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Elastic by Tegon Maus


Inspired by Writing Prompt One Hundred and Seven: The elastic on his waistband was frayed, adding one more pleasantry to this awful business.



I love my job but sometimes… let’s just say… some days are harder than others.

A few years ago, in late October I had a major remodel to a house out in the middle of the desert located in the middle of nowhere.  It was a 3 ½ hour drive one way from the shop that called for us to spend the next 2 weeks, day and night on the job site. This project was so far out we no longer got radio waves let alone cell service. Why anyone would build a house forty minutes off the paved road in the foothills of the Mojave is beyond me.

For this project I took Barry… a large, 53-year-old man of questionable upbringing. After 12 years in prison he had… let’s say the residual effects of a pharmaceutical enhancement that called into question his ability to be alone. More interesting than this was his prevalent fear of the dark.  He had, on more than one occasion, refused to go under a house to work unless I went with him.  He lived in real fear of zombies, werewolves and vampires. 

I know how that sounds… that a man who spent time in prison and appeared to have no problem being accepted as an equal among a Hell’s Angles’ reunion party would have trouble with the dark or being alone, but it was something he battled with every day.

At the end of the day we made our way to the new job that would start in the morning.  On the drive he was buoyant, talkative, and enjoying the ride. Then, just outside of Victorville in the growing dark, civilization began to drop away one or two houses at a time.  Within the next twenty minutes the landscape had changed into one of open, undulating, vast waste land.

“Where are all the houses?” he asked with a little panic in his voice.

“We’re in the desert… there are no houses,” I returned with little interest.

He turned in the seat and stared out the window.

“What do we do for lights?” he asked, turning to me again.

“Sorry pal, none of them out here either.”

He sat silent for the remainder of the ride.

At long last we bumped our way through the dark over a less than maintained dirt road coming
to a group of large weathered trees. The branches swayed heavily with the wind that blew wildly carrying with it giant clouds of dust thrown in the air by our arrival.

“Get the gate Barry.”

He sat there looking at me with wide eyes, glancing first to me and then outside.

“By myself?”

“Yeah, get out and open the gate.”

“Come with me,” he insisted.

“Stop dicking around and open the gate,” I admonished, pushing him lightly.

“Hell no. I ain’t going out there by myself. No telling what’s waiting to eat ya,” he returned locking the door. 

“God,” I huffed undoing my seat belt, opening the door.

“What are ya doing?”

“I’m opening the gate.”

“You can’t leave me here by myself… what if one of them comes for me?”

“One of them?”

He popped the door open on his side and ran to throw mine open as well.

“Open the gate,” I was tired, hungry, dirty and frustrated. I didn’t need this shit.

He stood upright, staring out into the dark. His head swiveled around franticly as if someone lay in wait. 

“Come with me,” he pressed.

“Christ,” I sighed and did as he asked.

He pressed close to me as we made our way to the gate doing everything he could to stay within the glow of the headlights.

I did the combo and it popped open on the spot.  I pushed it open and rolled a rock in front of it with my foot to prop it open.  At the instant I released it the sound of the truck door closing filled the air… followed closely by the lock engaging.

Barry was safely ensconced in the truck once more.

He rolled the window down a crack and shouted. “Get in before they come,” and then cranked the window close quickly.

I had to laugh to myself a little... a guy as big as Barry afraid of the dark was way too much fun. I had always assumed he was joking about his ‘condition’. He could be a scary looking guy in his own right… it never occurred to me he was on the level.

“Yeah, yeah.”

The house, still a five minute drive from the gate, was built sometime in the mid-fifties. The paint was chipped and blistered by sun and wind. Its board and batten exterior had seen better days. The truck’s headlights swept across its face and for the briefest of moments there appeared to be an animal or a person, something on the porch. Whatever it was, it disappeared before the truck came to rest. 

I turned the truck off and the lights died quickly as the darkness washed over us.

Suddenly the truck filled with a high pitch squeal that sent chills down my spine.

“What are you doing? Turn them on… what are you waiting for? Turn them on,” Barry shouted and then punched me had in the shoulder.

“What the hell?”

“Turn them on or so help me…”

I did as he asked but now I was mad.

“Happy?” I asked.

“Go turn the lights on in the house,” he ordered.

“And here I was thinking I was the boss,” I sniped, pushing the truck door open wide, stepping out.
I walked through the beams of lights and opened the door.

“Come on you lazy bastard,” I called waving him to the house.

He scampered wildly toward the house, darting between billows of dust, almost knocking me over in his attempt to get inside.

“You left the lights on in the truck,” I groused, pointing.

“What are you, crazy?  I’m not going back out there,” He said brushing himself off.

Now it was getting under my skin. I was the one who had to go back out into the wind and shut off the lights.

The rest of the evening went by without incident. The wind howled relentlessly beating against the house, thumping loudly. Then around eleven the unthinkable…

“I gotta go to the bathroom,” Barry said softly.

“Beg your pardon?”

“I have to go to the bathroom,” He repeated louder this time.

“Well pal, none of the plumbing is hooked up you’ll have to go outside.”

“I can’t.”

“You’ll have to… its outside or hold it until the morning.”

He looked to the door and back to me.

“Come with me.”

“I’m not going with you. If you have to go… go, you don’t need me.”

“You have to… I can’t go out there by myself.”

“Go outside or crap yourself… all the same to me.”

“Go with me.”

“No.”

He began to dance about… his eyes pleading with me.

“Okay… I’ll go this far with you,” I said opening the front door. “I’ll leave the door open for you.”

“Come with me.”

“Nope, if you’re afraid of the dark it’s on you. It has nothing to do with me.”

I sat down on the couch tickled pink to be in control again.

“I’m not afraid of the dark I just don’t like it,” He corrected.

“Well, prove it… come or go. Do what you want but leave me out of it.”

At last, reluctantly, he dove through the door and into the darkness outside.

I was filled with self-satisfaction.

Time seemed to slow as I waited. He was taking far too long… even for Barry.

After a moment or so I went to the door… I could see nothing, hear nothing beyond the wind.
I was about to call out for him when I thought I heard him call.

“Help.”

At first I wasn’t certain that I heard it and I stepped out onto the porch.

“Help!” Barry’s voice cut through the howl of wind, sending goosebumps rippling over every square inch of me.

“Barry,” I called.

“Help me!  They’ve got me,” He screamed.

My mind instantly swam with confusion as I searched the darkness for some sign as to direction I should go.

“Help!” He cried out again, his voice clearly filled with panic.

I ran in the direction I thought it came from… again I heard him call and I ran to his aid. Then much to my shock I found him…  there standing in the dark was Barry.  His clothing was tangled in the bramble he was now totally naked save for his under ware.

“I was stuck… I fell and I couldn’t get free,” he moaned. His backside was covered in cactus needles. 
“Help me.”


A part of me wanted to laugh… a part of me felt sorry for him.  To make things worse the elastic on his waist band was frayed, adding one more pleasantry to this awful business.  It was going to be a long night.

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Married forty-three years to a woman he calls Dearheart, Tegon Maus lives a contented life in a small town of 8,200 in Southern California. By day, Tegon is a successful home remodeling contractor, but his passion is storytelling.

Tegon's progatonists are frequently wedged between a rock and a hard place, but manage to work things out through the story. Like most when pushed into a corner, it only brings out the best in his characters and become the unstoppable force of a reluctant hero. Tegon's signature style is creating characters who are driven and believable, and who strive to find happiness.


Tegon is the author of The Chronicles Of Tucker Littlefield series.


Check out Tegon's other work on Amazon, including her latest novel, Service Before Self!

Contact Tegon on Facebook and Twitter!




Leapin' Lethargy by Andrew Call


Inspired by Writing Prompt One Hundred and Thirteen: The window stood open and all I had to do was jump.

Pickled between inevitable pain and ambiguous salvation, most people choose to fly. Faith in a foxhole for the avid atheist kind of stuff. In that brief limbo, the desperation to escape one’s burning building overcomes any dread of cannonballing out the open window. Those who don’t leap often regret stepping back from the edge as they burn, and those who take the plunge are afforded what luxury there is in imagining a colorful splat during freefall. Whenever my window cracked and gave me an opening, I was apt to jump.

“Jump, ya chick’n shit! She’s watching you.” Sid Madison got me to jump at age eight with a jab from the school pool.

“Jump or he’ll kill you!” An unnamed husband with fire in his soul got me to jump buck naked from a two-story balcony at nineteen.

“Jump and I’ll find you!” Nineteen. Same unnamed husband. Fire in the soul. You get the picture.
“How high, sir?!” as I jumped for freedom in Basic.

After two tours, I jumped into law enforcement to escape PTSD. Before I retired, I jumped into marriage, through divorce hoops, around a triple bypass, and over the bottle. Lord, did I jump. Vivid hope for a colorful splat smudged and now abstract.

Here I was again, standing on the edge.

From inside the car, the rain on the windshield made my bowels burn. Or maybe that was the IBS. Of all the days, of all places. I looked out and up through squinted eyes. Retiring hadn’t gotten me anywhere, and divorce hadn’t allowed me the peace of mind I’d expected. Didn’t move far enough away from those flames. Three years, half of what I owned, one younger asshole taking my place in my ex-wife’s bed, a move across town…by all means I’d gotten pretty far. In what direction, God only knew.  Paint-by-numbers with Dhali holding the brush.

And here I am, outside my old apartment building, looking up at my old window. Ex-detective Richard Pascal, back on the case. I opened the car door and stepped out into the rain.

~

“Rich, I know I shouldn’t have called, but I didn’t want to call the actual cops.”

My ex-wife Janine stood in the open doorway of our old apartment. Twenty-four floors up, three doors down, the framed entrance separating us.  I’d refused to go inside and a small puddle dripped to life around my feet.  I listened as Janine told me how the new guy had imploded after she dropped the pregnancy bomb. Really, Jan? Pregnant? How he’d trashed the apartment and stormed out.  He was on the roof.  Misery loves company, I thought. Here I come, buddy.

“I’ll talk to him, Jan. Stay here.”  She closed the door and I took the stairs. 

The door reading ROOF ACCESS whipped open with the wind. I stood inside and squinted through the sheets of rain as they danced, making out the timid-looking bastard against the edge of the roof. He was sitting with his back on the cement ledge. His eyes darted up at the noise, and the rain blasted me in the face as I stepped out. What was his name? Jim? Jan and Jim?

The rain was so thick it felt like I was standing under a hose, but I wasn’t thinking about the rain. In that moment, drenched and emotionally drained, I shut off. Or turned on. My little wind-up key finally breaking.

“It was like he wasn’t really there,” Jim would tell Channel 4 later. “He looked at me but didn’t see me.”

I was empty.  There was nothing left, and I knew it. I strode the distance to the roof’s waist-high cement guard and turned my empty gaze on Jim, his hair matted to his face and eyes puckered to fight back the rain.

“Hell of a day.” I zoned out into the middle distance, not looking at anything in particular.  Jim slumped into the gravel roof and started to sob. What a sad excuse of a man, I thought. A piss-poor replacement.  “If you came up here to jump, maybe you should.” 

I felt the rain like fire on my neck. Burning. Building. Unbearable.

My heels scraped back in a featherweight pendulum, the ledge pressed against my waist, and I rolled forward into one last lethargic leap. 


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You can follow and contact Andrew here:

Twitter: @ACallCreative

Flight by Susan Vittitow Mark

Response to Writing Prompt Ninety-Seven: A kayak, a tent, an endless horizon and yet...

Flight

A kayak, a tent, an endless horizon, and yet the tall towers of the city shimmered before Laura's eyes where there should have only been the endless waves of the Pacific. Whispering pines were drowned out by honking taxicabs and the shouts of street vendors. The sand under her feet grew hard and hot like the asphalt of summer. She spat out the taste of diesel fumes, sour garbage, and stale urine. The scent clung to her hair.

She blinked and it all vanished. The forest lay unbroken behind her. A cool breeze blew from the sea. Waves lapped gently over her feet where she'd stripped off her boots and dug her toes into the welcoming sand.

If she had to remember the city, better to remember it as it was when it was alive rather than how she left it. Better not to remember the screams of the dying, the stench of corpses. 

A seagull landed near her, cocked one eye. She laughed. “Got nothin' for you.” Her stores were little enough for the long days of paddling and not enough to share with a garbage eating bird.

Dinosaurs. Birds were damn dinosaurs, or what was left of them. Scientists had looked at the DNA or something and discovered T-Rex's great-grandbabies were in the fried chicken buckets at the company picnic. They ruled the world once. So did humans. Once. What will be left of us? she thought.

“You heading up north, too?” The seagull turned its head. “If you are, can you take a message to Chris for me? Tell him to stay safe, stay put. I'll get there somehow.”

The black eye stared at her as if some ancient intelligence lurked there. The bird flapped its wings twice, took off and soared straight north. Look for the cabin, she thought, as if her mind could reach the bird's. It's along the Oregon coast. He's there. Tell him to stay there. Tell him he shouldn't try to find me.

She watched as the seagull became a tiny dot and then vanished. I must be cracking up, talking to birds. She sighed, stretched her aching arms. At that moment she would have killed for an ibuprofen, a cup of coffee, and a roll of toilet paper. Those things would all be in the past now. Maybe she and Chris would tell their grandchildren how it once was. If she could find him. If he hadn't gotten it into his fool head to come find her in the burning city.

Laura sat and laced her boots. She broke down the tent, stashed it in the kayak with the last of the food and the water purifier. She pushed off from shore and willed tired arms to paddle. She turned north and followed the seagull.

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Contact Susan at:


Susan Vittitow Mark co-blogs Writing Wyoming with Lynn G. Carlson.

Spotlight: Darrah J. Perez




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Darrah J. Perez is an inspirational Native Poet and Author who writes through her Native American Ancestry. Her work touches many, known to bring chills and inspiration to all those who either read her books, hear her poetry, or attend one of her presentations. A poet of our time with a gift for everyone.

Follow Darrah on Facebook for updates on her latest poetry as well as everyday life.


Check out Darrah's books, It Never Happened and It Always Happens, available on Amazon!

Contact Darrah at: darrah.perez@gmail.com

Please respect the copyrights of Darrah and Beaux by linking back to this original post and giving credit where it is due, to the author.

Spotlight: Last Bus To The Cemetery Gates by T.K. Geering


Julianne was waiting in the queue for the last bus at Strangling Road. It was late and would probably be full, but if you were lucky you could strap hang, until the bus terminated by the Cemetery gates.

The locals had renamed the road when a young girl had been held at knifepoint, and fatally stabbed. Several weeks later it happened again but this time there had been other marks, which had been unaccounted for.

She began to pass the time with a young fella in front of her.

Late again as usual and its started to rain!

The man didn’t seem to want to talk, and pulled up the collar of his bomber jacket to stop the fine drizzle cascading down his neck. His dark hooded eyes were hidden under his black baseball cap. Pushing his hands into the jacket pockets he looked gloomily into the distance for the bus. Julianne was a bit slighted. She was quite a looker and dressed the part. Albeit on the pale side rarely did she have to force men to talk to her. She tried again

Any idea what time the bus is due sweetie?

“Nope!”

“Got a light for my smoke?” She asked removing one from the squashed packet she fished out of her coat.

Silently he took out his lighter and flicked it into action.

She bent down to light up inhaling deeply. Looking straight into his eyes she said,

“Talkative ain’tcha.”

He didn’t want to talk; his latest had just given him the elbow in favour of his best mate. Aggression crept over him. He hated women who pissed him off, but he could talk the talk no problem. He would scare her shitless. He’d seen her several times before waiting for the bus. Flaunting it and putting herself on offer to any takers…

“So, you go all the way then?” He asked suggestively.

Woah that’s a turn around!

“As far as it takes us” she smiled up at him.

Leaning in closer he put his arm loosely around her shoulders to gauge her reaction. She responded by putting her arm around his waist and looking up into his dark eyes she closed the gap between them.

“How about we walk to the cemetery gates instead of catching the bus? It’s bound to be full and it should only take us about ten minutes if we take a short cut I know down the back of Strangling Road.” He suggested.

Julianne thought about it for a moment. It had stopped drizzling now but the bus still wasn’t in sight.

“Ok, why not? What’s your name by the way?”

“Raymond, but most of my friends at work call me Ray.”

“I’m Julianne. What d’ya do for work then Ray?” she asked making conversation.

“I’m a trainee butcher and this last few weeks I’ve been learning how to cut meat. Some of those knives are that sharp I sliced through a side of beef in one cut,” he said looking for respect.

She gave it to him.

“Wow that’s awesome Ray” and for an extra incentive she squeezed his waist, which pleased him.

“This is the shortcut I was telling you about. It’s just past these bushes here.”

As they walked along the path shielded by the trees they approached a rough bit of scrubland. He stopped and roughly kissed her with his eyes open enabling him to take a quick look around. He then pushed her to the ground at the same time palming his knife.

Quick as a flash she was on top of him. Drawing back her lips, Julianne exposed a pair of fangs and sank her teeth into his neck. As she drank greedily he let out screams of horror and passed into oblivion. Taking the dropped knife she stabbed him viciously.

“Lets see how you like being stabbed through the heart.” she added venomously through her bloody fangs.  

As Julianne stood up, her black wings slowly materialised. Taking flight into the midnight sky she slowly glided towards the cemetery gates. Julianne needed to rest up and where better than here. Satiated for the moment she would be ready to take the return bus back to Strangling Road tomorrow night.

~o0o~

© T K Geering 2012


You can find more of Geering's work on her websiteTirgearr PublishingTwitterand Facebook

Spotlight: Mari L.


Response to Writing Prompt Sixty-Seven: The tape kept rolling , but I had nothing left to say.

We set up the camera in silence, there was nothing he could say to change my mind. I sat down on the couch with my two friends/helpers. Tyler, my best friend manning the camera, held up his hand, fingers counting down from five. He gave me the thumbs up and I grinned at the camera, “Hey babe. Enjoy.” I turned to my left where Jason sat. Jason fit the phrase blonde hair and blue eyes almost as well as my other friend/helper, Ryan, fit the phrase tall, dark and handsome. I leaned forward capturing Jason’s bottom lip between my teeth, nibbling on it as he tugged on my hair. I kept my eyes on the camera as I let Jason pull me into a kiss. Ryan lifted me up and sat me on his lap forcing Jason to crawl forwards to keep his lips glued to mine. I threw my head back grinding my hips on Ryan’s lap moaning when Jason began to kiss and lick my neck. Ryan grabbed my hips and I felt his approval pressing against my ass. I smirked at the camera, turning my head to capture Ryan’s mouth. Jason moved his attention slightly lower and I arched my back as he took full advantage of the low neckline on my shirt.

After a few more minutes of enjoying my companions I sat up straight fixed my shirt and blew a kiss to the camera. Tyler had left a few minutes earlier having had enough of the snog fest and the tape kept on rolling, but I had nothing left to say. I knew I probably wouldn’t send the video to my ex, but it felt satisfying having made it none the less. Jason and Ryan left when they realized I was done, but I remained seated on the couch, wishing I had been kissing someone else. That was my one regret in making the video, who was in it. I stood up slowly my resolve forming and I quickly left to find my best friend.

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Contact Mari at:
Wattpad: Professionally Unique
FictionPress: Professionally Unique

Spotlight: Lamb Stew By The Fire by T.K. Geering


Mary gazed out of the window at the snow whilst waiting for George to arrive. This was their second date and she wanted everything to be perfect. She had resolved not to tell anyone about him until she was sure. Mary had already confirmed that he liked lamb stew and hers was second to none. No one would ever have the nerve to say differently. Mary and her temper were as legendary as her stews.

She twirled her long red hair around her finger as she stood there watching the snow falling. It was beginning to settle and would eventually start drifting, but the road from the old cotton mill was pretty straightforward. Soon the clacking of the looms would stop and George would be on his way.  She sat down on the cosy sofa in front of the roaring log fire becoming mesmerized by the flames. At one point, she could see a horses’ face reminiscent of her childhood.

Muffled sounds in the snow, indicated George’s car had pulled up outside and   Mary went to the door to greet him. He hugged her tentatively but not too tight; he wasn’t sure yet.
The table had already been set in the small cottage and George offered to open the wine he had brought. Retrieving the bottle opener as directed, he noted the block of carving knives sitting on the worktop. He and knives were not good bedmates; he frequently seemed to cut himself. He blanched as that familiar squeamish feeling passed through him. Knives served a purpose though. Pouring two glasses he took them to the sofa and handed one to Mary.

“Dinner won’t be long George I thought we could sit here and enjoy a drink before I dish up the stew.”

He confirmed that stews needed to be timed to perfection. It was not only his favourite, but a specialty of his also. Comparing recipes, their ingredients and cooking methods seemed to match. He sat down at the table as Mary entered with the crockpot. Dunking a spoon in to taste, she decided that it just needed a bit more salt. George tried it and disagreed stating it was perfect but Mary had her way and sprinkled in more.


They finished the meal and George agreed to clear the dishes for Mary. He settled her on the sofa again with a glass of Merlot, and set to clearing up whilst Mary made the most of the unexpected help. Returning to the sofa he stood behind her gently caressing her neck with cold steel as he plunged one of her carving knives deep into the back of her neck. The initial shock kept her upright for a while and then she keeled forward. Wiping clear all of his fingerprints he took one last look around and returned to the car. How many more would he have to kill before they got the recipe to his exact liking?

~o0o~

© T K Geering 2016

You can find more of Geering's work on her websiteTirgearr PublishingTwitterand Facebook


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