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Showing posts with label Featured. Show all posts

Fiction: "The Flame" by Emilie Noelle-Provost


If you don’t count Johnny Depp, until the day I met Charles Forest I had never so much
as considered making love to a man other than my husband. It was a bright morning in
late June, one of those rare days in New England that nearly convince you that all is right
in the world, or at least that such a state of affairs might be possible. Charles’ driveway, a
long and winding affair that must have been a bitch to plow, was lined with sugar maples
and covered with dove-colored gravel. I cringed at the way the little stones crunched and
popped beneath my tires. Although I’d taken the longest route possible, and had been
careful to drive the speed limit, I was still fifteen minutes early.

     Wisps of steam rose up from the dewy lawn in the places where the sun broke through
the trees. I climbed the steps to the covered front porch and, not wanting to catch Charles
Forest in his bathrobe, decided to wait a few minutes before ringing the bell.

     The house, a sprawling place that over the years had belonged to a string of farmers, was
painted the same dusty red as the brick mill buildings in the city where I lived, not far
away, but a world apart, really. The property stretched on as far I could see: lawn
followed by meadow, followed by woodlands.

     After five minutes – probably too long – I pressed the doorbell. Charles opened the door
the moment the chime sounded, making me wonder if he’d been standing there, just on
the other side, the entire time.

     Charles looked the same as he did in the professional headshots you could find of him on
the Internet. That is to say, stern and jowly, his face vaguely resembling a pug’s. His eyes
were a bit too large for his face with irises the color of March mud, the pupils cavernous
black. I could see that his hair, mostly gray now, had been dark once. He wore the type of
no-nonsense crew cut you’d expect to find on a high school chemistry teacher.

     Charles was taller than I expected, maybe six-foot-three—though I suppose a person’s
height isn’t something you can determine from photographs. I’d worked his age out to be
48 the night before when I was doing research for our interview. The man standing in
front of me could have easily been in his mid-50s.

     Charles Patrick Forest (the name he used on the covers of his books) had written eight
best sellers and had published countless stories and articles. Five years ago, he’d won the
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

     “Hi. I’m Nathalie LaFlamme. From The Globe.”

     Charles smiled. His teeth were broad and bleached and flawlessly square. His lips—by
far his best feature—were fleshy and voluptuous, the sort that fashion models would kill
for. He swung the front door open wide, placing his arm high enough for me to pass
underneath it.

     “Glad you could make it on such short notice. Come in.” Charles shut the door and
jammed his fists into the front pockets of his jeans. He wore a wristwatch that I was sure
had cost more than my car.

     We stood in the foyer, both of us silent just long enough for the circumstances to feel
awkward. At last, he said, “Why don’t you come into the kitchen? I just made coffee.”

     The Forests’ kitchen looked like someone had lifted it from the pages of a magazine:
creamy marble countertops were offset by custom maple cabinetry and a showroom’s
worth of high-end stainless steel appliances. A photograph of Charles standing on a beach
with amiddle-agedd woman and two teenage boys was tacked to the fridge with a magnet
shaped like a miniature banana. The boys had Charles’ eyes.

     I sat on one of the stools at the kitchen island while Charles set out coffee mugs and
pulled two bottles of water from the fridge.

     He cracked the cap on his bottle and took a long swallow. A rivulet of water slipped
down his chin and stained the front of his shirt. I held out a paper napkin, and when he
leaned over to take it from me I noticed a drop still clinging to his lower lip. I had to fight
the urge to touch it.

     A gentlemanly room with mahogany paneling, Charles’ study was lined with hundreds of
books. A silver Macintosh laptop sat in the center of an oiled pine desk the size of my
living room couch.

     We sat on a love seat by the window. Charles’ last novel, the Pulitzer Prize winner, had
been placed in the center of the coffee table.

     I took out my list of questions and set down my voice recorder. I was about to switch the
device on when a wiry, dark-haired woman – the one from the photograph – poked her
head through the doorway.

     “Oh, excuse me. I’m Dianne, Charles’ wife—Charlie, I need you to go to the store and
pick up some things when you’re done.”

     Charles nodded in reply, and when Dianne had closed the door behind her, he turned to
face me, his lanky frame all elbows and knees.

     “How long?” Charles touched my left hand with his forefinger. His skin was dry and
papery, and even after he pulled his hand away, the spot where his finger had been felt
warm.

     I took me a moment to realize he was asking about my wedding band.

     “I’ve been married for seventeen years. We have two girls, age fourteen and sixteen.”

     “Twenty-six years,” Charles said, nodding his head in the direction of the closed door.

     He gestured toward the voice recorder with his index finger, suggesting that we should
get on with it.

     “So, tell me about this new book you’re working on,” I said.

     “There is no new book. I haven’t written a word in years.”

      I paused, wrinkling my forehead. “Then why did you ask to do an interview? Your agent
told me yesterday that you were working on something – that I would get an exclusive
story. I had to do a lot of juggling to come here today.”

     “My agent is under the impression that I am working on something. I’ve been telling him
so for years. I’m under contract for one more book.”

     “But why not just get out of the contract? Surely you could just hire a lawyer, or ask your
agent to …”

     “No. You don’t understand. The thing is … I don’t want to do that. I really want to write
another book.”

     Sighing, I clicked off the recorder and began to gather my things.

     “I’m sorry.” Charles stared at the wall, his huge hands covering his knees. “I thought that
if I knew I was going to be talking to someone from the media—it might help me get
back on track, motivate me to get behind the desk.”

     Then, as if it were the most natural thing in the world, Charles placed his hand on top of
mine and began stroking the underside of my wrist with his thumb.

     Like ripples lapping at the shore of a lake, waves of desire radiated out from beneath my
ribcage and down into the hollow space below my belly button.

     Charles leaned over and kissed me on the mouth.

     He nibbled at the curve of my neck and pressed his lips into the delicate flesh opposite
my elbow. His hair and skin smelled of sandalwood and cloves. I gripped the back of the
sofa to keep from swooning.

     A dog barking outside brought me to my senses. I pulled my arm from Charles’ grasp and
forced myself to stand. The room looked all wrong, its dark wood and leather furniture
too sharp a contrast to the bright day outside. I did what I could to straighten my dress.

     Charles stood up and tucked in his shirt. He adjusted his enormous Rolex, placed one
hand on the small of my back, and escorted me out of the house.

     We are Catholic in my family. My great-uncle Lucien, a priest, officiated when I married
Paul. My daughters, Marie and Georgie, go to Saint Genevieve High School, the same
school Paul and I graduated from. I wasn’t a virgin when I got married, but I had never
been with anyone but Paul until that morning at Charles’ house.

     My parents never talked to my sisters and me about sex. When I was ten, my mother gave
me a book that explained what would happen when I got my period, and what I should do
about it. She stocked the bathroom closet with maxi pads, and said I should let her know
if I had any questions. I was sixteen when I finally learned where babies came from.

     In high school, we had the Catholic version of sex ed, which consisted almost entirely of
the girls’ gym teacher, a manly nun named Sister Maureen, warning us about the grave
dangers of premarital sex, masturbation, birth control, and especially abortion. She wore
a silver whistle on a nylon cord around her neck. In the event that we were harboring any
impure thoughts, at the end of each class Sister would lead us in a vigorous jog around
the field house.

     In spite of all this, or perhaps because of it, Paul and I have always had a fulfilling love
life. We are attentive to each other, and fit well together. This was true even after I met
Charles, when my dreams became haunted by the smell of the leather sofa in his study.

     One Sunday in October, when Paul and the girls and I were at Mass, Paul reached over
and began stroking the back of my wrist with his thumb. I don’t remember a single word
from that homily.

     After church, I went upstairs to change. I shut the door to our bedroom and dialed
Charles’ cell number. I was relieved when I got his voicemail.

     “Hi, Charles. This is Nathalie LaFlamme, the journalist who came to your house a few
months back. I was just wondering if you’d started working on anything new and maybe
wanted to talk about it.”

      It was five days before Charles returned my call. Seeing his number on the caller ID
made my face and neck flush red. I let the phone ring four times before deciding to
answer it.

     “Hello.”

     “Nathalie. I’m so glad you called. There’s something I want to talk to you about. Can you
have dinner with me?”

     “Um, sure, I suppose so.”

     “How about Tuesday at six-thirty? Meet me at Marcelo’s in Portsmouth.”

     Marcelo’s is on Bow Street, overlooking the river. I’d walked by it probably two dozen
times and had never once considered eating there, mainly because of the guy that stands
out front wearing a tuxedo during the summer, beckoning passersby to come inside. It
looks too expensive.

     The hostess showed me to a private dining room on the second floor. One whole wall was
made of glass, the lights along the waterfront twinkling in the vanishing dusk. A log had
been lit in the fireplace against the October chill. Charles, seated at a table for two near
the back of the room, stood up when I came in.

     He looked different than when I’d last seen him. He had a tan and seemed to have lost a
few inches from his waistline. He wore a navy blue blazer over a cream-colored dress
shirt open at the collar. His khaki pants had been meticulously pressed. He gestured for
me to sit as he pulled out a chair.

     Without asking if I wanted it, he poured me a glass of Chianti from the decanter on the
table.

     “Before you say anything, I want to apologize to you for the way I behaved the last time I
saw you,” he said. “I don’t know what came over me, but I hope you’ll believe me when
I tell you that I’ve never done anything like that before.”

     “I’m just as responsible as you are,” I said. “It’s not like I asked you to stop.”

     “No. I should have known better. I took advantage of you. Let’s see if we can put it
behind us and start over again.” He raised his wineglass and clinked its rim against mine.

     Charles set a neat stack of paper, held together with a red rubber band, on my salad plate.

     “What’s this?”

     “My next book.”

     “Is this why you asked me to come here?”

     “Yes, and I want you to read it—before I send it to my editor. And then, I want to know
what you think. I hope you’ll be able to write your article now, too. I think I owe you that
– at the very least.”

     When I began to protest, Charles waved his hand in the air, swatting away the very
possibility that I might say no.

     After dinner, Charles walked me to my car.

     We stopped on the sidewalk beside my Honda and I took my keys out of my purse. The
air was cold and clean and smelled like the sea. A thick blanket of stars hung low over
the darkness of the water. Our breath came out in billowy vapor clouds that quickly
disappeared into the night.

     It was nearly 10 p.m. We’d been the last customers in Marcelo’s. The temperature had
dropped since I’d arrived and my jacket wasn’t warm enough.

     “Get in touch with me after you’ve read the manuscript.”

     I nodded, hugging my chest to conserve warmth.

     Charles put his hands on my shoulders and kissed me on the forehead.

     “Thank you for having dinner with me. I had a nice time.”

     I looked up at him, craning my neck. I’m fairly tall for a woman, but no match for
Charles’ height, even in heels.

     He leaned down and kissed me on the lips.

     The kiss was a friendly one. But the spicy smell of his cologne and the feel of his lips,
together with the wine, left me completely unmoored. I wrapped my arms around him
and pressed my mouth to his, not caring that we were in the middle of the sidewalk.

     We ended up at an inn overlooking the water, a thoroughly contemporary place that,
although stylish, seemed bleak when compared to the cozy, fire-lit dining room where
we’d spent most of the night.

     Charles helped me off with my jacket and hung it in the closet. He took off his sport coat
and hung that up, too, before turning off the light in the entryway.

     I stood in the middle of the room, which was lit only by the moonglow pouring through
the windows. Charles came over and put his arms around me. He planted tiny kisses at
the base of my neck until my knees threatened to fold, but by then I was thinking of Paul
and the girls. The room’s sharp angles and icy chrome fixtures had leached the fire from
my bones.

     Charles led me to the sofa and sat down beside me. He kissed my hair and we stared out
the window at the reflection of the moon on the water.

     After that night, I carved out a tiny pocket in the flesh beside my heart and let Charles
live there. I called him after I read his manuscript, and I finally wrote my article. We
exchanged an occasional email.

     The next time I saw Charles was almost two years later. He invited me for coffee at a
sidewalk cafe in Newburyport.

     “It’s so good to see you, Nathalie. How are you?” He placed his hand on top of mine and
gave it a firm squeeze.

     From his bag, he produced a hardcover copy of his new book, the one whose manuscript
he’d given me to read.

     “It will be in stores on Tuesday, but this copy is for you. Open it.”

     I cracked the front cover to find a handwritten inscription on the title page.

     “Not that. Read that later. Here.” He flipped the page to reveal the book’s official
dedication, printed in italic font: For Nathalie.

     I looked up from the table. “What about your wife?”

     “It’s none of her business. I wrote the book for you.”

     Across the street, a group of women stood on the sidewalk. An older lady wearing a
green windbreaker pointed to our table.

     “I think you have fans,” I said, nodding my head in the direction of the women. “They
probably want to say hello.”

     “They can wait. Take a walk with me.”

     We strolled along the riverfront, my arm laced through his. It was a lovely, warm
September afternoon. Cottony clouds drifted across the sky.

      When Charles felt sure that we’d lost the group of ladies, we sat down on a bench. He
draped his arm around my shoulders. I leaned into him, my head resting in the space
between his chest and chin. I could feel his heart beating through his clothes.

     I followed Charles to his house in my car.

     We entered through a side door that looked like it had once been meant for deliveries.
Charles led me up a narrow stairway at the back of the house, its wooden runs made from
a patchwork of oak boards. The stairs creaked when we stepped on them.

     “No one’s here. Dianne and the boys are visiting her mother in Tampa.”

     Our destination was a bright guest bedroom, simple but elegant, at the end of a long
corridor. Late day sunlight streamed through windows that offered a beautiful view of the
meadow behind the house, golden that time of year.

     The bed was an antique four-poster, its wood dark with age. The spread covering the
mattress was white chenille. Laid out on the floor in front of the painted brick fireplace
was a hand-braided rag rug. A landscape painting of an afternoon river surrounded by
autumn trees hung over the mantle.

     Charles neatly folded all of my clothes and placed them on a chair.

     Despite our best efforts, we were awkward with one another: shy, fumbling, and much
too careful.

     Naked beneath the thin covers, we held each other while the sun dipped below the tree
line. We watched the stars poke through the fabric of the evening sky. And for a brief
moment, I was sure I could feel the rotation of the earth.

     At breakfast six months later, I read in the New York Times that Charles had died of
brain cancer. I pretended that something had gotten into my eye when Paul looked at me
from across the table.

     Charles’ last novel, a historical piece about a young woman in Maine who loses her
husband, a potato farmer, to a hunting accident, made it onto most of the bestseller lists.
Recently, I heard a rumor that someone had purchased the movie rights.

     Marie, my youngest, went off to college this past fall. With both girls gone, the house
seemed lonely, so Paul and I adopted a French bulldog, Jane, from the humane society.

     On weekends, we take Jane for long walks in the woods. One Sunday, just before
Thanksgiving, she got free from her leash and led us on a wild chase through the trees.
When we caught up to her, we found ourselves in a clearing, a wide meadow full of tall,
amber grass whispering in the breeze. In the distance stood a rambling, old house painted
dusty red, its windows blazing orange in the setting sun.

Poetry: "Foreign Countries" by Megan Buckley


The first foreign country I ever visited
Was my body.

Unmarked land
And empty soil
Stretched over bone and skin,
Hard and soft.

Editor's Notes: July 2017


A few weeks ago, I had a panic attack.

I haven't had one in years, but I live with mental illness every day.

I am certain I'm not the only one. Like many of you, I know what it's like to face anxiety that cripples and fear that tears you apart with its lies. Because that's what fear is: a liar.

This month, we are proud to share stories that stretch wide across the spectrum of the mind. Some of them are nearly physical in their intensity, wide open and vulnerable. Others are more poetic, almost lyrical. Still others are thoughtful and probing.

They are all important, and they are all necessary to our understanding of each other.

I encourage you to take the time to read our July issue with an open mind. Not every story is pretty, and that's what, we believe, makes Lady so beautiful.

Thank you to all the women who participated in this issue.

Wendi

Poetry: "Amazona" by Artemis Saleh



To all the strong Souls that #didnotreport

She was alone. 
The old stories and songs walked her by, 
as if they would not remember her anymore. 
She had betrayed 
her own ones.

She was sitting alone.
No one would ever 
sit next to her again. 
She knew it.

She was sitting way up, 
on her tree, 
that she had planted once.

Her heart 
Didn‘t want to have to do with her anymore. 
Her mind 
was droven hysterically.
The hate 
had first swallowed her 
and then spitten her out again.
She was a woman.

Hot tears flooded her scarred corpse. 
Filling the hollow on her ribcage, 
where once had grown a breast, 
that she had taken off a long time ago.

Back then, 
If she would have been given 
the opportunity 
to decide for someone 
and against something.
She would have done it 
without hesitation. 
But things had happened. 
In the madness of trust.

So how should something 
be regreded, 
that hasn‘t been done 
by oneself?

She felt no fear 
for the beauty of the future 
that could have layed in front of her. 
No.
The returning memory of the past. 
Its arrival 
was what she feared.

She was paralyzed.
A piercing scream escaped her chest, 
distressing 
bone marrow and roots of the tree.

She lost the feeling. 
First for space and time. 
Then for warmth and coldness. 
And in the end for dream and reality.

She flinched 
and started falling. 
Smashed 
against the cracking branches. 
Some scars were opened again. 
Other gaping wounds arose on scarfree skin. 
A branch 
bore itself through the gums above her incisors, 
after catching her tounge severing it 
and boring on through her lip. 
It teared open.

Her long hair 
got tangled up into the branches 
and pulled itself out her head.

Through the brunt of falling 
her corpse skidded against the trunk 
and cutted itself 
where ripcage and lower back meet each other 
deep into the flesh.

She striked the ground. 

The arrows 
that had fallen out her quiver 
and the battleaxe 
she had tied around her thigh, 
sank almost patternlike 
into her already raped corpse.

But nevertheless. 
She was still breathing. 
Slowly, 

like a rushing and calm water. 
Hardly perceptible. 
In this raging madness. 
She was freed. 
Through the fall into the coarse pain.
She flew 
into the comforting arms of delirium.

She smiled 
the most horrible smile 
the tree had ever seen 
of her. 
She laughed 
out of the depths of her corpse, 
even though 
she could not make a noise 
without her tounge. 

She almost choked on it, 
but no. 
She breathed out. 
And then in 
as deep and sincere as never before.

She disappeared.

Poetry: "Did I Tell You" by Israel Collier


Did I—
tell you ‘bout the
time I denied
my attempted suicide?
Did I
tell you ‘bout the
time that I
tried
in fact to
crawl under a rock and die?

I did!
I did!
…thought to slit my wrists,
vertical you see,
jump off a bridge,
smack the ground,
Boston cream’d,
not needles or pills,
not pipes or booze…

Did I
tell you ‘bout the
time I denied
my attempted suicide?
Did I
tell you ‘bout the
time that I
tried…
I tried in fact to
crawl under a rock and die?


For a second I thought
if I could just hide
from the ugly, the failures
the poverty and fakers…
But I changed my mind,
I fried my lapse
of judgement see,
of foolish
and dwelled instead
on the good,
the need.




Did I
tell you ‘bout the
time I denied
my attempted suicide?
Did I
tell you ‘bout the
time that I—
tried
in fact to
crawl under a rock and die?


Did I?
Did I?
I mustn’t have cuz
you’d know that I,
I tried it a couple times!
Well, in my head at least
I pictured the noose
and errthaaaang,
But then I thought
Naaaah—
I can’t.
I got too much to live for,
Too much to do and see…
I got responsibilities.


Did I
tell you ‘bout the
time I denied
my attempted suicide?
Did I
tell you ‘bout the
time that I
tried—
I tried in fact to
crawl under a rock and die?

But I didn’t succeed.

Fiction: "The Other Sun" by Darci Halstead Garcia


The sensation that there were rocks in her shoe was distracting. Despite stopping twice to take them off, she could find nothing.

It must be the gravel, she thought.

The sneakers were old and worn and the small clay like rocks on the dirt road was sharp against the thin soles. Adjusting the backpack that contained all she owned in the world, she continued on.

It is all I will need, she thought. If I can just get there.

Taking out her water bottle, she sipped, still walking. It was three miles to the bus station and she had to conserve as much energy as possible. Her short blonde hair was in a single knot tied haphazardly on top of her head, pieces stuck to the sweat on her neck and forehead. Every now and then, droplets would get into her moss green eyes and sting. Her pale yellow blouse had sweat stains on the underarms that were clearly visible. It was too big and hung almost to the knees of her worn jeans. They were too short for her long legs, but it was all she could find. Normally she was only allowed to wear dresses. Tight, terrible dresses.

She wondered then if they realized she was gone. Those people that lived at the end of the road in a brown house with a brown roof filled with brown furniture. Even the food was brown. The water and air were brown. She knew too much about what went on in that house. It was why she hadn't taken the car. They would have heard. Walking was silent. It would give her the head start she needed.

The planning had taken months. Pretending she was numb. She had been there ten years.

Ten years, she thought.

Her twenty sixth birthday had passed two weeks ago. Only she knew that. There was no celebration. Just the passage of time. She felt old. As old as the barren landscape that surrounded her, older than the hills that rested at a slightly crooked angle in the distance.

“Older than time,” she whispered.

The sun beat relentlessly from a cloudless sky yet she continued, one foot in front of the other. She began to sing nursery rhymes, anything to quiet her racing mind, her frightened and confused thoughts. Quietly at first, but the monsters in her mind came faster so she sang louder as she felt the acid fear crawling, its long legs coming from the bottom of her spine, snaking and weaving its way to her throat, choking her. Suddenly she lurched forward on unsteady legs and then fell, face down in the littered, yellow road. Flecks of colored rock stuck to her face and hands. Her mouth was open and she realized suddenly that she was screaming. The panic was palpable.

“Get up! Go! You have no time.”

Still, she lay there, scraping her hands in the road, clawing at the dirt and rocks filling the nubs that were once her fingernails.

The sweat rolled down her back as she slowly rose from her position and sat there, head down, arms wrapped around her knees. She rocked slowly, trying to calm herself as she fought the nausea that continued to wrack her. There was nothing in her stomach to vomit. She had not anticipated this, had not considered it would be so vile. This beast was in every pore of her body, seeping into every inch of her skin, crawling along her flesh, invading her, mocking her. It called to her, provocative in its beautiful promises. She knew it was a liar. Even now it was hammering at her, at once gently coaxing and alternatively demanding she acknowledge its presence. Demanding to be fed.

Gradually she rose to her feet, weak and still dizzy, brushing away the sand and rock still attached to her flesh. Her nose was running and she laughed suddenly. A hoarse sound. There was no tissue. She brought the sleeve of her shirt to her face and wiped her nose and the remaining sweat. As her arm dropped back to her side she thought about what it covered, what her sleeves covered. Her grotesque appendages that shouted to the world her abject failure. Her unholy sin.

She opened her water bottle again and sipped, then spit the dust from her mouth. She watched, fascinated as the yellow brown clay seemed to absorb it, then disappear.

Like it had never been, she thought. Like I had never been.

I can still make, she thought furiously. Be something. Go to school. Be normal, whatever that was. I can still do great things.

Empowered by her thoughts, she began walking again, faster now because she had lost time. Precious time.

You almost had me, you filthy beast, she thought and now she was almost running, eating up the dry acrid lifeless ground that separated her from freedom. Rushing headlong towards the place where there was sun. Not the tormenting ball that sat there amidst a horizon, devoid of even the slightest hue of color as it fired down bolts of scorching flames that, even now, licked along her body and left bright red blisters in its wake. She was going where the sun was gentle, and while it, too, gave light and heat, it remained content to lounge carelessly among a kaleidoscope of clouds wrapped in all the colors of the rainbow. In that place the sun would blow its gentle warmth over her, caressing and gliding its fingers everywhere she was cold. Everywhere she was dead. The fingers would find her secrets and brush them away then gently enfold her in its own blanket.

She smiled when she thought of that place and slowed her pace. She was struggling to catch her breath and her body was too weak to run. Her heart was knocking furiously inside her chest. She could feel every beat, every pound, as if to remind her that she still had a heart. Still was comprised of something innately human. She stopped suddenly and felt the pain rise, the all too familiar sensation of being detached from her body, existing only in her thoughts, circling around her vessel. She tried to stop it but it was strong. It was an army and she had no weapons, as it propelled itself there, into her quiet space and invaded it.

No longer was she standing in the middle of a barren road. She was there, in that brown house with the brown roof and the brown furniture. The bed was brown and smelled of cigarettes and too much sweat and too much blood and too much agony. That brown bed was alive and hungry and she was going to feed it. It would take everything. Her hopes, dreams, sorrow, and pain. Her charity and honor, her compassion and wisdom, her health and beauty. Not her soul though. That she had lost long ago.

The liar inside her screamed, demanded she feed it. So she let them climb over her, heard their grunts as they pressed her repeatedly into the filthy brown bed. She could feel the iron underneath, feel it as they pounded and pounded and the metal would scrape her spine and mercy would come when she finally disappeared into a safer place.

They would leave when they were done and then she would invite the lie back into her body, stretch out her arm and send it into her waiting veins, send it into all of her waiting veins. It was happy to leave its beautiful glass house and glide along its metal walkway, guided by her desperate hand, pushed through to blessed heaven. She could float and see the stars and ride the clouds and cease to exist. Those times she welcomed the liar, that thieving bastard, welcomed it and embraced it because it did what she craved it to do: made her disappear, and she so desperately needed to disappear.

She was vomitting. Retching, doubled over agony and again, she fell, this time to her knees, her traitorous arms barely able to keep her up. There was only bile, but it would not stop. Her head was heavy, expanding, and she continued to retch her devils onto the road. She had badly underestimated her foe. The liar was strong within her, impaling her. Its talons now firmly embedded as it tore her intestines to shreds, ripped her apart as it continued its relentless onslaught, bending her to its will, crucifying her. The snot running from her nose joined gladly with her tears, leaking into the corners of her mouth leaving streaks on her dust covered face.

You did this to yourself you silly useless girl, she thought.

She knew that she was dying. The body, the brain, they have an instinct. That knowledge brought both terror and resignation. She would never reach her destination, never be free of this monster.  She lay on her side now and felt a crushing sensation in her chest, as though a giant weight resided there. She felt the still scorching sun, unforgiving as it continued its assault, and for a moment wondered if she should take her sweater from her backpack to cover her face against being further burned. She would laugh at the idiocy of that thought if she had the strength to.

How long had she lay there? Now there was no heat at all. She shivered, her whole body shaking as a cold settled into her bones, permeating, suffusing itself throughout her being.

They will find me here, she thought. Here in the middle of this forsaken road in this forsaken town that most did not even know existed. Would they try to reach my family? No.

She no longer had a family. The thoughts twisted and turned as her brain slowly died and she decided to find a happier place there, think of happier moments, and, suddenly, she saw herself, running, her long hair flowing behind her and she was laughing. It was joyous, and then large arms swept her up and a booming voice was calling her princess. There were pretty clothes and she smiled then and she let it come, these memories of her other life. It was a cataclysm, this spate, a rushing torrent of her before existence. She did not run from these visions. She let them encompass her, let them warm her.

Her frail, weak body was giving up, her heart no longer able to pump the necessary blood and oxygen through her besieged frame and each and every organ was in despair.. All depended on the lie to live. The shadows in the brown house had been telling the truth after all. Without the lie she would die. Now she looked fully, there was nothing to lose. Watched herself as as she had been, laughing with her friends, anxious to try the lie. She had been so sure of herself, so positive she was stronger than the lie. She would try it once or twice. Wrong. She had been wrong. Her breathing was shallow and she knew it would be soon. She was no longer afraid of death. Death was not her enemy, but a welcome friend come to take her home. She was floating in a sea of vapor, weightless and, there, in the distance, she could see herself as she once had been, smiling and beckoning. It was time to go. She did just that. There on a nameless road, in a nameless town, she went, where the other sun lived.

Flash Fiction: "Old Drum" by Christine Twigg


His old drum rested against the battered leg of her 1960s pea green couch. It was the first time she had really looked at that couch in decades. From this close position, lying on the carpet and looking up, she could see the loose threads hanging and the sag of the springs. For a brief moment, her mind wondered how she could have ignored the ugliness of her furniture for so long, but that thought was quickly shuttered and she momentarily came back to her present sense of dread.

     The carpet needed cleaning; not just vacuuming. It stank. She could hire a cleaner, or maybe rent a carpet-cleaning machine—she’d seen them near the entrance at the grocery store—but that thought made her feel even more lethargic.

     Overwhelmed.

     That was the word. She said it out lout, but hearing the disuse of her voice brought her back again to her situation. She’d been lying here for much of the afternoon. Her lower back was stiff and her feet were cold. Her stomach clenched. Was she hungry? She had some almonds on the counter.

     She took a quick mental inventory of the fridge and cupboards but before she could settle on anything while her mind’s eye traveled over to the coat rack, just beyond the kitchen, in the mudroom.

     George’s red coat. Why had she ever bought him a red coat? Red coats don’t look good when they’re dirty. They just look dirty. Panic made her sit up. She would wash the jacket. She had some sort of stain remover spray she was pretty sure. That might help.

     With a croak, she fell the two inches back to the floor.

     That fucking jacket.

     She stood, bending over briefly from the sudden light headedness, then walked with purpose to the mudroom. Without any thoughts, she yanked on the zipper of the left pocket. When it didn’t open easily this time, she shouted obscenities. She was still shouting after she’d practically torn the zipper from the pocket and was holding its content in her hand. There was no satisfying crash when she flung it onto the floor, nothing to break when she ground her heel into it.

     She was fifty fucking years old. They didn’t use condoms! The thoughts were coming again, too fast to be able to catch any more than the tail end of them before they were gone, replaced by the next. A crushing note. A severely embarrassing scene at his office. A glorious display of a violently destroyed cherished CD collection.

     Blood.

     Screaming.

     Her blood rushed, the ennui completely gone. It was her who was screaming.

     She shrugged into the jacket, put the almonds in the pocket and left, locking the door behind her.

Editor's Notes: June 2017


We have some exciting news to share this month! We were recently featured on author Catherine Lavender's website where we talked about what distinguishes Lady and why we love this work so much! If you want to check it out, you can read the full interview here. Thanks, Catherine!

Also, I can't wait for you to read this month's issue. The pieces we have included for June are striking in their focus, and they give a shift in identity perspective that is needed from time to time. No matter what you're facing as you scroll through our June issue, I think you'll find yourself connecting with one of these extraordinary writers.

Enjoy!

Creative Non-Fiction: "How to Lose Your Sugar" by Emma Comery



Stage One: Death of the Sugar Addiction

To start with, you want to be healthier. Or maybe you're trying to ditch those last pesky

pounds, or you're thinking about bikini season. Maybe you feel tired all the time. These are all

great reasons to cut out sweets. Or maybe you look at photos of yourself and recoil at the way

your jawline reminds you of raw dough. You can't remember a single day since you were twelve

when you haven't wondered why you've been allowed to walk the earth. Sure, your bones are

beautiful, but you've never been able to see them. Besides the feel of cool sheets on your bare

skin, you think food is the most delicious thing in the world. Lemon poppy seed muffins combat

school stress; Raisinettes keep you company on Friday nights. Red velvet cake with cream

cheese frosting is your soul mate. You hide empty bags of Twizzlers in your bottom desk drawer.

Your special talent becomes devouring eight servings of Kroger bakery cookies in two days. Ice

cream is a palate cleanser, not a treat. Your father says things like, “Have you been running?”

and “Start taking care of that double chin, cutie!” Your mother pretends not to see, not to hear,

but you forgive her. She's got so much on her plate right now. And your father—you tell yourself

he's a jerk but you start wearing sweatpants and extra large t-shirts again. Begin to eat your

feelings. Eat so many sweets that they stop tasting good. Eat them anyways. You're always tired,

but you never sleep through the night.

     At a party one weekend, a friend tells you he's gone almost 365 days without eating dessert. Note

the way his shoulder bones stick out like Appalachian mountain ridges. Make up excuses to put your

hand on his shoulder.

     Go home for Christmas. It's the first time you've seen your mother since her mastectomy

in September. This one was trickier than the first surgery fifteen years ago. This time there was

an infection, multiple surgeries, four extra days in the hospital. All semester you've called her

and she's great; she's recovering; the surgery worked; everything's peachy keen, girly girl. You

have believed her. But now you're home and she says, “I have an appointment at a wig shop next

Tuesday. Would you like to come with me?”

     Think No, what I'd like to do is flip this table over and scream at you for lying!

     Drive your cat to the vet the next day. Your father discovered a lump the size of an Easter

egg on her underside three days before you came home. “Mammary tumor,” the vet says. “She

has six months with or without surgery.” On the drive home, take your eyes off the road to text

your friend from school: "Breast cancer has waged war on my family." She won't reply.

     During the holidays, you gorge yourself. You have less than a month than to eat all the sugar

you want. Shovel in the pizzelles and the trays of homemade Christmas cookies. Draft your

game plan. You'll start on New Years Day 2016 and stop at midnight just before 2017. When you

return to campus, you will take all the empty candy wrappers and the stash of Reese's under

your bed and throw them out. You think it's best not to set too many rules for this no-sugar

challenge.

     Historically, you have a tendency to break the rules you set for yourself. You outline the following

policy:

— No sweets, soda, or syrups

— If something doesn't fit into any of the above categories, ask yourself, "Will eating this

make me feel guilty?" If the answer is yes, walk away.


Stage Two: Hangry Hell

Start on the first day of the new year. Hurt your mother's feelings when you say you can't

eat the leftover tiramisu she made for the holidays. She'll hear "I won't." Stare too long at the

patches of bald skin on her head. Waver in your resolve. Slowly and deliberately peel a

clementine instead. The juice of the fruit will sting the paper cut on your finger. Your mother will

pick at her food and go to bed early. Something has begun to stretch between you and your

mother, something like a drought. Food has always been her love language, and you no longer

speak it. The next evening, she offers you a small bowl of vanilla frozen yogurt. She will tell you

that cold foods are easier for her to taste, and she jokes that at least some of her taste buds are

standing up to chemo. Capitulate. Fold the froyo with your spoon, watch the stickiness clump

and slide. When it touches your tongue, it tastes like the sour flesh that hangs off your hips. To

make up for your sin, pledge to tack on two extra days to your challenge. When you go to bed that

night, lock the door. Your father will rattle the knob and yell, “Open door policy!” Turn on your

clock radio. Loud. Drown him out. You have been his property long enough. Undress in front of the

mirror. Your breasts stare back at you. Go ahead, cry.

     Back at school, concentrate on counting the thousands of freckles on the arm of the boy

across from you when your professor brings a box of fresh doughnuts to class. Be angry at food.

Give up coffee almost entirely. It tastes like acid sludge without your normal two packets of

sweetener. Opt for tea instead. Sip slowly, bleary-eyed. Go to class but don't actually wake up

until lunchtime. On Friday nights, fall asleep on the couch. By ten. Your life is a never-ending

sugar crash. Dream about John Krasinski hand-feeding you bite-sized pieces of carrot cake. In

bed, he re-enacts scenes from The Office, kisses your palm, and tucks your hair behind your ear

over a plate of every cake imaginable. Vow never to tell anyone about this dream.

    When you tell your friends of your resolution, one says, “You're kidding, right?” Another scoffs, “I

give it a week.”

     Their betrayal feels like a belt cinching too tightly. Recall how impressed they were when

you gave up meat, how supportive (for the most part) they were about minimizing alcohol. Tell

them it's their duty to hold you accountable. Tell them to stop offering you sweets. At school, at

restaurants, treat the dessert bar like an ex-boyfriend. The conversation was flavorless and the

sex hadn't been worth it. Fill yourself with healthy alternatives: baby carrots, edamame, raw

almonds, all those expensive snacks you can't afford as a college student but decide are a priority.

Drink water with lemon juice. The tang will pique your taste buds. Drink so much that it goes in

faintly yellow and comes out clear. Horde fresh fruit – build a tower of apples and oranges on

your kitchen table. Pillage the frozen fruit aisle at the grocery store. Fall in love with vegetables.

Take pride in your grocery lists and freezer full of smoothie-ready strawberries and spinach. Talk

about Benefiber like it's your prodigal first-born.

     Tell yourself it's not that you can't eat sweets, it's that you don't.

     Tell yourself this approximately eighty-nine times a day.


Stage Three: The Weight of Waiting

After three weeks, you stop dreaming about John Krasinski but you don't lose any weight.

You continue attending classes, continue stuffing baby carrots into your cheeks, continue avoiding

your father's phone calls, continue sending overly-cheery emails to your mother: "64 degrees and

sunny here in KY! Enjoy your Zumba class and have a fantabulous night!" Your father has begun

calling more frequently, often while you are in class or at the gym. You never want to answer, but

you always imagine the worst: your mother has fainted from her anti-estrogen drugs, your cat has

died, a special forces team of cancer cells has infiltrated your mother's chest, unsatisfied with her

breasts and demanding her heart at gunpoint. You assume, always, that everything is wrong. So

you always answer the call.

     “You and Mom have been sending emails to each other like rapid-fire,” your father says. Envy

drips through the phone. No surprise that he asks what you've been eating.

     “Salad,” you reply, your voice like limp lettuce.

     Your article on feminist literature has been accepted by a journal. Now your school wants

to publish a short web article on you. They have an impressive ability to make exploitation sound

like an honor. A photographer takes a head shot. Your whole body feels heavier at the sight of

yourself. Without your friends knowing, manage to conduct a week-long cleanse (fruits and

veggies only). They would only yell at you. Lose approximately zero pounds. You are moody,

quick to snap.

     Nothing has changed, and you don't understand why. You've done this thing – this

extreme dietary alteration that is so foreign to everyone who knows you. You've dedicated

yourself to your health. You lift weights. You can squat your roommate now. You'd do anything

to know when the smell of chocolate will stop tasting like opium.


Stage Four: Happy, Healthy, Heavenly

By the end of the first month, you can bear to touch your stomach without flinching. Your

waiting has paid off. Say goodbye to regular bloating! Even when Aunt Flo visits, she doesn't

bring her usual army of lower abdomen pain. PMS no longer includes vomiting, dizziness, or

fainting. You stop hating your uterus. You can't even remember when started hating it. It's

amazing how much a lack of bloating affects your daily life. Your posture improves; you feel

more comfortable wearing flattering clothes. Your friends (all but one) applaud your new

confidence. They like to brag about you to other friends. (All but that one.) Your skin clears up.

Your hair gets shinier; you don't have to wash it as often. When you do wash it, the longer

shower is like a stop in time. The feel of water on your scalp is a new pleasure. You fall asleep faster

and stay asleep more often. After a good night's rest, you're ready to go the next morning. The

moment you stop feeling bloated, you become a new person. This new version of you doesn't

want to whittle herself away. This you is powerful. You eat up the campus sidewalks with jungle

strides.

     It is springtime now, and when your father flips you the bird over webcam, call him out

on it. Hear him stomp away and shriek like a child. Your mother's face twists like a lemon. You

regret throwing a live grenade into her life, but you refuse to replace the pin. She can humor him

all she wants, but you don't deserve anyone's disrespect.

     You discover that confidence is not a constant line. It ebbs and flows. When your bras start to

feel tighter around your upper ribs, you see fat everywhere. Your hips, your shoulders, your

wrists. You are hyper-aware of your breasts. You talk to your friends, your workout buddy, your

mother. There is unanimous conviction that a tighter bra does not mean a fatter girl.

     “Your back has gotten so much stronger,” your buddy points out. “It's all muscle.”

     At the gym, two guys compliment you on your squat. Over dinner, a friend tells you, “The first

time I met you I was sexually intimidated.”

     You don't know what to do with any of this.

     Some days, it feels like all there is between your breastbone and your hips is air. You

don't know how you feel about this, this constant sense of lessening yourself.

     When someone offers you a Reese's Peanut Butter Cup, stare at the crinkly orange

wrapper like you've never seen it before. The grit of sugar between your teeth is a distant

nightmare.

     You smile at your classmates more. Strike up conversations with acquaintances. Stop letting

shyness and insecurity prevent you from being the person you've always wanted in your life.

Develop your own brand of aggressive compassion. When your roommate says she loves you,

shake her shoulders and yell, “No, I love you more!” When she throws markers at your head,

they hit you like butterfly kisses. Participate in a retreat about the power of language. Learn that

it's okay to think your father is a jerk when he calls your gay friend “flamboyant” and says your

feminism is “hostile.” Listen to the Hamilton soundtrack on repeat for months. Take a class in

poetry. Learn about sestinas and trochaic tetrameter. Write lots of poetry about loving your body

and the new woman you feel breaking through your skin. Try to build palaces out of paragraphs.

Worry more about words than weight.


Stage Five: The Sweet Afterlife

Apply to graduate programs and jobs. You want to live near the coast. Washington, North

Carolina, someplace you can run down long roads, open your bedroom window to the sea air,

and write poems, a romance novel, essays about giving up sweets, and letters to your mother that

say you love her, you miss her, you have always wanted to be her friend.

     Dream you are in bed with the boy with the shoulders. There is sunlight, bare shoulders,

blue panties. This is about you and the clench of muscles beneath the curve of your belly. The

boy is the least important part. Your skin doesn't roll like dough. It snaps, live like wires. For the

first time in your memory, you are completely unashamed of your body.

     It has only been four months since you last ate sugar. People ask if you miss it. They ask

if you will eat it again at the end of the year. Shrug. “I'm not sure.” At night, splay your fingers

across your belly. The soft rise makes your blood pump steady and slow, at peace.

     Imagine yourself after graduation. Maybe teaching, maybe working on a farm or at an

animal shelter. Any job that requires your heart to pump faster. Your mother will fly cross-

country to see you. She will come alone, her hair growing back in. Hug her big. The two of you

explore the hiking paths and small towns of coastal Washington. Talk about everything and

anything. She likes your apartment and asks to read your poems. One afternoon, find a bakery

named Cafe Demeter and sit at one of the metal patio tables on the front porch. Your mother

orders a hot tea for you and a small decaf coffee for herself. She reads the cafe menu. “They have

tiramisu!” She is smiling. “Are you interested in splitting a piece, Em?” You sip your tea. It

tastes clean and real, like an herb from your mother's garden. You know what you will do.