Karl Koweski

the broken stripper

the dim lights couldn’t conceal
the fact the next stripper
mounting the buffet-sized stage
wore bicycle shorts
rather than a g-string
and a torso-obscuring blouse
instead of pasties

she possessed the
anatomical features of a watermelon
with spat seed eyes
and a smile like
a chewed green rind

she wobbled on the stage
occasionally
brushing against the pole
the duration of the song
swaying without rhythm
without removing any clothing
ignoring the eviscerating laughter

“hey manager!” my buddy hollered
“come quick!
our stripper’s broken!”

her dark glistening eyes
registered zero awareness
her flaccid expression
scarcely changed
when I approached the stage
on a wave of
escalating laughter

I handed her two dollars
and turned away
getting halfway back to
the howling red Os of
my friends’ guffawing faces
the stripper yelled
for my attention

thinking she’d decided
to give me a peek
at her busted titties
beneath her
puritanical blouse
I rushed back to the stage
where the non-stripping stripper
handed back a dollar
whispering

“you accidentally gave me two dollars”

Craig Podmore

Fetish

She wants to kill god when she cums.
Broken bottles on her breasts,
Fucking Guevara in her dreams.

She’d open her own crotch for the atom bomb.
Give me the statistics of the latest massacre
So I can cut myself to it.

I read to her excerpts of the morgue report
Regarding the deaths of Goebbels’ children
So she can fantasise about their laments whilst orgasm.

Pictures of holocaust stapled to her vulva,
Bile stained, bible pages in the toilet –
The derogatory is obtained.

Personally I’d like to fuck Eve and make her purge
An apology for the fall of man but congratulate her too,
For the ruins of god’s insipid plan.

Meeah Williams

Jigsaw Face

Janet came back from the dead and at first Miles couldn’t believe it. He’d been wishing for something like this with all his heart ever since the car wreck. Even though he knew it was impossible.

“If only she could come back, just for five minutes,” he’d say to anyone who’d listen and to himself when no one was around to listen, “Just for five minutes. I’d give twenty years of my life to say how much I loved her and how sorry I am for what happened.”

At first it was touching, but after a while it just got on people’s nerves. Everyone got tired of hearing the same sad old song.

“Time to move on,” is what they all thought and sometimes even said out loud.

Then Janet showed up on his doorstep one evening with a small valise of her things. Miles was overjoyed; his prayers had been heard! The problem was that Janet had no intention of staying for only five minutes. And hearing about how sorry Miles was and how much he loved her wasn’t going to cut it as far as she was concerned.

Somehow Miles thought an apology would wipe away her anger over the car accident that sent her flying through the windshield and into the trunk of a hundred-year-old oak tree at one-hundred-thirteen miles per hour. That was the speed recorded on the frozen speedometer in Miles’s crushed Vette. As you might expect, Janet was killed quicker than instantly.

Janet had told him that he was going too fast and that he’d had too much to drink at the Superbowl party but that hadn’t carried any weight with Miles at the time. Now it was too late to change anything, no matter how sorry Miles might be.

“Sorry doesn’t feed the bulldog, buster,” she said.

It was a saying she often said to ominous effect in life and it never presaged anything good.

Miles never expected Janet to be so unforgiving. He somehow always pictured the dead being mellower.

Instead from the moment he woke up in the morning to the minute he finally managed to drop off to sleep with her nagging voice ringing in his ear, it was a constant stream of recriminations and bitter “I told you sos.” It was about a thousand times worse than when she was alive.

Even worse, Janet was nothing much to look at anymore. She didn’t come back as an angelic pre-accident version of herself, as Miles always pictured her coming back for those five minutes he once naively dreamed about. Rather, her face looked like a lump of gray ectoplasmic clay on which someone who was naturally right-handed tried—and failed—repeatedly to scrawl a legible version of their signature using their left hand.

It made Miles cringe every time he had to look at her. Which was often enough, as Janet never seemed to get out of his face.

“Please, for the love of Mike,” Miles pleaded, “give it a fucking rest.”

But nothing would stop the onslaught. Eventually they settled into a pattern of bickering that turned Miles’s life into a living hell. Miles grew so disgusted and tired of it all that he gave Janet a new nickname. He started referring to her as old Jigsaw Face.

That’s when the self-cutting started.

First it seemed merely an accident, a slip of the knife while cutting an apple. A shaving nick. But soon it was clear nothing accidental was involved. Somehow Janet was steering his hand, causing Miles to cut himself.

People at work began to notice. His new girlfriend, who Janet never took to, became alternately concerned, repulsed, and angry. She broke up with him shortly after Miles lost his job at the shoelace factory.

His friends drifted away, one by one.

At home, Janet and the now unemployed Miles did nothing but scream insults at each other. The neighbors complained. The police were often called. Eviction was threatened.

Meanwhile, the cutting continued.

Eventually the story ends in the kind of foul stench and surplus of flies that generally characterizes the end of all such stories.

The downstairs neighbors call to report the aforementioned flies and stench and the weird greenish black stain spreading on their ceiling. The cops come with the landlord and Miles is found spread-eagle on the floor in the living room, his arms and legs slashed to ribbons. His throat is cut from ear to ear. His face looks like a jigsaw puzzle made of rotting meat. The razor is still pinched between his bloodied fingers.

“Survivor’s guilt,” his closest friends concluded.

Yep. You could see it coming a mile away.

Levi C. Dunn

Terrifying Girls Highschool

I like glam-emo music from Vancouver
and bizarre horror from the island Japan
about sexy girls who hang from ledges
and stab each other quick over and over
ruining their bloody school girl uniforms
and dissonant reverb ripping guitar riffs
the stereo is on and the film is live
in the living room of my dark twisted dreams
and the cute little blonde twink in my arms
asks why I like such harsh terrifying wonders
I kiss him, roll him over, pull down his pants
“I’ll show you the pleasure of being stabbed, hon.”

Rodney Gardner

Three Rs

Among beers and conversation with an old friend
We spoke of our hometown
Everyone is getting divorced
All the divorcees
Getting with other divorcees
Keeping it a tight group
Bodily fluids still run deep
Twenty years later
The one that got away is on your line again

In a whole world of new genitals
There’s a place in California
Where the beat-up ones are still better
One’s junk has been pleasure for us all
Fur burgers and meat sticks are recycled
Like bottles and old car parts
And comfortably familiar is preferred

David Boski

GMC Safari

It was our second date, and after having some drinks
I dropped her back off at her parent’s house,
where she was living at the time.

‘I wish you could come inside and fuck me, I really want to fuck you’
she said in between us kissing.

‘yeah, I guess your father wouldn’t like that’ I replied with my cock throbbing in my jeans,
resigned to the fact that I would probably have to rub one out alone later.

‘wait, I have an idea, you want to fuck in the van?’ she asked excitedly.

earlier that night she told me how she used to fuck her high school boyfriend
in the back of her dads work van,
as he would always leave the keys out on a hook in the foyer.

“is there room back there?’ I asked, momentarily forgetting she’d done this before.

yeah, we’ll make it work, wait here.”

when she came back, she unlocked the sliding door
on the passenger side, and we got in, and we made it work.

it smelled like dirty carpet and paint thinner in there
but that didn’t distract me from the task at hand,
and she told me I could finish inside of her, which I did.

a few months later her dad offered me a painting job,
and occasionally asked me to drive the van, and every time I did
I thought of that night; the first time I used it to paint his daughter’s interiors.

A. Theist

I used to go to church, but…

(Ask) Jesus to come into your Heart
(And) He’ll send you the Holy Spirit to
(Receive) you in your shameful state
(And) when times get desperate just
(Smile) because He’ll whisper in your ear
(And) tell you exactly what to say
(Then) when the authorities
(Publicly) question you about the commotion, just
(Kill) them with kindness
(Because) you can be certain that
(You) are carrying out Gods will and
(Are) defeating the Devil in his plan to burn
(The) world, for in everything he does, he attempts
(Destroying) all that is good, all that is
(God)

Scott Thomas Outlar

Kittens and Cupcakes

I am the forgotten man –
left out in the blistering sun
to reach a state of overexposure
as the metal death apocalypse
rains down in solar ray saturation.

I am the nothing/nowhere –
dragged by the hair
to the edge of a grave
and skinned to the bone
to feed the maggots below.

I am the last remorse from a bloodstained heart –
kissed by an angel of terrible vengeance
upon my scabbed, blistered lips
to usher in the chaos storm
the harbingers have been heralding for eons.

I am the night sky full of shadows –
lost in the vast reflection
of a tired moon
that wants its pound of flesh delivered
before pulling the tide of blood to shore.

I am the cancer worming its way back home –
dripping with cum and sweat
between torn, soaked sheets
where lovers once slept in peace
before the disease of denial completely set in.

I am not the first, but will be the last.
I am not Hallelujah salvation.
I am the final note in the song of annihilation.