Wednesday, 8 January 2025

Forever Searching by David Lyons, americano

When my parents died, I searched for the memory of them in St. Ann’s Square, where each step I made disturbed the pigeons, lifting them high into the crisp bitter morning air. Faces with a miscellany of expressions abounded, with gaits and strides defying unison. Suede shoes and working boots, intermingled with red-soled ladies’ shoes and airs of hauteur usurped the standing places of humility, with attitudes of indifferent entitlement. We once had a tradition of walking its peacefulness on Christmas morning, where no soul or sound would disturb. Where serenity had for a short while reclaimed its almost obliterated heart, and gave it a temporary tranquillity far removed from the hustle and mayhem of just a few short hours previous.

Unsuccessful, I searched through onto a busy Deansgate, with its familiar architecture and flagstones. Since my last visit, a Banksy of a boy with a lollipop holding a balloon on a string watched the determined footsteps of commerce dash by dispassionately in blue pinstriped suits with eager determined faces.

I stopped by the little tweed shop on Market Street that still displayed things my parents loved. From a distance I imagined them chatting together as they walked peacefully into the smell of yarn. Left and right my eyes tried to prise the shoppers apart on Cross Street to see if they would appear through the crowds. But they didn’t. I searched until my eye’s lost focus. Enquiring faces stared at me, but I kept scanning for that break in their ranks to see if the faces I love would appear and say a thousand words with just one smile.

In Prestwich I imagined I would find them, walking up that steep leafy hill together on Sandy Lane, looking out of place on city streets. They were far removed in nature from the street wise city life that circumstances dictated they submit to, for a brief while. Later, I stood at the arched window of Acorn Antiques on Bury New Road, that was long overdue another coat of red paint, to see if I could see them inside, browsing just like they used to. Their treasured booty could vary from a pewter setter to an inkwell with so many unusual combinations in between, and the chosen item would be admired and moved about the house for days after, looking for “just that right place”. In my mind’s eye I could see Dad, in his cap and tweed jacket, and Mam in her big brown hat and long green coat. I was sure they would appear together from amongst the crowd and give me that smile that would melt my heart one more time, but that moment prized more than life itself never arrived to lighten my weary soul.

I thought certainly I will find them in Kinsale, where so many happy memories too beautiful to fade must still live in some perfect dimension of time, a place where nothing beautiful dies. So, I searched the narrow streets and coffee shops, eating cake and drinking americanos at familiar tables. On occasions I imagined I could smell Mam’s “Poison” perfume, and believed its cocooning fragrance may have been just around the next corner, but each time its presence, whether conjured up by longing or for real, was only momentary and vanished in the fresh sea air. The bench near The Blue Haven where we used to have our 99’s, that always melted dripping down to the pavement in white dots, was wet from rain, empty and unwelcoming. Boland’s wool shop with its dented brass doorknob that had greeted so many shoppers with its cool touch, surely, I imagined, they would be there. Mam looking for warm pullovers for Daniel and Jennifer, while Dad looked on, his hands filled with shopping bags, his fingers red from the strain of their strings, as he complained occasionally to deaf ears. The shiny timber floor in Boland’s was still as noisy to footsteps, as it gave off its intimate feeling of bygone antiquity. The uneven timber surface was worn by a century of those eager to peruse, but of all its splendour, it couldn’t offer me my one desire pearl.

I rambled on deflated of spirit to a deserted Garretstown beach, with its lonely cold waves and icy breeze that tore its way to my skin through my light jacket. So different now from those long heady summer days with our green deck chairs and cool box filled with ice cream and sandwiches. The sand that intimately knew those footsteps I loved, was smooth and cold now, its past memories erased by the unsympathetic tide. All was forlorn and empty here, except for the sound of the crashing waves and ireful gulls. I cast my treasured memories out onto the turbulent waters, hoping for a consoling reply, but they returned as bitter cold sea spray onto my face and mixed with tears to end my search in this place.

The evening fragrance of the Blush roses beneath the statue of Our Lady at the grotto in Ballinspittle was as ever beautiful. Even the old man with the seafarer’s complexion, who lovingly carried out the maintenance, was there with his little worn-out motorbike, but his kind eyes didn’t recognise me. My smiling hello was met with a friendly but distant reply. He would have remembered Dad and Mam though, and as always would have chatted with them for longer than I had preferred on most occasions. Sometimes he would cut a rose with the utmost reverence from beneath the statue for one of Mam’s intentions. He would delicately hold the rose out to Mam’s waiting hand, as though he were offering Our Lady’s grace and succour inside that one tiny bloom. She would then wrap the rose with equal devotion and carefully place it delicately in a box to post to her deserving cause.

The once favoured empty table and chairs by the window in The Speckled Door were unchanged and waited patiently. Its oak stained surface had endured many a hot plate attack since my last visit, and displayed the scars like a mark of culinary accomplishment. The cracked jardiniere with Renoir’s Dance At Bougival badly embossed on two sides still lived on the window ledge, and was as ever contemplating the best view of Cork. Fresh flowers for its adornment must have been that one task too many for the owner of The Speckled Door, as the dusty plastic red roses knew me all too well. That familiar smell of fresh fish cooking in the kitchen tantalised the four diners at the table by the crackling fireside. They were humourless short haired Americans, and ticked off an item from their bucket list as they passed around a single pint of Guinness between them. Their insipid facial expressions displayed no delight in the taste of Irishness as the glass churned its way round and round the table until its head went brown. The remembered sound of laughter flooded the little room that evening, but only I could hear its reminiscent melody.

Surely on Grafton Street I would find them – on an October day where the golden leaves finally let loose their grip, and nervously whirled around in circles, lost in the autumn breeze, in a new an unfamiliar world. Maybe in Marks and Spencer, Dad yet again carrying lots of bags and wearing his brown Peacock’s jodhpur boots with the long scratch on the toe that they acquired on the first day of wearing. “Let’s have a little coffee” Mam would always suggest, so it would be americanos with mushroom toasties and lemon cake. Maybe it was our luck but the brown leather sofas at the furthest end of the seating area were always empty, as though waiting for us as welcome friends. The brown leather sofas were still there, shabbier than I remembered, cracked and torn in places, after a lifetime of giving comfort to weary legs, but it seems time had taken its toll on all of us. I stared at the lemon cake, and coffee until it went white and cold, and leaving them behind, I said goodbye.

Dad and I would wait to one side by the tall glass front door, while Mam went back in for “just one last thing”. We would chat and laugh as we stood by waiting and watching the world race by. Nothing could hinder or change our perfect world then, except time, and time’s dilatory wheels did indeed grind fine, and carried out its bidding without care or concern to past sensibilities or dignities; with no recourse, fiercely ignoring the feelings of gentile lives lived. Plotting and manifesting endings so alien to past times spent. The door and that spot where we used to stand still looked the same, but the memories there are now hidden from the passing world and known only to me.

We only meet in dreams now, and we meet very often, but welcome as these nocturnal encounters are, they pale in comparison to my forever present real-life memories. I will keep searching though, and one day I will find them, walking together towards me through the crowd. Dad with his cap and tweed jacket, and Mam in her big brown hat and long green coat, and they will give me that smile that only God knows I long for more than anything in this world, and this time I will go with them, and we will no longer just meet in dreams.

About the author

 David Lyons' latest book "The Muse and other stories", a work of eighteen short stories and 85k words is currently hunting for a published. This will follow his previously published young adult novels "The Dream Voyagers" (2015) and "Land of Butterflies" (2023). He composes music, jazz and pop. 

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.)

Tuesday, 7 January 2025

Seashell by Michela Grimaldi, hot chocolate

 “What do you think of these, Gina?” she asks, holding a pair of H&M jeans. They are baggy and grey. I can tell they are heavy by the way she moves as she is trying to hold them up, a marionette, gently maneuvered, her arm slightly descending and then quickly pulled back, like with a fishing rope.

The tag reads “willow” but Hanna doesn’t know that’s the name of a tree, and she wonders, but very briefly, why a pair of pants would be called “hollow”. She does that often, misreads tags and street signs, ads, or names of stores, or fruits. She does it in a way that’s mellow, so soft it caresses the air.

“They are nice,” I say as I walk towards her, and begin to inspect the fabric and texture.

“Okay”, she smiles, “I need more than that. Let’s keep looking.” She’s already moved on; with one hand she pushes through hangers while the other holds still in mid-air like she is using it to balance herself.

I remember Hanna being a flamingo.

“Look, Gina, I’m a flamingo.” She yells from the kitchen, standing on one leg, the right one bent upwards close to her body, one arm open in an attempt to remain stable, her neck stretched out, her eyes looking for me around the room as I walk in. Our mother throwing circles of zucchini in a hot pan. The pungent air like someone drew clouds with garlic markers.

“These are almost perfect”, she says, pointing at another pair of jeans, sitting on top of a large and tall stack of clothes. I can tell her sentence is intentional. I see it in front of me before her words reach the top of her mouth. It’s simple, then she adds almost. Somewhere before now, she said that same sentence, to which my mother replied “Nothing is ever perfect.”

We are in a changing room, inside a store, inside a mall, she’s next to me as I’m trying the jeans on, and for a moment I wish I could envelop her, make her smaller like the size of a sea shell, make a pendant out of her.

The jeans fit me well, we both agree, but we don’t say it. We just stare in the mirror, looking at me, at her, the yellowish curtains of the changing room, the stool she’s standing on. Maybe for two or three minutes, until she says “Do you think they will find us if we stay here?” And for a moment I don’t know who she is talking about. I think of my mother. I see her flower dress, the green one with pink tulips, the one she wears only in summer.

I start crying, not much, and not for long. Slow-motioned tears, four, maybe five, like I’m holding my face under an empty water bottle.

She meant the H&M staff. She says “Don’t cry Gina, I’m sure they would find us, they have cameras, I saw them.”

I realize maybe I overreacted, maybe the jeans don’t look as good as I thought, maybe I hate this store, maybe she doesn’t know what’s happening, maybe it is all good, maybe nothing is perfect.

She opens the curtains and holds my hand. “See, look”, she says."There are people; they have not forgotten about us.”

And I think of all these people, looking for unnecessary gifts. I’m sorry shopping, thank you shopping, give me what I want shopping. And then I think of Adam, and all the gifts he could have given us but chose not to.

“Let’s get out of here,” I tell her.

“But what about the jeans?”

“Fuck the jeans; let’s get ice cream.”

“You said fuck, Gina.”

“I know, frog. It was necessary.”

She stays silent, actually contemplating that possibility.

“Can we stay a little longer? Just one or two more stores.” Hanna says.

We walk out of the H&M store in the deep ocean of sweaty elbows She is holding my pinky finger with her entire hand, her body slightly ahead of me. I can hear her excitement, it’s loud like the church bells outside our house. I see it in her movements, poised, controlled, unafraid.

“There are soo many people. I’ve never seen so many people all in one place. Maybe somebody is also shopping for jeans like us. What do you think, Gina?”

“Possibly,” I say.

“Look, Gina a baby guitar!” She says pointing at a ukulele. “Maybe one day I can have one like you. Maybe I can learn to play like you do. I hope I can play one day. Can you teach me, Gina?”

I look at her; like she is a giant ball of all my favorite things. A lemon slice that tastes like barbecued chicken, rosemary stuck in my teeth, watermelon, scratching the back of my feet, cold water on my head.

She is so beautiful. She is real. The way she plays with her fingernails when she is waiting for an answer, the way she eats raw onions like I eat tomatoes, the way her chest fills with air when she wants to ask you something, the way she goes about speaking, using the same propositions, repeating sentences she heard, the way she calls out your name like you’re the only thing that matters.

“That’s a ukulele.” I say. “It’s a smaller version of a guitar but anyone can play it, there is no age limit.”

“I see, thank you, Gina.” She has her back to me, facing the storefront and looking at the wall of instruments. Strands of hay-coloured hair decorate her small round head. I picture her brain, only it looks like a human heart, pounding, racing to assimilate all that new information. I see her skin shedding, her body taking strange distinct forms, like she is made of objects that live through all the things nobody wants to feel. I want to stop this process, cover her eyes and ears, take her back to the shape she had before she came into this world.

I have this recurring dream. I’m walking through a field of giant strawberries like the size of buildings. It’s a labyrinth. Each time I think I’m getting closer to getting out, strawberries keep popping up. Once I told Hanna, and she told me it meant I like sweets.

About the author

 Michela is an emerging Italian writer living in Barcelona. Before choosing Spain, she lived in six countries across Europe and the Americas, and continues to enjoy traveling. Michela loves to write short stories that are meant to be a slice of life, and remind us why humans are unique. 

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.)

Monday, 6 January 2025

Egret, Regret by Diane Wald, lemonade and sushi

“We got through the day,” Hayley-Jane told Joanie, attempting a positive spin on their boredom. “We almost always get through the day.” They had just graduated from Our Lady of Sorrows Academy, the all-girls high school they’d studied so hard to get into and prayed so fervently to get out of. They referred to it simply as “Sorrows,” as they discussed with languorous detail how difficult it was to live with their parents during this viciously hot summer before college.

            Joanie was giving herself a manicure, applying a milky green polish to the nails on one hand and a peachy violet color to the nails on the other. The effect was not as artistic as she’d hoped, and she wiped it all off. She knew she could do better. “We could look for jobs again,” she said.

            Hayley-Jane threw a sofa pillow at her, knocking over one of the little nail polish bottles on the coffee table. “I have a better idea,” she said. “I think we should take a train trip.”

            Joanie was intrigued. She set the bottle upright and wiped up the small spill with a tissue. Joanie was accustomed to cleaning up. “But do we have enough money?”

“I’ve got the password to my mother’s Amtrak account. It’ll be at least a month before she notices the charge, if she ever even does. Let’s go to New York City and walk around the museums and drink cocktails or something.”

            “Hallelujah,” Joanie said. “Let’s go pick out stuff to wear.”

                                                                        * * * * *

They managed to snag two adjoining first-class seats on the nine a.m. Acela Express from Providence to New York, planning to return that same evening, and informing their parents that they were driving to New Hampshire to spend the day with a friend. Hayley-Jane insisted on sitting next to the window, and Joanie didn’t care, because her aisle seat afforded her a better view of the “occupied” lights on the restrooms, and who was going in and out of them. She didn’t have to go, but she liked to keep an eye on things just in case. She could easily see out the large window next to Hayley-Jane anyway, since her friend kept her head down most of the time communing with her phone.

            Joanie poked Hayley-Jane. “Look at that!” she said, as they passed by some wetlands outside of Old Saybrook . “What a beautiful white water bird!”

            Hayley-Jane looked up, mumbled “Egret,” and closed her eyes to nap.

            “Huh,” Joanie said. “I had no idea.”

                                                            * * * * *

The Moynihan Train Hall at Penn Station was bustling and bright and the two friends gawped at their surroundings for a long minute before taking the main exit to the street. They didn’t really know where they were, but they didn’t think it mattered because they were going to take a cab anyway. They had already discussed being terrified of the subway.

            “I’ve been thinking,” Hayley-Jane said. “If we take a cab to the Metropolitan Museum of Art we can walk around in there as long as we want, have lunch in their fancy cafeteria, and decide what to do next—if we have any time left, that is. What do you think?”

            Joanie was happy with that plan. She’d already found out that the Met was having a special exhibit of Rothko, whom she adored. Sometimes when she looked at his paintings, she imagined herself in her own painting studio, dressed in raggedy paint-covered overalls and a thin, sexy t-shirt, smoking hand-rolled cigarettes. Rothko paintings made her dizzy, especially that Crucifixion series. She wasn’t at all religious, but she felt something deeply sad and confusing when she stared at them.

            They only had time for the massive Egyptian sculptures (with Joanie peeling off to view her Rothkos), but they felt sophisticated and other-worldly—other-worldly from Providence, anyhow. After a lunch of sushi and lemonade amidst the frond-festooned décor of the cafeteria, they realized they’d have to hurry back to the train station. They felt independent and satisfied that they were well on their way to pulling off a deviously clever plan.

Hayley-Jane seized the window seat again, and just as the train pulled into the station at New Rochelle, the first stop outside New York, she got up and bolted out the door, leaping over Joanie, who had fallen into a deep slumber as soon as they’d boarded.

            The woman in the seat opposite Joanie tapped her arm and pointed at the window, where Hayley-Jane grinned at her and performed a little shuffle step on the platform. Joanie banged on the window with both fists. “What are you doing?” she yelled. Hayley-Jane spun around and tapped a bit more, using a few steps she remembered from fifth-grade dance lessons. She looked deliriously happy.

            Joanie got up and almost tackled the conductor, who was ambling down the aisle collecting tickets. “My friend is out there,” she screamed. “We need to get her back on the train.” But even as she screamed, the train began slowly rolling out of the station: chug, chug, chug. She raced back to her seat, pressed her face against the glass, and watched her friend’s expression change from cockiness to panic. Joanie called Hayley-Jane’s cell, which rang right next to her, lying on the seat next to Hayley-Jane’s purse and jacket. The conductor contacted the New Rochelle office, but Hayley-Jane had not materialized.

Joanie, exhausted, cried for a minute, but then just settled into staring out the window. In Old Saybrook, a huge flock of egrets had descended along the dark, shining waters. Witnessed from an airplane, Joanie imagined, the scene might have resembled a Rothko, the congregation of white birds forming a crisp white slash across the blocky dark greens and greys of the shoreline and woods. She felt alone, but not sad. Someday it wouldn’t matter what other people did or thought. Someday she would have a paintbrush, or something like it.

 

About the author 

 

Diane Wald has published five chapbooks, four poetry collections, two novels, and hundreds of poems in literary magazines. Her most recent books are The Warhol Pillows (poetry), and My Famous Brain (novel). Her next novel, The Bayrose Files, is forthcoming from Regal House Publishing.

 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.)

Sunday, 5 January 2025

What’s Cooking? by Sarah Swatridge, a Babycham

 

1978

 

The Home Economics block seemed unusually quiet as Mel approached having taken the register to the office. As she reached her classroom she overheard two teachers talking.

“I’d be in with a better chance of getting the Head of Department job if I was more innovative.” Mel recognised the voice of Mrs Bateman, her cookery teacher.

“They’re in the lecture theatre,” Mrs Walters said to Mel. “Have you signed in the late book?”

“Mel’s not late,” Mrs Bateman said lightly, “she takes the register. Come along with me now. We’re watching a film on Food Poisoning.”

 

As much as Mel loved to cook, it was a pleasant change to watch a film. The lights were dimmed and she could pretend she was one of the group rather than on the periphery. She’d only moved to the area a few months ago and was new to the school. It was tough to join in the Fifth Year.

 

Because Mel often helped in the pub kitchen, where her parents were landlords, the brewery had sent her on a health and safety course with her mum. She realised she knew quite a bit about food poisoning already.

 

She fiddled with the hem of her cookery apron. This too set her apart from the others. They’d all made their aprons in the First Year during their needlework lessons. When Mel joined the school, she had to stay late a couple of evenings in order to make her cookery apron. Each year group had a different colour and you embroidered your initials, so there was no getting out of making one or wearing someone’s hand-me-downs.

 

Her Year Group’s colour was marigold and where hers looked fresh and bright everyone else’s was worn and faded after many washes. But at least hers was a good fit. Jennifer Taylor was the tallest in their class and her little pinny now looked ridiculously small.   

 

Mel didn’t put her hand up to answer the questions after the film but she was confident she knew all the answers. She wouldn’t make any friends if she came across as a know-it-all.

 

“Those of you who are staying on for the sixth form may want to be considered for the role of Head Girl. I have application forms if any of you want to put yourself forward and even if you’re not sure, you can talk to me after the lesson.”

 

Mel already had her career path mapped out. She was going to do Catering at The Technical College and eventually run her own pub. There was no need for sixth form for her.

 

They spent the rest of the morning’s lesson making marmalade. Mel was last to finish as she’d been helping Paula who was always a bit slower than the rest.

 

“Mrs Bateman?” Mel began just as she was leaving the classroom. Mrs Bateman instantly reached for an application form and waved it in Mel’s direction. 

“Oh no, I don’t need one of them but I, I had a thought…” Mel didn’t want to admit she’d been listening to their conversation, “I was just wondering if you were interested in the new oven we’ve got at the pub? It’s called a Microwave.”

 

“I’ve heard about them,” Mrs Bateman said with interest. “Are they any good?”

“They’re quick,” Mel replied. “If you’re ever near the Rose and Crown, I can show you how it works.”

“Could I bring the whole class?” Mrs Bateman asked.

“Our kitchen’s not that big,” Mel told her. “But the microwave’s only about the size of a telly. I could ask mum to give me a lift to school and bring it in.”

“Doesn’t it need to be installed?”

“No, you just plug it in, like a kettle.”

“Are they difficult to use?” Mrs Bateman sounded a little doubtful.

“Not at all. In fact I can show you how we heat things up and what I cook in it.”

“Well, in that case, that would be wonderful. Let me know what your mum says?”

“It’ll be fine, I’m sure,” Mel said confidently, “Although best if it’s back by lunchtime.”

 

Mel’s mother agreed to drop off the microwave for the following week’s lesson. It was only then Mel realised it was she, and not Mrs Bateman who would be doing the demonstration. Mel knew she could do it. How many times had she watched Fanny Craddock on the television?

 

“Are you going to choose a friend to be your assistant?” her mum asked.

“I haven’t made any friends yet,” Mel admitted.

“It’ll take a bit of time love,” Mum said and gave her a comforting hug.

 

The next day she went to see Mrs Bateman to run through her ideas.

“That looks organised,” Mrs Bateman said. “If you leave that recipe with me I’ll prepare the ingredients. I’m warning you that if this goes well, I’ll have to invite you to repeat it for the teachers. Not one of them has used a Microwave but a lot of us are interested in learning how.”

 

 

“So,” Mel began, remembering not to speak too quickly, “if you just want to heat something up, like this pre-cooked Cornish pasty, you just put it in for ninety seconds and it’ll be hot and ready to eat. It’s really that quick!”

Mel slipped the pasty out of its wrapper, on to a small plate and turned the dial.

While it was cooking, she relayed a little anecdote which she hoped would make them laugh.

 

“When we first had it, Mum and I tried all sorts of things. Once I used a ready-made steak and kidney pie. A pie and a pint goes down well in the pub at lunchtimes. Well, I popped it in, just for one minute, as I didn’t want to overdo it, but all of a sudden, sparks flew and I thought I’d blown it up! My Dad rushed in from the bar to see what all the noise was about. You see, I’d put the pie in, with its foil tray and that was the problem. So, never use foil or tins in a microwave – a glass Pyrex dish is fine or Tupperware.”

 

“Did it taste alright?” one of her classmates asked. “The pie I mean.”

“Yeah, it was fine. Dad ate it.” Mel told her. “I was so relieved I hadn’t broken it, but at least I learnt my lesson!”

 

“Is there anything else you can’t put in a microwave?” asked another pupil and Mel saw Mrs Bateman smile. Sometimes the class were really quiet and the girls didn’t ask questions, but then they’d had one or two really boring lessons, like how to iron a shirt or how to change a plug. It was OK when they got a chance to do it themselves, but sitting and listening wasn’t much fun.

 

“So far, the worst thing was when I heated up a bowl of tomato soup and forgot to cover it. It splattered everywhere and took me ages to clean afterwards. I always cover things now, just in case.”

 

Mel looked round at her classmates, they seemed to be quite interested in what she was saying, so she reached in her carrier bag for the small bunch of grapes.

 

“Don’t tell my mum,” She said, “But another landlady said she’d heated up a pudding for her husband.  It was a tin of fruit cocktail with custard on top. The custard had gone cold, so she put it in the microwave and said it exploded!”

 

Mel looked at the bunch of grapes and asked for a volunteer, Jennifer Taylor’s hand shot up, and Mel handed over the grapes.

“Can you choose the biggest, juiciest grape?” Mel asked. She daren’t look in Mrs Bateman’s direction.

 

 

Jennifer did as she was asked and Mel got her to place it on the glass tray in the centre of the microwave. Within seconds it had exploded! The girls cheered. Mel quickly wiped away the mess and was thankful she couldn’t smell burning. It was only then she realised she might have set off the Fire Bell and they’d all have to shiver out on the playground until they were allowed back in.

 

“I wouldn’t risk a whole bunch, and anyway, why would anyone want hot grapes?” Mel told them and got another laugh.

 

 

“Can you cook in it too?” one of the girls asked.

“You can,” Mel explained but couldn’t help making a face. “It’s not as good as a proper oven. It doesn’t brown things, so sausages look raw but this suet pudding is OK. We serve it on Sundays as an alternative to apple pie or crumble.”

 

Mrs Bateman had a tray of all the ingredients Mel would need. It was all prepared in little glass dishes with the recipe, should she need it. She wanted to giggle at the thought of Mrs Bateman acting like Johnnie Cradock helping his wife in the television kitchen.

 

It only took a matter of minutes for Mel to mix the ingredients and cook it in the microwave.

 

She drizzled some golden syrup over the suet pudding and handed it round for everyone to taste. It looked a bit pale and she wondered if custard or jam would have been better?

 

Mel enjoyed demonstrating and was amazed the whole class listened to what she had to say. They even clapped at the end!

 

 

“Delicious!” Penny said and that was enough to give it the Royal seal of approval, as far as 5A was concerned.

 

“Shall I save you a seat in the canteen?” Penny asked at the end of the lesson just as Mel was carrying the microwave back to her mum’s car.

“Great. Thanks. I’ll be as quick as I can.”

“See, you do have friends!” Mel’s mum said.

 

The following day Mrs Bateman’s classroom door said ‘Head of Department’. She handed Mel a personal thank you card and an application form for Head Girl.

“Thanks but I told you, I’m going to college.”

“It’s your choice, but I think you’d make an excellent teacher. You’re always so patient with Paula and we all enjoyed your demo.”

 

“Thank you,” Mel said graciously taking the form. “But won’t they choose someone who’s always been at this school? No one knows much about me.”

“On the contrary, you are proving to be a very valuable asset to the school and we don’t want to lose you. All the teachers get to vote and I can promise you Mrs Walters and I, along with your form teacher are all behind you. Go for it!”

 

Mel thought a lot about filling in the Head Girl form but decided it wasn’t for her. Even if she had made friends, she’d rather be at the technical college than stay on at school for another two years.

 

Instead, Mel agreed to do a demo for a few of the teachers who were interested in getting a microwave of their own one day. She’d leave out the grapes though.

 

At the end, Mrs Bateman helped clear up the school kitchen. “I used to work at the tech,” she told Mel. “In those days, the students had a half day, such as Wednesday afternoon off. I think that’s still the case. Perhaps you’d like to come and work one afternoon a week as a Home Economics Technician? We can pay you, although it won’t be much but I’m sure it’ll look good on your reference when you’re applying to become a landlady yourself.”

 

This time, Mel didn’t have to think at all, “That’s a deal, Mrs Bateman. I’ll just have to pass all my O Levels and CSEs first!”

 

About the author

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

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, 4 January 2025

A Ghostly Sign by Fleur Lind, a cocktail from Psycho Suzi’s Bar

It was Polly’s first hunt. She listened as team leader Leon blurted out the rules and dusted over any relevant ways in which the rules could or should be bent slightly. With information overload, Polly’s attention had slipped. Having just started a new job, learning the ropes in a legal firm was enough to take in without being plunged into a big team-building event with her colleagues. She looked at the faces of her team. They too had drifted in concentration,  Leon concluded his speal and opened a Q & A. Polly’s attention was snapped back with robust discussion from her team.

“We’ve got two hours to find all the stuff on this list.”

“A scavenger hunt is lame. I wanted to do rock climbing.”

“Someone might fall and sue us.”

“I was all for the mystery train trip.”

“Being Halloween and all, we should finish this event with some appropriately-named cocktails at Psycho Suzi’s Bar.”

“I’m all for that. The Hangman’s Noose or Miss Maude’s Eyeballs.”

“’ Let’s focus, people…the first thing on the list, we have to find a sign.”

“A sign?  Like from the afterlife?? A meeting of the spirits?”

“No, Annie. A sign. Like a registration plate, a street sign or something.”

“Taking one of them will end badly.”

Oh. I won’t need to pop home and get my weegie board then.”

“Good grief! Weegie boards? Polly must  be wondering what she’s got herself into…”

Polly smiled, quietly wondering exactly that; What an interesting bunch. Total nutjobs.

“So back to the sign…Psychos Suzi’s will be shut if we don’t get a move on.”

“I know where to find some. There are heaps on my Uncle Ted's old shack. He blew part of the roof off with dodgy fireworks some years ago, and a few signs are barely hanging on, so it should be easy to take one off. The shack has seen better days and times, and I think the signs hold the main structure together but it will always be his castle. He still pops in to be laird…”

“We should ask him if we can have a sign, It wouldn’t be a good look if a law firm flogged a sign without prior consent…”

“Uncle Ted died ten years ago.”

“Does anyone speak ghost?”

About the author 

 

Fleur is a Kiwi living in SE Queensland. She enjoys the fun, challenge, and possibilities of short stories. She is a member of the local writer's group - The Squabbling Scribblers. For more of Fleur's work: fleursfabulousfables.wordpress.com 

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.)

Friday, 3 January 2025

Kindred Spirit by Donna Gum. hot cappuccino

Alone, she stood barefoot on the cold tiles, immersing herself in the portrait. She wiped the tears that kept welling despite herself.
 

His large brown eyes looked at her with the quiet wisdom and love she'd known for years. The gray strands touched his black hair. She remembered how soft it had felt. He'd fought the end as she'd tried to make it easier for him. They’d spent most evenings together in the living room. He’d insisted on sharing meals with her up to the end.
 

His breathing rasped as he walked. He’d come into the bedroom with her as she went to the bathroom. 

When she'd come out minutes later, she'd found him lying on the faded bedspread, his beautiful eyes staring, unblinking. His labored breathing ceased. She’d thought he’d improved that evening, but wasn't there a rebound of the old self before the end?
 

She gulped back a sob and reached out to straighten his image in the ornate frame on the wall. Fourteen years they'd been together, the most loyal dog she owned.

About the author 

Donna Gum began writing in non-fiction and ghost-writing, but couldn’t resist the call of fiction. She enjoys writing flash fiction in the Appalachian Mountains. Her latest fiction was published by Borderline Tales in December, 2024.

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.)

Thursday, 2 January 2025

Last Night in Dublin by Brent Cronin, Irish coffee,

 He’d heard birds chirping when he finally shut his eyes for the night, and because of his impending morning flight, he’d only slept for an hour or two. His phone alarm rattled his brain at 6:30 a.m. Delirious, he reached for the device on the nightstand, stopped the alarm, and set it for 7 a.m. His body craved sleep more than anything—except the woman next to him, who remained heavy with sleep as he traced her hip under the covers. He was in and out for the next precious half-hour, feeling her soft skin, kissing her face. Sometimes she turned to meet his mouth before turning away and drifting back to what seemed like peaceful slumber. She had no plane to catch.

At the ugly sound of the alarm, he forced himself to roll out of bed. He found his pants in a pile near the bathroom, shook them out, stepped into them. There were three small twin beds in the room (it had been the only room available), and they had occupied the middle one, where she still slept. On the windowsill sat a crumpled, translucent red condom. He retrieved it and threw it in the bathroom trash. He didn’t want her to have to deal with it.

 

He pulled on his sweater and slid back onto the bed, enveloping the sleeping woman. She turned and they kissed more. He wanted to tell her he loved her; he felt it in that moment, even though they’d only met the night before. Guinness, conversation, a silent disco, more Guinness, spontaneously latching onto a pub crawl; a bar with a dance floor she hadn’t been to since she was eighteen. Dancing to ABBA. Sitting on concrete steps in the rain, calling hotels between her pulling him in for kisses.

A taxi waited for him outside the hotel.

“Get lucky last night?” asked the driver, glancing at him in the rear-view mirror.

“Maybe. What makes you say that?”

“Why else would you be out at this hour?”

The driver dropped him off at his hostel, and he rode the elevator up to the six-bed dorm room he’d paid for but hadn’t slept in. He pulled his luggage from underneath the bunk bed and packed in a hurry, cramming the still-wet towel into the suitcase and sitting on it to zip it shut.

On the plane, he sat next to a priest. There was irony in that, he was sure. What a strange life—to choose celibacy. Last night, to him, had been sacred.

About the author 

Originally from Seattle, Brent Cronin is an MFA student at West Virginia University. He writes autofiction with a direct, deadpan style, and has been published in Dunes Review, The Listening Eye, and The Dead Mule School of Southern Literature. You might find him riding his motorcycle in the Appalachian hills. 

brentcronin.com

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.)