Archive for December, 2025

excerpt

Dessert devoured, the dishes stacked in the sink, my mother ignited
a DuMaurier, leaned back in her chair and exhaled.
– You’ll never believe, she said, what happened next . . .
The social worker Lois Daniels went to the front door and gestured
to a man behind the wheel of a car. He took up a position on
the boulevard.
– He looked like a secret service agent or something, my mother
editorialized. Sunglasses and everything.
– It takes one to know one, Dad snorted.
Mrs. Rhodes knocked on Fender’s bedroom door.
– They’re here, sweetness.
The boy could be heard shuffling around inside.
– The place has a billiards table, Fender, Mom said. You can play
all day.
They took turns listening at the door. Mrs. Rhodes, Lois Daniels,
then Mom. The radio was playing a Beatles tune; the boy hummed
along.
She told me she worked in the morning and started to laugh . . .
They went outside to talk over their next move. Lois Daniels consulted
with the spook, who retrieved a ladder from the side of the
house. He climbed to Fender’s second-floor window and peered
inside.
– Well? Lois Daniels asked.
Mom interrupted the narrative to fire a volley of smoke rings
across the kitchen. Through the haze I could see the despair set like
floor tiles in Mrs. Rhodes’ troubled face.
– The kid’s gone, the spook said. Door’s open.
The four of them raced to the rear of the house. They looked under
the porch and searched the shed. Lois Daniels poked the long grass
pushing up through the fence, a border guard sniffing out illegals.
The spook shook the apple tree.
–He seemed disappointed,Momsaid. Like he expected Fender to
fall to the ground like a piece of fruit.
Mrs. Rhodes climbed the back stairs and beckoned her son home.
To those who lived nearby her cry had become as familiar a sound as
the passing of the afternoon freight train.
– Fen-der! Fen-der!
They heard the moan of a distempered canine, the howl of a hungry…

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00731WSPE

UGGA

Posted: 21/12/2025 by vequinox in Literature

twenty-eight
Two hundred and eighty thousand years before zero
in the cave of Denisova
rip the hunting skin
sew furs
you lose your body hair.
Human, the beginning of shyness
invention of shamelessness
as a game of attraction
your wooden spear
pierces the first human rib
you see the flowing blood
you fantasize
you see huge spears piercing the earth
and an unknown fluid springs out
to use and wash your clan.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/192676370X

excerpt

Paul splashed his way to the hatch used by the crew. She resisted calling out to him but sprang up and entered the passenger staircase, ready to run downstairs and head him off before he reached his cabin. But rounding the corner on the stairs she smacked into Lona who was—even at this early hour—immaculately dressed in a pale blue silk blouse and white shorts.
“Good morning, Mrs. White,” Lona said eagerly with the ever-present smirk that so irritated Jennifer. “You’re up early.”
How does she look so damn good at 6 o’clock in the morning? Self-consciously, Jennifer pulled her nightgown around her. She couldn’t remember if she had combed her hair. She called a hurried good morning but even as she raced past she couldn’t help thinking, Lona and David and now Paul. Doesn’t anyone sleep in? She wondered how many others might have witnessed Paul’s arrival. Natasha? Hopefully not that ugly fellow with the carbuncle who, no doubt, rose at dawn to shoot rabbits for target practise.
Jennifer knocked on Paul’s door and it creaked open; Paul, now shirtless, wore a guilty expression and was still buttoning a pair of dry pants.
“So, what’s the scoop? You competing for the Soviet Union in long distance swimming?” she asked, sliding in the doorway and pushing the door shut. Then she remembered the microphones. “Or shouldn’t we talk about it here?” She pointed at the speaker over the berth.
“No, that’s okay. I stuffed it with a sock on the second day of the cruise. Personally, I think it’s just an intercom and not a bug at all, despite what David says.” He turned back to wringing out the river water from his dripping shirt and pants. “So you saw me?”
Jennifer nodded. “Come on. Explain. Sooner or later I would have heard about it—from Chopyk or Natasha.”
“We’re friends—aren’t we? I was going to tell you.” He gave a big sigh. “In fact, you are the only person I want to tell. Do you remember when we met that workers’ club from Toglyatti?
“How could I forget? You were very taken with that gorgeous woman. What was her name? Vera?”
“You noticed that? I didn’t think anybody saw us when we…when I met her.” Paul continued, rolling his shirt in a towel.
“When you what?” She was laughing now. His face reddened.
“When I left with her.”

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562892

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763246

Marginal

Posted: 21/12/2025 by vequinox in Literature

IX
Come, sit next to me and let us
make heroes of all the incidentals
and offer them glorious pages
which we’ll write on their behalf
since all the incidentals lived
so that the others could be glorified
come, let us talk of the enamoured poet
who in a moment of weakness
aimed at his brave chest and let
the bullet drive death into his viscera
and for his lover who he never touched
who also passed early in her life, let us
talk, come near me, and touch my hand
let us both cry for the young woman
who all alone died in a hospital bed
before she could enlighten her darkest dream

https://draft2digital.com/book/3747032

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1771715987

excerpt

and beast followed beast into the churning ice. Blue ice turned bright red. The remaining
ewes grew suddenly silent.
When a channel opened, Hjálmar bellowed, “Raise the sail.”
Once more, the wind pulled the ship through the mountains of ice that bumped
and ground; giant pincers threatened to grasp the vessel and break her like a nut.
On top of one mountain of ice, two towering white creatures stood on hind legs as
if to warn the stricken mariners. These woolly beasts appeared to the Norsemen to
be enormous sheep as large as any cattle on Pictland pastures. The sailors had surely
reached the edge of the world and were about to be plummeted to the depths of hell.
Tough Norsemen wept openly as they stood. Monks wailed their prohibited
prayers aloud.
“Out of the depth I cry to you, O Lord.”
After two days and nights in the ice fields, the fog lifted and the Norsemen sailed
into clear waters with only remnants of drifting ice here and there. They had survived
against all odds. The monks, who prayed constantly throughout the ordeal,
concluded their prayers with joy in their voices. Father Finten intoned the Song of
the Three Young Men from the book of Daniel:
“All you works of the Lord, bless the Lord.”
Captain Hjálmar smiled. Even Illska seemed to approve.
All afternoon and through the starry night, Hjálmar allowed his craft to drift
with the current. The remaining sheep were fed and given water. Finten informed
the captain that little fodder and only one ram remained. “Unless you turn back to
Thulé, the remaining sheep will soon die of hunger and perhaps of thirst.”
Hjálmar appeared to appreciate the Irish priest’s concern and confided in Finten.
“I do not wish to fight the current nor risk a return to the ice. It would be better to
slaughter sheep for food and furs and carry on to warmer waters.”
While Father Finten stood close by, Captain Hjálmar called Bjorn to discuss the
situation. The priest could hear both men clearly.
The captain spoke first. “The Irishman tells me only one ram remains among
nineteen ewes. It would be madness to face our Thulé investors without the cargo
we promised.”
Bjorn answered, “I agree; it would be madness. Our flock of rams was what the
herders desperately needed for fresh breeding. They will be furious when we fail to
deliver them.”
The conversation ran back and forth between the two voices in low muffled tones.
“Besides the loss of our rams, to fight the cold current back to Thulé would take
longer than the remaining sheep could possibly last.”
“The rams were our greatest cargo, and the crew will be disappointed to have lost
their share. But I would not like to face the herders. Captain Haraldsson told me
from his return from Thulé that many of their ewes are unable to carry pregnancies
to term. Thulé herders blame their present stock of rams, the ones we delivered on
our last two voyages.”
“If we continue south and east, we should pick up the warm stream that I know
flows back across the ocean to home waters.”
“If such a warm stream comes this far. No one has ever charted the current that
warms our home shores.”

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763106