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Latest Stories

April 13, 2024
Flash Fiction Benoit

The March

By just one seat, the Coalition of Hard Fighting Women, More Justice for Women and Green Now had won the election. At 12 noon on Giri (Wednesday), triumphant feminists would march from each end of Sydney Harbour Bridge to celebrate. Led by Prime Minister…
April 13, 2024
Flash Fiction Dominik Slusarczyk

The Exam

I I catch the ball, spin, and throw it back to my friend. I throw it way too hard. It goes sailing over my friend’s head, bounces, then goes into the back of a girl sat in a little circle with her friends. One of her friends tuts at us and tells us to be more…
April 13, 2024
Mystery Stories MegaParsec

Mrs Briton's Secret

Everyday Mrs. Briton would quietly leave the house in the dark. She would tiptoe so that no one would ever come to know that…..(beginning given) She was dying. The only pillar of the family’s well-being depending on a tiny vial and a hypodermic needle. Every…
April 11, 2024
Horror Stories Luna Woods

Cornswell The Witch

The year is 1692. A young fellow named David was on his way into town when he saw a weird-looking house in the distance. The house was old and run-down, but there was still light burning through the windows. "DAVID. DAAAAAAVIIIID." David turned around to see…
April 11, 2024
Science Fiction Stories David Blitch

Do You Remember When?

Do you remember when? Before the Alien Bastards came? Well, I sure do! I sit here in my farm house on the lake, at the foothills of the White Mountains, getting wasted on cheap beer even before the lunch bell has rung. It is a place so secluded, among the…
April 11, 2024
Romance Stories A.Coster

A Night In The Black Forest

My homebound journey following my tour of Europe was interrupted when my plane halted in Paris for a couple hours, leaving me with just one hour in Frankfurt to make my connecting flight. As I had feared, I would not make it. If you’ve traveled through…
April 01, 2024
Science Fiction Stories Salvatore Difalco

Life And Death In The Arcology

My neuropractioner, Dr. Mercury Pope, called my state of despair a waste of time. He wasn’t the only one, but coming from a neuropractioner it meant something. “Let me edit you,” he said, reaching for what they called the Helmet Doctor, a portable editing…
April 01, 2024
General Stories Michael Barlett

The Need For Speed

‘Be-Bop-a-Lula, she’s my baby Be-bop-a Lula, I don’t mean maybe’… CHAPTER ONE Gene Vincent’s rock n’ roll hit song blasted from the Radio Shack speakers in Scotty Ferguson’s souped-up ’53 Studebaker Hawk. Scotty had just cruised the length of the downtown…
March 19, 2024
Fantasy Stories Wondering Monk

Just My Imagination

The alarm clock went off and started playing an awful tune. Tom opened his eyes and closed them back, squinting. He reopened one eye and stood up to stop the torture. The phone was on the desk, in the furthest spot from the bed. Although he changed his way of…
March 19, 2024
Science Fiction Stories Ocelotlzin

Earth Is Dead

Recording… It doesn't matter who I was; I probably lived a long time ago, and I am now just a voice someone added to the audio-visual records. What is essential is the recollection of events that lead to the current state. So, a little history needs to be…
March 08, 2024
Flash Fiction Benoit

Some Enchanted Evening

It was a rugby tackle with tears: Chrissy burst in, sobbing and babbling, hugging James. Her face was all wet, eyes wild. What…? My parents split up, Dad has moved in with his boyfriend and I cannot join them. I am shut out. I have lost my dad. Torrent of…
March 08, 2024
Horror Stories Marvel Chukwudi Pephel

In The Hands Of My Legs

The car pulled up in front of the large salon. The neon sign, that sexy broad thing, on the salon'sroof read "Mr. Gil's All-night Salon". The exhaust pipe of the car was pumping solid smoke, theswirls moving from the car and towards the salon.…

He walked around as his greasy three-inch pony tail bopped with him. He talked to no one in particular and everyone in general.

His suit stretched tightly over his abdomen and his trouser legs pooled at his feet.

His hustle was rehearsed as he worked the crowd in the Department of Motor Vehicles office in Coney Island, Brooklyn.

Prowling for last-minute clients to represent for a “small fee,” he was practiced at his game. The Administrative Law Judges were ready to rule on cases quickly, meeting a quota set  by the city. This meant he had to act quickly too; his card at the ready: “Harvey Millstein, Esquire.”

“Whatcha got there?” he asked pointing to the wad of paper clutched by small hunched over woman. “No habla Ingles,” she said.

Harvey found another potential client, a middle-aged truck driver, wearing a work jacket that read “Carnation.” He also had paperwork intended to fight a moving violation that carried a fine.

However, the man squatted at Harvey as if he was a mosquito.

Strike Two.

Harvey circled his steps before the doors opened and the 10:30 a.m. sessions began. He put his clipboard under his armpit and proceeded inside.

The crowd was checked in at the door, handing over licenses as their forms of identification before they were shuffled inside, taking their seats among the hard-backed benches lining the courtroom.

Judge Jules Phister adjusted his robe and sat in the elevated chair. His lazy eye gave the impression he was looking at each defendant warily.

Harvey took the last licks of his Tootsie Pop. Game on. In his mind, he glided through his delivery…

“Court’s in session,” Judge Phister said, thumping his gavel.

The judge called a name and Harvey rose quickly. His client, Kendra Wilmes, took the oath to tell the truth, and the Police Officer stated his case.

“The motorist failed to come to a full stop at the intersection,” the officer said.

Harvey was biting his lower lip, eager to begin his cross examination. He fired questions in rapid succession.

“Where did you observe my client?”

“Were you parked at the northeast corner or southeast?”

“Was the sun obstructing your view?”

He was like a kid in a spelling bee, his mind in overdrive.

On and on, and with each answer, the officer was fidgeting more and more. Harvey was pleased. Kendra picked at her fingernails. Judge Phister stifled a yawn.

Five minutes into the questioning, Judge Phister raised his hand.

“Inconclusive. Case dismissed.”

Home run.

The years passed like this for Harvey. The 10:30 a.m. session was followed by the 1 p.m. and lastly by the 4:15 p.m.

He remembered when the court benches were new, the wood gleaming with the manufacturer’s polished finish before the gum wads formed a stucco-like crust underneath. He worked before the advent of smart phones, when a line snaked around from the DMV to the deli with people trying to make a call on the pay phone.

His 5’ 6” frame felt big in the DMV’s cramped courtrooms.

Harvey walked home most days, to his rent-controlled studio. He rested on the pull-out in the living room, reviewing the day’s wins and losses, calling his bookie, and reading the dog-eared tabloids left behind by plaintiffs in the DMV.

Sometimes, when he put his clipboard on the table in his tiny vestibule, he picked up the dusty, framed photo of former Mayor Ed Koch. In the far corner was Harvey, who attended a Town Hall meeting in the Bronx where Hizzoner was speaking.

“How am I doing?” Harvey would ask, copying the former Mayor’s moniker. His question echoed off the walls of his small apartment.

Most nights he caught a bite at the greasy food cart around the corner. He considered the Pakistani food vendor a close friend.

“The usual, Mohammad,” Harvey said. “And don’t be skimpy with the onions.”

The vendor spoke in his cell phone’s headpiece, as Harvey shared his many triumphs of the day. He embellished – a little – in the retelling. He felt satisfied that he had made a difference. Mohammad nodded. Harvey ranted.

On May 5 there was a touch of spring in the air, the salty sea breeze from Surf Avenue created an almost balmy feel. Cinco de Mayo. Harvey thought maybe he would toss back a few margaritas after work. He might take the D train into the city.

Harvey felt optimistic, springing up the steps of the DMV, when a giant rubber bad felt like it was squeezing his chest. His clipboard hit the concrete before him.

“Check his identification,” the Paramedic said, as Harvey’s lifeless body was lifted onto the gurney and put into the ambulance. “We have to notify next of kin.”

The thin, plastic bi-fold in Harvey’s back pocket yielded few clues. “Nothing, here,” the Emergency Medical Technician said.

There were just cards that read, “Harvey Millstein, Esquire,” and outpatient identification from the Brooklyn Psychiatric Center.

“Does anyone know this man?” Paramedic Sanchez called out to the court personnel who paused momentarily to gaze at the commotion.

“Isn’t he the janitor?” someone in the crowd called out. “No, the security guard,” rang out another voice. “No, that was last week. This week I think he was the attorney again.”

Harvey Millstein was every man and no man in particular.

______________________________________________________________________________

The author Andrea Della Monica is a Brooklyn native who grew up observing the characters who made up her tight-knit community. A journalist, a mom, a pet sitter: all describe the inquisitive Della Monica. She is working on a collection of personal essays for a memoir to be published in 2015. She enjoys spending time reading, and contemplating nature in her get away in Massachusetts. A worn copy of Edgar Allen Poe’s collected work is always in her handbag.

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