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Thursday, June 19, 2014

"Simon Says" by Mckenzi Alyce Williams


“Shut the door, Simon! They’ll see us!” Aurelia whisper-yelled, her doe eyes stretched even wider with fear.

“No one can see us Lia! It’s pretty dark in here.” Simon replied, obviously not concerned by the possibility of being caught.

“It’s not dark enough to hide this.” Aurelia said harshly, pointing at the rolled up Persian rug. Sweat dripped down her forehead, a sign of her hard work.

They didn’t plan this, it just happened. Who would’ve thought that one game of Russian roulette could get this messy? They had removed all of the bullets. Six bullets, and somehow, one of them had ended up embedded in Carl’s head.

“Just help me get him out of here. It happened and it’s over.” Simon said. His usual lazy smile was replaced by a grimace.

Aurelia laughed dryly and complied. She had always known that Simon was trouble, but she had thrown caution to the wind. He was so alive; such a beautiful mess. She couldn’t help but love him and love who she was with him. Taking a deep breath, she bent down, securing a corner of the rug in her fists, and pulled. The soft material slid easily across the hard-wood floors. The oak had been scrubbed of any and all evidence earlier, so the smell of harsh chemicals assaulted their noses.

“Geez! Who knew that Carl was this heavy?” Simon interrupted Aurelia’s train of thought. She could hear the touch of amusement in his voice.

“This is not funny Simon!” she dropped the rug quickly, making the coffee table rattle, “Wait, did you do this on purpose?!”

Simon’s grin faded quickly and he stood up, also dropping his side of the rug, “What do you want from me Lia?! I told you it was a mistake so just drop it!”

Sweat also cascaded down his face, dripping from the slope of his nose. Light blue veins protruded from his neck telling of his anger. His fists were clenched tight and he let one go to push a stray strand of dyed gray hair back in place. His watery blue eyes were livid, mirroring his rigid posture.

 “I-I’m sorry.” Aurelia dropped her head, feeling guilty. She knew that if she didn’t back off that it would just make things worse, “Let’s just finish this.”

“No. How about you finish this by yourself. I’m out.” Aurelia’s head snapped up quickly at his words. Was he serious?

Simon walked around the body, leaving the room with a grunt. She stood there in shock, not sure what to do. First anger flooded her, and then sadness followed. Her mouth opened and closed. She was loss for words, and in that moment, she knew that she would do exactly as he had told her to do. If she didn’t, it wouldn’t be done and that was something she couldn’t risk.

The smell of cigarette smoke from the balcony brought her back down to earth and she bent down, gripping the rug yet again. Pulling the body proved to be hard work, but she dragged it all the way outside. Finally, she hoisted the body into the dumpster and wiped her forehead with the back of her hand. Trash day was tomorrow and by the time someone realized that Carl was missing, he would be buried under tons of garbage. A lone tear made its way down her face, staining her dirty cheeks.

Aurelia pivoted and walked back into the house, plopping onto the rickety couch. It groaned under her weight. She looked at the balcony door, making sure that Simon was still outside and reached into her pocket. Five bullets rolled into her hand. She smirked, raising her hands to sit behind her neck. The rest would be for Simon.

"A Pretty Normal Story" by Isaiah Brown


   
Ladies and gentlemen, skinny and stout, I’ll tell you a tale I know nothing about; the admission is free, so pay at the door, now pull up a seat and sit on the floor. One fine day in the middle of the night, two dead boys got up to fight; back to back they faced each other, drew their swords and shot each other. A blind man came to watch fair play, a mute man came to shout “hooray! A deaf policeman heard these noises and came and killed those two dead boys. He lived on the corner in the middle of the block, in a two story house on a vacant lot; a man with no legs came walking by, and kicked the lawman in his thigh. He crashed through a wall without making a sound, into a dry creek and suddenly drowned; the long black hearse came to cart him away, but he ran for his life and is still gone today. I watched from the corner of the big round table, the only eyewitness to facts of my fable; but if you doubt my lies are true, just ask the blind man, she saw it too.

"Riders of Kaneonuskatew" by Carly Koenig

I watch the cockfighters and Spitzhaubens scratch at the loam
peck and claw
until shards of sunlight prickle out of the ground,
tossed aside instead of worms
now treats for magpies.

The guttural noises of dairy goat and hair sheep are stuck on tattoo
and the old man’s loud Albanian voice never ceases.
There’s always that weird growl from the community well--
haven’t figured that out yet, but the neighborhood boys?
They say it eats toads.

All I know is the old man’s goats are copper deficient;
their tails are like fish spines.
Seems eerie,
like Death managed to nip their tails
before they outwitted him
as goats are prone.
Seems eerier with the clouds gathering over Ana’s wheat fields.

There’s always something fresh to the air here,
but it’s manure and monsoon.
Like beets: dirt into dirt.
People die every year, cramped up in their houses (breathing stale air)
or struck by lightning in the field,
but rain smells delicious.

Then there’s the buzz of it in the air before--like now--
and I think of the birds sitting on the old zapit poles.
Bigger than you, but it can’t touch you,
can’t hurt you.
Miles and miles away.

Everything is miles and miles away, until it isn’t.
It’s why no one here wants to leave: here they can be afraid.
They can jerk away when the traveling book salesman coughs,
and it’s all right.
Small town small-minds, scared of shadows and the prince of darkness.
Really actually scared of wolves and plague, which is written right into their bones.

We live on top of bones here, too; they float up with those monsoons.
We can’t forget, so I watch the kaneonuskatew
watch with the same sunken, pallid eyes
as those around me.

The book salesman said the name came from some Canadians,
some people called Cree I’ve never heard of--
when I said so, he said that the riders are the reason--
and that the name fits.
“One that walks on four claws,” he said, giddy.
They have four feet with four claws on back, but six front.
Bodies like horses,
tails like those goats,
teeth like musk deer,
and feet like witch familiars.

Strange, strange, like the sounds from the well.
But like the boys feed toads to the well’s citizen,
old men think of how the increased grip of claw in loam
would make plowing the hills easier.

I don’t care about the kaneonuskatew.
I care about their riders.

"Whiplash" by Mckenzi Alyce Williams


Just a little farther.
Her hands clutch the grass,
Pulling herself back home;
Willing her body to move.
Bits of dirt,
Embedded under her fingernails
The wind steals her ribbon.
Mama would be mad,
Grass stains on her pink dress
Daddy said cryin’ was for babies and drunks
She allowed one shaky breath,
And she focused.
Just a little farther.

"The Chinese Crested and the Frog -Sean Williams


A Chinese Crested yelped,
After it accidently hit an electric fence,
While playing with a Chihuahua outside,
The Chihuahua had long hair and was spotted,
The Chihuahua sped like roadrunner,
To Charles’ owner Rebecca and found him,
Then later that night a frog sat outside,
My window sill had a greenish look to it,
The reddish pink belly blew up like air,
Like helium in a balloon it grew,
“Girl go get my laptop,” said my mom,
Then I finally fell asleep in bed.

"Come My Way" by Haylé Baker

It was if a black cloud when the it flew away
Oh come my way
I remember you were green as grass
Oh come back my way
We were in the park when you flew away
It smell like fresh pool water that day
Oh please come back this way
The kids were laughing when you went away
Please kites come back this way

"The Wind Speaks" by Kayla McCall

The wind
Speaks with the string
Whistling and whispering
Its long song
Singing tales of its long adventures
Over mountains and beyond oceans
Telling stories to the earth
Through the kite that flies through its depths
The wind speaks with the string
Of its travels near and far
The wind
Speaks

"A Poem to My Brain" by Elena Mangrobang

Oh brain, my brain, my one
and only
irreplaceable
can’t live without
and yet
why must you torment me so?
Answers not given and
questions unanswered,
why must you do this to me?
You are my hero, my savior
my worst enemy, my end
you ramble like a psychopath
and tell of the non-existent
you make a fool of me at times
heck
even the title of this poem is wrong
and yet
you, at times, have the knowledge of an aspiring scientist
and the wisdom of an old man
you even make me look intelligent
sometimes
“why,”
I wonder
“How,”
I inquire
what is it inside of you
inside of me
we’ve been together since birth
and yet
you still keep secrets from me
with these eyes
opened for you
my beloved
I’ve shown you my everything
poured out my heart
I have hidden nothing from you
“so why,”
I say again
why can’t you tell me your secrets
as I have told you mine
it’s almost as if
we’re strangers to each other.

"Prayer Against Forgetting Girls" by Terriana Richardson


The girl with the bad attitude
The girl with the mole on the side of her mouth
The girl who liked girls
The girl whose house burnt down
The girl from California
The girl whose twin was fascinated with roaches
The girl who liked digging worms
The girl with the sweet conscience

The girl with the puppy that never stopped barking
The girl with every new shoe
The girl with beautiful hazel eyes
The girl that dressed like a boy
The girl that squeaked like a mouse when reading in front of an audience
The girl that created her own world of rainbows and lolly pops
The girl with fast behavior that made nothing but As
The girl who’d love to fight
The girl that got every question right
The girl with ambidextrous vision

"Take Me to Manchester" by Molly Brown



I check my phone one more time to see if you have replied.  I know it’s only been two minutes, but I’m anxious, and refreshing Tumblr every four seconds is not helping whatsoever.  Our conversations are always
so intense, so captivating, I don’t think I can ever get the same satisfaction from talking to anyone else.  Butterflies in the stomach? No, it’s more like pissed off hornets that are plaguing me.  My feelings are building up to a physical hurt in my stomach that just might need pain killers.  I bite my lip and check the clock.  Sterling silver hands point to 11:07, and I know I need rest.  And considering what time it is where you are, you certainly need sleep. Just one more message, I tell myself, and then I’ll tell you good night.  How long has it been since I checked, one minute? Close enough.  And oh my gosh, I have a message.  Before I squeal, I must remind myself that I am not a mouse, and therefore shouldn’t.

You say, “It’s five a.m. Screw sleep. I need you,” and I feel guilty for keeping you up this long.  Being six hours off isn’t exactly my cup of tea, but I suppose it will have to work, for the time being.  If only air fare from here to England didn’t cost so much.  For the two-thousand dollars I need, I would have to take up a second job.  That would mean probably switching to night classes, which would turn to reinventing my entire lifestyle.  But the ache working its way through me is so strong. Could I really do something as big as that for just a few fulfilling nights? Oh, why can’t the trip be more affordable? I wouldn’t have a problem at all with the flight being $1.50 or something to that effect.  That would be wonderful, actually!  The price of a hamburger to actually see you? I would love something like that!
Or maybe you could come here.  Pool your psychology money and go cheap, perhaps? You told me yesterday that there’s someone you know, a friend of a friend who can get you in the sky for even less. Wait, can we meet halfway?
 
Would that be a better solution? Or will it simply take tolls on both of us? Where is our halfway point, anyway, in the middle of the ocean? None of this seems to work! What a screwed up world we live in, I re-establish as I go to reply.

“When we finally meet, how about we do so in the winter? Perhaps even Valentine’s Day?” When we meet.  Never thought I’d be using those words as often as I am now.  “I love snow, and it’d give me an excuse to wear your jacket.”  I stare at the un-sent message.  Is that too cheesy?  I take a moment to evaluate.  No, I decide, it isn’t too bad for your liking, but just to be safe, I’ll insert a heart at the end to make myself appear cute.  Yes, that works.  Satisfaction building, I tap “send.”

At first, I didn’t think you were real.  I didn’t doubt your existence, that is, but instead your words.               Everything about them seems so Nicholas Sparks-esque, so undeniably cliché that I often find myself looking over each message once more just to make sure that I’ve read correctly. Even then, I can hardly grasp it, so I save them to look at later.

My favorite is as follows: “Your words are like poetry, they fall softly on attentive ears; they caress the heart and ease the soul.  I can only imagine the beauty they would exude spoken with your voice, so perfectly formed around the lips designed to shape them into being, from the mind capable of conceiving such beauty.

Any piece you craft will be indescribably heavenly, sweetheart, and I will love it.  You are perfect.  I need you here with me; my arms ache to feel you in their embrace.”
 
You have begun to occupy my every thought like a lovely parasite, working its way through my brain.  Half of these little figments start with “when I see you”, and at first are only mildly ridiculous:  When I see you, we will get coffee. When I see you, we will eat devil’s food cake underneath a Magnolia tree. The more I think, the further they escalate, until every single idea seems to be ripped from a hipster’s blog. When I see you, we will write poetry together.  When I see you, we will go underwater basket-weaving.  When I see you, we will watch stars in the desert while listening to The Killers.  Okay, you brought up that last one, and I love it.

“Oh my gosh,” I say out loud.  I forgot to tell you good night.  So much for going to bed now.  Honestly, though, I don’t mind. It gives me a refreshing feeling to know that you would stay up as late as five in the morning just to see the words I’ve typed for you.  One day, I really do hope to see you in person, and run my fingers through your coarse, dark hair.  Until then, I will check Tumblr so repetitively, it is alarming.  I will memorize your time zone and how your times correspond with mine.  I will stand under every lone tree in every park I cross and, for the briefest of moments, feel like you are next to me.  Thoughts of you will let me have a peaceful sleep.

And when I wake up at three a.m., I will notice that the pillow next to mine is unoccupied, and I will wonder, why does the Atlantic Ocean exist?

"Stomach" by Charlie Fikes


Dear Stomach,

I treat you like a wasteland,
Fill you up with trash and treasures
But you know what?
You never seem to grow,
Considering the fact that I burn the calories after.
You’re the only thing that seems to make me happy,
Happier than when trash day comes,
To fill up the wasteland.
Stomach, oh stomach you seem to hold a ton,
Cakes, cookies, veggies and then some.
My personal lunch sack,
My storage facility.
A shortage could not stand in the way
Of me and my trash.
A cheap price to pay and to receive,
A secret session with just my trash and me.

"How to Go from Lost to Finding Yourself" by Isaiah Brown


You start at seven; you’re a bad kid with black hair and small brown eyes. You never behave well; you curse, talk back, and hate authority. You never knew what justice was and you start breaking into homes. Your mom never will understand why you steal. She tells you that the law was being too easy on you because you have been caught three times and that the law will catch up to you.
When you are ten, the law will be a book of restrictions that could control your life and then the law will show you what happens when you constantly break it; you are out in juvy. You never cry, but you will almost plead to be set free.
When you are fifteen, the law will be a close friend that will stay on your back; you will go to juvy again for breaking and entering. Your mom will say good riddance, but you don’t care. She will come back.
When you are seventeen, you are let out of juvy, a paranoid teen who doesn’t trust anyone and who steals every day before dinner. Your mom catches you stealing, and she can’t face you; she is fed up with your lifestyle.
When you are eighteen, the law is a dozen parole officers that all smell of burnt coffee and they do not care about you, much less respect you. You are finally tired of disappointing your mom so you get a job, and your mom will say she was glad you are done stealing.
After that your mom passes away from a heart attack. By that time you are twenty-nine and to honor your mother you accept the law and you will realize you doing that will make you a better man.

"Peace" by Jaylon Long

In your life time, what is reality?
And in that reality can you truly comprehend the ones of others?
Each of us are bound by our knowledge and awareness,
and based on our knowledge and awareness, that is what we can call reality.
Reality is also based on our beliefs and generalizations.
However one’s reality may be an illusion to another.
And through that disconnect, other’s pain can’t be truly understood.
True understanding can only be comprehended through equal pain.
How can one give advice if they have never gone through the same situation?
Pain can manifest into goals that can prevent pain
and in that prevention of pain,
One could possibly be helped.
However pain can manifest into hatred,
and in that hatred revenge can be stimulated.
Cold revenge that even hope can’t extinguish.
These are the effects of hatred.
Regardless if passed down through generations or recently acquired,
All hate is the same.
And in one’s revenge, which only provides a short satisfaction,
the curse of hatred continues and the vicious cycle repeats.
So in your reality you have to ask yourself,
Is there a such thing as peace on earth and how can it be achieved?
Can hatred be conquered or in the existence or hatred only can peace be achieved?


"No One Knows About This" by Terriana Richardson

When I reached the pinnacle of the coaster
The adrenaline rushed in like a soccer ball
The sun beamed hot as a toaster
I took a glance down and confirmed how tall
We were, up there; when all my feeling
Arose, closing my eyes hoping it to be a easy trip
Then once again I felt a since of chilling
Suddenly my partners hand was in position of my grip

I used that stranger’s hand for my relief
I’m not the only one in this mess
As I look over yet whom do I see, across from me?
A disgusted look I gave though, I didn’t stress
No one knows about this fairly awkward moment with my enemy
After this ride it seems as if my enemy has become a new frenemy.

"Longing" by Bethany Griffice

I have fears I might never leave
This deserted place, tied to one spot
That Scotland’s presence will never live
In my eyes, or my touch
Here, no northern lights alter the skies
No wandering mermaids grace these waters
No snowy mountains touch the stars I see
Fresh sea breeze doesn’t blow here
My mind does wander,
Up high above sparkling city lights.
Alone in the love of Paris,
A dream of wishful imaginations.


"Solution" by Molly Brown

Her finger trembles against the gun.
She taps the barrel, the sound echoing through the silent room like a typewriter.
Across the bed, her lover’s own fingers
Entangle into the curtains.
In the boudoir’s reflection, their eyes meet,
His green, hers blue.
His breath shakes like a dying rabbit.
His lips form words,
Words she had already been murmuring:
“This won’t work.”
“This could have worked,” She says.
He pries the curtains open,
As if they were steel instead of cloth,
And he presses his hand to the pane.

"Ace McCool" by Jeramie Scott

His name is Ace McCool, and he rides our school bus. The McCool’s are all substance abusers. Average sized, dark dreads and dark-skinned. Ace’s hair is like the color of black shoelaces, stained with remains of leftover carpet scum. He walks through the halls of Woodlawn High with an empty beer bottle and alcohol stains on his shirt.

Mother McCool is a meth addict/prostitute who often brings home men from the Trap House. She always says that her kids are the burden that keeps her on the street every night. Ace falls down the second floor stairwell; an empty beer bottle escapes his grasp; glass shatters down the stairs pieces broken across the steps.

He wobbles from the stairs trying to leave the scene, leaning against the hallway wall to keep his balance. The principal comes to help. Ace yells when he’s drunk. So, he yells at the principal. “My mother is a whore brings men home and is addicted to meth”. The principal says he’s going to call Ace’s mother. Ace begins to cry, says he has no mother. He tells the principal his mother is a play toy for the drunks at the Trap House. He tells the principal his mother eats meth for breakfast.

Ace collapses into the arms of the principal and gives up. An hour later they meet with a social worker in the principal’s office. The social worker suggests rehab. She tells Ace there is a place that will accept him, but only if he is willing. Ace stares at the pictures of the principals’ family, and the degrees frames hanging on the wall. He feels that he can redeem himself. Ace pulls out a small bag containing meth and placed it on the table, says I don’t want to be like my mother.

The next morning, Ace gathers a few clothes from his house. As he walks through the hallway he glances into his mothers’ bedroom. She’s in the bed, unconcious with two men, all of them naked. They look like store manikins that were just laid out on a mattress. He continues past the living room and stares at his brothers and sisters. He says nothing. He heads towards the kitchen, to a lone beer bottle, tempting, on the counter. Opens it, pours it slowly down the drain until it is empty. he walks outside, he walks to the street and settles heavily into the waiting cab and shuts the door.


"Mr. Greggs" by Patty MgBodile

Mr. Greggs lived  in the biggest house
At the end of the street.

The post man never came to Greggs’s box because
Nobody ever sent him anything.
No children dared to play on his jungle-tall grass.
Not even the church-goin’ women would
Ring to give him peach preserves on Sundays.
Nobody hated Mr. Greggs,
But nobody really liked him either.

Last Sunday, a little boy with yellow hair
And cheeks dirtier than Greggs’ cracked old windows
Got spanked for stealing.
All they found was
An empty jar of peach preserves
In Greggs’ window.

"Lascia Che Ti Aiuti" (Let Me Help You) by Kayla McCall


     
The bright lights crowded Oliver’s vision as he stepped out into the harsh rays of the sun, and he squinted to relieve his eyes of the flash of pain that flooded through them. After the initial discomfort waned, he began to bask in the warm rays of the sun. He was in the woods today for the first time in years, and he declared that he would take time to notice and appreciate all the beauty around him. He leaned against a maple tree to his left and inhaled the pungent scent of the sap that was locked away inside of them. He closed his eyes and listened as birds tweeted different melodies and animals tittered around the forest floor. He opened his eyes and smirked as two squirrels ran over the fallen leaves of late autumn, stained fabulous shades of orange and brown and yellow then chased each other up a tall oak tree. He was surrounded by an air of peace as he admired the wonders before him.

Oliver walked deeper into the lush forest until he came upon a tree. He pressed his hand to it and ran his fingers over the bumps in the bark, and memories of summers spent here in America with his father flooded his brain. They would come to visit relatives here yearly and go back to Britain, his native land, every fall. He decided to move to America after the death of his father. Since his father was a single parent, and Oliver had no siblings, there was nothing left tying him to Britain. Most of his family was in America anyway so he thought the best thing to do was to leave. He couldn’t be there when his father wasn’t.

Oliver trailed his fingers back over the notches in the rough bark and smiled. Years of archery lessons with his father filled his mind. He remembered the first set of bow and arrows that he got for his tenth birthday. He remembered his father guiding him into the proper stance as he raised his bow. He remembered the faint scars that still lingered on his forearm from where the bowstring whipped his arm every time he would let an arrow fly during his first lessons. He remembered this tree, the one he would always use as a target when he practiced.
 
With a deep breath, he stepped back and let the memories overwhelm him. He thought of the bow that he sold after his father’s death because anything that reminded him of his father hurt too much. He shook the thought from his head and moved on.

Oliver walked deeper into the woods, his loud footsteps echoing throughout the trees as he goes, and the familiar surroundings he knew as a child changed the deeper he moved into the forestry. Eventually he found himself near a pond that he never knew was there. He looked into it and saw his face reflected back at him.    
The image of his brown hair and skin, so much like his father’s, stared back at him. He lay down by the pond and let the earthy sounds around him lull him into a halfway land between waking and sleeping.
At the snapping of a twig, Oliver jolted up. He looked around trying to find the source of the sound. After nothing emerged, and no further noises followed, he lay back down, blaming the sound on some small animal scurrying about.

“Who are you?” His head whipped to the side as he sat up again, looking for the voice. He rubbed his neck trying to alleviate the pain that shot through it at his sudden reaction.

“Who said that?” He asked, slowly moving to his feet. He heard a stepping then dragging sound as a woman emerged from behind a tree.

“Now you answer my question,” she said.

“I-I’m Oliver,” he said, flustered as he gave her a quick once over. She wore tattered khaki shorts and a navy t-shirt. Her hair was a tangled mess of black waves. She crossed her arms over her chest at his scrutiny, and he noticed the scratches all over her forearms standing out against her bronze skin.

“Are you okay?” He asked once he found his words again.

“I’m fine.”

“What is your name?”

“Liliana,” she answered in a hushed voice.

“That’s a nice name,” he mused. As he took a step towards her, he noticed that she took a step back. “I know that accent,” he added furrowing his eyebrows. “Where are you from?”

She scowled at him, “Why do you care?”

“I was just curious.”

“Well, you shouldn’t be. It’s none of your business,” Liliana said, turning away.

“Wait,” he yelled. “Are you hungry? Do you need anything?”

“No,” she said sullenly, without turning around.

“Are you sure?”

She stopped and turned her head slightly.

Oliver took this as his only opportunity and pushed his hand into the satchel he kept at his hip and waded through the junk until his hand landed around the firm expanse of an apple. He quickly pulled it out and shoved it in her direction.

Liliana turned and eyed it before taking it from his grasp. “Grazie,” she muttered in thanks.
“That’s it, you’re Italian!”

She chuckled quietly, “Si Italiano.” She paused, “And you are English, no?”

“I am,” Oliver said. “Would you like to sit?” he asked a beat later, gesturing to a large rock a few paces away from the pond.

Liliana nodded and began limping towards the rock. She grimaced every time she shifted her weight to her left foot.

“Do you need any help?” He asked reflexively, but she shook her head.

Once she made her way over to the rock, she sat with a long sigh, and he sat beside her. She took no time before sinking her teeth into the bright red, glistening apple over and over again until there was nothing left. Even then she still nibbled at the core.

“Do you want anything else? I may have more food,” he stuck his hand back into his satchel and rifled through it. Sadly, he found nothing in there so he reached into his pockets and pulled out whatever he could find. He held the contents in his hand—one dollar, a piece of spearmint gum, some chocolate, and pocket lint—and sheepishly held them in her direction. She took the gum and the chocolate but left the money in his hand.

They sat in awkward silence as she stared at the water, and he stared at her. When the silence became unbearable, Oliver said, “Can I ask why you’re out here?”

She sighed. “Yes, but I will not answer.”

“Oh,” was all he said, trying to hide his disappointment.

There was a pregnant pause before she begrudgingly breeched the silence. “Do you remember all those stories about faes and faeries?” She began in a hushed tone. He nodded. “My mother would tell me a story about them every night before I went to sleep. She would always tell of the romance between the faeries, and how one day, we would all find that one person. Apparently, my father wasn’t that person for her so she left him,” she shrugged. “Without telling him that she was pregnant with me,” she added. “She moved from Catania, Sicily to Verona in search of love. She wanted to find that one person,” she said while rolling her eyes. “Anyway, apparently she did. David.” She paused. “My mother was a big romantic.

She was so proud of their love story and instead of telling me stories of faes she would tell me her love story… it wasn’t until years later that I realized I liked hearing about the faes more.”

“How did her story go?” Oliver asked.

“Same as any, boy meets girl etcetera. He was touring Verona when she met him. I was around ten and all I can remember is my life changing so rapidly. They fell in love in a week and he whisked her away to America and, of course, by extension, me.”

“Do you like it here?”

“I do, but I would rather be back in Italia.” She looked up at him, smiling sadly as her bright brown eyes glisten. “Mia madre era un idiota.” Oliver furrowed his eyebrows. “My mother was an idiot,” she clarified.
“Was?”

Liliana nodded, “She died a few weeks ago. As soon as that happened, my step father kicked me out. Said I was too old to be living under his roof. He didn’t even wait a week after they put her in the ground to do it.”

“I’m sorry,” was all he can think to say.

“No need to be,” she said, sitting up straighter and wincing when she leaned to the left. “I’m going to get out of here eventually.”

Neither of them said anything more. They sat in companionable silence for what felt like hours. The sun began to dip below the horizon covering the sky in dazzling shades of orange and pink and blue. The temperature began to drop steadily as night progressed, and the late autumn wind began to blow through the trees. He felt Lilliana shiver beside him, and before he could think, he was shucking off his jacket and placing it on her legs and taking a worn gray skull cap from his bag he placed it over her matted hair.

She smiled at him, “Grazie.”

“You’re welcome,” he replied.

They sat like this for a while longer before Liliana laid her head on his shoulder.

Eventually her breathing evened out, and he peeked down at her to find her eyes sealed tightly shut in the depths of slumber.

Oliver took this time to think of how the last weeks of her life must have been. He thought of how she must have been heavily dependent on her parents, if losing that connection reduced her to living in the woods. The loss of money that was supplied by her parents had changed her life, but she still persevered. The poverty weighing down on her didn’t discourage her, but made her stronger, and her hopes for the future hadn’t waned, only built. She didn’t accept that this was her life. She believed that she would move forward. He looked down at her and felt a mix of sympathy and admiration.

He wanted to help her, but what could he do, really? She probably wouldn’t even accept his offer. He sighed and sat up straighter on the rock, careful not to bother her. He knew that he couldn’t leave her here. Not only was that decision morally wrong, but it was one his father would never condone. His father would help her. The last thing Oliver would want to do is let his father down.

Liliana woke an hour later and startled when she noticed how late it had gotten. Stars now dotted the dusky expanse of the sky. “Oliver si dovrebbe essere sempre a casa!” She shook her head, “You should be getting home.”

“I can’t leave you here.”

“What are you talking about? Yes, you can. Go.”

“Not unless you come,” he said, strengthening his resolve.

“No Oliver andare. Go. Go home,” she said standing and walking away as swiftly as she could with her limp.

“Liliana—”

“No Oliver, the last thing I would want is to be a burden on you,” she pleaded.

 “What do you plan to do?”

“I don’t know. One day I will get out of here. I do not know where I will go just yet, but I won’t be homeless for long.”

“You can’t do that.”

“I have nowhere else to go Oliver,” she said impatiently.

“You can come with me.”

“Oliver, I barely know you. Questo è pazzo. This is crazy. Besides I can take care of myself!”

“But you shouldn’t be living in the woods. There are places you could go, shelters.”

“I don’t want to go there.”

“Then let me help you,” he said. She looked into his eyes. “Just until you get back on your feet. I could never forgive myself if I left you alone.” He waited a beat then added, “It doesn’t hurt to ask for help. It doesn’t make you weak. Everyone needs help sometimes.”

Oliver held his breath in anticipation as she mulled over her answer and began to get antsy as the silence stretched.

“Bene. Okay,” she finally acquiesced, somewhat begrudgingly.

“Grazie,” he said.

"Elsa's Mother" - Based on the Movie "Frozen" by Sunday Owens

With the love from Jack Frost
my sweet daughter was born.
With skin like snow.
And eyes dark as berries.
She developed her father’s winter powers.
The fact that I was human
was looked down upon by The Guardians.
They wanted to take her from us.
We had to hide her...
We had to protect her...
They couldn’t have her...
So, we set her on the steps of the castle.
Knocked one, two, three times.
A place where I know she will be loved...
A place where I know she will be protected...
A place she would be looked after...
With the best of care.
My daughter, the future queen.
Long live Queen Elsa!

"Okay" by Kayla McCall

In.
Out.
In.
Out.
I focus on my breathing, willing the tears that are crowding my eyes to stop. I clench my hands as tight as I can until my nails are digging into my palms and my knuckles turn white. I go through my usual mantra, “I’m okay.” I say it over and over again until I believe it.
I clench my eyes shut, but it’s futile. Fire burns brighter in the dark.
They’re gone and I’m here. My whole family is gone.
 My house erupted into flames. Smoke billowed through the windows and all I could see was the bright yellow, red color of the flames.
Pure luck is to blame for me not being there. Instead I watched my entire home burn with my entire family inside and my entire life crumbled.
I suck in a deep breath.
In.
Out.
“I’m okay,” I whisper.
I imagine their faces, my mother with the lines branded in her face from years of laughing and her kind eyes; my father, whose face was worn with age and wisdom; my sister who hadn’t even reached the age of ten.
“I’m okay.”  I mutter the lie again.
A tear escapes my eye that I quickly wipe away. They wouldn’t want me to cry.  I try my best to pull myself together and push away the evil thoughts gnawing at the back of my skull.
In.
Out.
“I’m okay.”
Hear Kayla read this work.

"The Shock" by Amber Kennedy

“Shut up, Bob! You’re a dirty old drag queen, and your pantyhose are too damn stretched to fit over your fat butt. That’s the god honest truth, and you know it.” Bob is wearing pink highway shorts with a plain black top. His boots are to his knees, covering up his hairy legs. His beard is longer than his hair, and his make-up is extra dry. “Like a Virgin” by Madonna is playing loud, drags are prancing around, and alcohol is being served. Bob shakes his head and orders the strongest drink, a Red Tail. He drinks as if there is no tomorrow.

Bob points his finger in my face and screams “Do not talk to me like that, I have feelings!”

The disco lights drop, and the club is crunker than ever. Bob is wistful. Money is his issue. No one wants an old, gray bearded drag queen who’s always complaining. His stomach is massive from drinking beer, wrinkles on top of wrinkles, and his breath stinks of alcohol. Besides he’s broke. He’s jealous of me; I have everything he wants and more. Everyone adores me.

“Maybe you should consider retiring as a drag.” His facial expression drops as he drinks several more shots. He stands, scratches his beard, and pulls at his skirt.

“I will not sit here and let you talk to me any kind of way.”

Bob exits the club, as I call out to him “Bob! Bob!” But, he keeps walking. A good looking man with bright yellow shorts, and a lacy pink top walks in. He passes by me and leaves a sweet smelling scent. I turn to look at the door and then turn back to follow the customer.The next morning, stopping at Bob’s apartment the door is wide open. The couch is flipped, the television is missing, and clothes and beer cans fill the floor. Kicking through them, I find a blood trail leading into the bathroom. I call out to Bob, but the house sits in silence.

My heart pounds. I had told Bob to retire, not kill himself.

I stop in the middle of the hall wall and sink into the dirty white carpet. Questioning myself. Is this my fault? Am I responsible? What have I done? My cries get louder and louder, then softer and softer. I hear something at the front door, and I rapidly grab the candle holder off the wall. I walked slowly to the door, and to my surprise, Bob is standing there washing his hands on his favorite white glitter shirt.

“Oh snap” he screams, but then he realizes it’s only me. “What the hell are you doing here?”

Distracted by the blood on his shirt, I say “What have you done Bob,” slowly backing up, tightly gripping the candlestick handle.

"Timeless Watch" by Terriana Richardson

Legend has it that if a watch is placed in front of a mirror, 
it starts to run timeless, because it soon sees that it tells time!!!

Afraid to show its prophetic powers
With a cover or a chain
You leave it on a wrist
And tell yourself eight quartz alone
With your ticking sound
Make believe or not
Is worth one juiceless battery
But then you greet him;
Focused, steady, and squat
He’s drinking juice at a charity race
You ask “Where’s Billy Ray?”
Your second thought “What if this race runs over time?”
You hold up red watch bands at him
Your psycho friend, your O.C.D., your soul mate of marker’s point
He doesn’t realize the warning 
Although to you these gestures appear as grim
Reminders that you’re patient
Just not enough
The one attention 
You can’t find in the morning.

"Listen" by Gabriel Moore


Listen, you freak!
That word is everywhere.
No one can help you get away from it.
There is a way to escape from a monster or a madman.
But there is no escaping THAT word.
They laugh, their voices tumbling and bursting out of their mouths like a river.
It may as well be a wildfire.
Your skin burns away like a dead leaf;
Peeling and snapping as their jeers ensnare you with barbed wire.
You try and squirm free, but the metal digs in more and more.
Tearing ragged holes in your flesh.
If you stop moving, the pain will increase tenfold, building up in your heart.
As you twist and turn, the pain becomes unbearable. Then you come to a realization.
There IS a way to escape!

"The Alley" by Circe Baskin

I walk to the four beat
Down the wet grey concrete
My heavy gold Tim’s tint the clear puddles
And pats of water
Turn my red jacket burgundy.
I think I hear something
behind the ear bud walls
It’s a voice!
But just the voices of the storm.
The street light expands its orange rays
While gold raindrops glisten past its eye
Continuing my foggy journey until I reach clear sky.

"Bugs Bunny's Day Off" by Alaina Williams

I swear to God if I have to utter
The phrase “Errrrr....wassup Doc?”
One more time my jaw will fall off!
and I will then proceed to pick up said jaw
and chuck it at the screen writers.
I rolled my shoulders and jumped
into my tub filled with freshly diced kiwi.
The only way to get the dirt
and that crunchy orange vegetable off of me.
O God, how the mere sight of carrots irked me to no end!              
You see, Mama Bunny had a chemical imbalance
in her brain. One day she made carrot
casserole with warfarin instead of salt and pepper.
I was sick for two weeks!
And on that last day,
I tripped over my favorite chair
held together by duct tape and crazy glue.
On the floor I could see under my bed.
It had stacks of self-help books
Including, Who Moved My Cheese
and The Five Languages of Love.
To tell the truth, my whole house
was filled with them.
As you could tell after Mama Bunny made me sick,
I had to take my health into my own hands.
Also, for some reason, there was an old
Boiled egg down there.
How come I never smelled it before?
Suddenly, my phone rang and I jumped
I grabbed it. “Hello?” “Hey Kiddo
Come on down to the manor
I’ll show you some bunnies.”
“No thanks Uncle Hugh, I have Lola Bunny.”
I sighed thinking about her curly blonde hair
and long gloved fingers.

"A Prayer to Kami-sama" by Maya Quinn

O, Tom of Toonami, I watch
as you sail on The Absolution.
I stay grounded on the couch for
I am hungry for kunai,
katanas to kodachis, and even
shuriken to the throat,
spraying blood onto my LED screen;
or comical romance, full of
the flowery and dramatic moe.
Bring forth the foreign animation.
I revel in the rice paper doors,
bamboo or straw tatami mats.
I will die if there’s another cliffhanger.
Did Eren die last week,
or was the bloody scream for show?
I’ve invested nearly eighty-four hours
of my week and will strive for more.
I’ve devoted myself to you
by neglecting my grandma’s phone calls
and feeding my dog at nearly midnight.
So please, deliver to me
my unhealthy addiction
crowded with fetishes of stoic
characters wearing glasses
and Japanese accents
from Hokkaido to Tokyo.
Ichigo stares at me with
dilated pupils, his hair at its peak
length. The air thickens with intensity
because he feels me staring, waiting.
The moment when the opening dawns,
I’ll sing romanji praises to you.


"The Sofa in the Corner" Maya Quinn

My body is enveloped into the plush cushions of our living room couch.
Artificial scents have saturated the fibers to give the illusion that I’m in the tropics. An arm is ripped and the cotton flows out like the innards of a gutted fish. The pillows are no longer stiff with pride; they sink down with promises of comfort. Its underside is a shelter for a family of dust bunnies, dutifully guarding them from the roaring vacuum. The brown has faded from chocolate, to mud, and finally grey like stormy skies. It is an old man that has lost his vigor, one that has given up his battle long ago. What will happen to him now? A veteran will rest in comfort, and relive the days that once held righteous battle in distant memory. While still believing he could do it all over again.

Listen to Maya read a poem

"The Dance" by Molly Brown

It is all in the change of the lighting, the silence of the floor, and the decrescendo of violins in the song that makes time slow down.  And he sees her, with such happiness that the Cheshire Cat does not hold a candle to her smile.  When she turns about the grey-turned-glittering tile, the shimmers cascading across her silver gown circle then halo her.  Her body pivots back to face him, for in this moment, she is water.  Two bracelets swing around her right wrist: one metal and smooth as silk, and the other adorned with diamonds.  Then she is back, back under his arm to complete a cinema-worthy spin. What seems like a thousand strings bring him back.  Time runs on as if this was only for him.  He wonders, did she feel that, too?

Wanna hear Molly read this? Click Here

"My Heart" by Terriana Richardson

Like a river with each beat
A drum with red flow
O, red drum my hold on life
Pump with compassion my oxygen, and love
My dear spine
The leader of the drumming line
My star that makes life shine
You work as one with the temple of my body
It takes time and tolerance for the temple to make a blood pact

For you are the main components
Proudly beating away
The root that sprouts the tree into a tree
The motor on my bike
Supports like a flag pole
Steady as a steel line
Where would I be?
Without this drum inside of me
My beloved source of life

"The Day Simon Left" by Molly Brown

“Shut the door, Simon.  They’ll see us.”

“Just a couple more seconds, please,” Simon begged, struggling to steal more looks out into the warmth of daylight.

“Get back in here!” Fef tugged at his wrist, her back to the wooden walls of their tree.  As he resisted, she sighed.  This was why she hated going up here.  Firstly, climbing the ladder of roots wasn’t her cup of tea, and to top it all off, her only friend wouldn’t shut up about these stupid humans! That’s all he ever talked about anymore.  It was dangerous enough, building this secret passage, and using that old doorknob they found to create a door, but going outside?  That was where she drew the line.  And what about the last time they went out, the time the humans made that dancing red flower and left it there?  One step too close, and Fef’s forehead was scarred with a black mark that crescent-mooned down to her cheek.

That couldn’t happen again, it just couldn’t.  Simon’s adventurous side would definitely get him hurt.  She was the only one who could protect him.

“Look at what happened to me! Those humans are crazy!”  She argued, persisting with another tug.  If she let go, she would be alone forever.

“Come on, Fef, that was one time!”

Under her breath, Fef grumbled, “One time too many,” but Simon had good ears, which was realized too late.  She had to recover and reinstate her argument. “We’re nymphs, Simon,” she griped, pulling at him as hard as she can, “we’re not meant to be out there!”

When he looked back at her, his eyes were swollen.  “You may not be,” He wrenched away from her, “but I am.” The door swung wide open, and Fef watched Simon run out into the crisp, flowery air, his olive tunic being the last thing she saw of him.

"D.U.I" by Circe Baskin

Cigarillo, Orange soda
Looking at him strange while he’s adding up the total.
Gave him his change.
Twenty-five on pump three.
Black hummer running,
He had someone in the front seat....
Shotgun!
At the, stop sign
Driver’s looking at him crazy like he’s kin to Hopsin.
Now he didn’t have a problem but this man’s got one.
“If you’re feeling like a toad then you better hop-some!”
Ribbit-ribbit,
So vivid, he can hear the crickets.
But he just blames it on his senses when he’s in the spirit.
When he’s in the spirit,
He’s got plenty lyrics.
Flowin’ with his homeboy,
Passing without interference.
Sold a few grams,
Now he’s a “Drug dealer.”
Going down the wrong lane,
It’s not his truck either.
Swerved off the road,
down into the trenches.
And now his homie ain’t livin’.

"Shame" by Allie King

All day Tanner sits in his little office going through his daily routine-reading the occasional law book, going over cases, taking phone calls, and worrying about which bills to pay today. Even when sick, he’s in every morning by 8:30, with coffee in hand. He takes an Advil or a swig of cough medicine to chase the sick away.
His brown hair is ruffled from running his hands through his hair, and his cobalt blue eyes are glassy from lack of sleep. He keeps his phone near, waiting to take on new cases. He wants to take on tons of cases, but he hates dealing with people he knows lie like a rug.

“Please help me.” The usually innocent clients plead through his voicemail.

“I’m innocent, I swear!” The ones he ignores.

Tanner sits across from his new clients, studying them closely. He can almost taste the anger in the air; like an aura around them. He closely watches their body language and how they react; they’d push and pull their anger, like a game of tug-of-war, within themselves. Hiding it briefly then raging once more.

 One slow afternoon, after spending days on a controversial case he almost didn’t accept, Tanner hears a knock on his door. At first, the knocks are calm and uncertain, but quickly, become bangs driven by anger.
Tanner opens the front door but, not quickly enough to please the six figures barging into his home. The tallest man hands over a clipboard of first and last names petitioning against the most recent case he’s taken on.

“How could you represent a pedophile?” The tallest man asks.

“Everyone has equal rights in this country, no matter WHO you are. You’re innocent until proven guilty,” Tanner says with creased brows.

The tallest man seems to understand.

“Just one chance I need, to prove all of you wrong,” Tanner says.


"Link’s Confession" – From the Legend of Zelda Maya Quinn

I hate the never-ending tunics.
Blue on Mondays, red on Thursdays,
While every other day is green.
Every landscape is also green,
Their shades from watermelon
Rind to rich kiwi pulp. The sky is the same
Damn pastel blue with cerulean swirls;
The sun, always crusty-mustard yellow,
From a cheap backlight.
“Hyah!” “Haaah!” are my repeated lines,
Unless I die. Then, and only then,
I get to fake a scream. To constantly
Relive the sound of the Happy Mask Man
Whispering in my twelve-year-old ear,
“You’ve met with a terrible fate haven’t you?”
The clock strikes five, and I’m no longer
The Hero of Time. Epona is retired
To her stables; the makeshift silver cardboard,
The land of Hyrule, is packed away.
I toss my sword and shield into the prop box.
I race for my tiny chrome moped
And ride toward home deep
Within treeless suburbia.
The front door is gaping with my blue velvet
Couch staring at me, meaning my
Roommate, Ganadorf, is home. I am sure
A pot full of boiled eggs adorns the stove,
Their partially gaping shells oozing
Like his revolting boil-encrusted feet.
I recede to the basement,
My unholy temple overflowing
With makeshift purple duct tape benches
Is home to my collection
Of beautifully crafted shards
From the menagerie of jars
That I have heroically mangled on set.


"Blind" by Jaylon Long

                                                             When I have fears that I might go blind,
                                                             I fathom about what I’d miss without
my dear eyes, so considerate, and kind.
No more bright blue skies and family cookouts

What if I’m to lose my treasured sight?
Never to see the people care I for.
Forced to eat blind, taking mystery bites.
The ideas of this fate are just torture.

As storms of my vision’s demise arrive,
 I then recall the simple things I’ll miss.
Then I vision myself at work early, eight o’five
Then I see my wife and me as we share a kiss

So as these doubts convey their woeful song
I see my fears make goals to make me strong

"Hart" by Carly Koenig

“I can shoot a hart
in the heart
at a hundred paces,”
he says, words blows from axes.
“Your heart’s mine,” he later says.

The cold, North wind slaps down the sedge,
hurtling through the valley
through tangled, thorny vine and rocky gully.

The mountains are impregnable walls
capped in snow, opposite to the deepest wells
the world has ever known.

His enemie’s remains are bone.
His mother is a crone,
one petrified not by time
but by not even being allowed pantomime.
Her secrets will be held forever
until her own bones rest under alder
side-by-side with her noxious husband.

I don’t want to die here, christened
by bruises as I leap into the abyss
nothing amiss
except his anger
until the ice turns to water in springtime, a child’s bladder
letting loose warmth onto yellow bedstraw
as if the dead foliage could rise with the thaw.

I will not move from this stone;
I will not bond with the waterfall’s rhinestone
glitter, nor splatter the gallstone
rocks below.

This stone will not be called lover’s leap--I have no beau
to show for my dissatisfaction.
Nothing won.
Only the caw of the crows, the only bird left
after Hel’s theft.

I cannot stay.
I cannot leave.
I pray
for the visiting khedive
to see my pondering
and see the aching;
for him to sweep me away,
to abduct
as men do.

I could bid my husband adieu,
a knife a corkscrew
in his neck.
I would be on a quarterdeck
where the moon causes a tide
before his human spaniels left his side.

But I am not a seductress,
so coitus
is imagining his carcass.
Flawless deadness: fungus-covered,
eyeless, gauntness, and foulness.
Discolored, disfigured, and rapiered.

A gift for this place’s only fauna:
the blackbird.
Guilty, I wish for wisteria or witches’ thimbles, for toxic flora,
but the only green is lichen in the orchard.

I am lost.


"Foot" Allie King



One toe too long, a platform too flat.

You’re quite strange, but
You guide me through life,
Stepping through
Dewy grass or
Snow knee deep.
I’m clumsy as all get out,
Jumping from peaks and ledges
Too high.
I hurt you.
Stubbing your toes,
Spraining your whatchamacallit.
But you still
Remain strong.
You heal–get it?–while
Anchoring me
To this world.
Aiding me in my lazy days
(monkeys have nothing on me –
I retrieve quarters, even dimes,
With my toes),
You’re always there.

"The Two Storms" by Maya Quinn, Alaina Williams, and Jaylon Long

“Now, you know I didn’t mean it, Talia,” I whispered softly as her tears pooled rapidly. I’d hurt her feelings unintentionally once again. My mouth always seems to dump out whatever is in the forefront of my mind. It’s a terrible habit I’ve tried to break, but I can’t match her princess-like elegance. I’m constantly at war with myself. How can I measure up to the wealth of her parents when I, the minimum wage earner, ride in an old school pick-up? So many thoughts were swirling around in my head right now as she tucked her chocolate swirled locks behind her ear.

“Are we really going to split over this? Over meaningless insecurities,” Talia whispered. I looked up at the sky, which was rapidly blackening.

“It’s gonna storm soon,” I said stupidly and ignored her question. I wasn’t in the mood to be pinned as the bad guy again, and I definitely wasn’t in the mood to be caught in the middle of this oncoming storm. We got off the porch and headed to my truck. She sniffled softly, and I continued to regret my poorly chosen words.

This ride would be a silent one.

Approaching her house, her little brother Trevor dashed to my truck as I stopped.

“Jake!” He greeted me with a gap-toothed smile.

“Hey kiddo! You lost another tooth.” I ruffled his hair as he giggled happily.

“Yep! And when the fairy gives me my money we could get some ice cream again!” Only I couldn’t. “Come in and play with me,” he insisted, tugging my arm.

“Oh no bud, I can’t,” his face began to fall, “W-Well okay.” I stuttered as I felt Talia’s stare burning into my skull. Trevor dragged me to their living room, and we sank into the leather couch as he grabbed his favorite action figures. The nanny smiled meekly as she hurried out the door to beat the storm home.

“You gotta be Thor this time ‘cause I was him last time.” As I grabbed the action figure, lightning struck just outside the window, and a loud roll of thunder shocked Trevor into silence. He looked at me, then, out the window as rain mercilessly berated the frame.

“The storm’s here, Jake.” he spoke softly and crawled onto the couch beside me. I let him sit in my lap as Talia walked into the room. Her eyes were red and puffy.

“Yeah, it is bud.” I spoke to him, yet my eyes never left her.

“That means you’ll have to stay longer and wait out the storm.” She forced the words past her lips, but a grin crept onto Trevor’s face. I guess I can wait out the storm a little, for all our sakes.

“Talia, come sit with us while we wait out the storm. You never know, at the end there might be a rainbow.” I offer a small smile, and she sits beside me with reluctance.

“How would you know that?” Her voice cracks slightly. “There’s not always something good at the end of a storm.”

I don’t disagree.

“Well, I don’t know. I don’t know much of anything really, but I’m willing to wait and find out.” I grab her hand to intertwine our fingers. Another roar of thunder brings a ray of lightning down on a red maple tree not too far away. Some branches fall, but the trunk, surprisingly, stands strong. Talia and Trevor both cringe and cling to me as the malicious weather gets worse.


I wake up some time later when the sun beams down through the window. Trevor and Talia aren’t beside me anymore, so I get up to search for them. I walk towards the field by there and see them by the branchless red maple. There’s a lot of other broken down fences and fallen trunks littered about the area. Trevor turns around and spots me first.

“It didn’t fall even though the lightning hit it!” He shouts, completely astonished, and so am I. I get to the tree and glide my hand across the darkened, crunchy exterior. Talia is peeling back the charcoaled bark that disintegrates between her fingers, so she can study the undisturbed, caramel wood.

“I guess it didn’t want to give up,” she says. Its contorted, chunky roots even take up the surrounding grass to penetrate the hard dirt. My gaze turns to the sky, and I can’t help but grin like an idiot.

There’s a rainbow in the distance.






"How to Overcome Your Fear of Dogs" by Allie King


At seven, you first try to stay calm. You confront Mrs. Robinson’s yappy dog through her metal fence. You know if Sparkles, the Chihuahua, bites you, at least you won’t die. You don’t show fear to the animal.

At nine, you go to Alby’s Grocery with your Mom. You catch a glimpse of the sickly brown Bernese mountain dog that wanders around your town. You become curious of the sad malnourished animal. He’s large…and he’s not trying to eat you. But, your mother drags you away, telling you, you’re crazy for getting that close to a stray; it could be carrying a disease.

At twelve, you don’t know how to react to any sized dog now. Until one day, your neighbor’s Rottweiler gets loose and bites a huge chunk out of your right calf muscle.

When you’re thirteen, you can’t even look at a dog without seeing with fear. You see evil when you see any dog
.
At fifteen, you realize not all dogs are the same; so, you ask your parents about getting you a dog.

At sixteen, your parents decide to finally get you a dog. You love the little pug almost immediately. With this dog all you can see is love and its determination to love you too radiating from its body. You pick the pug up and sit him in your lap. You look at his little wrinkly face and decide you need to give him a name. You go over names in your head until you find the perfect one. You decide on the name Smooshy.

You realize you’re supposed to be afraid of all dogs. You get ready for the stomach aches from fear, but they never come.

"Dribbles" by Gabriel Moore

Salty breeze flew past me, ruffling my hair and leaving a salty aftertaste on my chapped lips. My hand reached up to feel them, and played with a dry flap of loose skin before letting go. I moved on to the smoother part of my face, and gently caressed my neck. The laughing of gulls shattered the silence like a sledgehammer obliterating a carrot. Their raucous caws echoed non stop through my head. My feet hung off of the dock I was sitting on, toes hanging onto worn sandals, lest they fall off. My eyes flitted to the soft orange glow appearing on the horizon, slowly burning away the midnight blue that had been fading for the past couple of hours. A rustling sound came from below me, and I looked down. There didn’t seem to be much there. Just small chunks of sargasso in the sand, drying in the forthcoming sun. Then, there was some movement in the sea oats. The green stalks parted to reveal a large ghost crab. Long black eyestalks stuck out of a pale white shell like the sea oats and sand the crustacean had just been hiding in. It scuttled warily away from me, raising its hairy orange claws. I lock my eyes on the little creature in front of me, curiously watching it warily back into its hole in the ground. I had been looking at the crab so long that I failed to notice something. The sun had risen, sending everything back into their own darknesses.

"Enemy" by Maya Quinn

“O, then dear saint, let lips do what hands do.
They pray; grant thou, lest faith turn to despair.”
He skitters, like a lizard on hot concrete,
across the gym floor toward the blushing girl.
Through a fish-eyed lens of a woman’s diamond
teardrop earring, Juliet swoons, her lips
overtaken. Romeo devours her tongue.
The crowd covers their mouths, astonished by
the swirls of chocolate and vanilla lips.
Older faces turn selenium; they
rise with huffs and puffs of outrage to leave.
The makeshift curtain scrambles to close, for
its gold-trimmed ends begin the verbal war.

"Mine" by Jaylon Long, Maya Quinn, and Alaina Williams

“Now you know I didn’t mean it, Laurel” was the last thing I said to her. Her tears still echo in the back of my mind like an infinite curse. Every night since that day has been the same, I wake up screaming just as the dream closes with her death.  How did things come to be like this? Her pain was only temporary; however mine lasts a life-time.  But I refuse to live with this burden. The burden of hiding, the burden of not ever seeing my daughter, Kayla, again, and the burden of loneliness; these burdens are the plagues placed on my life. That being said, it is only appropriate I tell the story, one last time.

 It all started 10 years ago from today, in the sun shine state of California. When I met her, it was at my favorite spot to be at during my 12th grade year, the library. It was deemed my favorite because it offered peace, yet it added fuel to the depression I had in my heart. Only a few years earlier, my parents were killed in a car wreck, which left me alone. From one foster home to another I went, it was my bi-monthly routine.  So because of that, this is why I am the quiet guy, the guy who never goes out, the sad guy. But no one knew of my pain, they were ignorant to everything and assumed that they could phantom my reality! But they could not, my pain runs miles deeper than theirs. That was until I meet her. Her name was Laurel, Laurel White. She was a transfer student from Greyhound High school and was so very beautiful. Her short black hair, caramel skin, and luscious curves made her like a goddess. But what made her special was that she understood my pain as if it was her own. She dropped her notebook in the library and I caught her before she could get out the door. Thankful, she asked me if I wanted to get coffee at the Starbucks in the library. During this session, we started to talk and I learned that she was just like me. One could call it, “love at first sight”. She was able to comprehend my pain and help me feel what my heart ran out of long ago, and that was love. During the next couple of weeks we regularly meet each other at the library afterschool and closer. Her love flushed out all the pain in my heart, and I was happy. Our long conversations on the phone and at the library turned into regular outings, and before you know it we had started dating. Our mutual attraction and mutual loneliness manifested into love. Neither of us had a family so we were all each other had. Her parents had died in a house fire and she too was forced to live in multiple foster homes like me. Two years after graduation, we were still together and arranged to get married in one year. 10 months following our church house wedding, we now had a gorgeous baby girl. Her name was Kayla Marie Hill; her first name came from my mother’s name and her middle name came for Laurel’s mother’s name. Years had gone by and in those years we had moved into our own house, a change in scenery from the apartment we had since graduation. It was two story brick house located right in front of a forest. The neighborhood was quiet and the neighbors were quite friendly. Now, Kayla was 5 years old and starting kindergarten, and things were great. I had come accustomed to my new life, until it happened.

The following morning after Kayla started school, August 2nd was when my trust for Laurel started to fade. She was starting a new job, and I feared that someone would come and take her from me. She was so beautiful, and I wanted to keep her. My jealously of the men that might be at her office made me more and more possessive. That was the reason why my trust started to fade. The next two months that followed were hard. Every day, I accused her of cheating, I always thought that when she stayed overtime at work. My insecurities and trust issues drived my thoughts more and more towards darkness.

Drinking soon became a novocain for me to suppress my possessive behavior. My wife pleaded with me every night saying “Please, baby. Please trust me”. Eventually as time advanced she got tired. She became heartless toward me more and more. And as you would expect, she told me that she had wanted a divorce. As soon as she told me she had left home with Kayla and went to her best friend’s house. Frustrated, I went there and trashed the place until everything was broken and this resulted in a week in jail, and a restraining order. Now she ignores my calls; hell, one day I called her 10 times one day. How could she do this to me? Wasn’t I good to her, and I let her have the freedom she wanted? Is she not thankful? She has to pay.
Every day, I stalked her and studied her movements and on this one day after work, she worked overtime. It was the perfect opportunity. So I hid in the backseat of her Lexus Coupe and waited until she got in. I had my chloroform soaked rag in my right hand as she unlocked the car door. As she started the car I grabbed her and put the rag over her mouth until she was rendered unconscious. I moved her to the passenger side, pull out of the parking lot, then I started driving towards the house.

Finally after one hour we pulled up at the house; I parked her car into the garage. I got out the car, grabbed her body and carried her up the stairs as we slithered through the floor decorated in broken beer bottles, broken glass and pictures, and trash. Upstairs, I tied her up to a chair, and then I woke her up. She woke up confused, and then she saw me. “What the hell is wrong with you Gregory? Why can’t you just leave me alone?” As I tried to explain she continued to curse me out and scream. “You sinister bastard!” were the last words that she said to me. I immediately grabbed her neck and said “Shut up! It’s my turn to talk. I loved you and you do this? You were supposed to be mine!” As I continued her struggle to resist stoped. She stops moving, and her pulse is gone. She is dead. As I cry and go reckless realize I have to hide the body. So I pour gasoline throughout the house, and I ignite it on my way out. Her lifeless courpse is burned. Outside, I can smell the burning flesh of my former lover as tears dripped down my cheek. As the police sirens get closers and closer, I fled into the woods. I then made my way to our secret family campsite located in a remote site of the woods.

And here we are now. Alone in these dark woods. So to whomever may find this letter, just know that I regret all of this. And as I hold the gun to my head, tell my daughter that….. I’m sorry.