Daniel S. Irwin

Four O’clock in Quebec

It’s four o’clock in Quebec
Which means nothing in 
Any place in Oklahoma.
I’ve been to Oklahoma.
Never been to Quebec.
Oklahoma is said to be
Full of steers and queers.
I thought that was Texas.
Quebec ain’t got no steers.
Or was that Montreal?
Hell, I don’t know.  I never 
Go lookin’ for either one.
Steers or queers, that is.
Yeah, that don’t mean shit.
Just like this freaky poem.
Yup, it might be four o’clock
In Quebec.  What do I know.

Luz Aida Rodriguez

Blind Black Jackie

blind black jackie,
christmas diamond, christmas star
I’m drinking and sloshing molasses moonshine, 
and there is no time left here
to go to hell or dream of me
both are the same, both remain quiet
for musings of my love 
In the voids, in the people you discard.

but if you were like me,
maybe you could be more free, 
as is divinity.
divinity is my pleasure,
divinity is my place of greed.

Am I divine? Or do my eyes deceive me?
Poisonously poised and awake to shine 
with pretty fragile hearts
gashing in the idle heavens. 
taking all of my lovers but seven.

all that you gave to me,  
now withering away in an estate sale, 
with sunshine blisters growing on your face, 
waiting for the day you become old and unfuckable. 
but i’ll stay here, full of fuck, full of rot,
in the snow deadlier as tomorrow 

so visible, so alone
destroy me as i destroy you. 
and i’m not a fucking HACK-HAG
I’m not old just yet
I’m not old enough for this
I’m only twenty one 

and I bet she’s so grateful to belong to you,
with that ring on her dead molten finger. 
Is she as pretty as the day you met her?
oh bitchless, I fall again
FORGET HER

Preacher Allgood

the piss of the blues

just when we know we can’t take it anymore
just when we know that we need something
when we’re desperate for something to help us get by
something that isn’t a god 
something that isn’t a superhero 
something that isn’t a sales pitch or a political slogan

just when we despair because that kind of something doesn’t exist
a decrepit and obscure old poet limps down an alley
to watch the final sunrise of his life
and the rats scurry out of his way
and the feral cats of the night pause to stare at him
and the smell of rotten garbage hangs in the air

and the poet unzips and pours out his final piss into a filthy oil slick  
and he coughs and he spits and he pukes and he pukes

and we all pause wherever we are as if we heard something  
something like creation bending a note on a battered blues harp

Mark James Andrews

Frank Zappa Says

the Mothers of Invention
got booked 
on a jazz tour in 69
a promoter’s trick 
to pump up ticket sales  
in the land of greed
& we didn’t play 
Top 40 Rock & Roll
This was my Absolutely 
Free Freak Out Uncle Meat 
version of my band 
on the bill with 
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Gary Burton 
& Duke Ellington
who I witnessed asking 
the tour road manager 
for a $10 advance one night
Edward Kennedy ELLINGTON
who wrote or collaborated 
on over 1,000 compositions 
who generously called 
his music American Music 
short changed in flimflam 
ameriKKKa
& I started this tour off
taking $400 out 
of my bank account
so my band could eat
I’m paying my musicians
out of my pocket
tour end I’m tapped out
$10,000 in debt

M Pauchet

Things That Go Bump in the Night

Tell the truth. Are you afraid of monsters? You know, ghoulies, ghosties, long-leggedy beasties, things that go bump in the night. Or do you think they’re just those cartoon characters your neighbor decorates their yard with every Halloween? Truth—real monsters don’t look or act like those caricatures in the franchise series. Sitting here on the metro, looking out my window, I feel slightly amused that others can’t see what’s reflected.  

We’re not spawned in cold, damp castles in foreign countries with names that start with Vee. Personally, I’m not fond of caskets and would prefer cremation. Maybe one of those new burial plans where they plant a tree in my ashes. If I’m in a cemetery, it’s to bury evidence, not because I enjoy the ambiance. Actually, chances are, you’ve passed me more than once without knowing.

It’ll be tonight—after dark, probably before midnight. I still have to work tomorrow. My target has no idea I’m on the way. It was an accidental bump in a store. I only wanted to pass. He wanted to impress his girlfriend. At this moment, he’s at home, doing the quotidian things that make him whoever he is, unaware that Death is riding to his door.      

For the record, I’m not all evil. I’ve helped the feeble cross the street—saved kittens and kites for children. I’ve been a hero in a fire. I hold doors and say thank you. I can be silent as the grave, strike swiftly as a mamba. But when I take your breath, it won’t come back. The people who see me don’t write memoirs—you call them victims.  

Whether my kind are born or created, I can’t say. Maybe each of us is sui generis, with a different backstory. It’s not as if we share confidences or trade craft secrets by the water cooler. By preference, we’re solitary hunters. When I speak, it’s only for myself.  

Sometimes I watch television. One night, bored, I was watching Animal Planet. There were two monkeys, doing monkey things in a tree. Suddenly, a reticulating anaconda surged up the tree. One monkey fled while the other sat there, frozen in terror. It just stared blindly in the face of death, never moving. Nietzsche was right. Stare into the abyss long enough, and it might look back. 

The subway car smells like an ancient ashtray, with vape flavors struggling for ascendancy. A fragrance catches my attention. Yves Saint Laurent, Black Opium. Her face is framed in black ringlets, her wide, brown eyes lost in the glow of her phone screen. I imagine how she would look, mouth open, eyes vacant, with ruby droplets across her neck. 

She reminds me of a kitten my parents gave me for a pet when I was five or six. Warm, fuzzy, mewing until I began playing with it. What stands out in my memory now is the looks of horror on my parents’ faces. Their mouths open, eyes bulging in disbelief. They tried making excuses. I was clawed—maybe it nipped me. I never had a pet after that. Over the years, neighbors occasionally came looking for theirs. By tacit agreement, my parents and I never spoke of those missing animals in our home.  

We always remember that first time. Whether it’s love, sex, victory, or death, those profound moments remain with us. My first was a punk in my class. Being a natural loner made me an easy target, I guess. He tried to bully me into letting him use my baseball glove in P.E. I refused. 

Too small or cowardly to do the job himself,  he reached out to an older family member who came to our school, caught me alone, and gave me a beatdown. As always, snitching was considered weak, so I told no one. But inside, I felt a blinding rage I could taste. The details are probably too lurid for your taste. Suffice it to say, my first was a package deal—a twofer. 

The train hisses to a stop, and a middle-aged man boards. He has broken veins across his nose and under his eyes. An alcoholic. He’s one of those people who were old when they were twelve. Stoop-shouldered, unshaven, in a brown trench coat, he looks like a stereotypical pervert. He would be an easy kill—no stamina, and the nicotine stains on his fingers tell me he has no wind. His death would probably be a mercy rather than murder.  

Not that I’m ever remorseful. I felt no guilt over the boys I’d killed. My concern now was covering my tracks. For the first time, I knew I didn’t need to fear the dark because it was already inside me. Taking my bloody clothes outside, I burned them in our fire pit behind the house. I sat a long time in the dark, looking up at the stars. I didn’t feel lonely, just alone. I wondered if there were more like me or if I was a one-off, a prototype? 

In the weeks that followed, no fingers were ever pointed at me. It was intoxicating. In my hubris, I was still a caterpillar breaking out of its chrysalis, not yet in my final form. For the time being, I returned to my regular routines and locked that part of me in a compartment inside my psyche. I started watching a lot of police shows, often with my parents.  But I was especially interested in procedural programs, which detailed how they caught killers. Know your enemy.

I had been living on my own for several months when a new neighbor moved into our apartment complex. He was loud, aggressive, and generally obnoxious. It was high school again, only now the students were adults who never grew up. It was a bully, beating me again. I saw him as just another glitch in the universe that needed to be addressed.  

I had learned that environmental conditions in the small hours favor surprise while reducing the risk of detection. As part of my self-training, I had practiced picking locks. It seemed like a helpful tool. Finally, on a moonless night, I made my move. 

After gaining entrance to his apartment, I listened for sounds. I heard only snoring from his bedroom. The architects who design modular buildings have no idea how much they help people like me. Every unit is a fractal of the whole. He lay on his back, snoring. Probably dreaming of all the people he’d bullied or would bully the next day.  

That was his final dream. It wasn’t a stellar performance—I was still new to the art in those days. That was long ago, the trail of corpses in my wake only beginning. Since then, I’ve honed my skills, my planning, and my reflexes. In my world, it only takes one mistake. 

We emerge from a tunnel into the night. There’s a fine mist, making the air damp and chill. My window begins to fog over. Good. Perfect weather for a killing. One day, on a bus (or was it a train or an airplane?), I felt another passenger’s eyes on me. Staring back, I felt a prickling sensation along my arms and around my neck. They were my eyes, looking back at me. When two magnets with the same poles are brought together, their forces repel each other. So it was with us. We are by nature solitary creatures. After disembarking, I never saw him again. But now I knew. I wasn’t alone.  

I feel the weight of eyes watching me again. Her face is cherubic, with golden hair and eyes the color of periwinkles. She looks to be three, at most four. Her expression is full of wonder and inquisitiveness. At the next stop, she and her mother get up to exit. I give her a wink and a grin. She giggles, and her mother gives me a grateful smile. I already have a target. Maybe another night, another train.   

I believe the universe has a purpose for all its creations. Perhaps we’re the apex predators of this planet’s dominant species, and it’s our job to take care of what nature doesn’t want around anymore—its aberrations. There could be a million explanations and rationalizations. Or maybe people should smile more. 

Sometimes, like tonight, I remember the faces, the sounds, even the smells. Looking out my window, I see the cold night for what it is—my domain, the hunter’s realm. I feel the tingle of expectation, the thrill of the act.     

Finally, the train reaches my station. Stepping out into the night’s chill heightens my senses. The shiver I feel isn’t the cold, it’s anticipation. I know the way to my destination, through alleys foul with the smell of stale booze, piss, and vomit. Through an empty lobby with peeling paint and stains on the shabby carpet. Up two flights of stairs to the first room on the right. He has no idea that death is only minutes away.    

Maybe I live far away—or next door. I may be riding this train to your residence at this very moment. What are the odds? Right now, you’re telling yourself that chances are, we’ve never met. And you’re probably right. But an unexplained noise in the dark startles you. You debate whether to investigate or stay in your warm, safe bed. Reason tells you it couldn’t be me. My advice? Pull up the covers and go back to your dreams in blissful ignorance. 

Because if you start looking, you might find me. Now, tell the truth. Are you afraid of monsters?

Tony Dawson

The Fall

Eve said, “The fig leaf hides my fruit; hands off, you brute!”
But when Adam got a hard-on in that special Garden
and felt he had enough to fill Eve’s inviting muff,
it meant that he and Eve were told to leave.
“Why not have a ball if you know you’re gonna fall,”
the snake had hissed, which made old Yahweh pissed.
It was to be their fate to be thrown out of Eden’s gate
‘cos Adam dipped in Evie’s well and made her belly swell,
until, enduring dreadful pain, she gave birth to Cain.
A year or so later, Abel popped out on the kitchen table,
for Adam, despite his vice, only knocked his rib up thrice
at least until he was more mature and Eve retained her allure,
for number three was labelled Seth or so the Bible saith.

HSTQ: Fall 2025

horror, adj. inspiring or creating loathing, aversion, etc.

sleaze, adj. contemptibly low, mean, or disreputable

trash, n. literary or artistic material of poor or inferior quality

Welcome to HSTQ: Fall 2025, the curated collection from Horror, Sleaze and Trash!

Featuring poetry by Damon Hubbs, Puma Perl, Daniel de Culla, Donna Dallas, Nathan Bas, Ryan Quinn Flanagan, Jeff Weddle, Marty Shambles, Leah Mueller, Justin Karcher, Misti Rainwater-Lites, Willie Smith, Mark James Andrews, George Gad Economou, Catfish McDaris, and Karina Bush.

FREE EBOOK HERE

Misti Rainwater-Lites

Dinosaur Story

a million years ago
when mommy & daddy began
we’d go home to my studio apartment
on lunch break from T-Mobile
I’d stick a Tony’s pizza
in the oven
tell him
“okay, you’ve got 15 minutes to make me cum”
and I’d waltz back into the call center
glowing, giddy
reeking of Victoria’s Secret vanilla body wash
and on Friday nights
you bet your ass
we blessed the crowd at the best karaoke bar in town
with our renditions of “Whole Lotta Rosie”
and “Brand New Key”
but now we are dry and ancient
getting excited about xmas tree decorations
and the best deep dish pizza in Toledo
we don’t fuck
but we don’t hate each other
and for that
I am certain
we win some kind
of prize

Isaac Offski

Happiness

I’m happy
eating pretzels
watching K-dramas 
while out there 
the sub-zeros 
hurl their bodies from cunt to mouth to ass
never touching ground
distinct subconscious reactions to flightless dark ages
keeping their reptile brains busy

I love the am/pm mini mart
the foreign pours, hot & cold
the armpit grace of the feverish
gas-pumping proletariat
with no clue where fuel comes from
where cars come from 
clothes, sunglasses
their toy pets their pet bambinos
their fucking hot dogs smothered in corn syrup sauces

it’s bankable how gullible the general census is 
don’t bother to elaborate 
because buying in is such a special privilege 
leaving shock & outrage 
to those with “-ists” ending their pronouns

outside
in a blizzard of sunshine 
a desert leveled by moronic demographics 
ocean chock fulla tunafish sandwiches
just me & supra-partial contents of a Maersk freight container
why would I bother 
time-travel piloting a murderous locomotive weapon

I don’t need 
to get to where I don’t want to go
faster