After Losing My Temper
fear crawls over me,
grinding toward dust
anxiety runs up my spine
I die in the terror
of the night
maggot filled, rotting
meanwhile,
he wraps
his
arms round death
invites
the reaper in
Hope for Hope
stroke
cut
outer
limits
pandemic
squeezed
perimeter
inward
voices
strange
to
my ears
write
some, read
stream
movies
say
my gratitudes
call
my sisters
who
are as bored
as
I
Dead
Speak
speak
not of desires
I
want no-thing
shrink
me
to
a cipher
allow
my body to die
soul
to flourish
Last Light
stark
trees, traced
with
confectionery snow
eerie
light fades
slips
into murky void
night
shuts window
until
the morrow
The
Turkey Who Came to Dinner
Flash Fiction Story
by Fay L. Loomis
Rodney allowed Margery to drag him
to the theatre to see Enchanted April.
When the play was over, Rodney said, predictable as Big Ben, “Would you hold my
hat and umbrella, while I put on my coat?”
Margery juggled her coat and the umbrellas as best she could, before
they braced the rainy night.
Outside, Rodney said, “The walk will
do us good. Save money for a rainy day. ” Rodney trotted slightly ahead, his
head bobbing like a turkey.
“Did you enjoy the evening, Rodney?”
“How splendid to be seen seated
between the Kensingtons and the Parker-Smythes. As for the play. Impossible. An island could
never make a man fall in love with his wife again. Rubbish. Don’t you agree?”
“Yes, Rodney, complete rubbish.
I
will never have an Italian isle to enchant Rodney and make him see me once
again, let alone love me, Margery thought. It is
time to fly the coop. I will cook up a
getaway and serve my plan to Rodney Sunday next.
Margery’s proverbial rainy day had
arrived and dark storm clouds overshadowed her preparations. She carefully
selected ecru fabric and lace to stitch up a table cloth, a dainty apron, and a
generous bib for the ungenerous Rodney. On Sunday, she searched the flower stalls for
blooms that resembled wisteria and planted the extravagant purchase on the
window sill above the table where it would ruffle Rodney’s feathers.
As Margery stewed over their last
supper, her kitchen counter transubstantiated into an altar and she could hear
Father Henley reciting Holy Communion. Meal ready, she went into the bedroom,
placed her apron and housedress in the packed suitcase, snapped it shut. Returning
to the kitchen, Margery scrutinized her china, selected a milk glass chalice,
filled it with toasted circles of grain, and planted it firmly at Rodney’s
place, alongside an empty wine glass, symbol of her unfilled life. Forgive
me for what I am about to do, she whispered.
“Rodney, come to dinner,” Margery rumbled. She
was pleased her voice had taken on hints of thunder that strengthened her resolve
to execute the scheme.
The turkey cock perched himself
across from Margery, eager to stuff his gullet. Startled, the gobbler said, in well-modulated
clucks, “Margery, what is the bloody meaning of this?”
Margery pecked at her food for a moment, looked him in the eye, and said with lightning speed, “Cheerio, Rodney. I am serving you not one, but a bowlful of Cheerios. A bowlful of goodbyes.”
Fay L. Loomis was a nemophilist (haunter of the woods) until her hikes in upstate New York were abruptly ended by a stroke; she now lives a particularly quiet life. A member of the Stone Ridge Library Writers and Rats Ass Review Workshop, her poetry and prose are published in It Ought To Be Magazine, Kaleidoscope, Synchronized Chaos Magazine, The Blue Mountain Review, Spillwords, Fevers of the Mind, and elsewhere.
Loved the flash fiction Fay L. Loomis, especially your weaving the brilliant story of Enchanted April into this...
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