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Latest Stories

June 07, 2026
Romance Stories Linda Boroff

Charlotte's Law

Charlotte always arrived at work half an hour early. She left her apartment at 7:15 each morning, brown bag in hand, to wait beside a car rental agency for the 7:22 Wilshire Boulevard bus, a tall, broad-beamed secretary with plump knees in miniskirt and high…
June 07, 2026
Fantasy Stories Matias Travieso-Diaz

Aurora’s Blemish

A storm tests the strength of roots, not the beauty of leaves. Aloo Denish Obiero Once upon a time there was a king whose domains extended far and wide, making him the envy of his neighbors. All was well with him save for a lingering misfortune: the queen had…
June 07, 2026
Horror Stories Nicholas Kellogg

Playtime With Lolly Polly

Emily sat in her red Subaru afraid that when her wheels touched the curb it had torched their integrity. She looked down at her phone— that same background photo of her and mom posing at the bottom of some mountain they’d climbed long ago, looking back. Her…
June 07, 2026
General Stories Marvel Chukwudi Pephel

The Wondrous Life of Evelyn Sawyer

It is simply beautiful, like the sight of butterflies on yellow leaves, to have the gift of imagination. It is simply, even undoubtedly, a largely held notion – unless you were born on some other planet – that babies should cry when they come. But Evelyn…
June 07, 2026
Horror Stories Tom Kropp

The Wendigo’s Disciple

The wendigo exploded out of the underbrush in a rush that human eyes could barely follow. Seven year old Robert watched out the window of his cabin in horrified disbelief. The wendigo resembled a cross between some kind of bipedal dark demon and deer with…
June 07, 2026
General Stories Thomas Turner

Living Life On Life's Terms

Written by Thomas Turner. Dictated by Richard Turner. Advised by Curt Chown Sonny is talking to Curt and Tom about his family. Curt says ‘You can't undo the past. Look at your life now. You did a lot of great things. You have a wife, kids and friends. You…
May 18, 2026
Horror Stories Tom Kropp

Chupacabra Demon Hunt

“It’s the Chupacabra,” Andres declared while glancing warily around the grassy range under the pale moonlight. Dan frowned as he studied his dead goat. It was the fifth goat he’d found in the past weeks with two messy puncture wounds in the neck and very…
May 18, 2026
Fantasy Stories Charles E.J Moulton

Corners Of A Spiritual Room

When Juliet met Annabelle Lee, almost all they could talk about was the Mona Lisa. Was she really Francesco del Giocondo's wife, or was Mona actually Leonardo? His mother? Or someone completely different? “Well,” Juliet countered, “you know it was actually…
May 18, 2026
General Stories Matias Travieso-Diaz

Three Autumnal Tales

I. Changes Pass Eighty By the time you’re 80 years old you’ve learned everything. You only have to remember it. I often say that the life of a human is like an American football game. During the first quarter (ages 0 to 20) one grows, develops, matures,…
May 18, 2026
General Stories Matias Travieso-Diaz

Your Lease Will Soon Expire

There is nothing more certain in nature than that it is impossible for any body to be utterly annihilated. Sir Francis Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum As the ravages of cancer continued to destroy Roddy’s body, doctors prescribed morphine to alleviate his pain and…
May 18, 2026
Crime Stories Tom Kropp

Attacked On The Toilet

I was sitting on the toilet taking a dump when the ski-masked man burst into my bathroom and tried to knife my neck. There was no way to prepare for something like that. I mean, I was butt naked pooping on my own toilet at 2am with my wife in the next room…
April 25, 2026
Horror Stories Tom Kropp

Night Watch

“What do you mean they never caught him?’ Kay asked her boyfriend, named Scot, nervously. Scot tried to hide his smile in the moonlight. Kay was a beautiful, blond-haired, blue-eyed, athletic figure, eighteen-year-old college student that was new in the area.…

I watched Karen walk away, the hem of her skirt flipping from side to side, just like the first time I'd encountered her on our way to the dining hall. She was a freshman then, I a junior. I commented on her dress, an enticingly short swirl of pastel colors. The conversation continued at dinner after we met up with her roommate. Now, exactly two years later, in the noonday sun, at the bench where we'd spent hours talking that first night, in front of a choir of my fraternity brothers--and other students crossing the university's quad--I got down on one knee and stuttered out a proposal. She said no.

 

 

Whispers filled the air around me as people walked away, most avoiding eye contact. One guy, I was too embarrassed to see who, patted me on the shoulder as he passed and said in a soft voice, "Tough, man." I didn't respond. I couldn't. My vocal chords refused to emit any sounds.

 

I watched her enter the library. She had an American Lit test at three and needed to study.

 

I put the ring back in my pocket and stood, my legs finally steady enough to provide support. I started toward the library and stopped after a few steps. She just needed time. The surprise was too much for her. We meant more to each other than just sex, though that was always mind blowing. At least, I thought it was.

 

I wokked Karen's favorite dinner--baby shrimp with green beans and almonds in a Thai sauce--put the heat on simmer, and read a couple of articles for my graduate seminar in government relations while waiting for her. At least I tried to. My mind kept wandering to Karen.

 

When I first checked the time, she was thirty minutes late. Now, according to the microwave, she should have been home an hour ago. I took the Wok off the stove, covered the contents with aluminum foil, and called her cellphone. It went straight to voicemail. I snatched my keys off the kitchen counter. Something was wrong.

 

Before leaving the apartment, I grabbed the holstered Smith & Wesson from the dresser drawer. I hated having it around, but it made Karen feel safer, especially since our apartment was in a not-so-safe part of the city.

 

The university had implemented an open carry policy starting the fall of this year. When the administration first announced the new guidelines, I was among the demonstrators rallying against the plan. Now, I wasn't so sure. There could be an unreported disturbance on campus, or maybe she had been attacked, or. . . I ran to the car wishing I'd worn more than flip flops.

 

I didn't see her while walking across the campus. She wasn't in the student center, or the library, or hanging out in the English department. I headed toward the east dining hall, the same one we ate at that first night.

 

I climbed the stairs to the second floor, and as my head cleared floor level, I saw her sitting with her old roommate and a guy I didn't recognize. He had shoulder-length blond hair and biceps the size of small watermelons. His jeans were torn at the knees, a style I personally detested.

 

I assumed he was a friend of the roommate but wondered why he was sitting next to my soon to be fiancé. Then I saw him caress Karen's bare thigh. She and the roommate laughed at something he said. I couldn't hear what it was, but I didn't find it funny. I felt the redness and heat return to my face.

 

I backed down the stairs, found an out-of-the-way couch, and waited.

 

Fifteen minutes later, the three of them appeared at the foot of the stairs, still laughing. I followed them to the parking lot, my breathing dinosaur angry. I began to feel dizzy and took longer breaths to calm down. It didn't help. Instead, I felt the muscles in my shoulders knot up. The roommate continued on the sidewalk to the left. The gigolo opened the passenger door of a red Camaro with T-Tops, and Karen slid in. Son of a bitch.

 

I raced to my ancient Ford Escort, slammed the door hard enough to rock the car, and followed them off the campus. The interloper and my girl entered a weathered yellow apartment building a few blocks away. I stayed in the car until I saw a light come on in a third-floor unit. I gave them a few minutes to settle in then got out of the car and waited on the stoop for someone to let me in, trying to look calm and uninterested. Even with all the violence happening in the world, people were still not as cautious as they should be.

 

I took the stairs two at a time, my head pounding with each step. I unholstered the gun and wondered how safe the bitch would feel when I knocked on the door and interrupted them doing who knows what. I felt the heat return to my cheeks once more, not from embarrassment this time, not even close. I made a fist, my nails digging into my palms, and knocked on the door. As I said, I'm not a gun advocate. Not normally. But now, as the door inched opened, all I had to say was "God bless the NRA."

 

Bio: Jim Harrington began writing fiction in 2007 and has agonized over the form ever since. Jim's Six Questions For . . . blog (http://sixquestionsfor.blogspot.com/) provides editors and publishers a place to "tell it like it is." You can read more of his stories at http://jpharrington.blogspot.com.

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