Wednesday, 27 May 2026

HAPPY AS LARRY - A NEW CREATIVE PROJECT

Full details

2th Man is launching Happy as Larry, a new creative project delivered in partnership with Norwich University of the Arts and National Centre for Writing.

The next phase of the project will bring together six writers, each commissioned to produce two short stories exploring the theme, with all work illustrated by Malik Furtado from NUA. Happy as Larry is designed to blend storytelling and illustration to create engaging, relatable content that connects with people in an accessible and creative way.

We are currently inviting submissions from writers who would like to be part of the project, with full details available in our Call to Action and Character Profile.

 

Bridget Belden Your mistake, Bidget Belden, a matcha latte

 

They told you you could have it all. You just had to follow the plan. First, go to a good school. Then get a good job. After that you meet and marry your handsome husband and then of course you have kids. They told you if you did all of this you would be happy. You would have a perfect house, on a nice street, in a good neighborhood where the schools promised success for your kids. Did it sound like a lot? Not to worry! You could have it all! You could bring home the bacon and fry it up in a pan. That’s what they said. Easy peasy. Everyone was doing it!

 

And they were doing it better than you.

 

They loved their jobs - they kept getting promoted. They were happily married and raising beautifully well behaved kids. They only fought sometimes. They volunteered at school and everyone loved them. Especially their husband. Their life was all going according to plan.

 

You didn’t know why yours felt so hard. Why you felt like a failure. You didn’t have the corner office. You and your husband were fighting. You lived to escape the life you so carefully built. All those business trips to fun, extravagant places where you could fall into a bed that someone else made everyday.  You didn’t have to plan, shop and make the meals after working a long, hard, unfulfilling day. You got to drink too much, dance too much and not worry about being judged for failing at everything.

 

Of course you missed your kids and your husband but when the time came to go home, you couldn’t help but feel a little sad.

 

Your mistake wasn’t trying so hard.

Your mistake was believing them in the first place.

Abou the author

Bridget Belden is a mother of two and lives in Orange County, CA. Her work explores what it’s like to be a woman in midlife, and more recently, how to cultivate peace in the midst of chaos.

 

 

Did you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee. Half o what you pay goes to the authort eehalf goes to expenses.g. Maintaining rhe web site and setting up The Best of Café Lit book each year.



Doctor Cyril's House of Remedies by laire Bezdek Gocha, lbitter lemon

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They told you you could have it all. You just had to follow the plan. First, go to a good school. Then get a good job. After that you meet and marry your handsome husband and then of course you have kids. They told you if you did all of this you would be happy. You would have a perfect house, on a nice street, in a good neighborhood where the schools promised success for your kids. Did it sound like a lot? Not to worry! You could have it all! You could bring home the bacon and fry it up in a pan. That’s what they said. Easy peasy. Everyone was doing it!

 

And they were doing it better than you.

 

They loved their jobs - they kept getting promoted. They were happily married and raising beautifully well behaved kids. They only fought sometimes. They volunteered at school and everyone loved them. Especially their husband. Their life was all going according to plan.

 

You didn’t know why yours felt so hard. Why you felt like a failure. You didn’t have the corner office. You and your husband were fighting. You lived to escape the life you so carefully built. All those business trips to fun, extravagant places where you could fall into a bed that someone else made everyday.  You didn’t have to plan, shop and make the meals after working a long, hard, unfulfilling day. You got to drink too much, dance too much and not worry about being judged for failing at everything.

 

Of course you missed your kids and your husband but when the time came to go home, you couldn’t help but feel a little sad.

 

Your mistake wasn’t trying so hard.

Your mistake was believing them in the first place.

Abou the author

Bridget Belden is a mother of two and lives in Orange County, CA. Her work explores what it’s like to be a woman in midlife, and more recently, how to cultivate peace in the midst of chaos.

 

 

Did you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee. Half o what you pay goes to the authort eehalf goes to expenses.g. Maintaining rhe web site and setting up The Best of Café Lit book each year.



Doctor Cyril’s Office of Remedies By Claire Bezdek Gochal,bitter lemon

 

 

Sara Withers blinked under the overhead lights of the terminal. Her boys met her and Greg, her husband, by the wheezing doors of the airport entrance. Or exit, depending on how you looked at it. Her hands shook violently as they always did.

“I’m just going to go to this appointment. Greg, are you all set?” she said.

“Mom, did you get our bagels?” Tom, their oldest son, said before her husband answered.

“How long will you be gone?” Greg looked anxiously at the children from his wheelchair like he didn’t know what he’d do with them.

“What appointment?” Harry said from behind his Kindle.

“I’ve told you three times.”

“Who has a doctor’s appointment right before a flight?”

“Did you go to Dunkin’?”

“What doctor has an office near the airport?”

 “I should be right back.”

She handed the boys the bag of bagels. “Next time, you’re old enough to get them yourself.”

Tom took two plains before he passed the bag along.

“We didn’t want poppyseed,” said the twins.

            “I’ll take it.” Oh, Jonathan, in the middle. She’d forgotten to get him one.

Before she could stop herself, she marched to the automatic doors and into the wall of exhaust of the departures curb.

“Wait where is Mom—?” The doors swallowed the rest of Tom’s words and silenced Jonathan as he mouthed that Mom was going to see a doctor about her hands.

The tremors in her hands began after Tom was born 15 years ago and worsened with each subsequent birth. The padded base of her thumbs quivered as though receiving aftershocks from a source higher up in her body.  In the last few years, she’d given up driving almost entirely, relying on carpools and bike rides, limiting her time behind the wheel to local and essential errands. Greg did a lot of driving but couldn’t right now with his broken leg. And he refused to pay for an Uber to the airport on a convoluted principle of frugality, which she found insensitive. During the 25-minute drive, she had not broken up the kids’ fights; she hadn’t responded to Greg’s musings about the election. He reached for the wheel from the passenger’s seat four times.

If it weren’t for her beloved cousin, Meg, getting married, she would never have risked it. Any of it. Driving to the airport. Meeting with a doctor she’d found when she asked an artificial intelligence chatbot for “radical solutions to involuntary tremors.” Driving so far once they landed at their destination.  But she had to. Meg, after innumerable failed relationships, was getting married in the far northern reaches of Maine. Meg, who’d chased fireflies with her after summer family dinners, who’d barhopped with her until dawn in their twenties. Who’d stayed overnight with all of Sara’s children as newborns while worrying her own biological time slipped away from her. 

For years, Sara had googled her symptoms continuously, frantically, trying to get new results to either confirm she was dying, or she wasn’t. She didn’t want to die, not at all, but the extent of her worry and complaint over the tremors had bored, then irritated her family and old friends so extensively, she’d almost hoped for a dramatic diagnosis to justify the oxygen she’d wasted.

She tried medicine, MRIs and CT scans. Therapy, hypnosis, massage. None of it worked or provided answers.

She considered asking her local friends for recommendations. She’d seen the version of her tremors in the tensing in their jaws, in the manicured feet of her coworkers, in the mothers’ bikini bellies rippling on summer weekends. But her friends in town weren’t the kind one trusted with vulnerability. It would be spread over texts and coffee and wine and contorted in a way Sara couldn’t handle.

So, she’d asked AI for help. The sexy robotic voice returned Dr. Cyril’s name along with dozens of glowing reviews. Among all the stars, the paragraphs of praise about how the good doctor changed lives, was no mention of his actual methodology. Only how his treatment worked when nothing else had. He had a degree in neuropsychology from a school in the Caribbean she’d never heard of. She couldn’t find a picture of the man, but he did have an address in a building within the concrete campus of the airport, and an appointment available just before their flight.

GPS delivered on its promise of the office’s proximity, and she found the brick building after a short walk along the airport road shoulder. The lobby was worn but mostly clean, a few clumps of dirt ground into the corners by the staircase. An engraved sign with a short list of offices hung next to the single, waiting elevator. About halfway down Dr. Cyril’s name was freshly etched. She could still hear the airplanes.

She tried to run a brush through her hair while she waited for the elevator. She’d cropped it, a cut Greg hadn’t noticed for weeks, and still it tangled. She couldn’t grip the brush in her shaking hands and only managed to rip a few blonde strands.

The narrow elevator reminded her of the ones of her dreams in which she’d go up and down, missing the floor she’d selected. She suddenly felt very alone, despite the nearness of the airport and her family. Her left thumb trembled painfully, and she sucked it the way the children did as babies. The twins sucked them for way too long, her mom friend, Kelly, told her once at a birthday party while the kids rode a pony and ate gourmet burgers from a food truck. Sara made the twins quit their thumbs after that and sometimes she thought if she’d let them continue thumb-sucking, they wouldn’t be so restless now. Which all reminded her she needed to book the magician for their party next month at the arcade.

The number six glowed in the bank of buttons, urging her to press it, and the other buttons receded. She pressed, she stepped on the elevator, and the doors closed.

She considered what the doctor would ask her about her medical history. The only thing she could truly note was the shaking had worsened as she entered perimenopause, the long final descent into the “change” or “the pause,” whatever euphemism you’d like to apply to the looming cessation of her ability to reproduce.

After an agonizingly slow climb in which she grew convinced that she’d be trapped and miss not only her appointment but her flight, the elevator doors opened onto a waiting man in a faded navy-blue cap and coat. He had tightish curls beneath the hat and a wide smile with the early hints of tobacco staining.

“Sara,” he said. Not as a question, but a greeting. His voice was melodic and lightly accented, which, along with the outfit, reminded her of a train conductor in old Disney films. He led her gently by the elbow, but with some hurry to a door immediately across from the elevator. She didn’t have much chance to look down the hall and though it was empty, it didn’t give her the sense it was deserted. A phone rang out of sight. She was pleased how easily this was going, how kind he seemed.

“Let’s use this office. It’s for my special patients.”

When he opened the door, she saw right away it was a large, single stall bathroom with a grab bar and in the center a chair that looked plucked from a country dining room. This was wrong. Very, very wrong.

He began to ask her questions as the door shut. “Did you find the office OK? Getting warm out there?” He locked the door, still smiling, and stood in front of it.

She said, “I think this is a bad idea.”

He said, “Why?” And his whole face not only fell but transformed like a mirage. His eyes went from a pleasing, lake blue to milky and hard, with contracted pupils. He was much younger than she initially thought, and not exactly handsome but there was something erotically attractive about him. He stared at her with distaste and a small frisson of lust behind those eyes.

He was going to hurt her.

He didn’t even necessarily look excited, but as if it was routine for him, inevitable.

Except, he didn’t block the door as she got closer; he stepped aside. She, despite her fear, wanted his strong arm to reach out and stop her. She was testing him. He was testing her. Why had she ever decided to do this? And why couldn’t she completely bring herself to rush by him, tackle him, grab for the door? A pull, a force, evinced by a man she’d never met before today. She was as terrified as she’d ever been in her life. And she froze, entranced.

She looked down. The grout was dirty, and her eyes swam, and she was afraid she’d lose her balance and crack her head. She focused on his conductor’s uniform and then looked up to his face that had changed. If she looked one way, like those old hologram cards she had as a kid, his face returned to the conductor. That was the false image, the imposed one, she understood now. The one you saw first. If she turned more the image underneath, the one printed on the card was the man who terrified her, and yet, to whom she couldn’t stop advancing. She thought she might know him after all. He raised his eyebrows. In menace, in something else, she couldn’t tell.

He gripped her wrist.

What if she never saw her children again? Her fear was nothing compared to the desire not to let them feel any themselves.

“Let me out of here,” she said.

He laughed.

How airless the room was. No windows. The heavy door seemingly sealed shut. Maybe it was. She’d missed her chance for escape.

“How old are you?” he asked.

“What?” she said. What? She didn’t know what she expected him to say. Any question would’ve surprised her: routine, clinical or absurd.

“You heard me,” Dr. Cyril said.

 “I, I am 48,” she said. Was he asking to mark the end of her time on Earth, like stopping a clock at the time of a person’s death? She did not want to die.

He said quietly. “I’ve never had a patient like you.”

 “You say that to all the girls,” she said. Jesus, Sara. Why was she joking with this man? Because she was scared and what else was she going to do. And, because she knew him, somehow.

“No, I don’t,” he said. “You’re very beautiful.”

He didn’t say “still’ very beautiful, which is what most people said about women in their forties. It prompted her to say, “Until menopause.” And then, “The end of my useful life.” 

“The end, the beginning,” he said, reading her mind, or not.

The surrealness and fear caught up to her in a sudden aural swoosh. She wanted to go home. She wanted to rewind and not come here. Yet, she wanted him, too. Him who called her beautiful and stared at her, like inside her.

“Do you know why your hands shake?” he said.

The last thing she remembered was him catching her and lowering her to the ground. He smelled earthy and not exactly familiar, but real. She still wasn’t sure he was real, if this place were real. But his smell, the hardness of the floor, convinced her she wasn’t dreaming.

 He didn’t let her slam her head against the ground.  He whispered her name as it went dark.

When she woke, Dr. Cyril sat in another chair she hadn’t noticed in the corner, watching her. He wasn’t smoking but had the posture of someone who was. The mask of the goofy conductor had entirely slipped in the shadows. “Don’t get up,” he said. He smirked. She imagined how his mouth would feel on her skin.

Her body got hot and then shivered. Wanting and repelled. The room smelled of her own sweat and his musk from a riverbed. “Please, let me go.” Her voice was hoarse.

He shrugged. “You’re the one who wanted to come here,” he said.

It was the chatbot, actually, who’d led her here. Artificial results, telling her what she was supposed to do.

He held her gaze, challenging her.

“You’re blocking the door,” she said.

“Am I? Or do you just want me to be blocking the door?” he said. “Two things can be true at the same time,” he said.

“What are you going to do to me?” she said.

He lifted a hand to her, and she ducked. She wasn’t sure if he were going to hit her or not. It was instinct to duck. He tucked a strand of her broken hair behind her ear.

Here was the chameleon again. Turned and he was a familiar stranger with a dangerous pull to the depths of her desire and turn another way and he was the humdrum doctor, as routine as her children’s YouTube shows.

“What do you want?” Dr. Cyril said.

Sara wasn’t even sure Dr. Cyril wasn’t generated by AI himself. It didn’t matter; despite the supreme, terrifying, oddness of this whole thing, she trusted he was leading her where she wanted to go.

“For my hands to stop shaking,” she said. “For my life to go on. For my children to grow up. For them not to grow up.”

“I see,” he said. “Do you want more children?”

“No, I have plenty. I just want.”

He waited. She didn’t know what else to say.

She wanted the chance to restart and redo everything now that she knew better. To not be invisible in midlife. To stop the arms race of parenting. For her children to grow up happy and healthy. For them to stay young forever. To escape the trap of all of it. She wasn’t sure how much of this she said aloud.

“If you didn’t know it was there, would you still worry about it?” he said, after a long pause.

“Didn’t know what was there?” She was so tired. She wanted to go home.

“Didn’t know anything,” he said. “Who you are. Who you were. Worry makes it real.”

“You have to worry about some things,” she said, irritated now. “I have to be someone.”

“Do you?”

She sighed. She thought, playing whatever this game of his was. “I guess I couldn’t worry if I didn’t know something existed, yes,” she said.  “Or if I just let it exist.”

 He smiled. A sudden deep sense of relaxation washed over her, like she’d taken a rainbath.

One of his top teeth was snagged across the other one and was graying, dying. For a doctor, she’d think he’d get that fixed. Why she continued to believe, or wanted to believe, he was an actual doctor was beyond comprehension. Every piece of evidence should’ve convinced her otherwise by now.

He spread his palms on his knees, and said, “Well, who are you then?”

“I am Sara.”

“Look down,” he said. “At your hands.”

She did. And her tremors were gone.

He rose from the chair. He put his arms around her waist, and she thought he was going to kiss her on the mouth, his breath surprisingly fresh, but he didn’t. And again, the fever dream sensation only he and she were real. “You did it,” he said.

 

She didn’t remember leaving his office, or getting back to the airport, or to her gate. It was as if she awoke midway through the flight with a start. She only retained the feeling of how it had been hard to part from him, and the increasingly hazy memory of how he’d almost kissed her once more, a deep farewell and about which she felt no guilt. Although, she did not tell her husband.

When they landed, she drove without incident to the Canadian border. A lake house in the family of Meg’s new husband for generations. The wedding was quiet, a sweet country silence. They swam a dozen times over the weekend. The lake sloughed her skin clear and bare. Her hands were still.  

“So, he just scared you, basically?” Meg said.

“No, it was more than that. It was like a hologram. I can’t explain it. Everything and nothing is real.”

“Maybe it was just the intensity of the session,” Meg said. “What are you going to tell the other women when you get home?” she asked. Her cousin knew her so well.

“Just a little. They’re going to want to go,” Sara said. 

About the author

  

aire Bezdek Gochal has work published in the North Dakota Quarterly and The Astorian. She was a semi-finalist for the Story Foundation Prize and an Honorable mention for the Adele and Robert Schiff Award. She lives on the coast of Massachusetts with her husband and two daughters. 

Did you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee?. Half of what you pay goes to the author thwe other half goes to expensse se.g. Maintaining the web site and setting up The Best of Café Lit book each year.