Category Archives: Stories

“Breakdown” Short Story by Larry D. Thacker

"Breakdown" Fiction by Larry D. Thacker: Sunrise in KY mountains

The rut was too deep for Alder’s car. He knew it the instant he hit it, but he’d been too determined and stubborn, moving too fast to make careful adjustments. The car hit fast at the wrong angle, bounced the frontend, and slammed down, the feeling and sound of a hard cracking thump vibrating through the floor panel into his feet. It was over that quickly. 

Steaming antifreeze puffed and streamed out with a jet, up from the front grill, from underneath. It was like a smoke bomb, lifting and trailing in the wind down the thin road and curling off the cliff to his right. He knew what he’d done. Antifreeze has a distinct sickening scent. 

Ahead were higher hills. Nothing behind them but clean, cold sky. Kentucky sky. Behind him was nothing but Virginia. He’d gotten so close.  

The road had worsened the longer he’d tempted his luck after finding the mining gate wide open, after driving past the weekend’s inactive equipment and pallets of stacked material, into areas void of trees, the grounds along the roads barely organized into naked eroded soil. He’d taken one of four branching muddied graveled roads up into smaller treeless hollows. The road thinned, leaving no choice but to continue up, hoping for an eventual wider spot for switching back and getting out of the mess he knew was getting worse every hundred yards. But the higher and further he pushed the vehicle, the more distracting the surroundings became. And now he was stranded. He knew that before even checking.         

Keeping the car running just long enough, he pulled forward, scraping along the frozen rut, and parked on what little shoulder there was along the road’s narrowness and killed the engine before it could seize up. An earthen cliff, only a few inches from his tires, fell at least a hundred feet to another winding route in this web of road. 

No one was around. Why would there be? It was a Sunday. 

Stay calm, he ordered himself. Breathe. And think. He stared out over the hood of the car at the distant hills, smirking. So close.  

The door gave a cold, rusty squeak as he opened it. He swung his feet over and out. The ground was a cold hard, an ungiving stiffness that hurt his toes. The dread of that feeling was already creeping in, a memory of frostbite from years before. He’d neglected reacting to the numbness in his left foot for too long during one of several stints along the South Korean side of the DMZ. It was in mountains just like this, steep and treeless. It wasn’t until he got to a warm place and his feet started thawing and stinging and pulsing in a strange way, like they were on fire, that the medic declared how he’d be lucky to save the two darkening toes turning pretty shades of blue and black. Now those toes were always what got cold first on his body. A sign of things to come, like bones aching before bad weather.    

The walk out of here would do him good, even in the cold. Wake him up and teach him a lesson. He tapped a smoke out of his pack and fought the wind and lit it and leaned against the car feeling calmer than he probably should have, grinning at how the hood’s heat warmed his hand. The cigarette smoke took on a life of its own, joining the gray smoke now swirling up from his wheel wells and the vent between the hood at the windshield. A warm, sickening steam. Sweet. No wonder a dog would lap up anti-freeze. He stood there in it, letting its warmth coat him for a moment. He was already getting cold. He’d miss this little bit of heat down the road no matter how much it stunk.   

If there was a time he needed cell coverage it was now, but he knew better. He tried. No signal. Things were instantly more complicated. You’d think a more isolated spot would warrant more tower coverage. But then, who would he call? 

Hey there, mom? I’m broke down two hours from you, can you come get me? 

She would have tried, but he would never have asked. 

Hello, officer, yeah I know it’s Sunday afternoon, but do you know any tow companies working out in the middle of nowhere? Maybe the embarrassment of it all made him hesitant.

He’d canceled his roadside service months ago to save a few dollars. 

Thinking there might be someone around, he listened. Called out. Some four wheelers in the distance revved up, their noise faint through the radiator’s hiss. The wind sung in his ears and stung his skin. The sun was warm in places up here, warm enough to stave off the cold for part of the walk out. 

He took another drag off his cigarette and went to the front of the car, got on all fours, his hands sinking into the thawing muck, and eyed the area under the engine. The anti-freeze’s fog barreling out into his face made his stomach turn, tearing his eyes. He pulled his hands back, avoiding the steaming green river of fluid snaking its way across the icy mud. Most of the ground was solid, but wet enough to soak cold through the knees of his jeans, running cold up his legs. He went back and sat in his car with the door closed, trying to use up what little warmth was left. He stuffed a leftover granola bar in a pocket. He flipped the collar of his coat and got out and walked away from his smoldering car. 

He halted after a few steps. What was he noticing? Nothing. That’s what it was. There was no hint of life from where he stood. No sound but wind. No houses, no people, no animals. No animals. No movement. The destruction here had driven away anything resembling normalcy. It was disturbing, even more desolate than the cleared no-man’s land look in spots along the DMZ stretching between South and North Korea. He’d memorized that scene after so many days and nights patrolling in weather easily colder than this. At least you could see topsoil and a little movement along the zone, though it was the most armored and dangerous piece of real estate in the world. At least some trees and life lived there. 

Trees had lived here, once. He could feel what was left of them under his feet, buried root balls of monster trees, pushed around and covered, compacted by lesser minded animal machines. Yes, there were trees, and everything else, all the green replaced with wintered dirt and clay and rock. A complete vacuuming up of the earth, pushed around, away. Out of sight. For some unseen purpose.        

The cold snapped him from his daydream, and he stumbled down the way getting a feel for the road. It was crisp slush, frozen brown and black mixes of mud and gravel, fist-sized and smaller chunks of coal scattered about, driven over and stabbed into mud. Frozen dirt crunching underfoot. Gray snow patched spots along the road’s edges. He knew there was asphalt down the hill. Walking would be easier then. This was coal mine property, but where the hell were the mines? Far down these webs of tiny roads he reckoned. 

A stiffer wind whipped up and the sun was gone at the first turn off the hill as he stepped into the mountain’s shadow. It wasn’t quite freezing, but what’s the difference in twenty-five or thirty-five degrees. Miserable or very miserable. At some point it doesn’t matter. Numb is numb.     

He’d never been around this sort of mining and didn’t have a clue what he was seeing. The hill was steep and high to his right with a cliff dropping off his left like a sheer cut wall. It appeared to be more of a strip job operation than an underground mine, but his view was limited, even from here, and he couldn’t see any real work going on. No large spots of coal were evident around these dug up swaths of land. More like they were staging areas or routes out for something much more serious going on further out into the hills.  

Across the valley and up another mountain, behind another flattened hill, past a stripe of evergreens and leafless trees, was a ribbon of exposed earth, a bulldozer, mounds of dirt and tangled trees. The top of that hill was intact. A broad body with a head of trees with treeless vertical shoulders and a scarf of trees, green, gray, then brown-yellow, and green again. 

Below the drop off to his left was mostly flattened overturned earth with three roads headed up the hollow into thinner valleys. The top of one of the smaller hills was perfectly flat, a single tree clinging sideways from a bank by stubborn roots. 

There were splotches of missing foliage, both sides of the roads disturbed in one way or other a hundred feet out on each side. He wondered where the mining actually happened. Some heavy equipment sat idle in groups of twos and threes well up the roads. A crane strung a lynched generator thirty feet in the air. He wondered if they left the keys in these machines. Do they even use keys in these things? He looked into the crane’s massive control compartment. The cab, big as his car, full of levers and knobs and unlit controls.  

He’d walked long enough to feel the numbness creeping in. His steps crunched on the road, the scrapes and bumps painful through the sole of his boots as his toes and heels numbed, the cold ache working into the arch of the feet, then the ankles to his shins. Before he managed to walk very far, he regretted his ignorant try at the mountain even more. No chance at a story was worth this.  

His pant leg bottoms were caked and stiffening before long, his boots heavy in clumps. The gusts of air burnt his face, drying and tightening his skin. His eyes squinted with tears. 

He got back to the gate, the quiet equipment, the unmanned guard shack. He peered through one of its dust caked windows, sheltering behind the building and watching his breath jet away in foggy shots. It was tiny, with CB radios on the wall, a phone, windows on three sides and the door. A desk was layered in unorganized papers and clipboards. A small space heater sat on the floor, unplugged. The guard was either a slob or no one had worked there in a while. A manual rested on the desk by a telephone holding down a stack of newspapers. He thought about testing the door, turning on the heat and trying the phone, but thought better of it. The last thing he needed was someone accusing him of breaking and entering. 

It would have been nice if someone had been there before, halted him at the gate. 

Buddy, only a dumbass would take that car up in there, and besides, you’re not allowed. Turn around and have a nice Sunday afternoon. 

He’d have taken that advice, maybe gotten a lead, asked him about the mystery lights up on Black Mountain, why he was there in the first place, then went on about an uneventful day. Turned around and went back into town for some coffee after a friendly conversation with all the mysteries of the mountain lights laid out for him by a kind and bored guard. He’d have settled for that.  

The mud and gravel morphed back to cracked pavement, like fractured, cold desert floor. He walked on until there were trees finally overhead and sheltering the walk, spinning their leafless frames from one side to the other, joining and mingling hands, holding back the sun’s warmth. A quick running creek mirrored the road to the left, murmured at him as he walked. He tried staying along the left shoulder on the grass, but the thick black dust and frozen mud pushed him back onto the road. Eventually there was no evidence of the mine property behind him, and he didn’t look back. The scene was in his head enough, in the form of a new question. 

He finally noticed a house up ahead. He was relieved to see movement in the yard, a man in jeans and a denim work coat and cap walking out, checking something in the bed of a truck, rummaging around, turning, glancing in Alder’s direction and going back in. When he got there and started into the yard a black pit bull raised its head and stared from the porch. Alder hesitated in the street. I hope you’re tied up, he whispered. Just don’t chase me, he begged under his breath. I couldn’t run if I had to. 

Alder kept on, frustrated, turning his head from the animal’s eyes, feeling its stare through the back of his head, trying not to challenge the dog’s space. He tried walking like he lived around these parts, casual but determined on a cold day. With somewhere to be. Almost past the house, Alder sensed movement from the porch out of the corner of his eye. He angled his head slightly, catching a glimpse of a curtain peeking open. Someone was checking him out. 

The dog caught his slight glance and let out a startling drum of alarms. It jumped to all fours, cold slobber stringing from its ratcheting jaws. Alder picked up the pace. The barking set off two more dogs in the direction he was headed. At least there were more houses coming up. 

Seven houses in a row, two on the left, five on the right, were identical, except for one painted red and another with green siding. The only real differences were the plants on the porches and the landscaping. A concrete yard statue here and there. A frozen birdbath. Different cars and trucks in front along the road or in muddy driveways. What made them most similar was the hardened gray dust coating them. Blackish smoke seeped out from most of the chimneys, hovering near the roofs before the wind pushed it up the hollow or back into the woods. He could tell from the smell they were burning coal. The smell was unmistakable. Acrid, choking, the gritty taste coating his tongue. 

He was finally to a Y in the road with several houses. Now was the time to ask for help. Surely someone would be out. Hopefully they’d look approachable. Hopefully he’d look approachable, too. Rude or not, I want out of this jam before I freeze to death, he thought, putting on a smile and looking around, hoping he looked as lost as he felt.    

A screen door groaned and slammed. A comforting sound. An elderly lady in her long plaid housecoat, hunched, moved slowly and steady as she struggled a bag of trash out the front door of her doublewide. The heavy bag was about as big as her. She carefully took the steps, setting both feet on each level, the bag plopping down behind her near ready to burst. A little dog trotted along at her heals, yipping at the bag. Alder was standing in the road next to her mailbox, near her trashcans. She kept coming and didn’t see him. 

He cleared his throat. “Hello there?” 

The dog halted in its tracks, commenced barking and bolted away behind her, tangled in the lady’s feet and nearly tripped her, all the while the lady, also startled, let out a yelp louder than the dog’s, elevating her head from the hunched position, saw him and let go of the heavy bag of garbage she was dragging, almost dropping it on the retreating dog.      

“I’m so sorry I startled you, ma’am.”   

She seemed embarrassed for letting out her little scream, rubbing her chest. 

“Startled me?” she shouted in her little voice up to his face, “You scared hell outta me, young man! You a preacher or somethin?” 

He wasn’t expecting that reaction and he didn’t get her joke.

“I’m sorry? No, I’m not a preacher…” 

She rolled her eyes.

“I said,” she began slowly, “you scared the hell out of me. So you must be a preacher, right? It was a joke, young man.” She laughed in a pitying way and rolled her eyes again. “That used to be a common joke,” she smirked.     

“Oh. I’m sorry. Really. Here, let me help with your trash.” He picked up the bag and carried it the rest of the way and tossed it into one of her three 55-gallon drums.       

“It’s a mite cold for you to be out in the elements, ain’t it?” she asked, her hands on her hips in a friendly, but judgmental stance.  

“It’s pretty cold for you to be having to drag trash out, too,” he countered in a friendly way.   

She grinned, arching up to see him clearly.   

“Well, they come on Mondays early. The dogs get in it if I miss pickup day,” she said, still catching her breath.   

Alder took the chance. He was pretty cold and miserable by now. There was a little short bed truck beside the doublewide.   

“I broke down up on a mine road. My radiator’s busted up.”  

“It’s a cold day to be breakin down. Course breaking down ain’t no fun no matter when it happens. But I’d rather it in the spring at least, wouldn’t you?”  

“Yes, ma’am.” he agreed. “That would’ve suited me better.”   

She made a sucking sound on her teeth, obviously thinking on something, reaching her head up again and staring, like she was looking through him. Alder stood straight, giving her time to size him up as a stranger hinting politely for help.    

“Well, we can drive my truck into town. Ain’t you cold?” 

He thought she might invite him in, which would have been too awkward for him to accept.  

“Let’s get you into town then, young’un, so you can warm up.” 

No invite in. She was friendly but not stupid. They walked to the truck. She had the keys in her housecoat pocket.   

“Where exactly you wantin to go? I ain’t takin you to Hang Rock. I don’t drive that far.”  

“I don’t know this place. I’d just like a place to warm up that’s got a phone. Get my car looked at and get on home.”  

“Not much open on a Sunday. There’s a diner in town. They’ve got the best food. And they’ve got a phone, too, if Dillard’s paid the bill. And Lord, they keep it burnin hot,” she added. “You’ll warm up nicely in there.”   

“You get me to town and I’ll take it from there. I’m just glad for the offer.” He made for her side of the truck to get her door. She shooed him away.  

“Don’t you fret none,” she said, sizing him up some more as he climbed into the passenger seat. “It’s Sunday everywhere,” she said, “The Lord’s watches closer today.” She grinned a wide grin, her way of acknowledging she was taking a chance on a stranger, but under God’s watchful eye.   

The tiny dog ran up from hiding and leapt into her lap before she slammed the door, twice. It made a metal-on-metal sound each time, startling the dog once again. It gave Alder a narrow-eyed once over.  

“Hmph. Some watch dog. I’ll trade you for another mean cat,” she muttered. The inside of the truck was warmer already. She apologized for the heater not working too well.    

It was only two miles, but she was a slow driver, weaving out of her lane and straddling the middle of the road, swerving when cars approached. She threw up a hand and waved as they passed laying on their horns. He tried to distract himself from the possibility of them not making it to town. 

“I’m Alder,” he offered, keeping a nervous eye on the road. “Can I help you with some gas for your trouble?”   

“This thing won’t burn no gas between here and there. Don’t worry. But thank you, though.” She didn’t offer her name. “Nice to meet you, Alder.” 

“Let me ask you, why were you up there in all that anyways. That’s the mines. I don’t think you work up there.”  

“No, I don’t.” 

“Was it worth getting stuck?”

So far it wasn’t.   

“I’m here to write a story.”   

“For what?” 

“A newspaper back home. In Labortown.”  

“Never been there that I remember. Don’t read the papers much.”  

He didn’t push it. If she wanted to talk he reckoned she would. The dog just sat still on her lap the whole way, staring, panting, baring its teeth occasionally to remind him to stay where he was. Alder didn’t make any sudden moves. Little dogs were the meanest he’d ever seen. You could fight a big dog off, like a person. A tiny mutt with a Napoleon complex would eat you up and have you bleeding to death from scratches before you could find where it was on you.   

He figured she might eventually ask what he was writing about, curious why this stranger was getting stuck and bumming rides. 

“So you’re a newspaper man, huh?” she asked. 

Alder nodded a little proudly.  

“You up there nosin around about the water?” 

“No ma’am.” 

“Them explosions? The dang equipment runnin through all hours of the night?”

“Well, no, ma’am.” 

“Layoffs?”

“No.” 

“What then?” she wondered. 

“Lights,” Alder said. “Mysterious lights. Around Black Mountain.” 

“Lights?” she laughed. “You mean like aliens and silliness like that?” 

Alder was careful how he continued. 

“Not UFOs in that sense. No. Just reports of strange lights.”

The woman scoffed. “First, you weren’t even close to Black Mountain. Second, everybody around here’s heard about them lights. You ain’t the first to wonder on them, young man.” 

“You have an opinion of what the lights are?” 

“I do,” the woman said, “I reckon everybody’s got an opinion on what they are.” 

After that, nothing. She quit talking. She’d lean up and glance to the sky and shake her head. It was killing Alder, but he didn’t push it. 

Where she dropped him off was one of the only places with any sign of life. A diner on the main street that reminded him of the Waffle Hut back home, only homier. He hopped out. 

“I thank you,” he said, closing the truck door, twice.       

She studied him a second and spoke. “Well, I figured you’d need a ride when I saw you comin down the road. Jenkins up there called me and told me to watch for ya. He’d have offered you a ride but he was gettin ready for work.” 

She grinned an all-knowing grin and told him goodbye and to be careful. 

“Make sure you try some of Faith’s chocolate pie in there,” she advised as she pulled out into the road without looking. She was laughing. Alder stood there letting it settle in that he hadn’t, in fact, startled the lady at all back there in her yard. The little dog hopped up on its front paws behind the passenger seat window and let out a string of high-pitched yelps at him as she sped off toward the only other place with any sign of life, the Family Time Thrift Mart.


Larry D. Thacker is a Kentuckian writer, artist, educator, and reality actor, hailing from Johnson City, Tennessee. His poetry and fiction can be found in over 200 publications including SpillwayPoetry South, The American Journal of Poetry, Appalachian Heritage, and Still: The Journal.  His three fiction collections include Working it Off in Labor CountyLabor Days, Labor Nights: More Stories, and Everyday, Monsters (co-written with CM Chapman). His poetry includes four full poetry collections, Drifting in AweGrave Robber ConfessionalFeasts of Evasion, and Gateless Menagerie, two chapbooks, Voice Hunting and Memory Train. He is also the author of the non-fiction folk history, Mountain Mysteries: The Mystic Traditions of Appalachia. He is a cast member on the new Netflix original series, Swap Shop. His MFA in poetry and fiction is earned from West Virginia Wesleyan College. Visit his website at: www.larrydthacker.com


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“The Contract” Short Story by Doug Jacquier

"The Contract" Fiction by Doug Jacquier in The Chamber Magazine

He was up early and well gone to his work on the farm, as always. She found the envelope on the kitchen table, propped up against the tomato sauce bottle that was already attracting flies in the burgeoning heat of the day. Well, that’s a bit romantic, she thought. Hadn’t picked that up in their limited conversations to date. She put the kettle on and added fresh tea leaves to the pot. They were both old-fashioned that way.

Sitting down at the Laminex table, she opened the envelope and began to read.

Kate (no Dear she noted)

Talking’s never been something I’ve had much use for and the only way I know what I think about anything is if I write it down.

Unless I’m mistaken, and I don’t think I am, you’d like this occasional weekend thing to become a permanent arrangement. I can see the sense in that but I want you to be clear about what that will mean for our future. Women say they want honesty in a man but in my experience they don’t really mean it. Now’s as good a time as any to find out if you’re different. 

I don’t want to marry you but I do want to spend my life with you. Instead of getting rubber-stamped by the Government or the Church, we’ll have this contract and we’ll have each other’s word that we’ll stick to it. Without that, life together would be pointless. And, besides, nothing about me will ever change. There will be no negotiation.

I’ll work hard all the rest of my life to keep a roof over our heads and put food on the table. You will be responsible for the household. I’d prefer you didn’t work but if you do, the household mustn’t suffer. I want plain traditional food. You can eat whatever your like.

If you want children, that’s fine with me but you will raise them. I will never mistreat them but I will not coddle them, because the world will not when I’m gone. They will learn tasks appropriate to their age and take responsibility for their actions.

If you have visitors or relatives to our house I won’t be interested in talking to them. You and the children will be all the society I need except for necessary business arrangements. 

We will continue to have sex as long as we both want it but I won’t be ‘making love to you’. 

I will never say ‘I love you’. I have no idea what ‘love’ is except people say that there wasn’t much of it around in my house when I was growing up. I guess you can’t miss what you never had.

We will be faithful to each other. I know myself well enough to know that will be true for me for all time. If you are ever unfaithful to me, the contract is ended.

I will almost certainly not remember occasions such as birthdays and anniversaries and I will ignore all attempts to rope me into Xmas.

There won’t be any cuddling on the couch and watching TV and I won’t be interested in going anywhere to be entertained.

There won’t be any deep and meaningful conversations about books or what’s in the news.

You must be thinking, “Where are the good things about this contract?”

You will have financial security as long as you live. The farm produces well and is pretty much drought-proof. If I die before you I don’t expect you to keep the farm and the place will fetch a good price.

You will have children (if you want them) to love and nurture as you wish and they will grow up knowing how to be resourceful and resilient, putting them well ahead of the pack.

You will have a faithful and respectful partner that barely drinks, doesn’t smoke, is rarely ill and will stay strong for years to come.

You will live in a community that has kept its values and its connections tight and in that sense you’ll never be alone.

And we will sit on the back porch at dusk and look over our land and not have to say how much it means to us. We will know what we’ve done together and that’s enough peace for anyone.

So, if that’s a contract you can live with for the rest of your life and never reproach me or yourself for the choices you have freely made, let me know tonight. 

She put down the letter, made herself a pot of tea, took it out to the back verandah and sat in her favorite cane chair, gazing at the landscape that could be hers forever.

As Kate sipped her tea, she mulled over what he’d written, let the landscape in to her mind until the horizon was clear and mapped out how she would provide her answer.

She returned to the kitchen, poured a second cup of tea, sat at the table and began to write. She didn’t bother with a salutation; who else would she be writing too?

I’ve heard people say that honesty can be a weapon. However, in your case I think you’re using it as insurance or, at the very least, assurance that I won’t try to change you.

Life doesn’t work like that. No matter how we isolate ourselves, the world will have its way and we have to deal with the consequences. Even for people like you who don’t follow the news, either the grapevine or the bank will tell them when there’s no longer a market for what they grow or what stock they raise; at least not at a price that they can live on.

You talk about the farm being drought-proof but you know such a thing has long gone and last year was the driest on record. In that sense, I’m not assured by your promise to keep a roof over our heads and provide well for me and any children we may have. To be blunt, that’s the sort of promise I’d expect from a townie, not a farmer.

Like you, I can take or leave marriage. It doesn’t seem to have made relationships any stronger or otherwise amongst people I’ve known. The fact that you want to spend the rest of your life with me fills me with peace and hope. But I won’t have a life without love from my partner and promising to be faithful entirely misses the point.

You know I don’t mean romance novel love or love that has to keep telling itself over and over again that it exists. That would scare me even more than what you’ve proposed. However, at the very least, I would expect you to look me in the eye and tell me you love me enough to want to spend the rest of your life with me and promise to let me know if that ever changes. (By the way, the sex doesn’t need to change – no complaints in that department.)

But here’s the real rub. We (as distinct from me alone) need to decide if we’re going to have children. And if we decide we will, you will be their father in all the important ways; comforting them, tending to their needs, teaching them patiently and defending them to the death. Don’t worry, I’m perfectly happy to take on the traditional mothering roles but I’m not going to let the cold distance of child-rearing that you inherited from your father and grandfather enter my bloodline.

How you are with others is fine with me. In case you hadn’t noticed, I’m not much different. Besides, think of the money we’ll save on presents. But we will talk, especially about the important things and we will talk about them at the time it’s needed, not when it’s too late. 

I’m all for meaningful silences but when they end I want to know what they mean. 

I want this life. Since the beginning I’ve felt I’m coming home when I come here and I feel lost when I’m not. I love you and I want to spend the rest of my life with you, provided you are prepared to accept what I’ve asked for in your ‘contract’ (that word is so wrong my first impulse was to take off, forever.) If that much is too much then it says a lot about our chances of survival.

I think you will because I believe you are the strongest and most honest man I have ever met and that you have finally met the woman that you need to survive what’s coming.

You can give me your answer, face to face, when I come next weekend.

Signed, guess who?

Flynn read the letter several times over, climbed on to the ancient TD-18 International Harvester tractor with its metal seat shined by three generations of ample backsides and drove out to do some ploughing. His plan was for the concentration on straight lines to bring him the peace to think clearly about what Kate had said. What wasn’t helping was the ‘love’ part. 

His father had been a hard and harsh taskmaster and he found it difficult to recall any words of praise passing his lips. The most anyone could hope for was the odd grunting nod and a mumbled ‘Not bad’. His mother was only slightly better, with hugs disappearing by the time he went to school and a relentless ticking off of tasks when he came home. 

He understood they were hard years when they were trying to get the land into the condition that it needed to be in for long-term sustainability and there was little time for anything peripheral. And as he grew older he imagined that they thought that leaving him the legacy of the farm was, in the end, the only love that counted.

Breast cancer (deliberately left untreated he discovered later) took his mother in her late forties and five years later he found his father dead from a heart attack while repairing fences on a boundary paddock. When he picked him up, he half expected to be told to bugger off and get back to his work. Flynn made the necessary arrangements and stood dutifully solemn at their funerals, accepting condolences, but felt nothing. One day they were alive, the next day they were dead. That’s how life worked.

On his first night alone, he went through some old photos and lingered over a picture of his Mum, clipped from the local paper, holding one of her prize cakes at the annual regional agricultural show. Mum’s recipes were a local legend and she kept them, written in immaculate copperplate script, in a re-purposed school exercise book, kept from her teaching days. He decided to keep it safe, without knowing why.

Women rarely entered his mind as he continued to develop the farm, with some occasional hired help. Those he had met at school seemed weak or unapproachable. After he left school, he would see them again in town, usually either flaunting what he imagined were country town fashionable clothes or pregnant or walking along with a tribe of whining kids trailing behind them.

A couple of girls had pursued him (or his property) and once he had found himself suddenly engaged to Cheryl Clarke, not that he could recall popping the question. The next thing he knew was that has being paraded around the district like a prize bull with a ring through his nose. He hibernated for weeks before that blew over.

Then one day, when he was collecting his mail from the post office, in strode a statuesque female stranger. The coat and slacks could only belong to a city type and her long red hair hung in waves down her back. Her face contained eyes and a fixed smile that spoke of openness while still conveying concealed steel. 

Having collected her mail, she strode out again, unfolded herself into a dusty, dented hatchback and sped off. In the background he could hear fragments from the tongues wagging. ‘ … new schoolteacher  … not married … bit of a tyrant in the schoolroom I’ve heard but the kids seem to like her … asked for wine in the pub the other day… drives like a maniac’. This woman had certainly entered Flynn’s mind and he was totally uncertain as to how to deal with that.

Up until then, he’d go into town for the mail and shop at random times, when the opportunity arose between jobs. Now he found himself on schedule to be there, coincidentally, when she came into the post office. She’d started nodding to him, as country people do, but with an odd, crooked smile on her face when she did it.

Kate made the first move. Instead of nodding, she asked him ‘I’ve heard that sometimes you take animals for agistment.’ After a moment, from the side of a barely opened mouth, he said ‘What did you have in mind?’

‘I have an ageing horse that I’d like to have close at hand.’

‘One horse?’

‘Sum total.’

‘Not sure my fences are high enough to contain a horse.’

‘Oh, her fence jumping days are over. Besides, you could ride her. If you wanted to.’

They pretended to haggle over an agistment fee and then Kate said, ‘I’ll bring her up at the weekend.’

And so it began.

And now here he was, sitting on his veranda, waiting for Kate, who was waiting for an answer.

Kate’s traveling car wreck pulled up at the veranda. She emerged, climbed the steps and sat in his Mum’s rocking chair and waited.

‘Not sure where to start’, he said.

She offered no help.

Silence.

‘I love you and want to spend the rest of my life with you’ he blurted, as if fearful that if he didn’t get it out quickly his words would be strangled at birth.

Silence.

Kate smiled but said nothing.

‘About kids’, he nervously continued, ‘I want to be able to leave the farm to a next generation. I’m just not sure I’d be much good at the raising bit. You might have to give me a few tips.’

Kate laughed and said ‘I can always work with a willing pupil’. 

They watched a pair of kookaburras land in the giant redgum that dominated the front yard.

Kate’s voice softened and she said, ‘That’s settled then.’

Now the silence between them was easy.

Later, she said, ‘Thought I might make a cake tomorrow. What did you do with your Mum’s recipe book?’

Finn smiled and said ‘Think I might have put it somewhere in the bedroom. Want to help me find it?’


Doug Jacquier has lived in many places across Australia, including regional and remote communities, and has travelled extensively overseas. His poems and stories have been published in Australia, the US, the UK, Canada, New Zealand and India. He blogs at Six
Crooked Highways


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“Bodies Bent with Work” Short Story by Steve Sanko

"Bodies Bent with Work" Fiction by Steve Sanko in The Chamber Magazine

Odours hover low in the arena, pungent with nervous urine; horse, cattle, sheep, any beast that can realize a profit. The auctioneer’s repetitious phrasing rings shamelessly to those listening and tedious to those who are not. His timing neither falters nor retires. He cannot allow himself to appear uncertain; not to his earnest buyers he can’t. That is the nature of his task.

 The auctioneer might well have been pitching caskets to corpses as far as I am concerned.  I am neither earnest nor a buyer and his ‘oo’ll gi me 40, 40, 40’ sounds like an engine missing far down the road. Today I am consumed by misfortune. That’s why I came to the sale barns. I didn’t want to bear the weight alone.

The same work bent bodies are here today as with every sale, some to buy, some to neighbor and sip coffee. Men and women that bend their bones with beasts’ work, can feel legitimately idle for a couple of hours. They lean the rail with their forearms, fingers laced, heads stooped from familiarity with strain; mighty workers clad in farm garb. 

I was leaning. I was leaning next to a neighbor whose great bent hands and work worn frame declared his right to be leaning as well. The Guthrie’s persevered as a cow/calf operation in spite of owning good bottom land, north of the assumed limits of good Ontario farmland. He and his wife Violla were stockmen not land tillers. He stood pushing his finger at the tear hole of his cup. I expect he had seen the worry in my face and needed a detour for his eyes. He could see that I had been bit by our neighbor’s trouble.

“See anything you like, Elmer?” I ask to let him off the hook.

“Sellin; not buyin.” He says and he draws involuntary circles on the lid. We stand awkwardly for what seems too long, knowing that there is a question that needs asking. 

“You heard?” He asks. I sense he hopes I have not. 

I acknowledge his question with a nod but have a gnawing one of my own. Why I am so spooked by this tragedy. This isn’t the first-time injured beasts had to be put down. Every guy here probably had to do it himself at one time or another. But that business. That was the saddest waste of animal flesh I had ever known. Those poor horses. Ran full out, probably for the first time; ran until they perished. I had gone over every possible reason why and not one of them offered any comfort. The reason I had suspected was hard to swallow. 

Guthrie twisted himself so he was facing me full on. He was still fingering that cup.

“You were there?” He asked it and raised his eyes till they were fused on mine, retiring yet persistent.

“No. Not me. You?”

“No. Walker told me.”

I scanned the men abreast of Guthrie, searching for Walker, as if that was going to settle anything. I watched Guthrie study me.

“Hell of a thing…” I said. “…just to bolt like that, full out.”

Guthrie made a spitting noise. “It would have only taken one of them to start.”

I listened to Guthrie’s explanation. I could see he had made his sense of it.

“Just bolted.” I repeated. “Ran clear to the swamp.”

Guthrie reached to an inside pocket. His hand emerged holding a small bottle. Under the cover of his coat, he tipped the bottle into his cup. He made a gesture. I waved the offer away.

“Those animals never saw anything like open spaces before…” Guthrie’s tone was looking for blame. “not in the years I knew Able to own them. They were either hitched and working or corralled in that shoebox paddock.”

Guthrie was probably right, but still, Able hadn’t been in the ground long. A dead man can’t answer to insinuations.   

“You ever keep horses?” Guthrie asked. He was implying, that if I had, I’d know. 

  “I’ve never taken a notion to want a horse.”

He looked to me as if there should be more.

“No need of horses.” I answered. “As a pet maybe but I wouldn’t want to find myself here selling a friend. Would you?”

Guthrie sniffed a brief laugh at my logic.

A big strawberry roan mare got led out into the ring. She looked like somebody flung red paint at her white body through a sieve. Striking. She held herself proud and bobbed and shook her head in protest. The auctioneer began his trill and I could read the worry in that animal’s lines just as Guthrie had seen it in mine. 

Able’s team had spent a lifetime in the company of soulless drudgery, no indulgences, no pasture land to kick up and play. They bolted out of the sheer joy of it; an opportunity they’d never known.  That’s what I convinced myself happened.  That’s what made it unpalatable. It’d be like watching fledglings getting picked off by predators on their first flight. Turn a guys’ guts just thinking about it.  

Every day Able would hitch his team and they’d draw whatever he had been hired to haul and when he was done cooling them down, they’d be confined to that small paddock, only spitting distance from the comings and goings of the road. Those poor beasts could only witness the world’s disposition: passing dog fights, lightning storms, kids playing on the road. Imagine it; them cut loose for the first time. They probably hit full gallop in three strides. Rash enthusiasm ended up a very ugly thing indeed.

It took Guthrie and I less than an hour to learn the authentic details of what happened to that team: When Able Cromptom passed from the ailments that had plagued him, his team had needed care and feeding. Able was a bachelor. Gossip had it that he had been orphaned although no one knew that for sure. That was before my time. It was agreed within the community that his team should be pastured by his neighbors until the estate was settled. It was intended to be a charitable undertaking.  We look after our own. 

Mr. Angus Brown agreed to be the temporary recipient of the team. He offered the pasture fronting on the Mallard quarter line. They were loaded in a trailer and transported. A crowd of helpers showed up, mostly for the laughing and telling of stories, unaware that they were to become witnesses. Upon being unloaded both horses became hard to handle. The gelding reared and snorted and the mare resisted the men as they removed her halter. Those horses knew something was up. Both immediately bolted. Neighbors shouted, encouraging the team to freedom. The animals took separate trails for the first time in their lives like they were rebelling against years of pointless toil. They eventually both broke the rise that led to low ground and descended out of sight.  The first sign that something had gone wrong came to the crowd on the wind. It was a dreadful sound, “Panicked whinnies.” That was how it was described. That sound got everyone running.

 Some said they had bolted because of being skittish of the unfamiliar ground. Little Jenny Brown thought the same as me. She swore she saw raw impatience in their trusting faces. Both animals were dead within thirty minutes of their release. The mare ran head on into a leaning dead tamarack and broke her neck. The gelding broke a leg in the swamp muck. There was no decision to be made over the animals’ future. It took half of that thirty minutes to fetch a rifle.

Guthrie left the auction barns forgetting to collect his earnings from the sale. Me; I thought to offer the guy who bought the strawberry mare more than he had paid. I let that thought pass.


 From a body of work that includes thirty short stories Steve has placed two pieces: ‘Hardly Worth the Telling’ with DASH, English dept., California State University, and ‘Burying Jacob Muscrat’ with the now defunct Danforth Review.


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“One Damn Photograph” Flash Fiction by Thomas Elson

"One Damn Photograph" Flash Fiction by Thomas Elson

A great resumé. Law review editor. Opinion writer for the state Attorney General. Chief counsel for the state legal ethics board. Assistant counsel for the state highway commission. Senior assistant then Chief of Staff to the Attorney General. Married. Two children.

Then a death. An off-year election. And now, Attorney General in his own right with marble-walled offices and parquet floors on the second floor state capitol building.

Political debts incurred were repaid with subtlety-slanted findings and fresh staff. Young, bright, connected, tempting.

One stood out. Given an office with an empty desk. Accompanied him on trips. Accommodating.

Restaurants. Baroque hotels in neighboring states. Reservations under assumed names lasting days longer that the scheduled meetings. Poolside. Sunglasses. Shadows.

          One newspaper.

          One front page.

          One resignation.

          One divorce.

          One damn photograph.


Thomas Elson’s stories appear in numerous venues, including Blink-Ink, Ellipsis, Better Than Starbucks, Bull, Cabinet of Heed, Flash Frontier, Ginosko, Short Édition, North Dakota Quarterly, Litro,Journal of Expressive WritingDead Mule School, Selkie, New Ulster, Lampeter, and Adelaide. He divides his time between Northern California and Western Kansas.


If you would like to be part of the RFM family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines.

If you like dark fiction, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.

“Damn Charlie” Epistolary Short Story by Ed McConnell

Rural Fiction Magazine: "Damn Charlie" Fiction by Ed McConnell

What follows is a statement written by Enoch H. Bock, former resident of Valley Junction, Iowa. He recounts certain events which took place in Valley Junction (now known as West Des Moines) during 1898. Retrieved from a time capsule opened in 1998, this unedited document, is part of the Local History Collection of West Des Moines Public Library. 

Some experiences are remembered because they are enjoyable. Others, because they are not. This story falls into the, not, category.

    In the early spring of 1898, I graduated from the Iowa State College of Agricultural and Mechanic Arts. Returning home to Valley Junction, Iowa, I went to work in my uncle’s general store. The job allowed time for me to read the law in preparation to take the bar exam. My family was proud that I had a college degree and was studying to be a lawyer.

    Before sitting for the bar exam, I met Sadie Stageman, a young lady from Granger, Iowa. Reverend Philip Coles, pastor of the Body of Christ Apostolic Church, introduced us at the Valley Junction Spring Social. 

    When I first saw her, I stopped in my tracks. With long brown hair and a shining personality, she was the apple of every young man’s eye at the event. I was smitten, but I wasn’t the only one with a bead on that beauty. 

    Del Hyer, one of the most personable people in our town, was thunderstruck by Sadie Stageman. That evening, when Del and I took turns dancing with her, we fell under her spell. 

    Given the feeling I could not live without her, I determined, then and there, to  win her heart and make her my wife. As such, the contest for her hand, was on. While Del seemed to have the inside track. I resolved that the outcome would go my way.

    Since Sadie lived in Granger, getting to visit her was no easy matter. A trip to that town was a time consuming journey. Granger was reachable from Valley Junction by rail, on foot, horseback or a horse drawn wagon. The distance between the towns was about sixteen miles by road. 

    The rail line was the faster route. It was a straight shot north, eleven miles, until it reached the outskirts of that town. The line then turned northwest, for a mile. The depot was one block from Sadie’s house. 

    Because of the cost of train tickets, I preferred taking the road to Granger. Others suitors visited Sadie from time to time. I would see them on the road and knew where they were going, but didn’t feel they had much chance at gaining Sadie’s hand. My main competitor was Del.

    Of all the young women I met, up to that time, Sadie proved to be the most enterprising. Given the number of suitors she attracted, to see who most wanted her hand in marriage, she devised a contest.

    On the Fourth of July, at the Granger Summerfest, Sadie announced that on August 25, she would entertain a proposal of marriage. The flyer advertising the contest read, in part, 

. . . She would consider the first proposal of marriage presented. She had the final say on whether it was acceptable. Any proposal would take place on her front porch. No potential suitor could arrive at her home before eleven a.m. on that date. The contest would close when the clock struck noon . . .

    Sadie set up a committee to control the arrival of suitors that she expected in Granger on that date. She did not want a pile up of young men on her porch. To maintain order, there was a contest signup sheet. Entries closed one week before August 25. 

    Sadie set up a welcoming committee. It split into two groups. One located where the road from Valley Junction entered Granger, another at the train depot. Any would-be suitors would have their names checked against a sign up list. As it turned out, only Del and I put our names on the signup sheet. At the time, I didn’t know we were the only ones. I figured the list to be long. 

    With the rules in place, the contest commenced. People in both towns had their favorites and placed bets on who they thought would win. This whole affair was turning into great sport. Anyway, Del and I made our separate preparations to get to Granger on the appointed day. Given the stakes, neither of us wished the other well.

    I was up early on August 25 when I ran into Reverend Coles. He greeted me with, “I saw Del Hyer, in the last hour, heading out of town toward Granger. He has no horse and is trying to cover the sixteen miles on foot.”

    Surprised by that news, I was also relieved. As it turns out, the night before, my horse came up lame. I wasn’t worried, though, all I had to do was rent a horse from Bill Cookson’s stable. Hurrying over there, I encountered a sign, Closed for illness. I thought, “That must be why Del’s on foot. He can’t get a horse either.” Crestfallen, I now had to find another means to get to Granger.

    Then it occurred to me, I could get my Uncle Ike’s buckboard from the general store. I ran to the store’s loading dock. It was sitting there. Seeing him, I said, “I need that buckboard to get to Granger before noon.”

    Uncle Ike knew why and was sympathetic, but replied, “Sorry nephew, I have to make a delivery this morning to the County Home. I wish I could help. Good luck.”

    I was miserable. Del was going to get to Sadie first. He had too much of a head start for me to make up on foot walking on the road. 

    Hoping there was an early train to Granger, I hurried to our town’s depot but the train had already departed. As I stood there, wondering what to do, Charlie DuBois, a friend of Del’s, approached me. 

    People around town, called him, Damn Charlie. An incessant talker, Charlie did something every day to scare or worry the townsfolk. He would sneak up behind some unsuspecting victim. Then, either, make a loud noise or claim there was some sort of varmint about to take a chunk out of their ankle. He was quite impressed with how funny he thought his sneak attacks were. Every time he pulled one of his stunts, the object of his unwanted attention said, “Damn Charlie”. The nickname stuck.

    I knew he was going to be a pest and was not in the mood to deal with any of his shenanigans. To my surprise, though, he came up with a reasonable suggestion to help me out of my conundrum.

    “Why don’t you walk on the train tracks? It’s four miles shorter than the road to Granger and it’s almost a straight shot. I can go with you.” Damn Charlie was the last person I wanted with me on this journey. Still, his idea was a good one. 

    I was confident that I could walk over three miles per hour for that distance. At that rate, I could make the trip to Granger in under four hours, even on the tracks. I figured it would take Del more than five hours to go sixteen miles even with a head start. I looked at my watch, it was a little after seven a.m. Del’s head start would make this a close race.

    Walking the tracks would not be easy, especially as fast as I had to move. If there had been another means of getting to Granger before Del, I would have taken it, but there wasn’t any other way. 

    Checking my pocket to be sure I had the engagement ring, I stepped onto the train tracks and headed north. When Damn Charlie started to follow me I turned and said, “I prefer you don’t come along.” Pressed for time and looking at my watch, I resumed walking down the tracks. At first, he seemed to heed my request because I didn’t notice him following.

    Soon, I heard the sounds of footsteps behind me. It was Damn Charlie. I didn’t want him tagging along but I didn’t have time to stop and argue with him. Since I could not prevent him from following me, I tried to ignore him.

    We were on tracks laid across the flat Iowa prairie. As I looked ahead, the rails seem to stretch into infinity. A barbed wire fence, set fifty feet on each side from the center of the track bed, lined our route. The only breaks in the fence were for occasional road crossings. What remained was open prairie, thick with tall grasses, or farm fields full of corn or soybeans. 

    To me, it all looked the same as I pressed down the line. The only man-made features were the barbed wire fence lining the track bed and a few, randomly placed, signal marker poles indicating when an engineer should blow his whistle as crossing were approached. There were no distance or direction markers along the tracks.

    Damn Charlie was still keeping pace with me. Up to this point, he had been pretty quiet, then I heard him say, “So you’re taking the bar exam, huh? That’s gotta be hard. Shouldn’t you be home studying instead of doing this? Even money says you fail that exam.”

    I could see why people thought he was annoying. His irritating comment distracted me from keeping watch of my feet. I had to be careful as I placed my feet on the ties between the rails so as not to trip, but Damn Charlie kept talking. 

    “You’re gonna get to Granger with an hour to spare, why don’t you slow down? You’re gonna be too tuckered out to make a proposal.” Ignoring his comments, I kept walking as fast as I could go, concentrating on what I would do when I got to Granger. 

    I knew how important it was to be the first suitor to arrive. I had little doubt I would be the winner. I could picture myself making a successful offer of marriage when my concentration was again interrupted by Damn Charlie’s voice.

    “Remember, I’ve known you all my life. I don’t think you’re smart enough to be a lawyer.”

    I let that comment pass because I knew I was about halfway to Granger and needed to keep going. I had to stop paying attention to Damn Charlie but he was aggravating, not going away and he wouldn’t shut up.

    It was then his voice changed tone, it became more urgent, downright dire. All I heard was, “Watch out for that bull snake by your foot.”

    I’m afraid of any type of snake. Knowing bull snakes can deliver a nasty bite, I jumped in the air hoping not to step on that earthly representative of the Devil. Landing, my left foot caught a gap between one of the ties and the crushed limestone filler. I twisted around, causing me to stumble and fall. 

    I don’t recall much of the next few minutes. Given the lump growing on the side of my head, I must have bumped it on one of the track rails. I wasn’t down long, but when I got up, Damn Charlie was running, as fast as he could, ahead of me, down the tracks. He was getting farther away from where I was standing.

    I thought, “There was no snake. It’s another of Damn Charlie’s tricks. That fool must think he can propose to Sadie if he gets to Granger first. I’m not letting that happen.” 

    I was still a little dizzy. I didn’t want to run, but figuring it would get me to Granger even quicker, I took off after Damn Charlie. I raced down the tracks trying to catch him.

    With effort, I overtook him and started to pull away. I was happy to be leaving Damn Charlie and his tricks behind. After some more time passed, I could see the town ahead. I was pretty sure I was arriving ahead of Del. 

    As I approached the train depot there was a crowd waiting. It had to be the welcoming committee. Excited that I got to Granger first, with raised voice, I said, “I made it. I’m here.” Reaching into my pocket, I pulled out the new, shiny diamond engagement ring. I started waiving it and was yelling, “Get me to Sadie’s house right away.” 

    The eyes of the crowd focused on me. To my surprise, Reverend Coles, stepped forward out of the assembled gaggle of people. With a curious look on his face, he asked, “Son, why did you come back? Why aren’t you in Granger?” 

    Confused, I looked around, then felt sick. I recognized every building and most of the people. It was then I realized the terrible truth, I was back in Valley Junction. Damn Charlie tricked me into turning around. Del must have sent him to keep me from getting to Granger first. 

    As I stood there, I thought, “Right now, Del is probably on one knee proposing to Sadie.” Standing in the crowd at the Valley Junction depot, I must have looked like someone stole my horse.

    From across the street, standing on the steps of the Frontier House Hotel, I could hear the late arriving, Damn Charlie DuBois laughing. He played his role well.

###

Not long after, Sadie and Del’s engagement announcement hit the papers. It was then I began to think about marriage to other eligible young women in the county. 

    I had taken and passed the bar exam in September and had set up a law office in Valley Junction. Considered an eligible bachelor and quite a catch by the townsfolk, I thought finding a new girl would be easy. It was then I remembered Sadie had a younger sister of marrying age, Bessie. I thought her attractive and would make a good wife.

    One fall day, while contemplating whether to ask Bessie to a church social, I saw an article in The Granger Gazette. The headline read, “The Wedding of Miss Sadie Stageman and Mr. Del Hyer.” The paper described it as “the social event of the year.” 

    According to the paper, “Miss Stageman, now Mrs. Del Hyer, wore a flowing white gown with a garland of baby red roses. Mr. Hyer, wearing a black top hat, gray, double breasted vest and a black tailed tuxedo, cast an adoring gaze at his new wife.”     

    The paper went on to report that, “Mr. Charles DuBois of Valley Junction was the best man. Miss Bessie Stageman, sister of the bride, was the maid of honor. Each looked resplendent in support of the newly minted husband and wife.” The Gazette even mentioned that Mr. DuBois and Miss Stageman hit it off so well “there are rumors he has started sparking her.”

    Upon finishing reading that news item, all I could say to myself was, “Damn Charlie.”

Enoch H. Bock

Valley Junction, Iowa

November 14, 1898

End Note:
Damn Charlie is an adaptation by Edward N. McConnell from the original story by Ambrose Bierce, Mr. Swiddler’s Flip-Flap, first published in “Fun” (London), August 15, 1874; Reprinted as by “B” in “The Wasp” (San Francisco), July 7, 1882. The works of Ambrose Bierce are now in the public domain. See also, “Index of the Project Gutenberg-Works of Ambrose Bierce”, Compiled by David Widger, Release date, February 1, 2019. gutenberg.org


Edward N. McConnell and his wife, Cindy, own McConnell Publishing, LLC. Their first project was to publish a short story anthology, Where Harry’s Buried and Other Short Stories, now available on Amazon Books. In addition, to date his work has appeared in Literally Stories, Terror House Magazine, Mad Swirl, Down in the Dirt, Rural Fiction Magazine, The Corner Bar
Magazine, Masticadores India, Drunk Monkeys, The Milk House and Refuge Online Literary Journal. He lives in West Des Moines, Iowa with Cindy.


If you would like to be part of the RFM family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines.

If you like dark fiction, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.