Chris Dorian

3am 

I never thought I’d miss the smell

The smell of spongy roof shingles stained with lichens and the exhaust of ambulances cutting through the block to drop bodies in hope their ascension can be delayed

The smell of stale beer and musty basement hastily mopped with last weeks water bucket

Water stained by the soil from outside and tears from within

The smell of tobacco smoke lingering in the air

Weaved in the thread of my clothes

Embedded in my fingertips

Particles stuck in my throat and sinuses

Copper rising from my lungs 

The smell of sweaty walls

Sweaty halls

Sweaty balls

Left over miasma of physical union in an unlocked bedroom

Or moldy bathroom

The smell of a stranger’s alleyway vomit in the treads of my boots

Pizza or ziti?

Or someone’s deodorant smeared on my shirt and the failure of its effectiveness

The smell of jungle juice and regret coming from the stains on my jeans

Reminding me that open 9oz cups mixed with crowds and music and limited square footage are about stable as a pile of rocks on the San Andreas fault

The smell of cucumber melon or sweet pea body lotion which has been transferred to my skin by some siren who will vanish from my night as quickly as she materialized into it 

The smell of a pissed on dumpster

It’s rotting contents

Or the burnt spoon next to it

The smell of crushed pills that never made it into a mucosal membrane or the ashes they were pulverized next to

The smell of morning dew creeping onto the asphalt reminding me morning can bring many things ranging from a cleansing rebirth to shame

The smell reminding me like those nights,  the party is mostly over

The only ones left crusty eyed and awake are people looking for a piece

Whether it be piece of ass

Piece of the pie

Or peace of mind 

The smell of those that have burnt out and worn their souls so thin they will vaporize into nothingness and into a seemingly eternal sleep upon collapse

Metaphorically or literally

The smell of the real soldiers that march on through the mess of the past and eventually will see the daylight

Even if it’s brought by the end of a tunnel

The smell. The smell that strangely signals a world of opportunity in front of you

Triggering vitality

Energy

Reminding you possibilities exist and that the carrot dangling in front of you was poorly constructed and you can reach out and bite that fucker if you try hard enough

I never thought I’d miss the smell

The smell of New Brunswick 3am

The smell of youth

Willie Smith

My Sign 

Now that I am old and worthless, 
teetering along the sidewalk, 
getting in everyone’s way, 
so rickety and disgusting, 
not even the dogs want to piss on me, 
I have attached a sign to the back of my shirt: 
If found down, 
please kick me to the curb, 
and call a garbage truck. 
Please do not attempt mouth-to-mouth, 
unless it really gets you off, 
because I might like it too much. 

Suzanne Kelsey

214

she was sitting at the bar alone, save for an empty glass
what are you having i asked, sliding into a seat a few down from hers
i caught myself staring at the black ink that spilled down her collarbone
cosmopolitan she said without looking over at me
crossing her ankles, she let one stiletto slide to the floor
my eyes were drawn to her slender toes, the neon lights glinting off jet black polish

i flagged down the bartender and ordered a drink for each of us
when they arrived, she reached over and proffered hers for a clink
i noticed the pale circle on her third finger, a faint indent where a shackle used to be

i felt emboldened by the vodka so i asked you here alone
only then did she turn and look straight at me
not anymore
it took me aback – her directness – and i forgot my words
she smirked (a knowing smile) and turned back to her drink

she plucked the lime from the rim of her glass and motioned it toward me
i love the tartness she said, and delicately wrapped her lips around the rind
her teeth tearing the flesh

we sipped in silence for several more minutes
then she asked wanna get out of here
where to i glanced despondently out the rain-streaked windows 

she stood up, and, downing the rest of her cosmo, slipped her foot back in along the insole
she rocked her ankle back and forth, gripping the edge of the bar for balance
i stared, transfixed, until her smooth, soft heel sunk home

my room she said as she turned and clicked away
i scrambled to leave a few bills for the tab before following after her

214 she called over her shoulder, leading me toward the elevators

i met her in the bay and attempted to join her in the lift
but she placed a firm palm against my chest
you take the stairs she said as her fingers flexed, surprising me with their strength
i backed up a step, the doors closed between us, and i booked it for the stairwell

on my way up i loosened my tie and untucked my shirt
shook myself out of my blazer
tossing it over one shoulder, i found her door, and knocking, found it was open for me

i stepped through the threshold and took in the suite
there was the softest sound, as of silk falling to the floor

i had long enough to see her naked before me, long enough to grin like the fool i was
but not long enough 
to register her own exultant grin 

not long enough to turn around
or escape

room 214

Bill Tope

An Undertaking

Mose lay upon the earthen bed beneath the house, where he’d been interred. The soil was moist and redolent with earthy scents. It was quiet as death. But he was not dead. It’s true, he had two bullets in his head, thankfully not near enough to his brain to be fatal. His assailants had shot him and, taking him for dead, pulled up the floorboards of the old country estate and deposited him beneath the house and then rather haphazardly pounded the boards back in place. Mose had been only dimly aware that this was all going on, preoccupied as he was with getting shot and all. The November air was chilly and he longed for his warm bed.

“Vic is going to meet us at Midland,” Julie Gold told Mose, her husband of eight years, referencing Mose’s family estate outside town. “He has to work a little late tonight, but he’ll be there around six.”

“Great,” remarked Mose, who was a funeral director and married to the woman of his dreams. Vic Taylor, Julie and Mose’s best friend, and an employee at the mortuary, often spent intimate evenings with the pair. They had been close for years. “Julie, you don’t have to cook, you know,” Mose told her.

“I want to. This is your birthday, this is special. It’s something I want to do for you. You usually do most of the cooking or else we get take-out, and I want to fix everything you like.”

Mose licked his lips. “Fried chicken?” he speculated.

Julie grinned. “All you can eat!”

“I hope the cops caught the hooligans who’ve been vandalizing the property out at Midland,” said Mose with feeling. Midland was all he had to remember his parents by; that and a thriving, $3 million business.

At dinner that evening, Mose had a vague inkling that something was up, but he just couldn’t put his finger on it. Julie and Vic were acting strangely, Maybe they were going to surprise him with a special gift? They knew he liked to save money; perhaps it was a new safe? These were the two most important people in his life. An often-expressed sentiment between the trio was that “I’d give my right arm for you, man; nothing’s too much.” The sentiment went all three ways.

“Eat up, Mose,” enjoined Julie. “I fixed all your favorites in honor of your birthday.” She smiled, but her expression was strained. Julie hated cooking, Mose knew, even for a special occasion. Which made him love her all the more. The three best friends had gathered round the dinner table at the estate. Vic reached for a piece of chicken, but Julie wordlessly shook her head and he withdrew his fingers. “I know you like BBQ ribs, Vic, so I made them special for you,” she said.

Vic helped himself. “Don’t you like ribs, anymore, Mose?” he asked, looking at his friend.

Mose shook his head no. “Lately, I have a problem digesting pork,” he explained, and helped himself to the chicken.

Vic started to spoon up a helping of potato salad, but again Julie frowned, shook her head no. “Here, Mose,” she said, “have some potato salad. Just the way you like it, with double mustard.”

“Do I have the best girl or what?” Mose asked Vic, grinning.

Vic grinned back at him. “You said it! You know I’m gonna steal her away.” They all laughed.

The meal proceeded apace. Mose was hungry, and ate no less than six pieces of fried chicken. Vic demolished most of a side of ribs, and together the three of them drank a 12-pack of beer. Julie seemed to have little appetite.

“I dunno, babe,” murmured Mose afterward, patting his lips with a napkin. “The mayo in the potato salad might be a little off.”

“What do you mean?” squeaked Julie excitedly, her eyes grown wide.

“It tastes a little metallic is all,” he said apologetically. “I’m sure it’s okay,” he assured his wife. He didn’t want to alarm her for nothing. “But the chicken,” he went on. Her head snapped up again. “It was delicious, babe,” he told her. She sighed with apparent relief. What was on her mind? wondered Mose. He shrugged it away. This was his birthday, after all. Today he turned 40, and he was on top of the world.

After dinner, the three friends sat around the living room of the old manor house, smoking reefer and getting gloriously high. The beer kept flowing, too. After they had gone through several powerful bowls, Mose noticed that Julie and Vic, sitting across from him on a sofa, kept staring at him inquisitively. Wow, he thought. That dope was powerful; he was getting paranoid. Mose felt very mellow, nearly nodded off to sleep, while Julie and Vic kept vigil, staring expectantly at him. Finally, he’d had it.

“What’s up, guys?” he asked seriously, but with a goofy grin. They became instantly alert.

“What do you mean?” demanded Julie, frowning anxiously.

“You feel okay, man?” asked his friend Vic, leaning forward solicitously.

“Yeah,” gushed Mose. “Super. Just higher than usual, you know what I mean? Hey, maybe there was some Paraquat in that pot, huh?” He grinned stupidly. Slowly, Mose nodded off to sleep.

In the next room, Vic and Julie took one another’s counsel.

“Shit, Julie, did you put enough poison in his food?” Vic asked.

“Of course,” she snapped irritably. “Besides, he ate practically the whole bowl of potato salad, plus a half dozen pieces of chicken. It was laced with the arsenic and the other stuff,” she said. “What could have gone wrong, Vic?” she asked tearfully. “We planned this out to the nanosecond.”

“Maybe Mose has a super tolerance to toxins,” suggested her co-conspirator. “You know, when the Russkies poisoned Rasputin, they used enough poison to kill an army, and it had no effect. Maybe he’s just a physical freak.”

“What’ll we do?” she asked in a frightened voice.

“Look,” said Vic with renewed fortitude. “We got him to sign over the funeral home franchise to you for tax purposes, so we’re going to go through with this, no matter what!” Julie nodded silently.

When Mose awoke in his chair, he was confused. His stomach hurt and he felt queasy. The room smelled like beer and stale pot. Vic was suddenly standing over him with a prodigious knife. Mose shook his head. What was happening? Suddenly Vic’s extended arm slashed down viciously, slicing through Mose’s shirt and into his chest. At that very moment, Mose threw up his arms, which deflected and dislocated the knife, and Vic scrambed for the weapon.

“Why, you sonofabitch!” shouted Mose through the red wave of pain. He grappled for the big knife as well, but soon Julie was standing over him, his father’s .38 police special clutched in her tiny hands. “Julie,” he yelled, “kill the bastard.”

She swore, and put two bullets into Mose’s skull. He collapsed like a sack of potatoes.

So, Mose found himself lying on his back, two feet beneath the floorboards of the old family home, no longer wondering, how did I get here? He remembered, in vivid detail. Now, he faced a choice: bleed out below ground or fight his way out. He chose to fight. Suddenly, the trapped man vomited. At the odious smell, he retched anew. Then he thought; I smell mint, the mint that was in the brand of embalming fluid used at the funeral home. Those bozos, thought Mose angrily. They’d tried to poison him with formaldehyde.

Mose’s head felt like a gourd which had ruptured. Blood oozed from the wounds levied by his loving wife; he thanked God she was such a poor shot. But still, it hurt like the very devil. He peeped through the cracks between the planks of the floor; they’d left the lights on, he noted. That’ll run up the light bill, he thought critically, always mindful of a dollar, but then shook himself to clear his mind. How would he get out of here?

Mose placed his hands against the unfinished boards enclosing him from above, and felt a pang of agony from the knife wound in his chest. He withdrew his hands and then slowly, painfully, drew his hips back until the soles of his shoes were flat against the planks. Through another escalating wave of pain, Mose flexed his thighs and pushed. With a shriek, the boards gave way; the attempted murderers hadn’t replaced all the nails they’d torn out. Why would they? he reasoned. They thought Mose was dead.

Julie and Vic lay in what they now considered as “their” bed, in the McMansion that Mose and Julie had occupied for years. They were making furious, desperate love. Soon they climaxed together. They always did so together, or so Julie led Vic to believe, a habit of long-standing that she’d developed with Mose. Duplicity in personal relationships just seemed to come naturally to Julie. With a satisfied grunt, Vic rolled off his lover and said, “This was a long time in coming, baby. I worked for that skinflint for years, but it finally paid off. No more, ‘turn down the AC, cut your lunch to twenty minutes, flip off the lights…'”

“Couldn’t happen too soon for me, Vic,” murmured Julie, nuzzling his neck. Suddenly she sobered. “Are you sure we’re in the clear? Are you positive that – the body – won’t be discovered?”

“We’ll go back in a few days or so and take proper care of – the body,” Vic told her. “We’ve already got the grave dug. The Midland property is in your name. No one else has a reason to go out there. Nobody’s going to discover anything; trust me.”

“I do, baby,” she whispered, and nuzzled him again.

Mose finally gained his feet and stumbled into the bathroom, took stock in the mirror over the sink, and nearly threw up again. His front was covered with vomit and blood, but the wounds in his skull were, curiously, both in the back of his head. Staring at his reflection, he couldn’t even tell that he’d been shot. There was surprisingly little blood. He felt behind his head, detected two deep creases in his skull. Huh! he thought. She had only grazed him. Was that lucky, or what? He smiled. Then he had a reckoning with reality. His wife, whom he’d loved more than life itself, and his best friend, had conspired to murder him. That put a bit of a damper on things, he thought.

Abruptly, the front door slammed open and shut again. Were the killers returning to the scene of the crime? Moving stealthily, he crept back towards the living room. Hiding behind a doorway, he peeped into the room and beheld there two nondescript teenagers, who were busily sifting through the dregs of the marijuana that the three friends had incinerated mere hours before.

“I tol’ you I smelled shit,” cackled one of the two, lifting a half-smoked doobie from an overflowing ashtray.

“Right on, Elliott,” agreed the other young heathen, taking out a disposable lighter and striking it to life.

“Hey!” growled Mose malevolently, feeling rather put out by this intrusion, all things considered.

“Shit!” gasped Elliott, dropping the lighted joint to the carpet.

“Whut happen’ to you, man?” squawked the other boy.

Mose frowned thoughtfully, drew his hand to his face. “Cut myself shaving,” he explained.

“Whoa,” breathed Elliott. “D’you need, like some help, man?”

A little light bulb could be seen to virtually flame over Mose’s head and he asked the two teens, “You guys wanna make five hundred bucks – apiece?” The two boys smiled.

Later that morning, Mose showered and dressed in clean clothes, and inveigled Elliott and the other boy, who went by the moniker “Diesel”, to ferry him in their ’64 GTO into town, where Mose purchased supplies. As always, in order to get the best deals, he directed them to first one retail store and then the next.

First, they stopped at home furnishing stores, and then at a pawn shop. Mose entered the stores and did the shopping, while the boys maintained their level of inebriation in the car. At length, supplies in hand, the trio journeyed back to the estate, where Mose went upstairs, to the fourth floor A-frame attic, and went to work. Down in the living room, drinking beers they’d discovered in the fridge, the teens could hear Mose whistling a merry tune. Looking at each other, they shrugged. After a couple of hours, Mose returned to the living room, where he gave the boys their final instructions. Next, it was off to the city.

What, wondered Mose more than once, would be Vic and Julie’s explanation for Mose’s sudden absence? At length, after sneaking around the lovebirds’ new home to eavesdrop, he discovered their plan.

“We’re lucky Mose didn’t have any family,” remarked Vic, churning up a smoothie in the blender. “Do you think people will believe he went to the Bahamas to ‘find himself’?”

“We were his only friends,” agreed Julie, with an unexpected wave of guilt. “He always said he didn’t need anyone else in his life, just you and me.”

“I told him I’d give my right arm for him,” smirked Vic. Julie said nothing. “I guess we should go out to Midland on Saturday,” Vic suggested. “Take care of things.”

Julie stiffened for a moment at the grisly prospect, then nodded. “Okay.”

Mose was in readiness when his wife and best friend next visited the manor house. Their arrival was expected. Hidden in the kitchen, he heard the door open with a creak and then slam shut. Julie’s was the first voice he heard.

“Oh, my God!” she cried. “He’s gone!” She was swiftly followed into the living room by Vic, who drew up short.

“Someone dug him up!” he exclaimed excitedly.

“Maybe it was a bear?” ventured Julie.

“A bear wouldn’t have shut the door behind him,” advised Vic, pulling back a protruding board and peering into the hole.

Suddenly Mose made his appearance. They didn’t notice him at first, till he cleared his throat theatrically; they jumped and then froze.

“Mose,” squeaked Julie, with a grotesque smile. “Thank God you’re okay.” Mose made no reply but to wave the revolver he clutched in his hand. Silently they obeyed his tacit instructions, preceding him up three flights of stairs to the fourth floor. At the top of the stairs, they halted before a tiny aperture, wide enough to permit just one person to enter the attic at a time.

“You first, Vic,” invited Mose, and his friend of twenty years climbed through the slot, with difficulty. “You next, babe,” said Mose, waving the gun for emphasis. “Now, both of you back up against the wall.” They did so, and then Mose squeezed his larger frame through the tiny door. The captives’ eyes remained fixed on Mose, who then said, “Look around. I’ve outfitted this room with all the comforts of home.”

They looked around, saw there two pairs of handcuffs, a bottle of water and a battery-powered circular saw. “What are you going to do to us, Mose?” Julie had the nerve to ask.

“Remember how we always used to say, ‘I’d give my right arm for you?'” asked Mose. They said nothing. “Well, I’m going to give you the opportunity to prove your words. Put the cuffs on: Julie’s left arm to Vic’s right, and then the opposite.” He waited, but not for long. Taking aim, he put a bullet within an inch of Vic’s head. The smell of cordite was thick in the air.

Moving rapidly now, they manipulated the manacles and were soon bound together, facing one another. Together, they presented much too large an item to pass through the aperture to the attic.

Julie said, “What if we have to go to the bathroom?” Mose laughed aloud, a harsh and ugly cackle.

“There aren’t any facilities beneath the floorboards in the living room, either,” he pointed out. “Should you find you need to get out in a hurry,” remarked Mose conversationally, “you can avail yourself of the circular saw.” Together, they both glanced at the red plastic saw. “And don’t worry, the charge isn’t enough to do much damage to your prison.” He tittered, then slowly withdrew through the small doorway, back the way they’d come.

“Mose, wait,” called out his wife. “Don’t leave us here.”

Mose shook his head. “That ship has sailed, Julie,” he said with finality, and backed away.

As Mose placed a boot on the landing, the loose carpet tripped him up and he plummeted the length of the stairs, landing hard and rendering himself unconscious.

Vic and Julie tried, but they couldn’t see what had become of their nemesis.

“Maybe we can tear the panels from the doorway,” Julie suggested. They regarded the boards composing the reduced aperture: it was all two-inch lumber, secured by long, thick nails. Vic depressed the button on the saw and it buzzed weakly. Clearly it was not powerful enough to make a dent in the fortress that Mose had constructed. He replaced the saw on the hardwood floor. “I wonder what he has planned?” he said aloud.

Down at the foot of the stairs, Mose moved not a muscle, though his eyes were open and staring. He was aware that all his plans had suddenly gone awry. His neck was broken.

The living room door banged open yet again, and Elliott and Diesel entered, bearing a five gallon can of gasoline. “This is what I call easy money, Dude,” remarked Diesel like the stoner he was.

“Hey, we woulda’ burned down the joint for free,” said Elliott, who loved fires, “but five hundo apiece, that’s gravy, bro. Old man Gold is righteous! Maybe he’ll have some more jobs for us later on?”

Spreading the fuel over the furniture, the floors and walls, they stood in the doorway and ignited a book of matches, waited a moment, and then tossed it into the room.

W H O O M P F!

On the third-floor landing, as well as in the attic, they all thought at the same precise moment, “Is that smoke?”

M.P. Powers

It’s All Academic

Become a teacher.
Get a mortgage on a house in the suburbs.
Buy a car with good gas mileage.
Get involved in the local poetry readings.
Start a zine and publish only those who publish you.
Use superlatives
like ‘excellent’ or ‘brilliant’ when describing the lousy work of your friends.
(Flattery is your friend too).
Read William Carlos Williams.
Become obsessed with his Red Wheelbarrow theory.
Cultivate a garden in your backyard.
Plant it with lima beans, bell peppers, radishes.
Watch everything die.
Give up on it.
Read more William Carlos Williams.
Be sober.
Get tenure.
Never miss a meal.
Ignore your betters.
Go bald.
Get back to nature.
Begin by mowing your own lawn.
Write some poesy about it (in the Charles Simic style – trade
Williams
in for him).
Become obsessed with chinch bugs and molecrickets
and the growth of grass and various types of weed killers.
Crash into a stump with your lawnmower.
Do a flip over the handlebars.
Get whiplash.
Wear a neckbrace for some months.
A fat and cumbersome one.
One that presses down into your collarbones and pushes up
into your jowls so your jowls
drape themselves over the edges of it
giving you the appearance of a Basset Hound with its flabby
mug sitting on a linoleum floor.
Believe that your students are noting your wit
when they’re really drawing cartoons of you.
Sell your lawn equipment.
Hire cheap Guatemalan labor and pay off your house
and pay off your car
and be even more sober
and buy a Hog
and leathers and a plasma TV.
And come home early from a faculty meeting one day
and witness
the meter reader
or the software salesman
or the bug exterminator
working away
on your wife.
You start shouting
and they start shouting and you ball
up your fists and the veins stand up in your forehead
and your whole bald head turns red and then
a deep shade of monkey-vomit purple comes down over your face
and he climbs off her
apologizes snatches up his clothes and balls
them up and placing them carefully over his nether regions
slinks half-nude along the wall and out the front door
and you go into your study
and you bawl God out
and reach for a glass of water.
Then reach for Simic.
When he fails
reach for Galway
Kinnell and Kinnell failing
lick your wounds
and check your pride
and forgive your wife
Because you can’t really blame her.
You turned her into your mother the day you got married
and besides, a poet needs a little pain in his life.
It gives him something to write about.
But don’t write about that.
Keep writing your surrealism, or whatever you call it.
Follow the herd.

Joseph Farley

Time To Waste

I see you wanted to waste a little time.
So did I.

You, the reader, must have too much of it
Me, the writer, doubly so.

Think of all the other things
you could be doing now.

Think of all the other things
I could have done instead.

It seems we both make bad choices.
Isn’t it good to know
We have this much in common?

Let’s make another bad choice,
This time together.

You can read this poem to the end.
And me? I’ll write it.

Paul Grant

Middleman

Christ knows why
But after hearing 
You’re back with him
I’m remembering 
How you told me
He always tried
To fuck you 
In the arse
And how sometimes,
Unwilling 
You let him

And I ain’t saying
It’s nice to do so
But as I think of him
Hammering away,

I can’t tell if it’s
You 
Or me
Who’s in
More pain.

Leah Mueller

Bible Camp Agnostic

We talked about sex at Bible camp: 
three young women, not yet
out of high school, bored out
of our wits in downstate Illinois.

The summer torpor drove us
to seek weird companionship
amongst Christian families—
screaming kids dressed in overalls,
pasty-faced pre-adolescents,
women who wore bras under
their nightgowns at bedtime.

In giggling whispers, the girls
and I discussed baseball terms.
One had already made it
to home plate, at age thirteen.
The other, more bashful,
had reached second base.

I estimated my own progress
as slightly past third.

Midafternoon, dutiful,
we sang songs about Jesus.
The pastor threw his head back,
crooning about Jesus’ arms, how much
he wanted those arms around him. 

I didn’t believe in Jesus,
so my mind always wandered.
I thought of my boyfriend,
and the hardness of his bat.

By the end of the weekend, 
I was best friends with the girls. 
The three of us exchanged
phone numbers before we parted.

We hugged each other, tearful, 
promising to keep in touch,
but, as I should have predicted,
Jesus had other plans.

The first girl had sex with a cop
while she was still underage.

I’m sure my other friend
eventually made it past second,

but something tells me
it was less than what she expected.

At this point, I’m just glad
to swing somebody’s bat,
and I hope somewhere in heaven,
Jesus is swinging his as well.

James Callan

Fantasy Baseball

My older woman fantasy became reality after meeting Maria at a Royals game. I was holding a hot dog drowned in mustard, just the way I like it. She was holding weak, stadium Budweiser. There were two empty seats between us, but I could hear each slurp of her beer. I could smell each burp, and determined she too had enjoyed a hot dog with plenty of mustard.

One of the players on the opposing team got his barrel on a fastball and sent it flying up and over the diamond, beyond the outfield, just inside the right field foul pole. Maria stood first, her beer sloshing over the rim of its plastic cup to splash across the front of her Metallica tank top. I watched Maria watch the ball, its unlikely trajectory to the limited space between us. With her free hand, she clawed the air, projecting where the baseball would travel, hoping to seize it for herself.

Maria edged closer, her beer precariously tilted in the direction of my lap. I scoffed the last bite of my hot dog, stood up, and prepared for a collision, which seemed inevitable at this late stage in Maria’s laser focus for that home run heading right between us. I could feel mustard clinging to my mustache, which I have worn for over a year, deciding to keep since trying it out during last Movember. I saw its imprint, a golden crescent, stamped on Maria’s shoulder when she barreled into my face, when she stumbled over my Crocs, my foot within, and I felt the full weight of my fantasy crush my metatarsals in a series of hairline fractures.

Naturally, I shouted in pain, which the jumbotron displayed for the humble, daytime attendance. My agony came across as fevered excitement, rabid fandom. On sports news, they showed the debacle, calling me a super fan who buckled under the pressure, buckled under Maria, who caught the ball, as she knew she was fated to do. Me, I caught the bug –the big, bad love bug– my face lost in the ample burden behind that soft, cotton layer of the Metallica logo.

Maria got to her feet first, then raised up her ball to show the world. She helped me up, and the kiss cam gave us no warning at all. Without reservation, we kissed with our tongues, escalating to heavy petting with a mixed reception of boos and cheers.

We sat back down, no longer two seats between us. We sat side by side, hand in hand, Maria’s plump, stubby fingers intertwined in mine, the summer sweat collecting on our palms, trickling down our wrists. The Royals lost the game, but I did not care. Baseball was far from my mind, replaced by baseball innuendo, the prospect of getting to third base with an older woman, finally, after all these years.

That night, as we did, in fact, get to third base, I thought about baseball. I paged through baseball phrases in the library of my mind: well known expressions, like “getting to third base,”or “out of left field.” I did this as a means of distraction, a tactic to keep me from reaching climax too quickly. It worked, too, until I realized that meeting Maria the way I had came out of left field, even if we had been sitting in right field, and I was, at that present moment, getting beyond third base with an older woman. I showed signs of climax, so Maria choked up on the bat. She put some barrel on the ball and sent it flying. Together, we hit a home run. As a team, we won big, champions of fantasy baseball.

I know it was the wrong thing to do, but in the morning I snuck out of bed. I watched Maria breathe, the sheets rise and fall in great mountains, and almost crawled back in for a doubleheader. But my broken foot was swelling, purple and large, and no longer fit into my Crocs, which I had to carry with me as I snuck out the door, walking out onto the street with an ugly shoe in one hand, a home run ball in the other.

Ryan Quinn Flanagan

Siemann

I walk into the interview
with a fake confidence I have 
not had in years.

Even the lighting seems half-favourable.

An older gentleman stands up
so we can shake hands.

Good to meet you!
I’m Richard Siemann,
head of merchandise.

I stop and pause for a moment.

So, you’re Dick Siemann?
The words just come out.

His face grows red
and he collects his papers,
says that concludes our 
interview.

Acting as though 
this has never happened
before.