Take me to the Water

B. B. Garin

It was hot and we didn’t know where we were going. Out the highway, past the
scrapyard, mangled cars glinting in the sun. Past the billboards for personal injury lawyers and
Jesus. Past the exit for the Reservation and the red-faced power plant. We meandered down the
escarpment, through a quaint old town to the edge of the gorge, following the river though we
couldn’t see it yet.
That felt right. We were always drawn to the water.
The kids slumped in the backseat, sugar from the doughnut-holes still powdering their
lips and not yet in their bloodstreams. Condensation from my iced coffee dribbled down my
wrist. Decaf. Useless. The doctor said cutting out caffeine would help with the migraines. But it
hadn’t. Had only made them worse.
“Caine? Caine?”
I flinched, as always, at the sound of my own name. Who burdened a baby with a name
like that? When I’d ask my mother, her mouth would press flat. It’s a strong name.
“Caine, what’s that?” Willow pointed ahead, the glass beads on her wrist clinking against
the steering wheel. She hadn’t turned the radio on. A bad sign. Music had always been at her
fingertips. Now the notes were fraying. Like my nerves and the hem of our daughter’s sunflower
dress. The one she’d worn every day since June.
“Is it a castle?” Kate asked from the backseat, roused at last by the slowing car.
“Don’t be dumb,” Jay told her.
The ice rattled in my plastic cup. I shoved it in the holder and ran a damp hand over my
face.
“It’s not dumb,” Willow said, voice an octave too high.
She looked at me for help, but I turned my face to the broad, stone building punctuated
by dormers and a sharp, copper-colored roof. Heavy panes, probably lead, divided the windows,
restraining whatever sunlight reached between two towering chestnut trees.
I didn’t recognize the building. But then we’d never gone exploring like this before. Our
lives patterned over familiar streets.
“Caine?” My name a reflexive breath this time. Willow was growing used to my silence.
“It was a monastery, I think.”
Or an orphanage. A boy’s school? Convent? Something religious with stark, charitable
overtones.
My answering at all surprised Willow. Surprised the kids. Surprised myself. I felt half
awake. A headache yawning in the spaces behind my eyes.
Willow slung us in a U-turn, the kids slanting and shrieking in the backseat, hostilities
momentarily forgotten.
“Let’s take a look.” Willow grinned.
She pulled over, tires shifting from cracked asphalt to gravel-studded grass. The gorge
split wide beside us. The drop-off wasn’t as steep here. A scrub covered hill sloped down to a
wide meadow. From up high, the river looked calm and clear and cool. Inviting in the summer
sun.
Willow and the kids spilled out on the shoulder, Kate pointing at a car flash on the
opposite side of the gorge. Jay slapped at her arm. Willow forced her way between them,
dragging them around, toward the not-quite-a-castle. For a moment, I considered leaning my
head back and closing my eyes against the windshield glare. I could sleep here in the car on the
brink of the gorge, while Willow and the kids did whatever they were going to do. Let them get
used to my absence.
But I wasn’t used to it. Not quite. I sighed out of the car.
We’d parked by a tarnished historical marker. The British had done something in the
meadow during a war. Not the Revolution, the one after. But the years were wrong, weren’t
they? History had never been my best subject. I gravitated to science with its formulas and
ordered charts. Been the only one in my class not to gag when I cut open a frog and found a belly
full of tiny black eggs, like swollen poppy seeds.
But science was only good for so much.
Jay squinted through black-rimmed glasses, pretending to read the sign so he could
ignore his sister and mother crossing the deserted road.
“Come on, buddy,” I squeezed his shoulder. “Let’s catch up.”
He recoiled as he had all summer at any sign of affection. But he followed me to where
the building’s shadow blended with the chestnut trees.
The path to the massive double doors split, curling around a statue. It looked like marble,
faded after years of snow, exhaust and biting north winds. The carving was grand in scale, an air
of Rome in its sweeping lines. A proud angel, wings spread wide standing on the back of a
cowering figure. I wondered who the poor sinner was meant to be. Cain? Judas? All us mortal men?
“Cool,” Jay said.
“Why’s the angel being so mean?” Kate asked.
“The Bible’s like that,” Willow said, taking her hand.
The path was overgrown, dandelions snaking toward our feet.
“It’s locked,” Willow said, muscles flexing in an exaggerated pull on the long brass
handles. Muscles sculpted by guitars and amps and speakers. If she didn’t pick those things up
again soon, all that strength would melt away. Like mine.
If she didn’t pick those things up again soon, there’d be nothing to pay the bills with
either. We’d never bought life insurance.
Laughter climbed halfway up my throat and met a bitter wall.
“It’s abandoned,” I said.
Willow batted strands back from her braid and set off down the steps. The children trailed
her, sneakers slapping. I wanted to stay in the cool shadow of the portico. There were no carved
figures to judge me here. Just cold gray stone and the crimson doors. Red for the Virgin’s sacred
heart? Or the apple that tempted? A reminder that the flesh was weak? That it wasn’t always our
own.
We waded through unmown grass, wispy-tipped and pale. I winced at Kate’s soft, bare
legs. I should’ve made her wear high socks. Ticks must’ve been crawling everywhere, left
behind by wandering deer. But we hadn’t planned on stopping here. We hadn’t planned
anything.
The front of the building ran on for what seemed a long time with smooth gray skin and
even, empty windows. No graffiti or cracked glass. But we were nowhere. A long way for
teenagers with pressurized paint canisters or casually lobbed rocks to travel. We’d only reached
it by Willow pressing on the gas as if she could outpace the pressure building in my head.
Willow found another door around the corner. A modern, beige fire door, incongruous in
the sainted old walls. It opened when she tugged.
“What are you doing?” I grabbed her arm, holding her back from the dark hallway. I
hadn’t imagined she would actually go in. That this wasn’t all some performance. A distraction
for the kids. A detour on the way to wherever we were going.
Except the drive had been the distraction and we didn’t have a destination. Hadn’t since
June.
“Aren’t you curious?” she asked.
“No.”
The kids stared between us.
“Let’s just get out of the sun for a minute,” Willow said, as if the heat were a reasonable
excuse for trespassing.
The open sky beat down on us. A perfect blue reflecting an imaginary peace below.
Willow’s cheeks glowed pink. Sweat darkened the collar of Jay’s t-shirt and left a line between
his spikey shoulder blades. Kate scratched her elbow. I rubbed the remaining bristles on my
head. Once, twice, defeated.
The dark interior carried the promise of coolness on its stale breath. I flicked a fat wall
switch. A brief buzz of forgotten electricity ghosted through my fingers, pressing on my ears.
But nothing was illuminated.
“It’s dark,” I said.
“We have our phones,” Willow said, not quite brushing me aside as she stepped into the
hallway.
I gave my phone to Kate, who never complained the way Jay had at her age, and so was
without a device of her own. It was hard to keep up with Willow. It always had been. A musician
needed drive she said. Not her parents’ wishy-washy hippie crap. Business before art.
I found myself drifting behind my family down a long hallway. I wondered if this was
what it’d be like. Losing step after step. Too slow for them to notice, until they were too far away
to care.
That wasn’t fair. That was cold. I was a bastard.
Closed doors appeared at regular intervals. Classrooms, maybe. Offices? Impossible to
see through their frosted-glass windows. Up ahead, Willow had already disappeared beyond the
reach of Jay’s light.
“Willow?” My voice echoed, hollow and mocking.
“Wait up,” Kate snatched at her brother’s shirt as Jay pulled away from her.
He deliberately quickened his stride, and then they were both pelting down the hall like
trapped birds. I froze. For a moment, I forgot I was their father. That I was meant to protect
them. To hold them back and cautiously venture into the dark myself.
By the time I woke myself up and moved, their faint lights hovered in the distance. Stars
preparing to vanish. I reached for my phone before I remembered my pocket was empty. I
should’ve made the kids share Jay’s phone. It probably would’ve been good for them.
I hurried forward, stumbling over unseen litter. My feet crunched mouse-frail bones. An
aluminum can hissed away from my heel. My shin barked something hard and plastic, its bulky
outline a grayer patch of darkness. A photocopier? Fax machine? Torture device?
Kate should’ve been wailing with a skinned knee by now. Willow cursing a stubbed toe.
Only Jay was impenetrable. It had skipped a generation, direct from my mother’s unyielding
eyes to his. She would’ve marched straight ahead. Anything that belonged to God, belonged to
her.
Finally, I stumbled out of the hall into a wide entryway. The locked front doors stood on
my right, traced in clean daylight. Opposite the doors, a grand staircase curled away into a mist
of dust and shadows. The rest of the space was empty. Not a forgotten chair or an empty picture
frame.
No Willow or Kate or Jay.
We used to be a team, the kids and I, tongues between our teeth, conquering math
worksheets. Transforming precise measurements of flour and yeast into sticky globs of pizza
dough while Willow worked the club circuit. But Kate hadn’t asked me to read her to sleep since
June. And Jay wanted cooking lessons for his birthday, so he could “do things himself.” I’d have
been proud, if it didn’t feel like an accusation.
Music twirled through the dust moats. Willow must’ve found a piano upstairs.
My mother had promised I’d regret marrying a musician. She’ll never have time for you.
And what about children? What will you do then?

And she wasn’t wrong. It just hadn’t seemed to matter. I would have time.
I didn’t argue with her. I didn’t have the will. So she smiled with grim satisfaction when I
was late to pick up Kate from ballet practice or scrambling to bring Jay the homework he’d
forgotten. She left science journals open to the peer reviewed articles of my colleagues on her
coffee table and I let her think I was jealous. That I missed those late nights at the lab.
I even told her I was sorry I hadn’t listened to her more when I kissed her parchment
forehead and left her alone in a white, dusky room with a cricket-chorus of machines.
Now I wondered what lies Willow would leave me with. If I’d be glad of them.
If they’d truly be lies.
“Come on guys,” I called up the stairs. “We should go.”
The piano stopped. Sudden, devouring silence.
I cleared my throat, fingers tight on the waxy banister.
“It’s not a playground.”
That was me, always ruining the fun. Insisting on reality. The piano started again. Softer,
as if praying I wouldn’t notice. Willow could be such a child. One of us has to be. So they can
relate to us.
My mother never worried about relating to me. She read me tales of floods and
destruction. And left me to cry my own way through the night. In that way she made me as
strong as she hoped.
My knees ached at the thought of inching up the half-lit stairs. As soon as I arrived,
they’d only want to come down again. Willow would decide the place was empty and boring and
not the adventure she’d counted on. I might’ve told her so outside, but she wouldn’t have
listened. So, with a taste of righteous resentment, I left them to it and opened the door on the far
side of the entryway.
The room was long, an empty banquet table stretching from end to end with barely
enough space to maneuver around. But then, the fathers or nuns or orphans with swinging feet
probably had no one to serve their meals. They would’ve passed the heavy silver dishes from
hand to weathered hand on all the holy feast days.
Even in the dim light, I could tell the polish was gone from the wood. There wasn’t a
candlestick or soup spoon left to speak of grander times. Just a heavy ceramic coffee mug, the
kind you’d get in an old-fashioned diner, abandoned by the last secretary to check-off a list and
ensure everything important had been boxed up and taken away.
There was another door past the banquet table, but dust thickened the air and I was afraid
to go further. As if my own breath might choke me.
The floor creaked beneath my shifting weight, and the door trembled on rusted hinges.
For a dizzying moment, I thought someone was there.
“Willow?”
Silence.
Of course, no one was there. In flesh or spirit. Even Kate didn’t believe in ghosts. Our
plain-named, practical children, so different from Willow or I they might have been strangers.
We’d wanted it that way. When Willow’s stomach first began to swell, we promised there’d be
no loose-limbed drifting. And no iron-bound dignity. We didn’t want to be our parents. But we’d
failed Kate and Jay. Made them into children who could walk through a haunted house without
fear or imagination.
I retreated to the brighter light of the entrance hall, leaning on the smooth banister.
“Willow?” Dust coated my tongue. The white lightning of a migraine threatened. “Kate?
Jay?”
Their names were losing meaning. Blurring and bleeding to nothing in the swallowing
silence. It was like slipping into deep water. Cold. Comforting. Arresting.
Footsteps raced above me, dislodging a flurry of ceiling plaster. Kate’s laughter filtered
down with the dust. Surely, that was Kate’s pitch? A door slammed. And another. Cracking like
gunshots. They were probably chasing each other through moldering dormitory rooms. Rattling
spotted, brass bedframes and offending the memories of whatever pious people had slept there.
Making all the little ghost orphans envious. I shook my head, if only I believed in such things. If
only ghosts worried me as much as splinters and tetanus-laced nails.
I climbed the stairs in resignation. My eyes had adjusted enough to distinguish the
patches Willow and the kids had left in the dust. My feet landed in the same blank spaces,
leaving no marks of my own. As if I were the ghost.
At the top, another long hallway stretched in either direction. It was empty, except for
occasional fingers of sunlight crawling under doors. The music and the noise had stopped again.
I swallowed curses, a cobweb catching on my lips.
How could Willow and the kids be so hard to find? The building was massive, but the
corridors ran straight, west to east. Our paths should’ve crossed by now. Unless they were
hiding. In which case, how would I ever choose the right door?
Maybe I should’ve left. Waited by the car. Let Willow call me a bad sport and fill the
drive home with half-hearted silence. Help the kids think of me as someone who would always
disappoint. Who would never feature in their memories.
Instead, I found a classroom or a chapel. Rows of hard chairs and an unadorned lectern
beneath a plain cross. I slumped down. The dim interior had kept my migraine in check, and the
sweat had dried on my neck. But my legs felt cramped. Electrolyte imbalances. I knew the
science. But knowing didn’t change anything.
The chairback in front of me had been scarred with a name. No, not a name. I leaned
closer, inhaling a nearly forgotten wisp of wood polish. Two letters. A M. Initials? Lovers? The
mere convenience of straight-sided letters when confronted with boredom and a penknife?
Impossible to know.
When I first met Willow, I didn’t ask about her name. Didn’t want to have to explain my
own in turn. She told me anyway. Of course, she’d been conceived beneath the swaying branches
of a willow tree, her parents carving their names in the wrinkled bark to mark the occasion.
Imagine telling a six-year-old that. Six! She’d shuddered and I’d laughed.
And then we’d kissed.
We’d scratched our names side by side on all sorts of papers since then—marriage
license, birth certificates, deeds. But papers were easily torn. Lost. Faded. Wood was as solid as
bone. Harder to mark. Harder to erase.
I traced the two letters, gouged deep. At the tip of the A, my finger caught on a splinter. I
jerked up, sucking the thin bubble of blood. Copper and salt and pine whirled in my mouth.
I spat in the dust, apologized to the cross, and headed for the door.
Leaving the rest of the rooms unexplored, I reached the end of the corridor, no sign of my
family. I turned around half expecting, half hoping, to see a hallway lined with specters—stern-
faced nuns and sepia children in starchy collars. But the shadow-streaked boards remained
empty. I supposed, like any good horror movie, the monsters were behind me now.
They were in the entrance hall. I heard them before I saw them; tiny chirps of some game
on Jay’s phone pinging up the grand stair. Kate’s muted voice, sniffling tears. And Willow’s,
losing patience, trying to assemble them into a cohesive unit and failing. They weren’t a coked-
up drummer or a recalcitrant keyboardist. Her usual charms were useless. She didn’t have the
skills for this, and I’d promised her she’d never need to.
My feet landed heavy on the floor and she looked up from where she knelt by Kate.
“Where were you?”
I waved at the cavernous space. “Lost.”
“I want to go home,” Kate said, scampering to my side.
“It’s boring,” Jay said, pocketing his phone without being told and folding his arms. Willow was frozen on the dusty floor, hands flat on her knees. A statue to match the one
outside—repentance.
How my mother would’ve crowed to see it.
But my mother had been wrong. Willow hadn’t let me down. It was me who would let
Willow down, leaving her alone with these two familiar little strangers.
And I hadn’t said I was sorry, not once since June. I’d only left the single, flimsy page of
the test report along with the pastel pamphlets on the counter by the microwave and gone to bed.
It was a school night, after all. The papers were gone the next day, so I’d known she’d seen
them. But we’d never talked about it. Not like we should have.
It was probably too late now.
I swallowed a breath gritty with dust and walked over to Willow, offering a hand to pull
her up. She didn’t need it, but she took it.
“Where to next?” I asked.
“Kate wants to go home.” Willow’s voice seemed small in the empty room.
“Nonsense,” I said. “You’ve got a little more in you, don’t you guys?”
I turned to the kids standing shoulder to shoulder now in the dusky light. Not quite
touching, but connected nonetheless.
Jay shrugged. Kate bobbed her head.
“Sure.”
“I guess.”
“Good,” I said. “Let’s get out of here.”
We filed back down the long corridor out into the eye-smacking daylight. The afternoon
had hardly flickered. We’d only been inside a half hour. We circled the avenging angel and
crossed the road back to the edge of the gorge. The water curled below, deep green with veins of
white, unchanged and forever moving.
We piled into the car and followed the river a little further. Until the road curved in a new
direction. Until our voices were worn low and stillness didn’t cling to our shoulders. Until the
light began to change, and the smell of a lingering summer evening crept through the windows to


Author’s Statement:This was meant to be a haunted house story. Caine and his family were going to go inside, have a poke around, get a few scares, and get out. It turns out, I'm not very good at haunted houses. But there were ghosts here, I knew it. The longer I sat with this character in this place (inspired by the real Stella Niagara perched in all its old stone glory on the edge of the Niagara Gorge) the more I thought about the ways we disappear. And the ways we remain alive.   


Bio: B. B. Garin is a writer living in Buffalo, NY.  Her work has appeared in Hawai’i Pacific Review, Westchester Review, Luna Station Quarterly, and more. She is currently a guest editor for The Masters Review and CRAFT Literary. She earned a B.F.A. in Writing, Literature, and Publishing from Emerson College, and continues to improve her craft at GrubStreet Writing Center, where she has developed several short fiction pieces, as well as two novels. Connect with her @b.b.garin or bbgarin.wordpress.com


Finding the Right Job, My Employment Journey as an IMDB Page

Madari Pendas


Synopsis:
I fumble through multiple positions as I search for the "perfect" job–the one that will confer upon
me freedom, financial stability, and the ability to buy $8 artisanal coffees. But each position saps
me of time or energy or the will to live. I continue the hunt, all while making up companies that
only exist as Tumblr pages, quiet quitting, "stealing" company time, taking edibles while talking
to customers, and purloining all the printer paper I can.

Director: 50% society, 49% generational immigrant trauma, 1% Instagram envy as inspiration.

Writer(s): Gender, economic class, that one controlling ex, CBT skills.

Producers: Mom, Dad, Abuela, and mental illness.

User Reviews:

JaneAustin,TX1234
Kinda unethical of M to lie to the restaurant manager about having work experience, like she
could have just told the truth. I get it, getting a first job is hard...but still & she stole so much
taro bubble tea and sake every day.

AgathaFisty8228
At Best Buy she became a WORSE employee. Our girl was buying Mike's Hard Lemonade and
drinking them in her car during her break, giving away cables to sexy customers, taking hour-
long lunches, and imagining a grand heist where she stole all the MacBooks from the warehouse.
She pretty much made-up product specs when clients asked–no fridge has a built-in baby! No
washer tells you if your clothes are too old!!

James_and_the_Giantz_Biatch22221
This bitch keeps looking for friends at every job she works at, then ends up sad when they treat
her like a coworker. Boooo! No stars. Also maybe try staying at a job for longer than two years.

TheSunAlsoRinsesandRepeats1996
She lashed out in all the wrong ways: coming in late; not caring how she turned in press releases;
having sex in a stairwell while on the job; abusing the time off policies to take trips to California
with druggie boyfriends; using the company's toner for her (unpublished) blackout poems. Why
did she keep warning recent grads to "Stay in school for as long as fucking possible!"

Thekittenrunner6969
I like that she collected a list of bullshit corporate phrases like yeah, I'll circle back; let's talk
about this offline; can you give me that rundown? What are your action items for this week? We
got client buy-in; Brenda, do a drill down; pivot; run it up the flagpole; pivot again.

EdgarAllenBroke3443
M's whole "awakening" after almost dying was soooooo cliche. So she was so burned out one
night after staying in the office until ten and ran a red light? So what? She wasn't hit and didn't
crash into anyone? No one was on the road anyways. This generation! In my day, we didn't even
sleep! Sleep was for communists and layabouts. If we were tired, we just got a second job.

Two-Mes_ina PodCast
She can't hide from the working world forever as a quirky adjunct who shows YouTube vids.
Give up on magic or adventure or whatever. There is no perfect job. She wants to feel something,
live in some grand way. Life can happen, but after five.

Trivia

I stepped on shit TWICE while inside of a Burger King. We're still not sure if it was human or
other.

I’ve stolen hundreds of paper clips.

While in the corporate world, I used to clock in the moment I woke up–since I was already
thinking about the job that counted as labor.

I once offended a member of the Hearst family.

I apply every year to work as a park ranger.

I once interned at a company with my childhood bully, who tried to bully me again as adults into
copy editing a sales deck.

I still doesn't know what to do or if I even have a "dream" job. When asked, I always say I’m
pursuing a professorship or a Fulbright (something fancy to get people off her back). I wish I
could admit I’m only interested in work that can be done while in pajamas and sleeping in with
my Pug, Borange Julius.


Author’s Statement: I wrote this piece reflecting on my unconventional work history. Having held over fifteen jobs, each experience has deepened my skepticism about capitalism and the role we play as workers. What does it mean to move between jobs rather than staying in one place for decades, as previous generations did? How is the workforce responding to a growing weariness toward exploitation and a rising awareness of class dynamics? I also wanted to comment on the current economic reality that forces many to juggle multiple jobs—a résumé that, in some ways, resembles an IMDb page, a long scroll of survival.


Madari Pendas is a Cuban-American writer, poet, painter, and cartoonist. She received her MFA from Florida International University, where she was a Lawrence Sanders Fellow, and won the 2021 Academy of American Poets Prize, judged by Major Jackson. Her work has appeared in Craft, Smokelong Quarterly, The Masters Review, Oyster River Pages, PANK, and more. She is the author of Crossing the Hyphen (2021) and She Loves me, She Loves me Not (2025), a queer love story told in poems.




The Mysterious Menagerie

Chris Bunton

Dr. Bernhard’s Traveling Menagerie had a real problem. All the clowns had killed each other in an argument over whose rubber chicken was the biggest. It was a tragedy, and it could not have come at a worst time.

The wagon train had pulled into the small town of Grand Tower, Illinois on the banks of the Mississippi River, and the Yellow Fever was rampant.

The towns people lined up for the medicine show to get a dose of Dr. Bernhard’s Crazy Goat Tea.

“It cures everything.” He said from the stage, that jutted out from the back of a wagon.

He wore red and white striped breeches, a blue shirt and a doctor’s coat, under a black top hat.

“It’ll heal the fever, and help you rise to the occasion when needed.” The Doctor said.

His beautiful assistant walked in front of the stage showing bottles to the people gathered around watching the doctor with awe.

“This potion is made by witches in the backwoods of Tennessee. Just add it to a cup of warm water and drink it every day till you feel better. It’s a good thing we came when we did so you can benefit from its magical powers during the outbreak. It’s on sale for you only, I didn’t give
this deal to anyone one else. Buy one get the other half price.” He barked.

The people got into lines and pushed each other to get a bottle of the elixir. The blonde lady sold them as fast as she could make change. Meanwhile Dr. Bernhard stood around conversing and answering questions.

“You can use it to clean pots and pans or to get your husband ready for duty, if you want.” He told a little house wife. She blushed and smiled at the thought of her husband having more energy for his duties.

“This stuff will even cure your animals, folks.” He shouted.

After a few minutes he remounted the stage and started barking.

“Tour the menagerie folks! It’s just 10 cents to enter and see the beasts straight from the wilds of Africa!”

He pointed to the entrance of a fenced in corral where several large multi-colored tents were set up. A small dwarf of a man stood ready to take the money from the folks as they entered the corral.

“And don’t miss our freak show!” Dr. Bernhard yelled “We have the best freaks you’ve ever seen; including the Lobster man. He has lobster claws, folks. And don’t miss the one-legged whore, 20 cents a pop. She lost her leg in New York City, when she trespassed on a gang’s
territory. They said she’d never walk there again. It’s Men only for that one!”

The folks lined up for the menagerie, and Dr. Bernhard went back to his wagon for a drink. As he walked, he was joined by a dark figure which shimmered in a way that was ghostly. It was there, but not quite there. The being whispered in a fast tongue that only Bernhard understood.

“We will replace the clowns, with new ones like we always have.” Bernhard said, nodding to the being that drifted beside him.

The being whispered to Bernhard again, in a voice that was like a dozen whispers talking over each other.

“No. We will see who comes, and decides to join.” Bernhard said.

The Being folded into itself and disappeared.

***
The people meandered about going from tent to tent seeing all the animals in cages and tied up.

The biggest draw was the Rhino. He was a majestic beast. He wasn’t even chained; he just wandered around and looked at people with a sad intelligent eye. It was almost like he was human.

A group of four boys snuck away from the crowd and went behind the Freak Show tent. They peeked underneath and saw Sally the One-Legged Whore plying her trade. She saw them peeking, and winked at them.

The boys quickly pulled their heads out from under the tent and ran around the other side, till they saw a red and blue tent marked “Clowns”.

The leader of the boys group went into the tent, and the others followed. But there were no clowns. Only a table full of make-up and a large mirror leaning against a wooden post. The boys looked around for something to steal, but there really wasn’t anything except for the mirror.

The boys stood in front of it, and they saw themselves. But, for a moment they saw themselves painted as clowns. Each one of them was different. Each one of them was reflecting who they were inside.

The moment grew longer. Then, it turned into an eternity staring into the mirror of their souls.

***
The Traveling Menagerie pulled into the town of Cairo, at the Confluence of the Ohio, and the Mississippi. It was here that they set up the next show. The number of animals had grown it seemed; including a pack of wolves following behind Sally’s wagon, almost like they were
devoted to her alone.

A crew of what seemed to be gorillas wearing shirts, trousers and Derby hats set up the stage. Then, as evening fell and the hot summer air cooled, a crowd gathered.

Dr. Bernhard dressed in his barking outfit shouted from the stage.

“This elixir will cure anything! It’ll get rid of the fever and remove warts. Just pour a few drops into your coffee and see what happens.” He yelled.

His assistant dressed in a skimpy outfit walked around in front of the stage showing a bottle to the people.

The crowd stood and listened while a group of four creepy clowns appeared and ran amongst them, doing tricks and honking horns. The crowd laughed nervously, and Dr. Bernhard shooed the clowns away.

“Go on you! I’m trying to sell these folks some medicine.” He yelled “We can never get away from the clowns’ folks. It seems that every town has a group of them! Little rascals to their cores.”


Author’s Note: Most of my fiction writing jumps out at me from things I'm reading or watching. I might be reading a history book and the idea comes into my mind, "What if?" Or I might be watching a show and the thought comes, "Wouldn't it be weird?" Then, the writing comes from there. Like some other writers, I want to use my homeland as a setting for my fiction, when possible. The rest is just a crazy soup that pours out on the page as I'm in the flow of working.


Author Bio: Chris Bunton is a writer, poet and blogger from Southern Illinois.

Dress

Bridget Hayes

You disappear tangled in shoulder straps, elastic bra bands, hanger hoops and swaths of fabric.
Hands punch and reach for holes, neck crunches, you try to turtle your way out, searching for the
opening, hurtling toward sunshine. Squirming, knees bent, writhing, one hand finds the sky while
the other arm, still pinned, knows it hastily needs to rescue the earring connecting your ear to the
silky liner. Finally loose, your head breaks free making room in the tube of flowery cloth for
your arm to unfold and reach out the right sleeve to freedom.

It is a workout. You wonder if it is even worth it. Is this fashion futile? Is style seeking silly?
You just need a dress to wear to the wedding. It’s such a short event. You’ll have it on and off
before you know it. You consider wearing that boring beige one that has been hanging in your
closet, unworn for years. You hate the thought of dressing for others and just want to find a dress
that pleases you. But you want to show some life, some pizazz, with maybe a small side of sexy.
You love the feel of what just-the-right-dress can do for you.

Now over your head, draped over your chest and bunched up on your middle, you help the
remaining fabric fall over your hips and down your legs like water. You sigh, relax, straighten
your back - half posing, and look into the mirror.

Not sure of what you’ll find, of who will reflect back to you, not confident that you’ll get what
you are looking for, you muster the energy to concentrate and focus your eyes on the figure
before you. You are face to face and alone with your very own self. Your glance shines back to
you shyly, and you register a soft, almost vulnerable content.

Your struggle and distaste for the dress hunt fall away. The distractions of chattering customers,
slamming dressing room doors, and clanging hangers become muffled. You slip into an almost
meditative state and can hear the sound of nothing slightly ringing in your ears. You feel the
warmth of your skin and regular pulsing of your heart. You are swallowed up by a humble sense
of quietness. You pause, soften, and utter a tiny involuntary, “Ohhh.” Like you realize
something, like something was made known to you, like you just shifted into a new perspective.

It takes your breath away. You remain still, staring in the mirror, but no longer at yourself in a
dress. No longer at shape, style, and glamor. You are halted by the gift of seeing your own
authentic beauty, the shimmer of your essence, the core of the magnificent truth of who you really are.


Author’s Statement: Inspired by the magic of friendship, I wrote this story at Raleigh-Durham International Airport while waiting for my flight.


Bio: Bridget Hayes lives in Northern California with her wife and two orange cats. Her writing is published or is forthcoming in Yellow Arrow Journal, Wild Roof Journal, Ionosphere, Ginosko Journal, Ink In Thirds Magazine, and Bear Paw Arts Journal. She is a tech librarian who helps people overcome their fear of technology. When she is not reading or writing she is likely outside. Visit https://bridgethayes.carrd.co/ or follow her on Instagram @beoutside2writes.

Fried Chicken and Pumpkin Pie

Adrianne Beer

My father and I got into a fight over a kitchen mouse that lived in our bread. He wasn't
willing to put a trap out. He said “that’s what the cat is for.” I scoffed at him, "The mouse will be
dead either way."
My father is a soft man. He throws away important mail before it is opened and fixes
two-dollar mugs with seven dollars' worth of super glue.
The first time my heart was broken, he bought me fried chicken and pumpkin pie. We
were in charge of dinner because my mother was at work that night. We strolled the grocery
store quietly. After 20 minutes he had ordered eight fried chicken breasts from the deli and I
picked out a sale pumpkin pie.
"For the whip cream we have at home," he said to me when I set it in the cart.
I was home from college for the weekend. I had arrived hungover and puffy. The boy that
wasn’t my boyfriend had broken things off days before. He said we could be friends. I got drunk
and sent him 22 unanswered messages. The next day I drove 2 hours home just to save face.
After the grocery store, we stopped at the Redbox and the gas station. My father went in
alone and came out with two Coke freezies. The movie we picked was War Dogs. It wasn’t
good, but we laughed at the same things. I ate the skin off one piece of chicken before cutting the
pie.
It was during the scene where Jonah Hill and the less known actor were being chased
through the desert that I told my father I might be gay. He was in mid chew and mumbled
something. He swallowed then repeated, “Good. I’m sure it’s easier dating women than men.” I
nodded my head. I hoped.


Author’s Note: I wrote this story thinking about the warm and incomparable comfort of a kind father. I hope it reminds you of the solace you get from coming home. 


Bio: Adrianne Beer received her BFA in creative writing from Bowling Green State University and went to library school at the University of Arizona. She is from Yellow Springs, Ohio. Her writing can be found in Moon City Review, Chicago Reader, Southwestern American Literature, and elsewhere.