Cover image: "Fictional Nostalgia" by Weiran Yao

Gallery 2

Night Songs

Amy Le Ann Richardson

Barefoot and Rooted

I trudged into the woods with my daughter,
misty rain dampening our clothes from
gray clouds making the last of the yellows and
red pop from the hillsides.

She sang songs, “Three little leaves hanging
from a tree dancing golden in the sun…”

We found delight in circular patterns of
fungus on the chinquapin oak leaves
dotting the ground in periodic clusters,
the maple leaves tinged with sunset,
and the number of brown sycamore leaves making
our path slippery and treacherous.

She tucked her stuffed skunk into the front of her jacket,
adorning her with large mulberry and pawpaw
leaves as we walked, always explaining
what trees they came from and why they matter.

I used to follow my mamaw through orchards and gardens
the same way with my pal, Bee Bear,
tagging along to climb in the branches of apple trees,
my bare feet gripping knotty limbs where she rested,
or delight in the joy of jumping into leaf piles in the fall,
Mamaw telling me stories about when she was a girl and which
kinds of apples were her favorite.

Our apple trees aren’t big enough to climb yet,
but these trees are important too, and I hope one day
my daughter may recall coming out here with me
to name them, building a bank of knowledge for who they are.

She shook a tree, declaring out of nowhere that we made it and
plopped down onto the ground beneath an ironwood,
looking up into the sky, saying, “Listen”
as she pulled off her shoes.

I sat down nearby admiring the scarlet sourwood leaves
still clinging tight, sure to be gone later this week.
I closed my eyes and listened to the soft rustling of
birds in bushes around us, their calls soft in the damp air.

Amy Le Ann Richardson was born and raised in Morehead, KY and holds an MFA from Spalding University. Amy is a farmer, writer, visual artist, and teacher and has received grants and fellowships from the Kentucky Foundation for Women. She is the author of Who You Grow Into (Finishing Line Press, 2024), and her work has been featured in Pine Mountain Sand & Gravel, Yearling, and Kentucky Monthly. She lives and works on her farm in Carter County, KY. See more at www.amyleannrichardson.com or follow on social media @amyleannrichardson.

Rachel Glass

Ocean Found

Nan forgot to wash the dishes so we’re eating out of plastic takeaway containers with the cutlery Mum brought just in case. Nan forgot she was hungry so she fusses over knick-knacks she’s hoarded for years. She picks up the metal manual calendar, the date left on 20th August 1997, gets distracted, places it on the table with the salt and pepper shakers and the chess king that’s been there for two years. It’ll be there long after we leave. I see something out of the corner of my eye; I assume it’s Granddad, come to see how Nan’s doing without him. But he’s not here. Of course he isn’t. Tiny beads of water fall from the ceiling. I’m not surprised. Water has always struggled here, groaning through the pipes when the taps run for too long. Nan’s in the front room, unaware of the flood. Dad calls a plumber, Mum finds a bowl but it’s too late.

                                                                       Tiny whales swim around us,
                          dolphins jump over the kitchen table,
                                          an octopus opens the window,
                                                                                                    though the water
doesn’t try to leave,
                                                      not a drop spills out
                                                                                   into Nan’s garden.
              Salt and pepper shakers, king, and calendar
                                                          float towards the hall.
                             They’ll find Nan soon.
                                           Gills open on my neck,
                                                                         fins sprout from my shoulders.
Oxygen under water tastes delicious.

Upstairs, Dad peels back the bathroom floorboards, heavy with water. They bend, tear in his hands, fragile as wet paper. He pushes the pipes to one side, finds the ocean he left behind.

Rachel Glass lives in Scarborough, England. She has had poems published by Dreich Magazine, Wild Roof Journal, and Polemical Zine. Her poem “Octopus” was highly commended for the 2020 Yaffle Poetry competition and her poems “Apology” and “Me But Happy” were longlisted for the 2021 Yaffle Poetry Competition. She can usually be found reading and drinking hot chocolate. Rachel can also be found on Instagram and TikTok @rachelglass25.

DP Charpentier

All of Me Cannot Be Accounted For

all of me cannot be accounted for
the missing pieces become obvious
in the pre-sleep dark
the time of day that feels like
               the moment after
a song’s last note or
               the slick rock revealed by
               a retreating wave
or the instant we stop holding hands

why are we told not to define
something by its negative?

the arching black bowl of
               the night sky
the emptiness of hunger
—cold, the absence of heat

               me, the absence of you

DP Charpentier is a writer and teacher living in North Andover, MA. His fiction has appeared in Fiction Southeast, his essay in Andovers Magazine, and his poetry in English Journal. As a teacher, he has spent an over 30-year career attempting to chip away at the canon from the inside, like escaping from Shawshank. Accomplices in this mission are his wife Lori, daughter Taylor, son JP, and pandemic goldendoodle Odin, whose barking would surely give them all up in a zombie apocalypse. Nonetheless, they will keep him.

oshi

Silent Havoc

oshi is a mixed media artist who creates artworks in an abstract expressionist manner. He is an autodidact of creating abstract expressionist style artworks and creates his artworks quite impulsively, relying on spontaneity; none of his creations are preplanned. Through art activities, oshi explores the relationship between his mental condition and the dark side of human psychology. oshi considers that his aesthetic is the projection of his lifelong experience of social isolation and alienation. oshi was born and raised in Japan. He graduated from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree and finished his Master of Fine Arts degree from Western Connecticut State University. Instagram: @oshiartist

Christie Cochrell

Wayfinding

Hazel stopped to catch her breath, and waved the others of the group past her.

“Coming?” the retired botanist from Santa Barbara and his wife inquired with friendly concern as they went by.

“I’ll be along.”

She pulled her phone out of her vest pocket and tried again to get through to Evan. Again, voice mail. She hated how impersonal it seemed. Old-fashioned as she was, she’d rather stuff a messy wad of pleas and peace offerings into a real mailbox, one she imagined overgrown with eyebright, wild red clover, knapweed—the wildflowers of the Salisbury Plain she’d learned to name from the packet of meadow seed she’d bought that morning in a little English shop and tucked into a card for Lucy’s birthday. She had it ready in her shoulder bag to give to her granddaughter if—no, when—they got a chance to meet.

“Dinner later?” Hazel proposed into the small, ungiving phone. “Maybe that pub at the top of New Street?” She liked its log fire, the views over the water meadows Constable had painted, where their group had walked two days before with stout sticks, sturdy shoes. “Or I could take the girls tomorrow for a birthday lunch. You know I’d love to see them—see you all.” And then, again, her constant, refraining refrain, “Call me.”

As she continued up the grassy path to Old Sarum, the site of the earlier settlements of Salisbury, dating as far back as the Iron Age, she kept her eyes on the spire off in the hazy autumn distance, in the paling late afternoon light. Storing up the cathedral, the countryside, the field of rustic sheep she passed, against the aching void ahead, the return into the long night—her flights on Tuesday back through London, Munich, Denver, to New Mexico. Storing up and shoring up. Wanting more than anything to walk along the English river there below with her granddaughters and their spaniels—just an ordinary Sunday family. Afraid because the light was going, and the year; the possibility that Evan might yet call. Today, tomorrow? After that, too late.

The cathedral spire gracing the horizon was her lucky talisman, her compass needle pointing solidly at hope despite the odds. One of the bright things that sustained her. It stood for the divine order (and human) Hazel taught in classes and espoused in private life; stood opposed to Evan, her unruly son who’d fought her from the start, and now, it seemed, had fallen out with her beyond reconciliation. Her research on humankind’s attempts over the centuries to live in harmony with the cosmos hadn’t helped with her son—especially since that clash the month after his father died. And of course his PhD and rocketing career in military history had seemed chosen to oppose her and all she believed. They’d gone to Teotihuacan when he was small, and she’d been fascinated by the stone record of traditions, religion, and celestial events, while he had fixed on the forbidding warriors with their shell goggles, raptor talons. Later, though they both studied Daedalus, Hazel admired the builder of the labyrinth as a ritual dancing-ground; Evan the prison-builder, the creator of armor, of sails and masts for Minos’s navy, of those audacious wings that plunged his son into the sea to drown.

The little group Hazel was touring with had explored the cathedral that morning. Salisbury: the tallest spire in Britain, built around 1320 and still soaring above the famous plain that also held Stonehenge. The fact of its survival delighted Hazel; she was heartened to know it had endured all that time.

Now they were visiting the site of the original cathedral and William the Conqueror’s castle that was only scant ruins on a grassy rise. The path led on up to the hilltop where the ruins lay. She couldn’t help believing even now, walking at the end of the autumn afternoon around the scattered earthworks and the mute remains, that goodness does outlive the ravages of time and rash actions; that things would work out after all with Evan and her granddaughters.

She wondered if the unhappy Eleanor of Aquitaine—also with rebellious sons—had managed to go on believing she’d be freed one day from her prison in this castle. Whether the airmen whose planes had lifted off from the airfield below (a Roman road delimiting it on the north) believed they would return alive from their missions. The airfield had brought Evan to Salisbury last fall to write another book, taking his young daughters away from school, friends, home, and farther still from Hazel.

She crossed the outer bailey, the ramparts; looked out again over the English countryside, which somewhere held the girls, to the cathedral spire off in the gathering twilight. She’d gotten no answering call or text.

________

 

Hazel and Brother Raymond sat over coffee and currant scones in the cloister the following morning. He mentioned their mutual friend, the old Tewa dancer she’d interviewed some years ago, who’d lived in the pueblo all his life and took as given truth the myths that made up its cosmology. That rain came in response to the Corn Dance entreating the kachinas. That the dances, the pots, the space of the pueblo’s kivas and plazas were containers for order and continuity, preserving ties to the old world and the ancestors.

When the brawny Episcopalian brother with his scholar’s hands glanced over at the phone screen Hazel checked and checked, she was led to tell him about Evan’s work, his being always somewhere else—“typically somewhere dangerous.” She told him of Lucy, always happiest out in the garden; Libby enthralled by owls, bears, in picture books. “The granddaughters I never get to see.”

It had seemed so serendipitous when she’d received a flyer for the tour of English cathedrals Brother Raymond was leading—Winchester, Salisbury, Wells. The perfect chance to visit Salisbury, where Evan was working on his latest book, on the Great War, the girls now six and eight and only pixel pixies on her screen. She’d come not just for them, and not indeed with any real expectation; but how she’d love to see them and hug them again, besides seeing finally the great religious edifices in England’s southwest, traveling with others of like mind and interests, as she faced retirement at the end of the year, the loss of her familiar world, students and colleagues.

“Their mother?”

“Leana? She was…unstable. She went back to Nicaragua when they were little.” Then it was me, Hazel remembered, taking her place, giving them love. Lucy following her around in the Santa Fe garden, making hollyhock dolls; Libby wanting golden globs of honey in her oatmeal, from the plastic squeeze bear. “And then he took them off again.” She knew she sounded bitter.

“It’s said that when we’re injured deeply, we can’t recover until we forgive,” the man of God cautioned.

“Sometimes it isn’t possible,” she said, eyes down, crumbling her scone.

“Keep working at it. Pray to find forgiveness in your heart.”

She ran a finger around the smooth, hard rim of the coffee cup. Considered injuries beyond recovery. Not ready to tell him about those. She must have looked skeptical, mulish. (How well she knew that look in Evan.)

“Perseverance,” he assured her, “will allow it. Remember Romans 12:12, Saint Paul’s directive—‘Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.’ Don’t give in to discouragement. Be steady in your faith, knowing that divine grace is always there. Well—here!” He laughed, and indicated with his graceful hands the long row of stone columns, the light-filled arches.

She felt again the rise of the great spire above them, its miraculous continuity. Continuity: the connective breath of families, of the universe, that the Tewas believed they kept alive.

Like hope, the only thing left in Pandora’s box—and in Hazel’s. Brother Raymond had given her that. This quiet cloister, the sweep of stairs at Wells, the chance to know the brave, bright Salisbury spire, triumphant over despair. In-spire-ing, breathing into, “filling the heart with grace.” Inspire came from spirare, to breathe; the breath of life continuing.

Continuing, if in shuddery gasps, after the human storm. Out of the box opened by Pandora, that fatally meddlesome woman formed from clay by the gods, had sprung war and pestilence, the stuff of Evan’s work. Hazel’s intention, as she’d told herself over and over, was only to set free a wistful prayer, fragile as one of the Holly Blue butterflies found in old churchyards. Palest blue wings with a small spattering of ink spots, embryonic words. What she had loosed instead had been catastrophic.

Brother Raymond interrupted her thoughts, saying, “Of course, if quiet perseverance doesn’t do the trick, you might try something more drastic.”

“Like what?”

“Faith in action. Jump feet-first—heart-first—into forgiveness, like a forbiddingly cold swimming pool. Plunge in, without the usual hemming and hawing and testing one toe after another. Spontaneous tears and bear hugs always shake things up.”

________

 

Action it was. Hazel lay in wait on Sunday morning outside the thatched cottage with river frontage Evan had rented. The address in the Salisbury outskirts scrawled almost illegibly on the envelope in which he’d sent a check before Christmas to finally pay back money loaned him for graduate school, Nicaragua, his and Leana’s house in Los Alamos. She paced and took deep breaths (telling herself alternately “this is a bad mistake”—against all of her principles of privacy, how things shouldn’t be done—and “we do have to make our peace”), until Evan came out at last. Lanky and easy-going, before he saw her. Then scowling. Dogs inside barking hysterically, a woman’s voice quieting them. The door slammed against any possibility of Hazel’s glimpsing anyone inside.

“How can you just show up?” Evan led her off, away. They walked at far too quick a pace for her, but she couldn’t complain. She found herself babbling, trying to find a safe topic, a scrap of common ground. She told him in too many words about the tour, how she’d been charmed by Wells, but even more—quite utterly—by Salisbury. Then into his continuing silence, how it had come to seem a beacon of hope for her.

“You know the only reason the cathedral spire lasted through the war, of course?” he asked with careful nonchalance, watching his mother’s face. “Because the German bombers used it as a landmark to navigate by. They needed it intact so they could go on finding their targets.”

She felt the breath knocked out of her. He’d always known exactly how to hurt her most; known all the ways people have learned to kill. She saw the way ahead as precisely mapped out as the Luftwaffe must have, crossing the lethal dark. He would never forgive her. The injury to all of them had been too deep. Her hope of his letting it go had been as naive as the bright story she’d clung to about the perseverance of the graceful cathedral. About hope triumphant.

Hazel grieved for Lucy and Libby, whom Evan would keep her from seeing again. Never forgiving her for having taken them that fall when they were six and four, snatched them as he put it, abducted the term in the police report—but really only needing to make sure they would be safe, not in those war-torn places his work and nature demanded. Unmoored already by her husband’s death, by the death just a week or two later of a close friend, loss upon loss, she’d lost herself as well, lost her connection to right thinking, right being, when Evan announced coolly that he’d be moving to Kabul with his daughters and the woman activist he’d taken up with. They’d leave as soon as he’d found a place to live there “close to the action.”

Maybe he’d been needling her, or she’d misunderstood, but Hazel, drowning in loss, feeling herself going under for the third time, panicked—panicked and fled. Bombarded by accounts from all the news sources, she lost all sense of direction. She saw only “a series of bombings . . . a barrage of deadly suicide attacks . . . sporadic gunfire . . . the site of an explosion . . . a change in tactics by the insurgents. The first half of the year saw an increase of 78% in suicide and complex attacks, such as the ones that shook Kabul on Friday.” And always, dead ahead, “children are increasingly among the killed or injured.” She bundled the girls into the car with the old Labrador, Charley, and a cooler of popsicles, and drove them seven hours to the cabin in Oak Creek Canyon. She knew Evan had no idea where the cabin was; she and Gerald had bought it when their son was in Nicaragua researching his book about the Sandinistas, under the volcano of León, where he’d met Leana. The details of his parents’ boring life hadn’t concerned him much.

In that moment of dazzled pain, Hazel had been so sure she knew best what they needed, precious Lucy and Libby; how terrible it was of him to choose to put them in danger. She’d give them the future they were meant to have instead, in red canyons, old grandfather pines.

She’d try once more, she thought now in the Salisbury countryside, stopping and compelling her son to stop and face her too, to explain where she’d turned wrong in the dark that day. Though he flinched away from her, she touched his shoulder quietly as she’d done when he was little, uncertain of his bearings, shy in crowds, to let him know that she was there. She laid her noticeably shaking hand on his tense, wiry arm, hardened by archery, tennis, but with the same freckly skin as hers, the same reddish dusting of hair. With all the anguish she’d kept bottled up she told him as they walked again, more slowly now—almost a sense of taking first steps, baby steps—on into the unsettled autumn morning with a remote intimation of cathedral bells, how much she regretted everything, and how she missed his vital energy. How similar they were, really; contrary but achingly interrelated, like yin and yang. He, Evan, always determined bravely on his wars, and she, Hazel—not ever brave, really—on harmony, on life.

The way the medieval or Pueblo cosmologies laid out, she went on, feeling her way forward. The heavenly bodies in their orderly spheres; future crops preserved in tiny-mouthed seed pots. The great blameless cathedral spires reaching up and up into the sky.

 

 

Note: This piece was first published in The Avalon Literary Review, Fall 2019.

Christie Cochrell’s work has been published by Wild Roof Journal, Catamaran, Cumberland River ReviewTin House, and a variety of others, receiving several awards and Pushcart nominations. Chosen as New Mexico Young Poet of the Year while growing up in Santa Fe, she’s more recently published a volume of collected poems, Contagious Magic. She lives by the ocean in Santa Cruz, California—too often lured away from her writing by otters, pelicans, and seaside walks.

D. R. James

Today’s Jay Imagines Herself a Hummingbird

Well, why not? This little feeder caters
only to the droves of four-inchers who
can sit-and-flit as if the perches were hot
landing pads. So, if this has what she needs,
then improv-ing a hovering hummer’s
an appropriate way to hope. True, her

explosive bulk and her blues the hues
of power burst the browner congress
like blue fire, like a flashy band of desire,
vamping the local tedium, seizing
the break to free-jazz their dreary tunes.

She’s like that time you always remember—
that impulse you knew could destroy
your life—the fell swoop when you deduced
a drab existence isn’t all there is, isn’t
all you’ll ever need to please. In my

cathartic case something like her
entered as an omen I’d’ve preferred
someone even blinder to interpret.
Then what first rehearsed to depict
stock tragedy unsettled instead
into a sprawling drama of the absurd,
a directorial risk that’s unearthed
an abyss of possibility, my
blind alley of visibility. Look:

third shift, a worker, churning dough,
re-discovers one morning he’s an artist,
best home sculpting fragrant stacks
of unsolved wood. And a girlfriend,
no longer satisfied to willingly abide
the swollen lines of lying men, decides
it’s time for that whim she’s always had
to dance. And a wife, or a husband,
in a body meant for loving differently,
confronts the facts, makes a staggering
move, and gradually life renews, re-begins
in the tough time it takes not to go back.

This man or this woman flutters into
what is need, chooses what will be
the vital lead—still wheeling before
whatever consequences beckon next.

Recently retired from nearly 40 years of teaching college writing, literature, and peace studies, D. R. James lives, writes, birdwatches, and cycles with his psychotherapist wife in the woods near Saugatuck, Michigan. His latest of ten collections are Mobius Trip and Flip Requiem (Dos Madres Press, 2021, 2020), and his prose and poetry appear internationally in many print and online anthologies and journals.

Rebecca Dietrich

Marrakech (02)

Rebecca Dietrich is a writer, photographer, and genocide scholar from New Jersey. She has published photography in the e-magazine Causerie and was featured on the cover of their 10th issue. Her debut chapbook Scholar of the Arts and Inhumanities (Finishing Line Press, 2023) will be published November of 2023. Rebecca’s poetry has been featured in publications by Plumwood Mountain Journal, Making Waves: A West Michigan Review, and Central Dissent: A Journal of Gender and Sexuality. Rebecca is an active member of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association and the International Association of Genocide Scholars. She holds a B.A. in Psychology with a minor in Holocaust & Genocide Studies from Stockton University.

Josh Nicolaisen

Polyphony

It stunk dragging Helga
                                            to the bog. I pulled
  the full tarp across the yard. Trenching in-
          to the slush of near-spring, I pulled hard what held
                                                                  the toxemic sheep ripening
  a half day into death. The flies were
                the first to sing. The mother
                                                                   and the lost lamb
       in her womb left my mother-in-law
  wiping her eyes. For six days
                                            she had been injecting glucose into the sick ewe.
Helga’s brood, now a year old, the black lamb in our own barn, her first
              dark fleece just shorn. I let the tarp loose and the dead sheep
                                                             rolled
                                                   down the steep embankment
                                       like a soggy bag of wool and bones. She came to
     rest in reeds and bramble. It’s uncomfortable
                                                                          leaving
                                                  a creature to be eaten
but what else to do? I don’t want to
                                            think about the birds
                                                                                        at her eyes when I see
     a pair of hawks begin
                          circling overhead                  or about Dan’s photo
of the moose corpse he found on Hall Pond and how
                                                         the scavengers had chewed an entrance
              in its anus before eating from the inside
                                                                                                          out.
When the coyotes skulk through cat-
                                                                tails and begin to feast, their jaws
                     release a grateful tune. The moon is new
and gone, but we trust it                       will return.
Fingers and kneecaps in the soil, in the dark, the shepherd
                                                                                                          plants
radish seeds. She croons to the cool dirt.
                                                                                 The two songs carry on
in tandem, like they do,
                                          like they always have.

Josh Nicolaisen lives in New Hampshire with his wife, Sara, and their daughters, Grace and Azalea. He is a professional gardener and former high school teacher. He holds an MFA from Randolph College. Josh is a Pushcart Prize nominee whose work has recently appeared or is forthcoming in Colorado Review, Clockhouse, So It Goes, Appalachian Review, and elsewhere. Website: www.oldmangardening.com/poetry

Joannie Stangeland

Dream House

If the house talks sotto voce, it is ghost-settling, footsteps on the stairs, a beam sighing     If in dream the rooms hold, softly, the light, they stay in my waking’s cupboards     If the house is mother’s, this is a dream and she has moved away     If the tree outside was a ghost tree, it shivers in the wind     If my child room had a room behind it, the dream is radioactive     If the past is Geiger-counted, it has a real hole in the kitchen wall

If good lookin’ cookin’ and Folsom prison blues twang and thump, the volume bumping up, the father, playing Johnny and Hank, drank Hamm’s after Hamm’s     If my sister says I went to the kitchen, asked to turn the music down, turn it down, I say, maybe once     If the father moved out and moved again, we meet at the diner for eggs and bacon, books and politics     If he seems happy, I will finally believe him

*

If the chime on the porch rings, it is wind o’clock     If the house is the mother’s mother’s house, the wind is talking     If nothing to do but listen, prime the pump, that well a dry way to spend summer     If the mother’s mother’s house, it anchored the orchard, grass waves roughing our calves     If the pond was too small for boats or swimming, the night still made a star ocean

If I wanted to stay, to walk from porch to cabin to shed to coop     If blue shadows pooled under the firs, the hill running up     If the red rose, peace rose, and hollyhocks, wind in the morning     If the wind spoke sage and apple     If after the mother’s mother died, the lawn grown over and undone, I could not come back

When hollyhocks flank my own gate, they bloom delicate yellow and peach like my mother’s mother’s dresses     When stalks lean in sunlight, spires going to seed, I sink from dreams of an attic room with one window, a blue bowl for three oranges I will not peel     When I am drifting between rooms, between ghosts listening, talk to me, wind

*

If a winter lawn speaks of fallen leaves, each dream drifting shuns interpretation     If the signs are made by birds or bones or the hand’s map, each story lies in sleep’s throat like dust in the corners     If neglect is a sin, I am numerous     If the house needs tending, it is love     If the house needs love, love hungers for tending     If in my waking days I hunger and need, needle and bury, for what     If in a dream my first husband lives, he leaves the house, and I know he will not come back

If the dream house has an extra story, more rooms than the dream could open, I do not find it until too late     If the mind, or what lives under the mind, constructs its own home, the textures of light build     If the precise thickness of air bears that light, will the dream climb back to that attic room     If I choose an orange from the bowl, how long will I sit without eating the fruit

Joannie Stangeland is the author of several poetry collections, most recently The Scene You See (Ravenna Press). She has received the Crosswinds Poetry Journal grand prize and the Floating Bridge Press Chapbook Award. Her poems have also appeared in I Sing the Salmon Home, The Pedestal Magazine, Cider Press Review, Whale Road Review, The MacGuffin, Two Hawks Quarterly, SWWIM, Prairie Schooner, New England Review, and other journals and anthologies. Joannie lives in Seattle, works by day as a technical writer, and holds an MFA from the Rainier Writing Workshop.

Linda Briskin

Ode to Julia Margaret Cameron (II)

Photo by Linda Briskin

A Possibly True Story About (a) Memory

My sister Cora is always taking my things: a bottle of pearl-green nail polish tucked in her pocket, a striped scarf twined around her neck, a blue sweater—my favourite—pulled on over her clothes, a purple pen I use only to write letters to my pal in Scotland. When I confront her, she says, “Just borrowing,” in a mocking tone too old for her nine years.

Cora confounds me. Earlier this morning she slid a note under my door, “I love you, dear sister Aline.” It was written in my purple ink and made my teeth ache.

Cora is stranger than strange. She’s presumptuous, her confidence irritating, her gangly limbs in a constant state of movement. She lies all the time—with no shame. She lies about things that don’t matter and no one cares. She lies about things that matter and nobody notices, enthralled as they are with her capricious laughter, cropped red curls and clever ways.

I’m the only one who sees it all. Sometimes I think she’s a pathological liar. Regardless of what dishonest, manipulative, deceitful things she does, my mother responds: “That’s just Cora,” with a hint of a smile. “Anyway, Aline, she’s just a child. You’re seventeen, almost grown up.”

Cora is adored. I have no memory of ever being adored. I remember rules and expectations: keep clean, tidy your room, act your age, grow up, be quiet, don’t make trouble, behave yourself, tell the truth.

Now Cora has stolen a memory from me, a vivid recollection of when I was saved by a blue jay and learned that birds communicate with us. I was fifteen at the time.

*

Towards the end of a day in late October, I’m walking in the woods at the edge of our house. A steady stream of maple leaves float to the forest floor. Although the heady scents of pine and cedar saturate the air, the trees look tired. The sky is clouding over. The forest is suddenly unfamiliar. I’ve strayed into a thicket of tangled branches, gnarled fingers plucking at my clothes. The path recedes in the deepening darkness. My stomach churns. Will I find my way home? Will anyone notice I’m missing? Dry leaves and twig debris crunch under my feet, startling me and the chipmunks. What lurks in the forest at night?

A blue jay stops on a branch in front of me, its feathers shimmering as if the sun has broken through the darkness. Its brown eyes are intense and curious. It knows I’m lost. I’ve read that blue jays, like ravens and crows, are the smartest animals on earth. I’m comforted by its attention. A companion, an ally. I’m not alone.

It flits in one direction. I follow, not certain what else to do. When the path diverges, the bird sits alert on a branch, scanning the forest. It waits patiently for me to catch up before choosing a direction. Seven times it stops and waits. Counting distracts me from the encroaching shadows. Then I see our house at the edge of the cornfield. The bird disappears. I hear its raucous caw, joyful.

I stumble into the house, calling out, “I’m here! I’m safe!” At first, my words echo in emptiness. But soon, I’m settled in front of a fire wrapped in a green crocheted blanket. Only my father is home. He hands me a cup of warm chocolate.

“What happened?” he asks.

“I was lost. So scared! Then I was saved—by a blue jay.” After recounting the details, I declare, “Birds can protect us in dark forests. The world is not quite what it seems.”

*

Today is exactly two years since my rescue. I’ll mark the day with a visit to the woods. As I’m walking down the stairs, I hear Cora’s voice, her cadence so similar to mine it might have been me speaking. She says with a sigh, “I was out of the woods and safely home. I heard the blue jay’s call before it disappeared.”

I’m stunned. I never shared the story of my rescue again, not with anyone, especially not with Cora. It was precious, a small protection I carry around with me.

Who is Cora speaking to? Maybe only to herself. Then she says: “My sister Aline is stranger than strange. She’s eight years older so really a grown-up, but she lies. She lies about me and about memories. She says I’m an affront to her. Not sure what affront means. A front? A back? Aline uses big words to confuse me and distract me from her lies. Maybe the older you get, the more you lie.”

Is Cora stealing my memories like my blue scarf and purple pen?

Yet just for a sliver of a second, I wonder whether the memory is mine after all.

Linda Briskin is a writer and fine art photographer. In her fiction, she is drawn to writing about whimsy, fleeting moments, and the small secrets of interior lives. Her creative nonfiction bends genres, makes quirky connections and highlights social justice themes—quietly. Her writing has recently appeared in Fictive Dream, South 8, Barren, *82 Review, Masque & Spectacle, The Schuylkill Valley Review, Canary, Tipping the Scales, Montreal Serai, The Ekphrastic Review, Rise Up Review and Cobalt Review, among others. As a photographer, she is intrigued by the permeability between the remembered and the imagined, and the ambiguities in what we choose to see. Recently, her photographs have been published in Humana Obscura, Ilanot Review, The Hopper, Flare Journal, Alluvian, Canadian Camera, Tiny Seed Literary Journal, Burningword Literary Journal and High Shelf Press. Website: www.lindabriskinphotography.com / Instagram: @linda.briskin

Weiran Yao

Fictional Nostalgia (2)

Weiran Yao (Eiro Yao) is a new media artist and transdisciplinary director based in London, originally from China. Their works cover a wide range of forms, varying from digital painting, 3D animation, and short films to mixed reality and video games. Storytelling and audience immersion play important roles in their creations. They have cultivated interests mainly on the political nature issues related to identity recognition and construction, crisis of de-subjectivity under the development of technology, and symbiosis between humans and nature, as well as inter-human intimacy and surveillance. With curiosity, creativity, empathy, and attitude, they have developed systemic capacity to express their ideas and put inspirations into practice via trans-media methods. You can find more about their works at weiranyao.cargo.site or @eiro.ocnebe on Instagram.

Florence Murry

Turning Circles in a Safeway Parking Lot

Caught in yellow light, we spin in spirals
                                                            on a midweek afternoon.
Mom in the Civic’s
                                             passenger seat
just the two of us.             Her open face smiles,
and her laugh unbolts.                 By now

she’s legally blind.

Sun escapes behind roofs
                                             while the motion keeps
                                                                                        her boundless.

Unrecognizable, I turn                 and turn again.

Her laugh like her favorites Lucille Ball
                                                          or Katharine Hepburn—

a laugh that breaks glass.                           A sound I rarely hear.

I think about the way the past detours its way back.

                              And, I’m in the spin again.

I turn the car
                                             in ridiculous circles.
I keep at it.                                      Sun blazes yellow to orange.

Her gnarled hands wrap
                                                          and unwrap the sky turquoise.

Florence Murry is the author of Last Run Before Sunset. Her poems have appeared in Slipstream Press, Heartwood Literary Magazine, Stoneboat Literary Magazine, Off the Coast, Bluestem Magazine, Westchester Review, Cumberland River Review, and others. Florence lives and writes in Southern California.

K.L. Johnston

Traveling West

I can hear your heart expanding
as we read the short notes shared by
your wife, pass around the photos
you’ve sent home

I want to be jealous but cannot.
Hearing in your shared discoveries
echoes of my own, separated
by ten years in experience.

Discovering the prairie
you have re-found wonder
in the song of the meadowlark,
the scent of sun on sage.

When your eyes are too full of vastness
and the shade of cottonwoods,
when your ears are too full
of the night songs of the coyotes

you must return home, so full
that wonder will spill from you like tears
and your voice will keep bubbling from
that deep well, sustaining all of us for years.

K.L. Johnston is an internationally published poet whose work has appeared in numerous literary magazines and anthologies. She holds a degree in English and Communications from the University of South Carolina and her wide-ranging interests contribute to her writing. Her work explores the connections of humanity with the physical, spiritual, and liminal places she has stumbled into in her travels and in her own back yard. She devotes her unscheduled time to writing and satisfying her curiosity about people and this planet. You can find out more by visiting her Facebook page “A Written World.”

Susan Cummins Miller

Strong Ranch, WY

Tucson writer Susan Cummins Miller is a former field geologist, paleontologist, and educator. She is the author of two poetry collections (Making Silent Stones Sing and Deciphering the Desert), six novels, and an anthology of women writers of the American frontier. Her poems, short stories, and essays appear frequently in journals and anthologies, including the recent Trouble in Tucson and the forthcoming So West: Wrong Turn. Her digital images grace four poetry book covers and a previous issue of Wild Roof Journal.

Janet Powers

Rhododendron

Janet Powers grew up in a family of photographers – both her grandfather and father were award-winning amateur photographers, and her father was well known for his slide travelogues on many parts of the world. She received her first box camera at the age of seven and hasn’t stopped taking pictures since. Janet’s photos have been exhibited at juried shows and art councils in Virginia, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Maryland, and Colorado. She is best known as Professor Emerita at Gettysburg College and local director of the Lifelong Learning Academy for Senior Citizens with Curious Minds.

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