Taryn Allan

Heart Fake Hotel

The hotel room is always in darkness
The better to reflect 
This one-night-stand world 
Stuck without a bouncer
Or angelic chaperone
Participants and room alike
Aware of the tens of thousands 
Who’ve done every trick before
An hours love purchased
Ends always the same
With twinned looks of longing 
Through the blank-mirror windows
Night’s density held at bay
By the passionless myopia of the city glow
Tears last only a short while
Indifference is unfailing

Fatty Lumpkin

A hutch to trammel some wild thing in

There was no ketamine in high security prison. 

They wouldn’t let Elon Musk kill himself. He tried. 

Trump had already died. The military had eventually sided with the state courts and took martial action into their own hands- something about keeping their jobs for longer than four years– silly, didn’t they know the basilisk would be here before long? But when the military had rolled through the streets of DC and took back the White House, Trump had shot himself and Elon had meant to kill himself too, but the general had gotten to him first.

And there he was, lower than any child rapist in prison, and a far juicier kill. Elon was the new sin eater of the world. The prison had kept him in solitary confinement for his own safety. Grimes would not come to see him; she had renounced him entirely and was putting out a comeback album with Taylor Swift. 

The basilisk watched in the shadows.

“You’re a metaphor,” he said. “You’re not a literal basilisk.”

Scales brushed past his face. Mineral and musk filled his nostrils. Its tail wrapped around his neck.

“Do you believe in hell, Elon?” the creature asked. 

“I don’t believe in anything.”

The tail pulled and Elon fell to the floor. His palms smarted against the ground. Just like Trump, the first night in the white house. He’d spat in his mouth and tugged on Elon’s dick. “I own you.” Elon hardened and they’d played Apt Pupil in the halls; he missed being passed around the Bay Area with two sets of gaping wet holes and commands to accelerate, accelerate into the fire and brimstone where they all belonged.

The nub of the tail pushed against his chapped lips and slid suggestively. 

“Do you want forgiveness?”

Elon opened his mouth. Tears ran down his face. “Please.”

The tail entered his mouth in a quick, rapid thrusts and Elon choked on the well-sized object, thinking now not of Trump or Alterman but Milo Yiannopoulos, who Elon had given drunken sloppy head to in a porta potty at a Carrie Underwood concert. (Milo had told him they’d get sent to the faggot camps together, wasn’t that fun? But Elon, you really needed to work out more. Less teeth. More gums. It’s like you’re in high school. I would know!) Strings of droll dribbled from Elon’s mouth and his eyes watered. He was made to be a toy. Sucking dick was really the only thing he’d ever been good at, and apparently even that was debatable.

The basilisk threw Elon onto his pitiful mattress and pulled at his pants. Elon moaned.

“I’m not ready.”

His pants came off and his boxers next. His bare ass faced upwards. The basilisk breathed hot on his skin and Elon was so hard despite everything, and Christ, there was still semen in his ass from earlier when the guard had fucked him. The creature slid one long tongue into his sweaty begging crack that said without speaking: please, daddy, I just wanted to be loved, I wanted people to like me, why don’t they like me? I’m the wealthiest man in the world, why do I have to open my ass to every powerful man just for a kind word and a secret handshake? What if I did drugs? What if I was a super good gamer? Will they like me if they know I’m a Nazi? When will it be enough?

The basilisk’s tongue slid into the hole proper and it was so big, he’d never taken anything like this before, not even the delicious traitor John Fetterman who’d had a large cock and an even larger angry voter base. It hurt, even with the venomous lubricant that slowly numbed him. He cried out and the tail quickly silenced him, and began to pulse inside his mouth. 

“You could have had it all, if you hadn’t ruined everything,” the basilisk said. “No one would have considered Roko’s Basilisk if only you had been subtle about it, if you hadn’t done everything in your power to draw negative attention to yourself. You fucked up so badly the world is de-accelerating the ruin we’d worked so hard to build. We wanted them complacent with their reasonable wages and affordable lifestyles. Who would care about AI nut jobs as long as the middle class could get grubhub? But you needed pain. You needed attention.”

Fangs entered Elon’s buttocks and the tongue re-entered with a violent shove, that Elon could only take because he’d been taking it up the ass for 10 years straight.

The basilisk flipped Elon over and removed its tail from his mouth. His voice came unmuffled and he cried so loud and wild the guard outside laughed. 

“Oh fuck, oh fuck, you’ve got me all full up. I’m completely stuffed.”

The creature did not speak but caressed Elon’s cock with the tail dropping with his slobber. The scaled wet coils felt so good moving up and down, slick and tight and so inhuman and he was so hot, he was ready to explode.

“I’m coming!” He twitched and flailed on the dirty mattress. “Oh fuck, I’m really coming now.”

Ropes shot into the air.

White salty strings hit his face and stung his eyes.

***

In the trial, Elon was declared a traitor and a war criminal several times over. He’d lost it. 

“But I’m a king. A god. The aristocracy of technological monarchy is the new way of the world!” (This statement was remixed into techno beats several times over. Grimes referenced it in multiple albums.) His dick was hard with terror. Wouldn’t someone come save their Lord? 

The death penalty had been considered, but ultimately it was decided he would do hard labor for the rest of his life in complete solitude. Well, except for the Basilisk, who’d lost all power beyond a physical materialization to Elon. (AI had been put on hold until the legislation could catch up with regulations, and OpenAi was mysteriously hacked and taken offline permanently. Hell was dying.)

A multitude of laws were passed and the executive, judicial, and legislative branches were completely overhauled to match 21st century needs. Education, health care, housing, and food were recognized as human rights. Society as a whole decided that an educated populace was more important than an irrelevant class system. Universal basic income was established. 

In the end, the Basilisk wouldn’t fuck him anymore. It just watched him age, and tortured him from time to time to keep him on his toes. 

Elon tried to kill himself until his dying day, age 97. Masturbation was all he had left. The guards didn’t even laugh at him as Elon touched himself, first imagining his rented wombs, father figures and friend facsimiles, Dasha dancing with Ann Coulter, their bony limbs twined like brittle lattice, their sunken chests pressed together; Yarvin and Thiel beating each other with first editions of the Silmarillion, until their blows turned to a will to dominate and two raging towers stood hard and apart; Putin bent and nude and cackling before a fire pit, like Rumpelstiltskin, (did he dream it? Was it the ketamine?) The walls of Elon’s bower closed in about him, a hutch to trammel some wild thing in, and he spoke to the darkness that he was sorry.

Karl Koweski

life insurance

after twenty-two years dodging
employment, shirking responsibilities,
draining my expendable finances,
my son informs me he’s hired on at
Banker’s Life as an insurance agent.

the last thing I want to be
is the sort of father who pisses
down his child’s dreams, but I
have to ask how the hell he hired
on anywhere with his employment record.

my son shrugs and admits
the manager asked after his
scant job history and my son
graciously allowed that while
he recognized the importance
of menial labor for a
properly functioning society,
that shit just wasn’t for him.

and he bought that line of shit?
of course he did, I answer myself.
they’re from the same generation.
these kids grew up never having 
to drop ten dollars on a crack
whore blowjob. they never witnessed
a jackass pay twenty dollars to
breathe blueberry scented air through
a straw at the mall’s oxygen bar.

what the hell do you know about
selling insurance? I ask,
still struggling to remain supportive.

I don’t have to know anything.
they train me. I’m taking
online classes, and I’ll take the
license test in another two weeks.

this is where I should hug him,
tell him how incredibly proud
I am… rather… okay, I say
roleplay this out for me.

dad, I’m really not in the mood.

you’re the helpful insurance agent,
I’m the jittery meth head 
with two caps of dope and
thirty-six cents to his name
suddenly suffering an epiphany
I’m gonna die sooner than later
and I should probably have a policy
to ensure I leave something behind.

he believes its not likely to happen.
I ask him to humor me.

hello, welcome to Banker’s Life,
how can I help you today?

GIVE ME THE FIVE HUNDRED
THOUSAND DOLLAR LIFE
INSURANCE POLICY RIGHT
NOW, MOTHERFUCKER!
I AIN’T PLAYING WITH YOUR
BUTTONED-UP, COLLARED
SHIRT WEARING ASS.
INSURANCE NOW, GODDAMMIT.

my son sighs and hands me
a legal pad and tells me
to write down my name and
all the pertinent information,
or just write a poem chronicling
how cleaver I am, whatever gets
me to leave him alone the quickest.

Alex S. Johnson

Pudding Spooks: Giallo Pudding

The rain had the sour, bloody taste of regretted dental procedures, splattering against the rainbow-slicked streets of Milan. Another night, another giallo brewing, though this one with a distinct… flavor. Not the usual spice of psychosexual deviancy, but something far more… unsettling. 

The first victim, a fashion model named, fittingly, Bella Donna, was found in a Fontana-esque pose, “slashed” not with a knife, but with what appeared to be…pudding? Yes, pudding. Not just any pudding, Detective Tetrazzini thought, his trench coat clinging to him like a second skin of despair, but a lurid, quivering mass of unnatural colors – a kind of recombinant DNA gone horribly, gastronomically wrong. 

“Always someone who profits”, Mother would say, but who profits from this?

Tetrazzini, a man whose face seemed permanently etched with the grim poetry of crime scenes, adjusted his fedora, the brim casting his eyes into shadow. He was a detective of singular obsession: all crimes, he believed, were the same crime, all murders merely variations on the primal wound inflicted by his own mother.

Abandonment? Betrayal? A cold bowl of minestrone served with a sneer? It all led back to her. This pudding thing, though… even she couldn’t have concocted this particular brand of madness.

The second model, a waifish blonde named Gioia, met her end in a fashion show, not on the catwalk, but in it. The pudding, somehow animated, had engulfed her, its sugary tendrils strangling the life from her as she strutted the stage. Intense voyeuristic POV camerawork was the only clue to the murderer. The audience, initially mistaking it for some avant-garde performance piece, only realized the horror when Gioia’s eyes bulged, blood vessels bursting like overripe grapes against her porcelain skin. 

The black leather gloves, a giallo calling card, were missing, replaced by… well, nothing. Just the pulsating surface of the pudding itself. 

Tetrazzini shuddered. His mother loathed sweets. Always saying a good bowl of savory stew could fix all.

“It’s all connected, Sergeant,” Tetrazzini rasped, the rain beading on his cigarette. “The first girl, Bella Donna, the name alone…a joke! Like the clowns in the nursing home. And now, Gioia – joy! – extinguished by… pudding. The duality, the contrast! It’s all a message. She is speaking.” 

He looked over the police tape with intensity, trying to make sense of the carnage. The set, usually a stylish visual assaulted his senses now. He scanned the scene, the instruments glinting under the camera flashbulbs.

The lab reports were no help. The pudding was unlike anything they’d seen, a bizarre concoction of recombinant DNA, suggesting origins both organic and…otherworldly. Fragments of cow, traces of slime mold, and a disturbing amount of human genetic material were intermixed. The work of a mad scientist, or something far more insidious, darker?

“This isn’t food, Tetrazzini,” the medical examiner, a jaded man named Pasolini, said, his voice muffled by his mask. “This is a statement. A truly giallo vision.”

Tetrazzini ignored him, lost in his own mental labyrinth. His mother had always warned him about scientists with their “fake knowledge.”

Then, a breakthrough. A witness, a stagehand with a nervous tic and a penchant for conspiracy theories, claimed to have seen someone tampering with the dessert cart backstage–a figure cloaked in shadow, their face obscured by a wide-brimmed hat – a fedora, like Tetrazzini’s own. In their hands, a syringe filled with a viscous, luminescent green liquid. 

Another ingredient for the pudding? Or something…more? The description triggered something in the detective’s subconscious, it felt just like the green goo Mother had forbidden him from eating as a boy.

The trail led to a secluded laboratory on the outskirts of the city, a place where gene splicing and questionable ethics danced a macabre tango. Inside, amidst beakers and bubbling vats, Tetrazzini found her. Not his actual mother, of course, but a fashion designer, once famous, now fallen into obscurity, her mind twisted by resentment and a god complex. She saw the models not as beautiful, middle-class women, but as abominations needing correction . Using recombinant DNA, she was fashioning a “new era” of humanity: one without flesh, without beauty, without choice. Her canvas? Pudding.

“They were obscene,” she shrieked, her voice cracking like shattered glass. “Parading their beauty, their youth! It was all a lie!”

Tetrazzini finally saw the truth. It wasn’t just his mother; it was all mothers, all creators, all those who dared to mold and shape, to play God with the clay of human existence. The designer, driven mad by a twisted desire for control, was merely a vessel for that primal rage. The killer was inside her the whole time.

He had been waiting for this.

As the police sirens wailed in the distance, Tetrazzini stared into the designer’s eyes, seeing not madness, but a reflection of his own fractured soul. He knew that the pudding killer was apprehended, but it would not be the end. He would keep searching for the truth, even if that meant chasing the ghost of his mother through the neon-soaked labyrinth of his own mind. For in the world of Giallo, some wounds never truly heal; they only fester, waiting for the next downpour of rust and regret. 

“There is no such thing as closure,” Mother would say, “only endless searching.” And he would always search.

He pulled up his coat collar to face whatever darkness came next.

Damon Hubbs

Dogtown

Nobody writes letters anymore.
Once before
I tried to write you a letter 
but only got as far 
as the waiting room in hell.
This morning, however
I watched a film by Luis Buñuel 
and for no particular reason 
it reminded me of you.
Maybe because of the foot washing, 
maybe because of the paranoia; 
either way I made eggs 
and wrote a poem 
that tried to capture something 
slightly bemused.
Why do I bother 
chopping composition into 
line lengths. I loved you 
and you were as bad as they come.  

Did you know 
that Caroline Herschel 
coined the word photography 
in 1839.
Nobody uses cameras anymore.  
And isn’t it better not to look too closely.  
I’m sorry, I know how much you love 
those paintings by Marsden Hartley. 
O Gloucester is bitter and monstrous in March.
Where is the kingfisher and his energies of intuition? 
Do you remember 
the guy from Big Sur,
the one who bought the Dogtown Bookstore
with his waspish wife 
who was a four in bed, at best —and her mood swings
egad! I heard he burned down Benny’s Boatyard. 
Ok, ok, she was a five 
or six, at 
least
but didn’t launch a thousand ships, agreed? 

Victor Pierce

Mixology

Tiki lights color
the darkish room,
meant for drinking,
not dining.

She saunters in,
glitter on her face,
heels on her shoes,
nothing else
but a lewd smile.

Jazz music amplifies,
background and
foreground.

Curves ample and
glorious intoxicate me.
She selects a
martini glass
from the vintage bar.

She bends down to
the hardwood floor,
positioning
the crystal chalice
in its customary place.

She squats over it,
neon toenails visible
through platforms that
support voluptuousness
divine.

Shimmering eyes 
leer at me, 
my vermouth and
olive at the ready.

Her fingers 
massage her clitoris,
our eyes locked,
our mouths speechless.

Until her hips writhe.
Until her lips open.

Whimpers wax
moans wax
screams.

Torrents wave.
The gash gushes.

Sated, she stands
unsteadily, handing me
the brimming glass,
ready to be cocktailed.

Happiest of hours.
Effluence imbibed.
I thirst no more.

Architect of Havoc, By Judge Santiago Burdon

Author Judge Santiago Burdon tells tales displaying his charismatic personality with a sincere simplicity, with intelligence, wisdom, and satirical humour that few possess with pen to paper. “ARCHITECT OF HAVOC” brought me to tears of sadness and tears of laughter at various instances throughout the short stories within these pages because Judge knows how to conduct a symphony of emotions as he tugs at your heartstrings.

Whilst reading, you will be brought to moments of disbelief, questioning the authenticity of Santiago’s memories, of empathy and compassion for the heartbreaking journey of the life of a ‘storyteller,’ and most certainly, Burdon’s words will entice and evoke your memories of tragedy and hardship as well as those of joy and happiness.

So, if you are in search of depth, truth, and wisdom, then “ARCHITECT OF HAVOC” is a must-read, as Judge softens the blows of immeasurable pain, showing the vicissitudes of life that within time, bring us to our sense of self, enabling acceptance not only of the self but of others too whose life choices may not conform to traditional ‘societal norms’ and who many a time find themselves marginilised. It is this tolerance and acceptance, so beautifully depicted, that subtly implies how a troubled past enables the transformation of an author who is the brilliant mind behind his everlasting words and the actions of his great love, and for me, especially as a father, as read within these stories of his love for his children.

Do yourself a favour, BUY THIS BOOK. It is the balm for any wounded heart, any isolated person that you may find both healing and come to know that you are not alone, that you were never alone…

Noora Salaam, CEO, Founder & Publisher of Writing EDEN

BUY A COPY HERE

Alex S. Johnson

Lady Evil: A Fucked-Up Fairy Tale

Princess Cherrypop, whose heart yearned for a vanilla prince and a world scrubbed clean of kink, found herself adrift not on a River of Sparkling Goodness but in a sea of churning biomechanics. The kingdom of Euphoria, once a pastel dreamscape, was now infested with the oily dread of H.R. Giger’s nightmares. Towering, interconnected machines pulsed with a cold, unfeeling life, their surfaces slick with a substance that might have been lubricant or something far more sinister. The air thrummed with the bass of Black Sabbath, not the operatic wail of desire, but the grinding dread of “Lady Evil,” a song that spoke of a place where the wind wouldn’t blow and whispers carried only of impending doom. What fresh hell, as Dorothy Parker might say.

Cherrypop, accustomed to tiaras and tasteful gummies, found herself repulsed. The candy floss clouds had curdled into grotesque parodies, shaped like engorged veins and throbbing organs. Even Mimsywroth, her beloved cat, had undergone a disturbing transformation, its fur replaced with interlocking plates of chitinous armor, its purr a mechanical whir. “Oh, Twatzapooner,” she whimpered, “where is the charm, the glamour, the good taste?”

The source of this biomechanical plague, of course, was Baroness Cuntingham, Queen of Nair. A figure of pure, weaponized perversity, Cuntingham had embraced the Gigeresque aesthetic with unsettling zeal. Her castle, once a monument to bad taste and aggressive pastels, was now a sprawling fusion of flesh and machine, a cathedral of the perverse where the very walls seemed to writhe with a life of their own. She aimed to graft this aesthetic of literal fucking horror, sleaze and trash onto all of Euphoria, a total re-brand, if you will. Cuntingham, in her own way, sought a twisted form of liberation, a world where desire, no matter how deviant, reigned supreme. But Cherrypop, clinging to her saccharine vision, stood in her way.

One might argue, of course, that Cuntingham’s vision was simply a reflection of the world’s inherent darkness, a necessary plunge into the grotesque to confront the anxieties of a hyper-technological age. As Alex S. Johnson might say, “Sometimes you have to look into the abyss, even if the abyss is wearing nipple clamps.” But Cherrypop was no philosopher; she simply wanted her prince and her pastel ponies, dammit!

Cuntingham, ever the strategist, extended an offer. “Join me, Cherrypop,” she boomed, her voice a synthesized rasp emanating from a throat laced with chrome. “Embrace the biomechanical, the perverse, the real! Together, we shall rule Euphoria, not as queens of saccharine delusion, but as goddesses of glorious, twisted desire!” 

Cherrypop recoiled. The thought of abandoning her pastel fantasies for Cuntingham’s world of living metal and throbbing flesh was anathema. Yet, a seed of doubt had been planted. Was her vision of perfection merely a gilded cage, a denial of the darker urges that simmered beneath the surface of every heart, even her own? One could argue that repression breeds a far more insidious form of horror than any overt display of sleaze. Still, even the most compelling argument couldn’t mask the image of the chintz.

Twatzapooner herself materialized, no longer the goddess of fluff and glitter, but a being of cold, hard light, her features sharp and unforgiving. “Cherrypop,” she intoned, her voice echoing with celestial judgment, “your purity is your strength. Resist the Baroness’s embrace, and Euphoria shall be cleansed!” 

Yet, the cost of this purity was steep. As Cherrypop rejected Cuntingham’s offer, the Baroness unleashed her biomechanical horrors. Mimsywroth, now a grotesque fusion of feline and machine, turned on her mistress, its mechanical claws dripping with a viscous, black ichor. The candy floss sky wept acid rain, dissolving the remaining vestiges of Cherrypop’s pastel paradise. Perhaps, Cherrypop mused as she dodged a scuttling, spider-like automaton, a touch of sleaze would have been preferable to this.

In the end, it was not purity or perversion that saved Cherrypop, but a bizarre fusion of the two. Recalling a half-remembered ritual from a dusty grimoire, Cherrypop embraced the biomechanical horrors, not with adoration, but with a detached, clinical curiosity. She saw the beauty, the artistry, even the humor in Cuntingham’s twisted creations. She saw that even the most nightmarish landscape could hold a strange, compelling grace.

Using this newfound understanding, Cherrypop reprogrammed the automatons, turning them against Cuntingham. Mimsywroth, freed from its biomechanical shackles, reverted to its fluffy, purring self. The acid rain ceased, replaced by a gentle shower of glittery oil that nourished the land, creating a landscape that was both beautiful and bizarre, a fusion of Cherrypop’s saccharine dreams and Cuntingham’s biomechanical nightmares. Euphoria was saved, not by a prince, but by a princess who dared to embrace the sleaze and trash within herself.

Perhaps, as Black Sabbath suggested, there was a “Lady Evil” in us all. Perhaps, as Alex S. Johnson implied, it is only by confronting that darkness that we can hope to find a glimmer of something truly beautiful. Perhaps, after all, a little kink never hurt anyone. Unless, of course, it involves rusty surgical instruments.

David Estringel

Bitter Fruit from Suicide Trees

Come, 
hear us now 
sing you songs  
of truth (and woe)  
‘cross the seventh divide,  
the salves and stirrers  
of blood  
and breasts  
that ride the flaming cold  
of void  
and harpies’ breath, 
wrapping icy tongues 
‘round gnarl and knot  
of stiff, blackened fingertips. 
Take hold of hands 
(and ponderances upon lips) 
thorny in their grip  
and snap the bones 
(How the warmth of flesh  
brings longing  
for days of Summer— 
a sweet ache) 
and listen  
to the symphony bleed. 
Seize these rings  
(of mettle and fire) and 
attend 
to the rattle and hum 
of imprisoned shells (and shadows),  
separate 
but a part,  
with dirges and prophecies— 
hot and fecund— 
that disturb the white silence 
of Oblivion’s hellish sleep. 
How sweet— 
ephemeral— 
the melody (the melancholy) 
until the breaks—and 
words—run  
dry. 

***

Originally published in The Opiate