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Tuesday, 30 April 2024

The Girl in the Photograph by John Saunders, mojitos

 Judith and Steven live in the flat next to us although you'd never know. They are rarely seen or heard and when they are it's when they are going out in the morning or coming back in the evening. They keep themselves to themselves and if you pass them on the stairs, the best you get is a cursory nod of the head or a momentary glance as if they are hiding something. They dress like young professionals. They might be doctors, solicitors, architects, who knows? There is something stand-offish about them, reserved, or perhaps they are just shy. The only reason we know their names is from the nameplate at the street door. When they are in, you'd never guess it. No music playing or even the whisper of radio through the thin plasterboard walls of the duplex. They seem to be away every weekend. Most likely they visit their parents or maybe they have a country retreat. Whatever they do, they have a very quiet life. They mind their own business.

We, on the other hand, are party animals, always looking for an excuse to go out or invite friends in. There's rarely a quiet night with us. We work hard and play hard as the saying goes. We are young and sucking at life like hungry calves. And why not? When you are in your early twenties that’s what you do? You attack life without fear or worry. Consequences don’t exist. You take risks because it's always someone else that shit happens to. Not me, not us.

Pam and I have lived here for the last twelve months. We’re serious and not serious if you know what I mean. We work for iPoint, the new tech firm. Both of us are in Sales and Marketing, so lots of big bonuses when we score hits. Our job is to sell online adverts at an astronomical cost to the big multinationals who want to take over the world. We’re happy to serve them. So you see we have little in common with Judith and Steven. They are boring late twenty-year-olds, probably planning to get married and saving for a down payment on a house. Wage slaves if ever I saw them. Pam and I might get hitched, we don’t know. For now, it's party time.  The weekends are best, late nights at our favorite nightclubs, lie-ins to let the hangovers evaporate, lounging around with friends over good wines and craft beers. If you're ever looking for a party night, Pam and Jimmy’s is the place to be.

It's a Wednesday night in June when there is a knock on the door, a gentle tap. Judith is standing there when I open it. She is dressed in a dark knee-length dress, her brunette hair tied back in a tight bun. She’s in her stocking feet. She looks at me sheepishly.

“Hi there, I'm Judith, from number fourteen next door; I hope I not disturbing you.”

“Not at all, come in,” I say.

Pam is in the kitchen and steps into the sitting room to meet Judith, now standing between us. There is an embarrassed silence.

“Judith”, I say to Pam, “from next door."

“Hi, great to see you, we've met in our comings and goings, I'm Pam, this is Jimmy.”

Judith looks around the messy flat, the table still has dinner leftovers, and the armchair is piled with laundry just out of the dryer.  Pam quickly moves it, I turn off the TV. Pam and I sit on the sofa, Judith on the armchair. She sits upright in the chair with her hands on her lap gently clasped. A regal pose or maybe like a model. I note the silver jewelry, rings, earrings, and a light chain around her neck. There is an air of calmness about her, a self-assurance as if she is an honored guest and she is about to be presented with an award. But she’s not, instead, she is here to ask us a favour.

 

The following Saturday, we both checked in on number fourteen. They are both away in Budapest for two weeks, a sort of holiday mixed with work. It turns out Steven is a professional photographer and he's got a gig there with a tourism company. A step up from the usual weddings, and baby portraits. She's a secretary in a medical clinic.  They have asked us to keep an eye on the flat and look after Gretta and Sarah. They're guppies, both about four inches long and multicolored with the most stunning fan tails. They are rather beautiful as they swim about the lit-up tank in the sitting room. It is a simple job. Feed them every other day, be careful not to overfeed, and check the temperature is stable. That's all.

The following Monday, I drop in, feed the babies, and check the water temperature. All good and they look good. I stand for a moment mesmerized by them swimming like underwater ballet dancers through the tepid water, peaceful, unconcerned about the world around them. My eyes wander to the wall behind the tank, drawn by the photograph. A portrait, framed in wood, head and shoulders. A beautiful woman, with long dark hair flowing about her face, her skin, perfect ivory, her eyes bright stars shining from dark circles of mascara. The look is sultry, her lips parted in a half smile. It's Judith, but it takes a few seconds to connect the picture with reality. The background is subtly lit, a professional shot of course.  I look around and notice other photographs, on the walls, sideboard, and desktop. All of Judith but all different in pose, lighting, and dress. They have one thing in common. She is beautiful in all of them. There are a couple of small ones of both of them but clearly, they are amateurish, snapshots taken on the hoof at some event. The room is a photo montage of Judith. That evening, a rare night in, I cannot get the pictures out of my head. Pam is making mojitos for us and a couple of friends who have just dropped in. I join in the crack but my mind is distracted. Never before have I seen such beauty captured and I keep thinking about how she looks in reality, how she keeps her hair tied up, uses the minimum of makeup, and wears dowdy dresses that a nun wouldn’t even wear.

I volunteer to feed the babies. Pam doesn't mind since I’m always home from work first and she thinks tropical fish are not the most exciting pets and are a little bit creepy. They swim in silence for most of their lives, in a glass tank with no interaction with the rest of the world. She can live without seeing them. After doing the necessary, I wander around the flat staring at the photos, mesmerized, as if they have a magnetic force that draws me in. It is the eyes that catch me, the lips that call my name, and give the invitation to stay. It's as if she is posing to please me, to satisfy my every desire conscious and unconscious. I feel an inner urge. I'm curious about other rooms and against my better judgment, I explore, the kitchen, and the bathroom and find myself in their bedroom. The curtains are drawn and I can just make out in the half-light, the bed, wardrobes, dressing table, and a chaise longue strewn with clothing. I scan the walls and sure enough there are more photos. Some head and shoulders ones similar to the sitting room. But there is one other, a larger one, and guess what, there she is, in full pose, lying naked on a chaise longue, most likely the one in the room. She is stretched out full length, her hair draped over the velvet headrest fanned like a guppy’s tail, her arms extended over her head and her legs spread to reveal all.  A reclining goddess. Her face has the same warm, inviting look that takes me in. By now I am flushed with the rumblings of desire. I sneak out of the flat quietly, as if the fish might hear me.

 

I was almost glad when they arrived home. I had fulfilled our commitment dutifully and had taken my time with each visit. The babies Sarah and Gretta are warm and well-fed. Judith and Steven dropped by with a present to thank us for our baby minding. We invited them in for a quick drink. Judith had a wrapped parcel. Pam said that I was the main minder so Judith handed me the gift and smiled at me in that warm and inviting way that I had not witnessed from her before, at least not in real life. 

 

About the author

 John Saunders is a founder member of the Hibernian Writers’ Group. His collections are After the Accident (Lapwing Press, 2010) and Chance (New Binary Press, 2013). He is one of three featured poets in Measuring, Dedalus New Writers, 2012. 
 
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Monday, 29 April 2024

Puzzles by Judith Skillleter, a large glass of rioja

It is well over fifty years since Angus and Rose enjoyed their wedding day. It was the swinging sixties, Rose wore a mini-skirt which horrified her mother and Angus had shoulder length hair which horrified Rose’s father. But Angus and Rose didn’t care; it was the best day of their lives.

They lived a fairly isolated life. Both were only children and after all these years all the previous generation were long gone. Although Angus thinks he has a distant cousin in Winnipeg whom he has always intended to seek out but has never got round to. It is too late now. Also Angus and Rose never had children despite having a lot of fun trying. Children just didn’t come along. It was before IVF and all those modern techniques that prevent childlessness. But Angus and Rose have long since been OK with this; they are happy together and that is more than enough.

Since retirement their days have developed a routine. They get up after the Today programme on Radio 4. Angus helps Rose to get ready as arthritis and heart issues prevent her doing as much as she would like. Her mobility is very poor and they have had all sorts of gadgets installed to help her get about. There are two Zimmer frames, one upstairs and one downstairs, a stair-lift, a walk in shower with an attached seat and everything in their kitchen and living room is at a level that suits her. Angus is still quite mobile for his advanced years and after Rose is safely downstairs preparing their breakfast he takes their dog Davy for a walk. It is a walk with purpose – pee, poo and papers, the three Ps. Davy must pee and poo and together they collect the Daily Telegraph and The Times.

Once home Rose will have breakfast sorted. Toast, cereal and some fruit washed down with Earl Grey tea for Rose and hot chocolate for Angus. Angus is particular about his daily hot chocolate, none of this powder nonsense. His daily breakfast drink has to be made with dark chocolate pieces melted into heated double cream and sugar and Rose prepares it to perfection every day.

Breakfast is usually taken in companionable silence. They start their papers' puzzles. Angus takes The Times and immediately tackles the cryptic crossword and Rose takes the Daily Telegraph where she tackles the Sudoku. She likes the killer Sudoku, especially on Fridays when that puzzle is “diabolical”. She has tried cryptic crosswords but finds them totally baffling – she can neither understand the questions nor the answers despite many patient explanations from Angus. Rose is much happier with numbers, after all she used to be a maths teacher.

After lunch, usually something light, they move onto the jigsaw puzzle they are completing together. The latest jigsaw has been a Brueghel, 1,000 pieces, The Battle of Carnival and Lent, and they are about two thirds through. Their evenings are TV based. They have the lot – Skye and Netflix - and their evenings are never boring. Life is good, life is content and life is very happy.

Or at least life was good; it had been very very good.  Four months ago Angus came back from his morning walk with Davy, shook his head and said that the chest pains had come back. They had been troubling him for a while but usually went away if he rested. This time they didn’t go away and when Rose brought him his hot chocolate he was sitting in his chair, sagging in his chair, totally unarousable - dead. An ambulance was called but it was all too late. Angus’ death had been instantaneous.

Now, four months later, Rose was sitting in an almost empty house.  Some things had been sold and a house clearance firm took the rest. The house had been sold to a lovely young couple who wanted a family home for their soon to be born baby. Davy had been rehomed as had Rose; she was waiting for transport to a retirement complex where she would be cared for until her death when she hoped to be reunited with Angus.  Her personal effects and the bits of furniture she was allowed to take had already gone and her room, her new home, was waiting for her. Rose hated with a vengeance everything to do with what was happening to her now.

She also occasionally hated Angus for going before her. They had always assumed that she, Rose, would be the first to die given her frailty, heart concerns and arthritis. They had accepted that Angus would be OK on his own, with Davy of course, but Rose needed care, Rose would struggle. The fact that the day might come when Angus would die first had never crossed their minds.

Rose feels guilty for hating Angus and also blames herself for bringing on the heart attack – too many hot double cream and chocolate drinks. Why didn’t she insist that he visited their GP when the chest pains first came on? Why didn’t she limit his intake of artery blocking food items? It was all her fault.

After Angus’ death things had to be done; administrative, financial and legal tasks and, of course, telling people. Her puzzles had taken a back seat and The Battle of Carnival and Lent jigsaw was returned to its box unfinished. It was now at the local charity shop with all the other jigsaw puzzles. Since Angus died Rose had not been able to look at a Sudoku. Puzzles had represented their happiness, jigsaw pieces had always become a complete and beautiful picture which described her life with Angus perfectly. The very thought of tackling one just brought on floods of tears.

The funeral had been straightforward as both Angus and Rose had previously organised a cremation without ceremony; the body was taken away and after a few weeks an urn containing Angus’ ashes arrived.  Rose’s fifty plus years of a glorious marriage was now represented by a pot of dust.

But everything seemed so much worse now when there wasn’t much to do, nothing necessary and unpleasant to occupy her mind. Now the agonising pain of her loss was destroying her. It was as if this pain had been waiting for her defences to be down, for emotional space to be made for it to attack – it was a pain that was excruciating, a physical pain, and an emotionally agonising pain.  The pain was a result of so many losses, not just of her beloved husband, but also her home, her dog, her security, her lifestyle and her reason for living. Rose felt desolate. Nothing made sense anymore, everything was puzzling but, unlike her Sudokus and jigsaws in her past, not in a pleasurable way.

She had thought of taking all her medication and joining Angus “before her time”. She knew that Angus would not have approved of this way forward; he believed that life had to be lived until the end and he would be cross with her if she arrived early. Rose nevertheless hoped that her own death was not too far away. “The sooner the better” she thought to herself.

She saw the transport arrive and a kind lady helped her make the last journey from her home to the car. Rose couldn’t look back as the car eased into the traffic as she left everything that had been so loved and familiar for the last time. If life was hell then she was facing it.

 About the writer 

Judith Skilleter is new to writing fiction after a long career in social work and teaching. Her first children's novel The April Rebellion, has recently been published. Judith is a Geordie, who settled in East Yorkshire forty-five  years ago and is married with four grandchildren, 

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Sunday, 28 April 2024

Sunday Serial, 240 x 70, Gill James,14. The Other Children 19 November 2018, elderflower cordial,

 

Introduction

This collection is a collection of seventy stories, each 280 words. They were inspired by the first picture seen on my Twitter feed on a given day.

She'd never managed to see them before.  Now they were there, dancing in circles in the bright moonlight. Their clothes were a little old-fashioned. And they were very pale. In fact you could almost see through them.

One of the boys stood still and looked at her. 

"Who are you?" she said. "Do you live near here?"

They all started running.

At least she knew where to find them now. They weren't there every night though. But she made her way to the clearing every night there was a moon. The second time she saw them she watched them for twenty minutes before they disappeared.

"Please don't go," she called as they ran back into the woods.

She had to wait another four nights before she saw them for the third time. Were there more of them this time? She hid at the edge of the wood. She could hear their voices but not what they were saying. Sometimes they sang. She wished she could join in.

When she sneezed they ran away. 

She didn't see them again for almost a week but on Friday evening she could hear them as she approached the clearing. She didn't hide this time but stepped a little nearer to them.  The boy who'd seen her before stared at her while the others crept away.

"I won't hurt you," she said.

He nodded.  "Come at the same time tomorrow and we'll tell you who we are."

The next evening they were sitting in a circle when she arrived. The boy gestured that she should sit down. "We are the ghosts of the children who have died in the Benton forest. Welcome to our world."                                

About the author

Gill James is published by The Red Telephone, Butterfly and Chapeltown.  

She edits CafeLit and writes for the online community news magazine: Talking About My Generation.

She is a Lecturer in Creative Writing and has an MA in Writing for Children and PhD in Creative and Critical Writing.    

http://www.gilljameswriter.com  

https://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B001KMQRKE

https://twitter.com/GillJames

 

Friday, 26 April 2024

Benjamin’s New Groove by Fleur Lind, carrot juice

Benjamin was thoughtful as he watered his vegetable patch.  They say it’s good to talk to the trees, he mused, as he adjusted the pressure to avoid flattening the young lettuces. The young leafy seedlings were called ‘Drunken Women’, so the label said. It was a good job the hose was delivering tank water, not anything stronger. Such were the whimsical thoughts randomly popping up as he mulled the answer to a far deeper, more serious question.

             ‘What if I talk to my plants?  Is that a good therapy too?  Or is that a sign of madness?’ Benjamin thought out loud.  A distant cousin of his was mad and he had no desire to join that queue. Although his cousin’s madness had led him to become a character in a classic novel, Benjamin didn’t want to go down that path.

            When the vegetable garden was soaked and droplets sparkled under the mid-morning sun, the deep serious question remained unanswered.  Benjamin had not discussed it with the carrots or zucchini, as he’d also heard that ‘green conversation’ should be light, positive, and happy. To promote the best environment and good growth.  His problem was burdening and wouldn't grow strong healthy plants and tasty food.

              Rustling sounds could be heard over the fence as his neighbour Roger unzipped the opening to his new greenhouse.

“Hey, Roger!” Benjamin called.

“Hey Benjamin, how are you doing today?” Roger was a bit older, had a wise fatherly nature, and his voice was reassuring.

“I’m okay.” Benjamin sighed.

“The rustling stopped and Roger’s head appeared over the fence, “Just okay?  What’s up?”

Benjamin rubbed his nose, “It’s a bit complex.”

“Well, how ‘bout you and me chew it over with some juice, and see if we can get to the roots of it?”

“That sounds good, your place or mine?”

“Hop over, I’ll get everything sorted.”

Benjamin felt a bit better knowing that another set of ears would hear him out.

 

Over a tall chilled glass of carrot juice, Benjamin and Roger covered the general gossip, weather and the cost of living.

          “Okay, let’s have it, lay it on me. What can we fix today?”

           Sitting with Roger was like therapy, they laughed, and compared notes on Rhana down the road and the latest weird and wonderful accessories to her cardigan. 

          “Okay, so I’m going to sound like misery guts, but I want a career change.  I’m tired of my job. I’m allergic to chocolate, I pull my hamstring with all the hopping around, I’ve got carpal tunnel from holding heavy baskets of Easter eggs, and I've got anxiety from trying not to wake kids up when I deliver my stash on Saturday night because they always look as if they're asleep but what would happen if  they wake up and I’m busted?” Benjamin gesticulated “I’m from a long line of Easter bunnies, but this job, over the years, has worn me down.  I’m in my prime, but I want a job with less drama!” he took a breath after all the troubling thoughts tumbled from his mouth.

             Roger nodded and took a sip of juice. “I see. I hear ya, man.  Your job is a tough gig.  It’s only once a year but no one appreciates how much prep goes into what you do. And there comes a time when it’s like, you just want a change.  I get that.” Roger said reassuringly.

          “So what should I do? I’ve been to a support group, the other bunnies say they have similar problems, but some are newer to the job and still have plenty of hop.  One bunny has quit, he’s gone bush, another has moved to the coast. So there lies a new problem.  A staffing shortage. Benjamin rolled his eyes and drained his glass.

       “Care for another?” Roger poured from the jug.

         “Can’t do any harm…not far to hop!”

         “What to do…” Roger thoughtfully rubbed his chin and smoothed his whiskers, “Well there’s a vacancy where I work.  I do voice-over educational audiobooks for kids.  I got the job after that terrible incident when I hit the headlines for murder.  I was framed, of course, but if anything my celebrity status was good for sales and the books bounced off the shelves.”

           “A voice-over job? That sounds like fun!”

          “Oh it is, you just be yourself and your alter ego.  Bring out the real Benjamin, play with it, run with it, hop with it.  No more hammies or carpel, and you are helping the kids learn.  The teachers love it. It’s a whole new world out there with learning.  Kids are holding their bottles in one hand and a device in the other.”

         When the jug of juice was drained,  Roger Rabbit and Benjamin Bunny felt happily bloated. They devised a plan to get Benjamin back on track and behind a microphone.  Benjamin wrote a letter of resignation to the EBC (Easter Bunny Council) and Roger showed the new ‘bunny on the block’ how to ‘rock the mic.’

        Rhana caught wind of the news and applied for Benjamin’s job, bringing a matronly tone to the table. She was also looking for a change and would wear a new accessory for every household she visited. She would take no-nonsense, being an avid fan of Bunny Break, the highly-rated prison drama series on TV.  She had the skills and the smarts to take the legendary role of Easter Bunny to the next level. More fool any kids who woke up on her watch.

 

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 - Rose City Writers in Warwick. For more of Fleur's work: fleursfabulousfables.wordpress.com 

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