those who, to put it kindly, had dressed down for the occasion in tatty jeans, or, even worse, in joggers with an odd hoodie or two. 

Marcia found herself placing a hand gently on the arm of her younger brother Miles. He had been her rock these last few weeks. She steadied herself before drinking from the small glass of wine that had been pressed into her hand by a well-meaning server. Then, perhaps she might be able to work out quite why all these unexpected people had turned up and were now talking animatedly to each other, not even paying much attention to the copious buffet set out in the middle of the room.

In the days leading up to the funeral, Marcia had managed to maintain a calm demeanour. She had recovered herself since getting the call about Bob’s sudden death and returning on the first flight she could get back to Heathrow. Her P. A. had arranged it all and rescheduled her visit for a month’s time at Marcia’s instruction. Since then, she had simply shifted into a different kind of project management and felt on surer ground in still dealing with officialdom and making plans work. 

Bob had never wanted to cramp her style when he suggested marriage to her. He had been twenty years older than her and felt himself to be quite ready to leave the itinerant lifestyle behind. All he had wanted, as he had confided to her, was to settle down in a pleasant community, hold the fort for her, and play a little golf between times. Perhaps he hadn’t bargained on how much of her time she would spend away from their new home, but she had thought him as content with their arrangement as she was. Whenever she had been with him at home, he had loved to hear about the wheeling and dealing that went with the multinational projects she managed. He had less news of his own to give her, though she had enjoyed the tales of club politics he told her over a glass or two of a new white rioja he had discovered at the local deli.

Marcia had been proud of their light touch marriage, but now, sipping her wine and observing her guests from one of the room’s alcoves, it occurred to her that she knew very little about how Bob had spent the time whilst they had been apart. After they had settled in the village, she had become increasingly enmeshed in her work. Of course, they had exchanged affectionate messages whilst she was away, but neither of them had felt the need to go into the nitty gritty of their daily lives.

Marcia decided that she needed another glass of wine. Miles was still at her side but was now involved in an animated discussion with a young woman who had sidled up to him. Marcia caught only a few words of their conversation, but it was obvious that they were talking about Bob and about some kind of village quiz. Miles was leaning in towards his new companion and smiling. It seemed to Marcia that she would have to replenish her own glass, and she moved decisively away towards the bar where the filled glasses of red and white wine were waiting for takers.  As she stepped forwards, Marcia could not help but overhear some of what the woman was telling Miles. 

  ‘It was all his idea. He was convinced it would work. It did. We made enough from the music quiz nights and then we used that to start up the cinema nights at the village hall. That raked it in as well you see… and that’s how we’ve been funding the new play equipment.’ 

Moving on into the surrounding chatter, Marcia caught more stray words amidst the hubbub. ‘Oh yes he inspired us to get cracking, didn’t he?’ a vibrantly dressed older woman was saying to the colourfully attired group gathered round her. One of their number, dressed in emerald -green, raised a glass to Bob, whilst her eyes glinted with incipient tears. Marcia had hesitated for a moment, wanting to ask exactly what it was that Bob had inspired them to do, but feeling suddenly embarrassed that this seemed to be another part of Bob’s life she’d known nothing about. Fortunately, Marcia was granted another clue as she lingered for a moment in earshot.

  ‘And next year it will be “Yeoman of the Guard”, won’t it? How splendid,’ said a lady in bright blue.

 ‘Oh yes – for the air ambulance this time,’ the lady in green had replied.

Unremarked by Bob’s friends, Marcia moved on. No-one had seemed to notice her in her understated black skirt and checked jacket – but then she knew so few people here and she’d been almost hidden at the front with her back to everyone during the service. She wondered whether Bob had planned to tell her about some kind of operetta group he’d had a hand in on her next trip home. Then again, she’d never actually asked him much about what he got up to in her absence.

By this time, a group of more casually dressed mourners had interposed themselves between her and the bar. Again, they were clearly discussing Bob. 

‘No, he was a decent type,’ said an older man.

‘So modest too,’ said a younger.

‘How did he have the time to keep hammering away at the council?’ chipped in another.

Again puzzled, Marcia listened carefully for clues. What was it Bob had done this time?

‘You must admit … The Fair Share store would never have got off the ground without him,’ someone else muttered as she stepped around their group and reached for another glass of red. What happened at this store, she pondered as she drank. Why were they all so grateful?

Uncertain of how to proceed, Marcia stood quietly by the bar. Before she could gather her thoughts, an elegantly dressed middle aged man had approached her, introduced himself and shaken her hand. 

‘I’m Hector Matthews, your husband’s publisher. I’m sure Bob would have mentioned me to you. I wanted to offer my sincere condolences. Such a hard grafter and a keen instinct for a feel-good best seller.’ The man had hesitated then, waiting perhaps for her approbation and so she’d smiled at him and nodded, almost convincing herself that Bob had told her about some writing project and that he’d found a publisher for it. Now she would have to continue to try and find out more about what the book was about, without giving away her complete ignorance.

‘Did you get as far as a title?’ she asked cautiously. 

‘Oh yes, that’s how I knew you. He’d sent a picture of the two of you for the back cover. Of course we don’t include family in any author photo. I’m just sorry Bob didn’t make it to see the launch next month. We’re calling it “The village that found happiness”. What do you think? He was quite an entrepreneur, your husband.’

After that, Marcia retreated, speaking briefly to Miles before leaving through a side door. She knew that Miles could be relied on to make her apologies and thank the guests for coming. Who else was there really to miss her as she slipped away? She needed time to think, away from the marauding crowd of Bob’s admirers. For the first time since she had heard the news that he was gone, she felt the full force of grief as she set off to walk the short distance back to their house which Bob had made a home. Mulling over what she had heard, she took the measure of the man and wondered if she had ever quite appreciated him for the generous, inventive, person he had been. She wondered now how she would ever be able to honour the village’s memory of him. But then again, she thought, the village did not need her help to remember him. Clearly, they all would. And yes, she did regret not having known about all the good he had initiated and the successes he had had, but then again, did that really matter in the end? They had been so happy just as they were, both together and separately. Once she’d unlocked the door, Marcia retrieved her phone and perched briefly on a hall seat to call her P.A. Marcia would be travelling out of the UK again by the end of the week, once Bob’s ashes had been scattered in the place they should be.

About the author

Jane Lives in Woodbridge, Suffolk UK. With the encouragement of her local creative writing class which she joined in 2021 she has been writing stories ever since, some of which have appeared on Cafe Lit.

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Wednesday, 14 January 2026

The Purrfect Job by Sarah Swatridge, full cream milk

I’m an animal lover myself and as I look around the office, I can’t help but think of my co-workers… as dogs. If I was a dog, which I’m not, I’d probably be seen as a poodle due to my tight curly hair.

Firstly, there’s Trevor who sits in the corner. He’s small like a Dachshund, neatly packaged! He works on the financial side of things. He likes his books to balance right down to the last penny. If it doesn’t tally he goes back to the beginning and starts all over again checking and double checking. I’m told he never gives up. I admire that in someone.

Then there’s Chantel who reminds me of an Afghan hound. She has long, streaked hair that’s yellow, auburn, and brown. To be perfectly honest, it’s a bit of a mess. She’s tall and big boned. Some might say elegant. She’s definitely not sleek like a greyhound. She’s friendly but scatty.

I haven’t had much need to deal with Chas. He’s very English, posh accent, polite but I can’t tell if it’s all a show. Is he trying to be something he’s not? To look at him, he makes me think of a Fox Terrier. He’s a short man with a square beard. I can almost imagine him with a little wet nose. I like his gentlemanly manners and he’s popular.

As soon as I saw Doug, I said to myself, he’s a Pug. He’s squat, small, solid and not what you’d call handsome. I’m not sure how old he is, but there are signs of wrinkles. He’s a Rep and in my opinion, he spends far too much time sitting. He did bring buy us all muffins to have with our afternoon cuppa. I was touched he included me: I’m only a temp after all. My aunt had a Pug called Dexter, and I loved him.

Now Sammy is the complete opposite. She’s the office junior and looks about twelve but told me she’s nineteen. I get exhausted just watching her. She almost runs around the building collecting this, dropping off that, moving gracefully. She does have a desk but hardly ever sits down. I wish I had such energy. I thought she might refuse Doug’s muffin but she woofed it down. Sammy’s the whippet.

Everyone’s been pleasant, but something’s niggling at me.

Finally, there’s the boss. He’s a Great Dane and no mistake. The other men are slight, but Mr Townsend’s huge. He has to duck down to get through the doors and has to turn slightly sideways because he’s all muscle. I was relieved he didn’t offer to shake my hand, I’m sure he’d have crushed some bones.

I’ve only heard him speak once when he bellowed at Sammy to run and fetch him a coffee. She says he’s a gentle giant but I’ve yet to be convinced. I watched as he left his office on his way to a meeting. He stepped on a paper cup that had been knocked off a tray. He flattened it and didn’t even notice what he’d done. I wonder if he’s aware of his own strength? I certainly wouldn’t like to be on the wrong side of him, despite what Sammy says in his defence.

I’m home in good time which is great, especially this week as my neighbour’s on holiday and I’ve promised to feed her cat and give the poor thing a bit of attention while she’s away.

Willow is waiting for me as I come up the road. She bounds over to say hello and winds herself around my legs as I search for the front door key. I abandon my bag in the hallway, grab next door’s key and let her in. She ignores the cat flap and follows me. She isn’t hungry except for attention. It’s my pleasure to make a fuss of her. Willow’s a tabby with the softest fur. Within moments she’s on my lap, getting comfortable.

Having stroked her for a few minutes and told her about my day, she begins to purr. I’ve promised myself I’ll get a cat once I’ve got a stable job. I make my decision. I’ll finish my temporary contract as agreed, but won’t be looking for a permanent contract with this particular company.

I’ll continue as a temp. It enables me to suss out the staff, the job, and the benefits, before I commit. You see I can’t very well put on my application form that I’d prefer to work with ‘cat people’ now can I? Even when I had a Saturday job at the cattery the owner kept a dog rather than a cat! So you can never be sure.

It looks like Willow and I are settled for the evening. I’m sure my neighbour won’t mind if I stay a while longer to keep Willow happy.

‘Thank you,’ I say as I stroke her. ‘I should have realised that actually I was a cat person all along.’

 

 

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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Tuesday, 13 January 2026

Why Do I Still Sleep? by Mike Lee, energy drink

 The fragile space of uncertainty beckons through dreamed skies outside a modern frame window. Margie lives in a world of breathless work, one and all, all in one, feeling adrift and weary as the demands press upon her.

The day plods on as Margie makes her way from the office to the terminal, where she eats breakfast and lunch, which are humdrum and sometimes lost in the electronic stacks of emails and other tasks, as she responds, ignores, and forwards.

The day ends. Margie stops. Fingers resting on the keyboard. Eyes staring ahead, a dull ache settling in, uncertainty and fatigue clouding her expression.

The night shift is arriving. Each arrival walks to each cubicle and wheels the workers on Margie’s shift in their chairs to the wall closet set. Each one pulls the cord from the plate on the floor and plugs in a charger under their left armpit.

Afterward, they close the doors.

That’s it for the night until morning, before Margie begins again.

 

About the author 

 

Mike Lee's work appears in or is forthcoming in Blood+Honey, Bristol Noir, Roi Faineant, Wallstrait, BULL, Drunk Monkeys, and many others. Also is in the latest CafeLit anthology 

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Monday, 12 January 2026

Tree Minutes by P.A. Westgate, a shot of vodka

Three minutes isn’t very long is it? That’s just three single minutes. And one minute’s not very long at all; sixty seconds, gone in a flash. You get sixty in an hour. Even that’s not very long.  No time at all if that’s all you have, say, if you need to nip to the shops and grab a sandwich at lunchtime. So a minute’s nothing much really. And three times nothing much really is still nothing much really. But if you’re all alone, sitting on the loo, waiting for either one or two lines to appear, three minutes is forever.

 

About the author

P. A. Westgate, Paul, lets his imagination run wild through short-story writing. In addition to writing, Paul enjoys an eclectic mix of activities including reading, singing, the Arts and cocktails. He lives quietly in his native Essex where he tries, with varying degrees of success, to keep his house and garden tidy.

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Sunday, 11 January 2026

The Other Woman by Sharon Boothroyd, bitter lemon

'Why are you hanging on to these kitchen blinds?' I asked Dad.

'They might come in handy one day,' he said.

I gazed at the heap of junk that filled the garage. Apart from the blinds, there were piles of  books, a stack of CDs and old VHS videos, and a collection of dusty board games.

There were pots of left- over paint, plus gardening and DIY equipment, old kettles and broken laptops and – oh, I could go on!

I'd forgotten about the extent of my widowed dad's hoarding habit.

He looked shame- faced. 'Sorry love.'

I'd rent a storage unit instead...I hadn't anticipated moving back home at this mid- life stage. Well, he had a spare room and it was nearer to work for me.

I worked as a receptionist at a dental surgery.

At weekends, I didn't have the inclination for housework, so it was a good job that Dad had a cleaner. Audrey was a decade younger than Dad - red- haired, cheerful and efficient. 

I sighed. I hadn't expected to  be a 'silver splitter' – that's a fancy media term for couples over the age of 50 who had broken up.

I thought back to when James and I had first met...

                                                                 ***

 

James, a vet, was on the verge of getting engaged to someone else.

We begun chatting at the local Am Dram group.

The group usually went for a drink after rehearsals, but in the pub, James and I drifted towards our own table.

At the time, he'd lived with a woman called Ella for around fifteen years. She was a personal trainer. 

He showed me a pic of him and Ella on his phone – it was a silly snap, taken in their kitchen, with them grinning over a plate of pasta. They looked happy, but...

'That was taken a long time ago,' James muttered.

Ella was slim, pretty, freckled- faced and brown- haired. James told me she was always in the gym.

'I suppose I'd better propose,' he announced glumly.

'If you don't mind me saying, it doesn't sound as if you want to,' I remarked.

He pulled a face. 'She's been dropping hints.'

One thing led to another between us, so he split from Ella.

When we found a riverside apartment, busy with setting up home, we temporarily bid farewell to the Am Dram group.

We were in our late forties, and as we'd hadn't married, I hoped for a whirlwind engagement and wedding. 

'I wouldn't push him into it Bel, if I were you,' my colleague Amy had advised. 'Let's face it, he wasn't keen on committing to his ex, was he?'

It was a fair point but he was with me now, not Ella. Yet I kept my counsel. Amy was turning into a good friend.

Well, James and I had our careers to focus on. We often worked extra hours.

Time passed and sadly, intimacy wasn't the priority it should have been. 

Tired and stressed, James went to bed early.    

 

                                                                        ***

When James announced that he wanted a separation, it came as a shock.

'Do you want me to move out?' I asked.

He shook his head. 'There's an empty flat above the vet's. I can stay there for the time being.'

I blinked back tears. 'Do you still love me, James?'

He hesitated. 'I think so.'

I nodded. 'I think so' was better than an outright no. It gave me hope.

When he packed, I told myself that he just needed time out.

In a few weeks, I mused, he'll return with a rueful grin and admit to missing his home comforts - the river view, my cooking, and his office.

 

                                                                 ***

He didn't. James stopped answering my calls and texts. But I needed to talk to him about an unexpected bill.

The flat didn't have a landline apparently and he wasn't on social media, either.

I'd visited James's flat in the evening, but strangely there were no lights on and there wasn't a reply from the Intercom.

He was clearly out – but where had he gone? Had he re-joined the Am Dram group?

I didn't know what to do!

I could hardly storm into the vets and demand to see him.

Even if I did.. what if he was in the middle of an operation? I'd look a fool as I took a seat in the waiting area with a clutch of clients.

Eventually, I rang the vet's, only be told by a receptionist that she'd pass the message on to James.

The subtle tone was – don't pester us again, please Miss Crawford!

I sensed something amiss.                                                                           

 

                                                                        ***

'You keep on nagging, Bella. Look, I'll have a clear out when I'm good and ready.' Dad adjusted his tie in the mirror.

Irritation pricked. 'Hoarders always say that.'

He was dressed smart and I wondered if, instead of going to a pub darts night, he was actually seeing Audrey.

She was single, too. I couldn't blame him. We all needed company, didn't we?

'See you later, love. Don't wait up.' He trotted off, whistling.

I switched the TV on, ready for my favourite house hunting programme.

James and I had enjoyed watching this, too. Oh, how had our relationship dissolved beyond repair?

When my mobile rang, my spirit soared. It was James!

'Hi Bel. I'm ringing about the furniture.'

I was taken aback. 'Furniture?'

'My flat is missing the bare essentials. I wondered if we could come to some kind of arrangement? You're living with your dad, so you don't need a washing machine or a fridge freezer, do you?'

His bare- faced cheek took my breath way.

'It's all in storage, James.' In the background, I thought I heard a muffled woman's voice.

'Well, if I had it, you wouldn't need to pay the storage company fees,' he concluded chirpily.

'I guess not.'

The next day at work, I relayed the conversation to Amy, over lunch in a quiet cafe.

'There's no point dwelling on it, Bel. Move on. See it as a new start,' she urged.

'Hmm. I think he's secretly seeing someone.' I blurted it out without thinking.

Amy thought for a moment. 'You need to confront him about this other woman.'

I sighed. 'Why bother causing a fuss? I'm emotionally drained.'

'But surely you'd like to know why he's kept it secret? I mean, how long has this affair been going on?'

My mind flew back to the lack of intimacy, those early nights...he'd probably been talking to her on his phone.

So I took Amy's advice and rung him.

He finally fessed up. 'Yes, I've gone back to Ella. We're - er engaged.'

'Right.'

I should have known. They'd looked so content in that pasta snap.

He apologised for the deceit, but to be honest, I was past caring. Then I realised that I'd stopped loving him.                                                                 

Three months later, Amy's taken me on as a lodger. I've re-joined my Am dram group, too!

Oh, and I discovered that Dad was seeing Audrey -  they're a couple now.

I'm pleased for them. I just hope, as a neat freak, that she can get cracking clearing out his garage...

 About the author

 


Sharon is fitty- something and suffers from anxiety. Writing short stories acts as a kind of occupational therapy for her. Did you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee? Half of what you pay goes to the writers and half towards supporting the project (web site maintenance, preparing the next Best of book etc.)