Tuesday, 24 March 2026

The Ship That Sailed by Patricia Feeney, cold brew

 Jack hadn’t been able to sleep, as usual. He’d had another night wrestling with Lorna’s unforgiving habits. With the air conditioner set at sixty-six degrees, they started the night with two blankets. Within an hour, Lorna wrapped most of them over her and left Jack shivering and tugging for his share. After another hour, she’d unload the bedclothes onto him, leaving him to wake in a cocoon of her sweat. As if this weren’t bad enough, Lorna took up snoring, a new habit: loud, congested huffs.  On the worst nights, Jack gave up and moved to the family room couch, taking half the dampened blankets with him. Goddamned menopause, Jack thought. He resented that he suffered its symptoms along with his wife.

At his weekly IHOP breakfast with Bud, Jack lamented his sleeplessness. “It’s menopause Jack,” Bud said matter-of-factly.It’s not about you. I remember when Judy went through it. The last thing you want to do is complain. Believe me,” he said as he leaned across the table and lowered his voice. Bud’s white hair dropped over his eyebrows as he tilted his head in a conspiratorial gaze. Jack silently compared his dull gray hair and thinning pate to his friend’s hair, thick loose curls that made the ladies take a second look. If Bud weren’t his best friend, he’d resent him.

“So, speaking from your experience, Bud, when do things get back on track? You know, back to normal?” Jack asked.

 

Bud shoveled a large forkful of pancake into his mouth, the syrup dribbling down his chin.  As he dragged the paper napkin across his face, he spoke as he chewed. “Normal? If you mean like before menopause, you’re delusional.”

Jack cleared his throat and refined his question. “What I mean is, when do the symptoms stop?”

“Hmm. I can’t recall,” Bud said. He tapped his fork on his plate and looked to the ceiling as if he were trying to find that data point. “Nope. I don’t know,” he finally said, returning his attention to Jack. “But Judy’s not the same, even without the symptoms. Still Judy. But different.”

“How so?” Jack asked.

“Lemme think. One thing that sticks out: she started saying things like ‘you do you.’  I had no idea what that meant but got the feeling she was telling me she’d be doing Judy with or without me.”

“Jesus Christ, Bud. How long does this last?”

“I don’t know, pal. How long do you plan to live?”

***

A year ago, Jack and Lorna stopped using the bed for anything but sleep, and now he couldn’t even count on that. No sleep. No sex. This isn’t how he planned to spend his golden years. At sixty-five, his libido thinned along with his hair. But he wasn’t dead. He still had the craving, even though it was tempered by his stiff knees and the hip that cried for a replacement. But they could adjust their positions to work with these inconveniences. He printed options he found in a link from his AARP magazine. He slid the stack of papers across the kitchen table one Saturday morning. Lorna flipped through them as the lines in her forehead deepened.  “Really? We’d have to be contortionists to get into some of these positions.” She pointed to one of the illustrations. “I’m afraid this one would wrench your back, honey. And this? Oh, my God, Jack, you can’t be on top. Remember your dislocated shoulder? I really don’t want to end up in the ER again trying to explain the injury.” Lorna finished looking through the illustrations, then dropped them on the table as she closed her eyes and sighed. “Jack, you know what I’m going through. I’m so goddamned tired, I can’t muster desire right now. Let’s revisit this when I’ve regained some equilibrium.” Jack stared at the pages on the table, saying nothing. “When we get there, let’s take another look at the side effects of the statin, too. I know you’ve had muscle weakness, but I want to be sure there isn’t anything we can make worse with sex.” Jack gave a conciliatory nod.  He thought marrying a younger woman would extend his sex life, not turn his trophy wife into a nursing attendant.

***

Jack held up his coffee cup to motion for a refill. He pushed his half-eaten breakfast to the center of the table and watched Bud, who was fully engaged with his triple stack of pancakes. “Bud, I don’t want to pry, but I need a reality check,” Jack said quietly. “Do you and Judy—uh—do you still. Shit. Never mind.” The waitress arrived with a cheerful ‘there you go,’ as she refilled Jack’s cup.

Bud used a slice of toast to wipe his plate clean of the syrup and shoved the bread into his mouth, closing his eyes as he chewed. After he swallowed the last of it, he sighed. “Damn

 

that was good.” Jack nodded, hoping the breakfast was over. “So, where were we,” Bud said, as Jack slapped his credit card on the table. “You want to know if Judy and I still do the nasty. Hell yeah. Not as often as we used to, but yeah.” He punctuated his statement with a loud slurp of his orange juice.

“That’s what I figured. Glad to hear it,” Jack said as he leaned back and spread his arms across the back of the booth top. “Yep, it looks like we haven’t lost our animal magnetism.” He picked up his juice glass and raised it in a silent Bravo.

“Jack, I’ve known you since we were teenagers bragging about sex we didn’t have. Cut the shit.”

“What?” Jack said, anxiously waving for the waitress.

“I know you, pal. You asked about me and Judy because you’re having problems with Lorna. In the bedroom.”

Jack dropped his waving arm and nodded. “Yeah. Okay. But nothing I can’t handle.”

“Right. Sounds like you’re killing it.”

“Shut the fuck up, Bud. Besides, I’m the same man as I’ve always been, but Lorna. Well, Lorna’s changed.”

“Sure, Jack. Have your pity party if that’s what you want. Or as my wife would say, you do you.” Bud caught the eye of the waitress and gave the card-signing signal.

***

That night, Jack migrated to the couch. Once he got settled, he thought about Mary, the grocery clerk at Shop-N-Save. He was drawn to her salt-and-pepper hair, always pulled back in a high ponytail. Lorna kept her hair in a short, professional bob with blonde highlights. No ponytails for her. Mary’s hair bounced across her back as she slid groceries over the scanner. She always asked how he was. Jack lied, claiming he’d just come from a Pilates class or was on his way to the gym. Mary was impressed with his vigor, her word. Jack noticed she wore a Fitbit. He got one to have something else to talk about with Mary. When they compared their step counts, Jack lied and inflated his by many thousand. But he didn’t lie when Mary asked about his hobby building remote-controlled miniature boats. He couldn’t remember the last time Lorna asked about his World War II aircraft carrier.  As Mary shuffled his purchases to the end of the counter, she asked detailed questions, pausing for split seconds to look at Jack, her coal-dark eyes locked on his fading blue irises.

Jack stopped wearing his wedding ring and told Lorna it had gotten too tight. Once the tan line evened where the ring had been, he made a point of using his left hand as he pushed the bachelor-sized groceries across the belt: single-serving prepared meals, small yogurt cups, two apples, three oranges. He wasn’t sure what he was doing, but he couldn’t stop. Each trip to the Shop-N-Save left him more obsessed with Mary. Jack blushed when she smiled at him. Her imperfect teeth, the small gap in the front, the endearing lines at the edges of her mouth mesmerized him.

Mary responded with a gasping wow when Jack told her his replica of an aircraft carrier would be permanently displayed in the local World War II Museum. The Museum Foundation had taken photos as Jack’s work progressed, documenting the intricacies of the project. “My, tthat must be an amazing piece of workmanship,” Mary said as she moved his groceries across the belt and Jack gushed the details of his labor.

“You can come to the launch!” Jack nearly shouted over the beeps from the scanner. Mary smiled kindly as she nodded toward the payment terminal. Jack swiped his card, grabbed the bag of groceries and quietly said “I’ll let you know the date. No pressure. If you’re free, you can come by.” Mary smiled and quickly turned her attention to the next customer.

***

Two weeks later Jack met Bud for breakfast and told him the date of the ship launch. “You couldn’t do it on a weekend, Jack?” Bud asked. “More people could make it. Hell, half our golf group still works. Not to mention, your wife.”

Jack nodded sympathetically. “I know. It’s too bad. I tried for a weekend, but the park is booked along the lake for the next few months. And I had to coordinate with the Foundation. A Tuesday was the best I could do,” Jack lied. The park administrator had offered the single available Saturday, but Mary worked two Saturdays a month. She was always off on Tuesdays, and Jack wanted to be sure she could witness the culmination of his work on the aircraft carrier.

***

On the morning of the launch, Jack found Lorna in her robe puttering in the kitchen at 8:30, well past the time she left for the office. “Lorna, are you okay?” he asked.

“Of course, I’m Okay. I took the morning off.”

“Oh, honey, you didn’t have to do that. It’ll be amateur hour at the lake.” Jack restrained the panic he felt rising in his voice. “You’ve seen the ship in the garage for the last year. You probably can’t wait for the damn thing to get to the Foundation.”

“Jack, you know I would love to see it on the water. And no, I’m not impatient about getting the monster out of the garage, as much as I might like you to park your car there.” They smiled, acknowledging their ongoing dialogue about the wisdom of parking his hobby in the garage while Jack’s car endured winter snow and ice and the smoldering heat of the Midwest summer. Lorna took a breath, then said, “I’m sorry, honey, but I have a hair appointment this morning. I had to get in before I leave for New York this afternoon. This was the only time Joellen had.” Before Jack could respond, Lorna’s phone pinged a message. Her brow furrowed as she read the text. “Shit. I have to run. I need to put out a fire at the office before I see Joellen.” Jack placed a sympathetic hand on her shoulder.  Lorna kissed him on the cheek and raced to the stairs. “Take a video, hon,” she called as she neared the second floor.

Jack exhaled a long breath of relief. He settled into a kitchen chair and sipped his coffee. Jack was acquainted with his wife’s in-demand hairdresser’s reputation. Lorna called her a colorist magician, whatever that meant. She considered Joellen a friend, even a confidante. “Joellen was so sympathetic when I told her about Johnny’s DUI,” Lorna reported. “She knew by the look on my face I was upset about something.” Every month Lorna spent hours in a pneumatic chair gossiping with Joellen, a woman half her age. His wife came home drunk with dirt about Joellen’s other clients. Lorna seemed clueless that her personal business must be broadcast to any head of hair that entered the shop.

 

***

Mary showed up early to the launch site. Jack’s heart raced when he spotted her on a bench not far from the lake. She flipped through a magazine while several of Jack’s friends gathered around him. They discussed the best spot to put in and where Jack would stand with the controls. A man from the local World War II Foundation took photos of the aircraft carrier, then took shots of Jack standing next to it.

“This is the big day, pal,” Bud said as he gave Jack a man’s side hug.

“It is. I just hope I sealed it well. All I’d need is for the damn thing to sink,” Jack said with a grimace.

“Hey, hey, there’s no one better at this. It’s going to float. I’ll bet you a hundred bucks,” Bud said.

As Bud predicted, the launch proceeded perfectly. The group of onlookers clapped when Jack turned the carrier around to return to shore. Jack, laser-focused on the controls, didn’t see Mary until he turned to thank his fans. She’d moved to the edge of the lake and smiled broadly when Jack’s eyes met hers.

Jack raised his controls over his head and yelled, “Oh yeah!” his gaze locked on Mary. The crowd responded with another round of applauses. Jack took a theatrical bow.

“Okay, Jack, now say a few words for posterity,” Bud said as he pointed his phone at his friend. “For your kids. Your grandkids. And for Lorna, who had to miss today.”

“Oh my God, yeah!” Jack said, the adrenaline continuing to pump through his system. He thanked his family, especially his ‘endlessly patient wife, Lorna,’ for supporting him as he brought his vision to fruition. When he turned from Bud, Jack watched the group disband. He looked for Mary, but she was gone.

Men from the Foundation loaded the ship to a flatbed truck to deliver it to the Museum. Jack’s sinuses burned, a signal he might cry. He watched a year’s work pull away, taking his moment of glory with it.

Jack wanted to get away from everyone and for-Christ’s-sake, cry. He couldn’t remember being this let down since his wedding reception ended. All the planning, all the anticipation built through the engagement. Then within a few hours, it was over. He and Lorna convinced their best friends to continue the party at the hotel bar. They closed it down and retired to the honeymoon suite, too drunk to have sex. They laughed about this the next day when they woke with hangovers. “Good thing we weren’t saving ourselves for marriage,” Lorna joked.

“We saved ourselves for each other. That’s all that matters,” Jack said.

•••

“Hey,” Bud said, interrupting Jack’s memory. “You owe me a C-note.”

Jack dragged himself back to the moment. “What?” he asked.

“The bet. I bet you a hundred bucks the boat would float. And it did.”

“Con artist. I never took the bet,” Jack said. “Always working an angle, Bud. Good thing I know you as well as I do.”

The friends slapped each other on the back and walked to their cars. Jack turned on his car engine and idled for a few moments. When tears gathered in the corners of his eyes, he knew it was time to leave. 

***

“Jack, you did it!” Lorna declared on the phone that evening. “Damn, I wish I could have been there.”

“I do, too, honey,” Jack said and surprised himself. He meant it.

“No worries, though. Bud sent me the video. It’s fantastic. And you look ecstatic.”

“That’s how I felt, Lorna. Ecstatic. But then I was let-down. It was the wedding reception all over again.”

“What a bummer. I hate that.” The two listened to their breaths in silence. “I never told you this, Jack, but I felt the same way each time one of the kids got married. All that lead-up, and then pfft! It’s over.”

“Exactly,” Jack said.

“Oh, I almost forgot,” Lorna said. “You won’t believe who I saw on the video.”

“Who?”

“Mary!” Lorna nearly exclaimed with glee. “One of Joellen’s clients. I only met her a couple of times when our appointments were back-to-back.” Jack’s stomach churned at the mention of Mary. His wife in-real-life knew his grocery-clerk wife. And their connection was the gossip monger Joellen.

 Lorna banged on about how Mary had three dead-beat ex-husbands—all who cheated on her. “When she had a kid with the second husband, he disappeared. Mary worked two jobs to put her daughter through college. She’s amazing,” Lorna said as her voice slowed. “But she hasn’t been in for quite a while. Joellen said Mary stopped getting her hair colored, so no need for Joellen.”

“Hmm,” Jack murmured.

“What in the world was she doing at the launch?” Lorna asked, abruptly returning to the moment.

“I have no idea, hon. It’s a public park.” Sweat gathered on Jack’s forehead. “Anyway, this Mary must have seen the group and walked over to see what was happening,” he said.

              “Of course. You’re a celebrity, honey. She’s one of your fans,” Lorna teased. 

***

Jack turned in early that night. He lay awake, staring at the digital clock on the nightstand as the numbers flashed the minutes, then the hours. He reached across the bed and touched the empty space Lorna left. He was still awake at dawn when the sunrise split across the room. That afternoon, Jack decided to make tacos, Lorna’s favorite, and he needed to pick up the ingredients. He drove down the main suburban boulevard and automatically turned into the Shop ‘N Save. He abruptly turned the car back to the main drag and headed to Aldi’s.

That evening, when he heard the key turn in the front door, he wiped his hands on his apron and hurried to greet his wife.  

Bio:

Patricia Feeney is a founding member of the Crooked Tree Writers, and is a member of the St. Louis Writer's Guild and AWP. Her work has appeared in Adelaide, Bayou (Pushcart nominee), biostories, Inscape, Persimmon Tree, Windmill, Grub Street, and elsewhere. She recently retired from teaching in Lindenwood's MFA program.

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Monday, 23 March 2026

My Prerogative by Leah Mueller, frosty Hurricane

Some people aren’t cut out to be strippers. When I applied to a semi-upscale Bourbon Street club, the owners sent me to their sister establishment, Papa Joe’s. It was a grungy, unisex joint. A woman named Tammy served as its undisputed queen. Her act seemed more gymnastic than sexual. As a finale, she sprang onto her pole like a trained monkey and hung upside down, tongue dangling. My erotic offerings were more modest. I mounted the stage and swayed half-heartedly for several minutes. Tammy tried her best to coach me. “Honey, these men are drunk and stupid. All you gotta do is shake it.” I staggered onstage in my ill-fitting stilettos. “My Prerogative” pounded in the background. I closed my eyes and drifted into a reverie. Undulating like a snake, I squeezed my thigh flesh and licked my lips. Several men burst into applause. The music came to an abrupt halt. My eyes fluttered open. Tammy stood beside the jukebox, plug in hand. “Goddammit, keep your pubic hair inside your G-string! I’m not going back to prison because of your bush!” Exposed pubic hair was illegal in Louisiana. I gazed downward. Sure enough, an errant tuft protruded from the edge of my costume like a patch of weeds. Those pubes could send an innocent parolee back to the slammer. Who knew? I tucked the hair back into place and resumed my awkward dance. Two hours remained in my shift. Then I could go home and forget everything. 

Bio:

    Leah Mueller's work appears in Rattle, NonBinary Review, Brilliant Flash Fiction, Does It Have Pockets, Outlook Springs, Your Impossible Voice, etc. One of her stories is in the 2022 edition of Best Small Fictions. Her fourteenth book, "A Pretty Good Disaster" was published by Alien Buddha in 2025. 
 
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.)


Saturday, 21 March 2026

Saturday Sample: A Bolt from the Blue by Mark Winson

 



A cup of unstirred tea that only presents the sugar

to the tongue with the last mouthful

 

It was a strange day. There was a grating silence hanging in the air. There were few birds singing, few conversations of passers-by that I could gate crash and less than the usual stampede of traffic rumbling down the high street. Most notable was the stillness that settled over the school playground, a clamour I ordinarily enjoyed; the chatter and giggling of children are to me, so representative of the continuation of life. The sunshine, the glorious sunshine that had dominated so much of that

summer, was also absent, as if God had flicked a simple switch. My face felt abandoned, condemned to defending itself from the sharp wind that brought about the change in the weather. Perhaps there had been something more, on that noteworthy day, that I should have been aware of.

 

Needs must, however. I had drained the house of milk, blitzed out the bread bin and was suffering an oral withdrawal after eating too many dry crackers. Dry, I say dry, but they had turned, were slightly damp, so I had to venture out. It would at least break the silence, not that my silence inconvenienced anyone, living alone on my meagre income was hardly going to open sunflowers. I had learned to cope however, made mistakes along the way, as we all do, but there was a subtle difference between wanting to and having to. The doctor had told me that!

 

So, I donned my overcoat. I feel the cold much more these days and wear it more than often. I’ve taken to sitting in it, to listen to The Archers, rather than putting the heating on. Then, I took up my not so macho shopping bag, which was the wife’s, bless her, and fully equipped, I left. I tried to walk with a defiant step, something I’d learned that relieved my trepidation and hesitation. Shoppers with swinging bags and drag-along children are normally the only waves that fail to part in front of me, but I was far more confused when there were none. An ever doubting mind you see, a propensity for reflecting on the downside of my existence, and a tendency to ask myself taxing questions all the time. I did on that day. Was it that people were avoiding me? Maybe the case had I not washed for a week, but I’m always fastidious with my personal hygiene and always indulge in a drift of aftershave.

 

I did well to dodge the abrupt parking bollards and spewing litter bins, which were more than testing, but getting across the road was like negotiating my life away. Screaming cars, articulated lorries, silent but deadly push bikes are bad enough, but I also had to contend with the state of the road surface. What do they do all day long, in those bleeding council offices? Most likely they are engrossed in that Facebook thing, playing games and talking to fellow anoraks. They even twitter, according to my nephew, as if they’re all birding freaks or something. I ride over the ruts in smooth roads when out of town, but I’m at far more risk of falling down those cut into an urban street. It’s then I wobble like jelly, scrabbling to right myself just in time to avoid yet another skidding car with all the tread of a fried egg in a well-greased pan.

 

I walked past the arcade, listening to the pinging pinball machines and jingling of coins falling over the waterfalls, past the last remaining record shop, one

that persists in playing music that you’re supposed to listen to in your garage! I stopped just outside Mothercare, somewhere I think all babies dislike judging by the bawling coming from inside and turned to stand at the curbs edge. Hesitating,

assessing the odds in crossing the street, I suddenly felt a splash from God’s watering can. I cursed him under my breath. I have my doubts about religion

and would like to know just how God can be held so reverently, what with all the bad in the world. There was twice the urgency if I wanted to stay dry. So, prompted by my chiding mind if nothing else, I quickly stepped out into the oceanic expanse of tarmac, leaving behind the security of its coastline, with no more focus than getting across the channel.

 

It was then that it happened. I’d been so preoccupied; I’d paid little heed to the rumbling overhead and failed to realise or recognise what was coming. I always listen to the news of a morning but have an unerring habit to switch the radio off before the weather report.

 

You don’t hear lightening, you have little warning that it’s coming, only a heavenly notification that it’s been and gone as the furniture overhead is dragged

across the sky. Then wallop! This bolt from what must have been a power-station in the clouds hit me, pummelling me into what became scorched tarmac! It

rifled up through my body, from the ground beneath my feet until the hair on the back of my neck stood like that of a cat’s angry back. I felt myself go rigid,

statuesque and hard; any chill of the day being blown away in a millisecond. There was a distinct smell of dry burning and a crackling closing over the vacuum left in the air as all the oxygen was consumed. Probably being the only reason why I hadn’t burst into flames. I could feel the blood in my veins beginning to boil, taste a hit of what seemed to be barbecue sauce, infused into my tongue. I yelled,

believe me you would! I don’t think I swore, least not as this generation seem to, but something leapt from my screaming mouth all the same. Then all was dark,

all was silent.

 

I don’t remember much more at that point, I had no inkling of how long I been away with the fairies, it was just, well, black. They say your life is supposed

to flash before your eyes, not that it did in my case, but neither did it occur to me that I’d been deprived of a promised liaison with St Peter, and had never stood before the gold wrought iron of heaven’s gates. I could have lost days, I could have lost weeks, things might well have accelerated to the point of memissing several episodes of The Archers.

 

Finally, after what seemed like an eternity, I opened my eyes. The shock was more than palpable, as stood in front of me was Jesus Christ, nestling on a fluffy white cloud formation, in a long blue robe that rolled comfortably over his relaxed arms, folded to allow his hands to come together in prayer. A legion of angels had glided over him, with the faces of innocent babies and the wings of mighty eagles

outstretched illustriously. Dainty birds with gloriously coloured coats, either heaven bound or in ghostly flight, swooped and played across the orange of the sky as they were welcomed by him. His smile was gentle, a forgiving smile to those that needed forgiving, and that could well have included me.

 

The vista in front of me was inspiring, inspiriting and yet in its own way, reassuring. It certainly wasn’t what I expected, believe you me. At first, I was

shocked, so shocked in witnessing what I was seeing that I felt sure it had to be a miracle. Had God put aside my perfidiousness, my dishonesty, that time I pinched a new band saw from work, that time I jabbed Richard Smith in the eye, I could go on. If asked I would never have admitted that I was unworthy, but then he is supposed to forgive you, isn’t he?

 

“I don’t believe it,” I said, “after all these years, after all this time,” I said. “I’m so sorry!” Frankly, it was surprising that this last-ditch confession was accepted and that the trapdoor to oblivion remained shut.

 

I was just about to kneel in front of Jesus and ask him for further directions, when suddenly, a panicked voice broke the serenity of the moment.

 

“He’s awake Vicar! He’s alive Vicar! but I think he thinks he’s dead, that he’s gone to heaven, he’s in a daze. You have to do something!” I could hear this lady’s

stampeding voice rattling round my head as I felt my stupor lighten and my feet finally touch down again. She sounded in some respects like the wife, always having her say, forcing her opinion, bless her, and then handing responsibility over to someone else. We survived as long as we did because I had the foresight to listen and then disregard much of what she said.

 

“Oh my, oh my Lord, how did he survive a strike like that? Just look at the state of him!” said a man more from somewhere behind my head, whose hands

were holding it steady. “It knocked the power out to the church and half of the town’s shops!” I was lying on my back you see, but then I’d hardly be standing

upright if what he was saying was true. In actual fact, I was lying exactly where a compassionate band of church goers had laid me, after rescuing my burnt

corpse from the middle of the charred road. How lucky that they were meeting on such a day, how lucky was I? They stood hopeful, crossing themselves over and over repeatedly, beseeching God not to take me before time, until eventually, thankfully, I opened my and managed to focus. I felt at first, as if I was in a hospital bed, with seven shades of junior Doctors angling over me, putting forward observations and coming to a bizarre diagnosis.

 

“We should never have brought him into the church, never have put him just here!” the Vicar said, chastising himself and looking up at the beautifully painted church ceiling. “He thinks he’s looking into heaven, thinks he’s meeting Jesus. You’re right, he thinks he must have passed away!” I don’t know whether it was the shock of the ceiling that I was looking at, or the crucifix hanging from the vicar’s neck!

 

It was then that I felt my mouth crack with an allowance for a broadening smile, or more likely a look of wonderment that had spread across my face, those looking down at me exhibiting much the same reaction. I was alive, I was more than alive, I was, well, repaired. I was no longer looking at Jesus and his cloud hopping minions, I’d focused on the vicar.

 

“No, you don’t understand,” I said. He wasn’t listening of course, not many people do when looking at someone of my age, they think that just because my bodies failing, my mind is too. His intentions were commendable all the same, Godly, saintly or whatever a man of the cloth strives to be.

 

“Lie still my son,” he said, “you’ve had a great shock!” Well, state the bleeding obvious he did, which didn’t help. “The ambulance is on its way,

don’t worry!” I looked directly into his eyes, the miraculous fresco above me didn’t matter anymore. I took hold of his arm, quickly, before he began preparing himself to give me the last rights.

 

“A shock it is, Vicar,” I said, “but not the shock you thought I’d had. You see, before I tried to cross the road and before I felt the heat burning up through my body… truth is…” I remember rubbing my eyes with the back of my hands at this point, as tears began to spill into tributaries running over my cheekbones. I smiled again, ready to make my announcement to the whole world and in the sight

of God. “Truth is… I was totally blind!”       

 

Find your copy here

About the author:

 

Frankly I don’t know how I came around to writing books. My teachers at school all said I could do better, although to be fair my English teacher Mrs Bullock extracted every last drop of mental substance from me, and fired up what has turned out to be a creative bent. Or is it that I’m just a daydreamer? Only in 2016 did I finally, after much persuasion from family and friends, take up writing more seriously and publish my first book. Since then, my style and genre evolved, until comfortably, I can now describe it as quirky fiction.                   

Friday, 20 March 2026

In The Right Place and Time by Aminah Khan, iced mint tea

 After hearing an infant’s first cry, a pair of white wings from the bed of clouds would fall from the skies. Everyone had a guardian angel. Their kind stood bright, cherubic, and rosy-cheeked. Their strong wings stretched for miles and shielded their wards from harm, with the promise of protection said on musical tongues that any child would believe. The only exception was that their assigned guardian angel would be the only one they could see. The rumour of their non-existence had come to a stop long ago because it surely wasn’t a coincidence that every youth had an angel’s hand to hold.

 

A guardian angel was the sunshine of every child's life. That is, however, with the exception of Letha Merigold. Her angel, who introduced themselves as “Styx,” did not wear ivory robes or golden halos but dark shadows that wrapped around their figure and face with a pair of crow-like wings resting on their back. However, despite their formidable appearance, Letha’s angel was just as timid as she was. She recalled peering up the dark, willowy mass as it loomed over her cradle, their wings hunched. The look in Styx’s sooty eyes shone a marriage of fear and hesitation, framed by lashes that curled like calligraphy. They then reached down to wrap a wispy finger around her tiny one and spoke.

“The spring solstice will help you bloom, dear Merigold. And so will I.”

Styx’s low voice meshed with the thunder that poured outside, making it tolerable and somewhat pleasant. A surge of sudden calmness waved over, accompanied by the sweet scent of narcissus, lulling Letha to sleep. Her angel let out a satisfied hum, promptly vanishing in the air.

Over the years of learning wrong from right, Letha also learned that not everyone will accept her. Her classmates cried in horror as she described her guardian’s form with candour, finding no reason to lie. In her case, the truth wasn’t so kind to her. As she grew older, those cries turned to taunts, and eventually, her voice became mute, as well as her soul.

She never bothered with her parents, and they never bothered with her. Though she couldn't be sure if that's what she wanted. She still complied, keeping her soul hush since it became apparent that her plethora of endless chatter was simply too much for them to handle. So by the time she turned ten, her father forced a used but sturdy camera in her hands, and soon her attention drifted.

 

Her passion for photography led her to her adoration of butterflies. Their gossamer wings showed up bright on screen while their delicate legs ested on twigs of lilac and honeysuckle. The window in her room was the perfect way to see them coming, though sometimes there was no need to beckon them. It seemed that they loved her back, fluttering around her head, forming a resplendent crown. Still, Letha decided that it was Styx’s wings that she favoured the most. Wings belonging to her invisible muse.

 

 On the morning of her eleventh birthday, Letha discovered that Styx’s form could turn to something more “tolerable" with a bit of glamour,” as they explained. The inky shadows morphed into a tall, lanky figure with human limbs, complemented by an androgynous visage with shoulder-length black hair and rueful onyx eyes. They didn't seem as thrilled as she was, and upon further discovering Styx’s self-shame for their supposed ugliness, Letha felt her heartbreak. So before they headed out to the kitchen where her cake sat waiting, she plucked an orange chrysanthemum from the garden and reassured Styx that she did not mind whatever form they presented as.

“I don’t care,” Letha said firmly while holding the angel’s hands after making them kneel down to her level. “As long as you can brush my hair and give me hugs, I'm happy.” She gave their hands a squeeze.

“Thank you, little one,” Styx replied, voice sounding slightly hoarse. The flower was tucked in their hair. “In fact, with your hair, I can practice french braiding!” she chirped, grinning when their eyes widened.

 

That morning, Letha realized that her guardian was just as human as she was. She knows that Styx will stay with her as her life continues till death, so she had to be strong for them too. Even ethereal beings could use a hug.

The two were seated on the grass in the backyard after blowing her candles, verdant flora surrounding them in a fragrant cocoon. She sat in front of Styx on the blanket, cupping her knees, her purple sweater draped down to her knees. Her camera lays carefully near her feet, next to the utensils and slice of honey cake, ready to be eaten once they are done. The fluttering of butterflies was not enough to fill the silence, so while Styx weaved flowers in her hair, she asked.

“Are you a boy or a girl?”

The weaving stops, and she feels a petal tickle her ear. “That’s a hard question,” Styx murmurs, “why do you ask?”

Letha shrugged. “It’s been eleven years. I’m curious,” she explained bluntly. There was no need to dance around questions with Styx. Only this time, they said nothing, and she mistook the silence for discomfort. “I’m sorry.”

Styx hushed her with a bemused look on their face. “I’m not so sure, blossom. It’s not something I think of often,” Letha turns to face them. “However, it should all depend here,” they tap where their heart would be. Letha frowns and reaches for her camera to fiddle with, the smell of cherry blossom tickling her nose. “What if I’m unsure right now?”

Once again, her guardian angel said nothing, instead of looking down at the stray flowers in their lap. They spoke after a while, “Then for now focus on becoming like water. You’d slip through nimble fingers and hold up mighty ships. You have plenty of time to think about this stuff for later.”

Letha hummed her approval. “We can hold them up together.” You’ll always hover nearby.

“Of course, buttercup.” They tucked one accordingly behind her ear.                                                                                                                                                

Letha wrinkled her nose, laughter spilling from her lips. “Buttercups are weeds, Styx.”

“No,” they chided softly, “if grown in the right place and time, they too are flowers.” They are wanted.

“Buttercups are also poisonous.”

Fondness glowed from the angel’s eyes. “Yes. Yes, they are.”

Bio:

Recently graduated in Biochemistry, she enjoys intertwining creative expression with science. Alongside writing fiction, she worked as a student journalist at her university. She has a strong interest in gene therapy, philosophy, and classic literature, and hopes to return to writing as frequently as she once did in the future.

https://www.thelance.ca/author/aminah-khan/ 

 
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Thursday, 19 March 2026

It’s All in the Dirt By Henri Colt, Chai latte

 

Sushil and I plodded along the trail in single file. We had a lifetime of experience climbing jagged snow-covered peaks in the Sierra Mountains. Now we were coming home from another trip, hiking in familiar fields covered with wildflowers. Just around the next bend, we’d start moving faster on our last downhill trek through the valley to our campsite. Usually, we climbed as a threesome, but Christian was dead, and after leaving his ashes at the summit, it was just the two of us, for the first time in years.

I noticed that Sushil had picked up the pace.

“You’ve dragged your feet all day,” I shouted. “What’s the sudden rush?” For a man who spent more than twenty years in the special forces and the rest of his life rescuing victims of child trafficking, he was in great form. Sushil had just turned seventy and told his girlfriend he felt in the best shape ever.

Yet he cried like a baby when I tossed our friend’s ashes into the wind.

“I was just remembering how Christian always wanted to run the last mile back to our tents.” Sushil broke into a slow jog.

I adjusted my waistbelt and felt my pack tighten against my back. I realized he wasn’t going to give me time to readjust the position of the empty urn I had stuffed under the top flap, so I heard it banging against the tent poles with each rise of my accelerating steps. I wanted to leave the urn on the summit, but Sushil thought we should give it to Christian’s daughter, even though she hadn’t spoken with her father in weeks and never made it to the funeral.

Christian’s wife and her mother were there and said we should do whatever we wished with it. He had never been attached to material things and probably wouldn’t have cared, but I poured a handful of ashes into a freezer bag that I put in my pocket, to give her with the urn just in case.

The man went downhill fast. He was a former investment banker turned philanthropist whose interests spanned everything from mountaineering to hang-gliding, with lots of photography in between. He had been healthy his entire life, never smoked, and drank only when he was climbing or camping with us somewhere in the back country. After he was diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia, the doctors told him he might have only six months to live. A stem cell transplant and chemotherapy didn’t help, and he was gone in five.

The three of us had known each other since grade school.

“Do you think you’ll cry when I die?” I shouted, wondering if Sushil could hear me over the thuds of our boots hitting solid ground. Either he could not, or I never heard his answer. It’s probably better that way, I thought, checking the heart rate monitor on my watch, but I wasn’t sure.

For an instant, I slowed my pace on the trail, trying to catch my breath and letting Sushil get far ahead of me. I paused to do what I felt Christian would have done. I looked to the sky and turned in place to take in everything wonderful and beautiful around me. The windswept clouds stretching to become wispy long white cushions, a dozen ravens cackling from those branches in a nearby tree, a small mound of scat, probably from that roving coyote I saw earlier, the deliciously orange poppy field on the other side of the creek, and memories which seemed to have blossomed out of nowhere after each kick of dirt under my feet. I checked my heart rate as my breathing steadied. As much as I thought I knew him, perhaps I didn’t really, and I wondered whether Christian ever felt as fearful about his future as I did that very moment. Whether he had ever spent any of his precious waking hours searching, as I so often do, for the drive to recapture the drive.

Down the trail, Sushil had stopped, his large frame silhouetted against the forest of pines behind him. He wasn’t looking at the view. He was waiting for me. I readjusted the urn in the top of my pack and broke into a light jog. When I reached him, he turned, and we walked on.

 

Bio:

Henri Colt is a physician-writer and mountaineer who marvels at beauty wherever it may be. His short stories have appeared in CaféLit, Rock and Ice Magazine, Flash Fiction Magazine, and others. His biography of Italian artist Amedeo Modigliani, Becoming Modigliani was published in 2025.

 

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.)