Jeff Weddle

What to Watch For

Killers with small knives 
obscure poisons known to the elect 
photographs deciphered and burned 
one bullet left in one revolver 
a woman somewhere afraid and hidden 
friendships tested and found wanting 
betrayal behind a mask 
the dream of a final score 
the dream of victory
the dream of nothing 
silence
killers with ropes 
killers with blunt objects
killers with blank faces 
bounced checks and no time left
delicious whiskey in dangerous bars
cigarettes smoked in the dark
confidences shared with pretty strangers
the child hidden well enough
easy money
easy love
easy the vanishing 
hope left in a sack in the woods
dismembered items
lovely auburn hair
shooting stars 
rage, tears, catastrophe 
the perfect moment 
the leaving 
the lovely eyes
never seen again

Dan Cuddy

Report From Beerland

seedy bars are always good for songs and cities

faded posters announcing some forgettable performance

fleur de lis wallpaper—St. Louis or New Orleans

the unintentional clank of piano keys

the river roiling

Tina rolling on Proud Mary

the back door open

an unheard whisper from the night

all those tires on the road

in the morning clean-up crews mopping the dance-forsaken floors

door open to release the stench of this night’s crowd

arse and elbowed so tight

the angelic barmaid with buck teeth
holding a tray of drinks up so high
as she works her way to far tables

amazing there aren’t patrons like dogs
leaping to clench the lip of a glass in their teeth

politics and failed marriages were certainly caught in their teeth

heroes everywhere in conversations nodding off

table tops aren’t pillows for spinning dreams

outside stars as far away as a kid’s grasp on things

things are stumbling forward, as they always do, in the dark

Daniel S. Irwin

Unremarkable

The stone didn’t seem
All that unique.
Just another in a sea
Of carefully arranged
Blocks of rocks.

A bit of moss grows
On the south side
And the base has
A few chipped spots
Created by the caretaker’s
Riding lawn mower.

Unremarkable in this
Silent setting where
Supposed equality in fate
Is belied in the last take
Of ‘one-up-manship’
In grandness of memorial.

Unremarkable other than
For the misspelling of
My name.

Marcelo Medone

Supreme Delight

“This is delicious!” Markos exclaimed, finishing swallowing his bite and smiling.

Through the cameras, Irina, the supervisor of the scientific study, closely monitored him from the next room, recording each of his reactions and comments on a sheet of paper.

Markos Panteli, the twelfth volunteer of the day, moved his arms and hands in the air, performing maneuvers and gestures that reflected his simulated activity, leaning gently on his swivel chair, wearing his virtual reality headset. For Markos, everything he was experiencing was as real as the bunion on his left big toe, which had been bothering him for six months.

“I’m glad you like the shrimp cocktail,” Irina told him through her microphone. “Why don’t you try the asparagus tart? Everyone agrees it’s a delicacy.”

“I don’t like asparagus. But if you say so, precious, I’ll give you a chance,” Markos said, dipping his spoon into the tart and popping a piece into his mouth.

He savored it for a moment and swallowed it, along with a sip of white wine.

“Not bad! I’m going to have to reconsider my opinion on asparagus.”

“I’ll ask you to moderate your alcohol consumption, Markos. We don’t want you to end up getting drunk.”

“But it’s virtual alcohol!”

“But your brain doesn’t know. The effect is very similar to that of real alcohol. Produces the same euphoria and disinhibition as physical wine.”

“Okay. I will keep that in mind in the future.”

Markos gulped down what was left of his glass. Without hesitation, he filled it again. Irina winced, looking at him on her monitor.

On the wall opposite Markos a huge virtual screen was being projected, from end to end, with a pleasant scene of a calm sea ebbing foamy waves on a tropical beach, with lush palm trees and a sun looming on the horizon. The sound of the waves gently lapping was relaxing.

“Won’t you select some music, Markos? You can choose from more than a million musical themes. Stretch your right hand and select the genre you prefer: classical, techno, blues, tango, jazz, rock, pop . . .”

Carmina Burana. I would like to listen to Carmina Burana while I continue eating.”

Immediately, Carl Orff’s vibrant cantata began to play, with his powerful O Fortuna, adding to the sound of the ocean waves. Markos began to wave his hands as if conducting an orchestra with two batons. Irina noticed that his brain waves associated with pleasure were amplifying and achieving noticeable peaks.

The haptic effectors that lined the chair stimulated his entire body with vibrations in accordance with the moments of greatest intensity of the cantata, making the virtual experience superlatively irresistible.

Markos virtually got up from his seat and walked around the banquet table, serving himself delicacies on a large plate: mustard roast beef, mushroom cheese omelet, turkey stuffed with spinach and caramelized cherries, salmon with blue cheese, Beluga caviar. Then he returned to his place, which he had never really left, and began to eat with relish.

“There is no rush, Markos. We will not remove any food from the table. You have all the time you want for the test.”

Markos ignored the comment and continued to eat at full speed, interspersing bits of bread and sips of wine between bites. Irina kept recording everything down to the smallest detail.

After an hour of feasting, Markos leaned back in his chair, patted his belly, and smiled.

“I know I didn’t really swallow anything and my stomach is still as empty as when I walked in here, but my brain has never been so delighted. Well said, delighted? With delight.”

“Yes. That is the precise word: delight.”

Markos looked up and down the banquet hall and did not find what he was looking for.

“Can’t one smoke here?”

“Whatever you want. Brown or blonde tobacco, Cuban cigars?”

“I’d smoke a joint of marijuana. It relaxes me, especially after eating.”

Then a very beautiful girl appeared, dressed in suggestive clothes, with a small silver tray on which she carried some marijuana cigarettes and a solid gold lighter.

“Wow! This is great service! The idea of the Playboy model girl is great! Again, what was your name?”

“Irina. My name is Irina Sotnikova. I told you when you walked into the room.”

“Well done, Irina.”

“No, it was not my idea. Your brain inserts its wishes along with those offered by the program. The waitress would be your ideal girl, at least to serve you after the banquet.”

The beautiful girl smiled and pouted sensually.

“She can do whatever I want?”

“Anything you want. I am not going to blush. I’ve seen it all in this job.”

Markos took a marijuana cigarette and lit it. He took a few puffs, with pleasure, and looked at the girl, who was looking at him expectantly.

“Do you want one too?”

He lit another joint and handed it to the girl, who laid the tray on the table, leaned one leg on it, and began to smoke with obvious pleasure.

After a few minutes in which they both enjoyed the cannabis session, Markos put down his cigarette and motioned for the girl to come over to him.

“What’s your name, pretty?”

“Whatever you want to call me. I’m all yours.”

Markos thought of the name Greta. He had always wanted a girlfriend named Greta.

“Greta. I want you to be Greta.”

She pulled her bodice over her shoulders, smiled provocatively, and threw herself at him with determination. Markos felt the warmth of her lips, of her firm tongue, of her saliva, mixed with his, which still had traces of shrimp, asparagus, wine and cannabis.

Before he could even think about it, Greta unzipped his pants and extracted his hot and stiff cock, immediately shoving it into her mouth and starting to suck it. Markos began to moan and then to scream with pleasure.

Suddenly, Greta produced a stiletto from under her clothes and showed it to Markos, brandishing it mischievously.

“I know you like a little dose of masochism, my dear boy.”

“Now I don’t want to play those games, precious. Once . . .”

“Everything ended badly, once. I can rummage through your memory, my love. But this time, you are going to enjoy it like never before.”

Then, she began to perform small stabs around Markos genitalia, producing tiny bleeding wounds. She bent down and began to lick the blood that was slowly oozing out.

“Stop it! It’s no longer a pleasant thing!”

“Stop it, Greta, stop it! I order you to stop!” Irina exclaimed through the microphone.

Greta looked at the camera and smirked. He continued with his sado ritual.

Irina jumped from her post, opened the door that connected the two rooms and threw herself on the seat where Markos was writhing in pain. She could not see Greta because she was not connected to the simulation. When she was manually disconnecting Markos from the system, Irina felt a twinge of pain in her back. Horrified, she noticed the expression of pleasure on Markos’s face, as he finished plunging the knife he had hidden during the test into her back.

“My dear Irina, this time everything went well. The previous time, my victim got away at the last minute. Greta could not hold her. Now, between the two of us, we caught you. This, my darling, is the supreme delight.”

Irina Sotnikova collapsed lifelessly on the body of Markos Panteli, who could not stop laughing like crazy.

John Tustin

LIFE IS A COMEDY

Why must humor and pathos
Always be holding hands?

Life is a comedy 
And God is the audience.

The sunflowers point toward the sun
Only to burst into flame.

The darkness comes
As darkness must

And the blankets fail to warm
As they always fail to warm.

The sun comes up
And it’s just coffee and sadness.

Another day of this.
Another day of that again and again.

God is smiling. God is laughing.
God is pointing. God is mocking.

Jesus is crying. Jesus is pleading.
Jesus is angry but Jesus is obeisant.

This world is too much God
And nowhere near enough Jesus.

This world is too much
And nowhere near enough.

God laughs on his throne
And Jesus cries, writhing there alone

And I just pretend I’m moving forward
Toward something good.

Ha ha
The joke’s on me.

Ha ha
Ha ha ha ha.

Stephen Bamberough

No Happy Endings

A fuck don’t come for free
It grips your soul on bended knee
Chasing dreams of what could be
But with every spent load I feel more empty

A floor full of dildos and a magic wand
Enough squirt on the carpet
To fill a garden pond 
Pleasantries exchanged and then we’re gone

No happy endings
No lasting song

Then back to the game of swiping right 
Feeding my ego all through the night
I know it’s wrong but I cannot fight
Just find me a hole and watch me take flight

This modern love it ain’t really for me 
To many choices upon my phone’s screen 
I’m physically high but emotionally lean
Living in a nightmare of my own wet dream

Jeff Weddle

Breaking News

Starvation and our minds gone hollow. 
The butcher hates the baker 
and the candlestick maker 
is packing heat. 

Half of us are crazy 
and the rest are bone stupid. 

The wisdom of the ages goes begging 
as we leer at young beauties 
on computer screens 
and wait for the next big movie to drop. 

Starvation and dim vision. 
The corner bakery is a distant memory.

The hospitals are broken 
and all the good songs are lost.

School children wander, 
aimless and hollow-eyed.

In various dark places, 
my countrymen prepare bombs, 
then celebrate birthdays and weddings, 
and all of that, just as they always did.

All parties end. 
Just ask Rome and John Wayne Gacy.

Starvation and laughter. 

The flies are in the web 
and the spiders are fat with plenty.

That’s how it is.
Please kill the lights, 
or something, 
when you leave.

Joseph Farley

Rat’s Ass

A white van pulled up to the gate of the Curran-Fromhold Correction Facility, the pink and pastel hell on Street Road in Northeast Philadelphia. On the side of the van was the city’s seal and the words “Sheriff’s Office.”

“What do we got today?” asked the guard at the gate.

“Holdovers for trial,” said the Sheriff’s deputy at the wheel while two other deputies looked on, one from the front, and one further back in the van.  The cargo was a mishmash of society not yet in orange jump suits, making their arrival from Police Department cells where arrests were stored temporarily. The prisoners were dressed in various combinations of civilian wear ranging from blue jeans and t-shirts to pajamas and a vomit covered business suit.  All were cuffed at wrists and ankles and chained to their seats. Locked wire mesh cages further kept them from taking a walk.

The manifest and other paperwork was reviewed by the guard and handed back. He nodded to another guard in a white hut. The guard in the hut pushed a button, noting for the record on a computer the date and time the gate was opened. The van drove inside the network of ten foot high cyclone fences topped with concertina wire. The van stopped again at another gate complete with guards. The process was repeated. From there van headed to the designated unloading zone. 

Other prison guards met the van. The Sheriff’s deputies and the guard in charge went over the manifest. The prisoners seat-cages were unlocked as were the chains to the seats. The wrist and ankle cuffs stayed on the prisoners as they were marched out of the van and into the courtyard. A deputy and a guard both did body counts. Signatures were placed on the appropriate forms. The van left with its deputies. The prison guards marched their new guests inside a building for processing.

Rules were read off. Photos and fingerprints were taken. Prisoners were led to private areas for strip searches and body cavity checks.  All went relatively smoothly until the processing line reached a thin disheveled man in his late twenties.  Processing slowed. Latex gloves and surgical masks were procedure. Even with gloves and masks, the guards were reluctant to touch this fellow, but they did their jobs.

The man was ordered to undress but seemed to have difficulty accomplishing the task. He seemed only capable of wobbling on his feet, as if he was dancing to a tune only he could hear.  Guards assisted with rough speed. Lice and fleas jumped off the prisoner’s body and clothing. His clothes reeked of urine and worse, but were put in a resealable plastic bag for recording and storage.

“Where did they find him?” a guard asked.

“Kensington Avenue, near Allegheny.”

Nothing more needed to be said. Kensington and Allegheny, better known as K and A, was the heroin capital of the east coast, the first big stop off of I-95 after coming ashore in Florida. Once a rough and tumble home to factories and warehouses, known for producing hit men and burglars, Kensington had degenerated further.  The factories and warehouses had closed decades ago. Poverty and gangs were rampant. The area was known around the world from YouTube videos of homeless addicts living on the streets under the Frankford Elevated, sleeping on sidewalks, in doorways, vacant lots, abandoned churches, and “Needle Park”, a grassy area in from of the local branch of the public library.

The prisoner’s arms, legs, even his neck was scarred from needles. Visions of heroin laced with Fentanyl and Xylazine ran through the minds of the guards.

“What was he picked up for?”

“Alleged robbery, resisting arrest and assault on a police officer.”

“Great. Help me spread his legs.”

A greased and gloved finger was poked into the man’s anus to search for contraband. Corrections Officer William Curry, the guard with this choice duty wiggled his finger around inside the prisoner. Drugs, cellphones, weapons got smuggled into prison in the back trunk. All was going smoothly except for the grunts from the prisoner and the finger duty guard’s desire to wretch. 

“Shit,” Curry shouted, pulling out his hand. He wasn’t referring to the residue smeared on the prisoner’s ass or on the latex glove.  “Something bit me.”

“A bug?”

“Bigger than that.”

Curry looked at his finger. The latex was punctured and blood was seeping out.

“That looks like an animal bite.”

“I’m filing an injury on duty report. I need to see a doc right away. God knows what I could get from this guy.”

Reports were filed. A sergeant and a lieutenant came by to take note of the injury and the prisoner’s ass. The prisoner stood naked all the while, legs spread, facing the wall, gently bouncing up and down.  A captain and deputy warden were consulted. A plan of action was determined. The prisoner was dragged to a shower and hosed down. Afterwards he was rushed to the medical section.

The prisoner was manacled face down on a gurney by a pair of guards, with his legs spread. The guards stood watch while a contracted doctor used a tongue depressor and a penlight to study the man’s asshole.  Any incredulity the doctor had about the initial report faded when he saw two small eyes looking back at him along with whiskers, nose and teeth.

“He’s got a rat in his ass,” Dr. Braddle said, not quite believing it himself,

“How is that possible?” asked Lynette Marsh, one of the guards.

“I don’t know,” said Dr. Braddle. “I’ve heard of cockroaches climbing into people’s ears, and other body openings. Usually happens when folks are sleeping. We use tweezers and a solution rinse to get them out. I’ve never heard of anything like that with rats before. Where was this guy found?”

“Kensington. On the street I believe,” said Marsh

Dr. Braddle looked at the prisoner’s arms and then his legs, feet and neck.

“Plenty of needle marks. I’m guessing he’s a homeless junkie.” 

“I think he is,” said Marsh.

“I hear there’s maybe four or five hundred homeless junkies in that neighborhood sleeping all over the place. They set up tent cities. The police move them and they just pop up again a few blocks away.”

“That sounds right,”  said the other guard, named, Stephen Cienkowski.  “They’re out of it half the time, brain damaged from horse tranquilizer.  It’s a real mess in Kensington. I grew up in Port Richmond, right next to it. Some say Port Richmond is part of Kensington, but that ain’t so. We used to get the overflow and still do. It was always a rough area, but it was nowhere as bad as it is today. Addicts, robberies, gang killings. There used to be a lot of churches on the avenue. “’I’d say one out of every five is abandoned now.”

“This is just a hypothesis,” said Dr. Braddle. “But I’m guessing our prisoner may have been sleeping, or nodding, in an alley or vacant lot. A rat crawled in his pants, or maybe he didn’t have his pants on at the time and rat climbed right in. Our prisoner didn’t notice the rat had made his ass into a hidey-hole. He still may not be aware of it. He seems out of it.”

“How will you get it out?” asked Nurse Grundy, who was helping with curing the problem child. 

“I’m not sure Alice. I may have to experiment a bit. I can’t imagine a big rat fitting in there. It must be a young one, not full size. One way or the other we’ll get it out. Maybe we can tempt it out with food. I’m reluctant to try an enema. The rat might chew its way further in to escape the chemicals. If I can’t lure it out, it will have to extracted surgically. I can’t do surgery here. The prison’s medical ward doesn’t have the right equipment. If we can’t get it out the prisoner will need to be sent to a hospital.”

After some thought, and consultation with the plumbing shop at the prison, Dr. Braddle came up with a plan. The prisoner was sedated and chained spread eagle, face down, on a bed.  A wide plastic tube was taped to the prisoner’s asshole. The tube fed into a cage where tasty morsels from the prison cafeteria were sprinkled. Video cameras were set up so the asshole and cage could be watched from another room if necessary, and so the action could be recorded. A half hour passed.  The rat did not stick its head out.

“It may be living off the prisoner’s innards or undigested food in the rectum and large intestine,” the doctor speculated.

Nurse Grundy had an idea. “If the rat eats what comes through the digestive system, and the prisoner is hooked on a whole bunch of nasty shit, maybe the rat is addicted too.”

“So you suggest we might try a different type of lure?”

“Maybe.”

It took some negotiation with the DA’s office, the police and the warden, but a few hours later and guard came to the medical dispensary with a box labeled “evidence.” Inside the box was a smidgen of brown, fairly pure Mexican dope.  It was just a few grams in an envelope, plenty to get a rat high.

The envelope was set in the cage. Additional taped was placed around the tube connected to the prisoner’s asshole to make sure it was secure. Then the wait began.

After a half hour movement was detected around the asshole. Puckering and bubbling, then a snout appeared. The nose twitched and sniffed, then disappeared back inside the prisoner’s ass.

“Maybe if we turn down the lights?” suggested one of the guards.

Curtains were drawn. All the lights in that section of the medical ward were turned off except for one on the other side of a divider. This left barely enough light to see what was happening. They waited. And waited. Almost an hour into their vigil the rat’s nose reappeared, sticking from the prisoner’s asshole like a big dingleberry or a rotting hemorrhoid.  The rat sniffed the air. Slowly, very slowly, it emerged from the prisoner’s asshole, then raced down the tube into the cage. The rat was too engrossed with sniffing, rolling in, and chewing the brown to notice the cage door dropping shut.

“I’m glad that’s over,” said Cienkowski. “This is the craziest overtime I’ve ever earned.”

“It does sound like something on the Maury Lowpitch show,” said Dr. Braddle. “But we all witnessed it. I may write a paper on this case and send it to a medical journal. This is the first case of ‘Rat’s Ass’ I’ve heard of.”

The prisoner began to moan.

“Maybe he smells the brown?” suggested Marsh.

“I don’t know,” said Braddle. “Lets see what’s going on.”

The prisoner’s asshole began to pucker. Another rat showed its head.

“He must have a whole nest in there!”

“Maybe we should call Rodent Control,” Cienkowski joked. 

Dr. Braddle looked at the guard.  

“I wish we could,” he said. “This will be like delivering sextuplets.”

A collective sigh went through the room. It had been a long day. It was going to be a long night.

Saira Viola

3am Sexaphonica

Fur-lined panties an oversized dildo
and a talking sexbot named Sadie
It stunk of tequila
half-smoked cigarettes and rubber pussy
In a rotating circus of muzak elevator air 

He tried small talk 
In a drowning sea of alcoholic fizz
He looked for warm blood –
someone human who could
make the eye of failure
stop winking at him 

What did he have to show for six decades?
Vicious voices on his ass 
And his ego flopping in the gutter

Noel Negele

Nothing but cricket sounds left in my heart

Bukowski said
that money is magic
and the older you grow
the more true this rings.

Like most people out there
I’m over informed in matters
not cohesive enough to evoke
a tendency towards some career path.

So much random knowledge
In the basic person,
Unhelpful and unused but
in random conversations.

And then there’s this whale:
The fuck to do?
Like the careerists
you yourself as a bum too
are enslaved by the need
to accumulate.

You have to have the money
so that you don’t need the money.

And like many other thirty years olds
Between the yes to this and the no 
to that offer
an ocean of useless knowledge 
and almost crippling indecisions
where I suppose many years are wasted.

Many of mine were.
Maybe it’s also laziness,
because it keeps on happening.

I witness many people stuck in 
dead-end jobs. 
Not even the fake promise of a ladder.
And they mix. I watch them
they mix 
out of loneliness
and the weight of the solitary struggle.

Two paychecks are better than one.
A more humane house.
The first step into normality,
into that pleasant boredom.

Two years later
I’m balls deep
into somebody’s wife
and many more doing this.

People are alone 
even if they’re with people. 

Temporary solutions 
that become long term problems.
Surely being miserable with somebody
is better than being miserable alone.

Two years ago
I was alone, yet again
in Hague, Holland
while the cold dark of the night
descent
in a deceiving speed
and walking on the rails 
a Spanish couple of girls
and boys, laughing
asked from me to take their
photograph
and I did
and I tell you 
it was one of the most beautiful photographs
you’ll ever see.

And when I got on the pier sky view
and the Ferris Weel went up
and then down
and then fucking up again
the city looked nothing
but lights on concrete
and I got bored
there, fifteen minutes on my own
realising that feeling alone
can be a passing feeling
and that’s all well and done
but sometimes it can last a decade
and then you can truly catch a glimpse 
of things in yourself
that will be difficult
to make peace with.

Things you won’t be able to shake off 
so easy.
Things that follow you.
Things you fight on the daily.

But today, on bank holiday
as I smoke on my bed
and I take one diazepam after the other
it all looks doable— 
all of it looks doable, the being alone 
the being not alone, the unpleasant fact
that most conversations in your life 
will contain very little meaning to you,
the morning alarm clocks
and that dangerous mess 
of human affairs that can derail you
like no other.

There’s a time for a full heart
to be opened up simplemindedly
from hinges to hinges 
like a playful child

And a time 
to be closed shut
to be considered 
as a fortress.