what spills over disposing of the drowned chipmunk
Jerome Berglund has worked as everything from dishwasher to paralegal, night watchman to assembler of heart valves. Many haiku, haiga and haibun he’s written have been exhibited or are forthcoming online and in print, most recently in bottle rockets, Frogpond, Kingfisher, and Presence. A mixed media chapbook showcasing his fine art photography is available now from Fevers of the Mind.
The minute they walked into the store I knew they were cops, but not locals. Some kind of state boys come up from Cheyenne by the look of them. I started for the bathroom to avoid them, but the meaner looking one, in a blue suit that looked like he found it in a thrift shop, called me.
“Just a minute, sir. We’d like to talk to you.”
I turned to my assistant, Bobby Runs-with-Elks.
“Why don’t you help these gentlemen, Bobby.”
“We need to speak to you, sir,” the oilier looking man said, taking off his sunglasses, revealing black eyes as soulless as lumps of coal.
Bobby, a full-blooded Shoshone, had been working with me for several years, as his father and grandfather before him. He got a small salary and 50% of the profit from the store at the end of the year, which went to his family. We outfitted a lot of hunters and tourists, so it sometimes added up to a good sum of money. I met his grandfather, Joseph Shiny Elk, at Parris Island, in 1968. We served two tours together in Vietnam and saw and did some terrible things. We were both wounded in a sapper attack and invalided out of the Corps at the same time. He didn’t want to go back to the reservation and I didn’t want to work on the oil rigs. So we formed a partnership and opened the general store in the Great Divide Basin, near the Killpecker Sand Dunes, a wild and beautiful place.
Joseph was a part-time deputy on the reservation and late one night on his way home was killed by a drunken driver. His son, Daniel Speaks-to-Elks, took over his share of the business and we got along real well. I never married or had a family, so Daniel was like my son and Bobby like a grandson. They would get the business when I died. I had been around for a while and was pretty fit, still working as a hunting guide now and then, and in no hurry to check out.
I saw there was no way to avoid them and put on my dumb storekeeper face. Bobby had already sensed something and was playing stone faced indian.
“What can I do for you boys?” Which immediately riled them since they expected to intimidate me.
“We’d like to talk to you in private, sir,” Oily grated.
“Bobby knows everything that goes on here…”
“Alone, sir,” meanie insisted.
“Well we can go out back, though the winds a bit stronger then you Cheyenne boys are used to.”
“What makes you think we’re from Cheyenne?” Oily asked.
“You got that townie look, like you’re used to telling folk what to do,” which annoyed them.
I wasn’t going to take them through my living area, so I led them outside and around the back. There were several wooden chairs and a bench sand stripped down to a smooth surface. I gestured for them to sit. They declined, but I sat, willing to let them think they had an advantage towering above an old man.
Meanie looked at oily, who said:
“I guess this will do”
“Alright, boys,” I said pleasantly. “Who are you and what do you want?”
They both pulled out wallets with badges and oily said:
“We’re criminal investigators from the governor’s office. We’re investigating the accident that destroyed the Grand Teton Resort and Hunting Lodge and led to a number of deaths.”
“What has that to do with me?”
“We heard you know Sam Zona. He may have been involved somehow in the destruction of the place.”
“I don’t know anything about that.”
“But you know Sam Zona,” oily insisted.
“He’s dead?”
“We don’t know. Now you know him.”
“Yeah. Casual like.”
“You know him better then that. He worked for you for several years when he was a teen-ager,” oily stated.
I just shrugged and meanie glared.
“We can make things difficult for you if you don’t cooperate,” meanie threatened.
I guessed they could and it would hurt Daniel and Bobby, so I decided to tell them whatever was common knowledge.
“What do you want to know?”
“Tell us about his background,” oily said. “Start with his parents.”
“I don’t know much about them. Manny came from up North someplace and married a Shoshone woman. They lived on the rez for a long time, but didn’t have kids. There was a story that an old medicine man told them they’d have a son, if they left the reservation and saved the injured animals.”
Meanie laughed. “We don’t believe in witchcraft.”
“Well they started a small ranch in the Great Divide Basin and they took in all kinds of hurt critters, birds, antelope, wolves, they even had a bear for a while…”
“Sounds like a fairy tale to me,” oily sneered. “How’d they make a living?”
“Manny captured wild horses and sold them… Now do you want to hear what I got to say? If not, go back to the city.”
“Go on,” oily said.
“Sam was an exceptionally strong and bright kid. He rode to school on the rez on his pony five days a week. At first some of the older kids tried to bully him. Calling him a half-breed, but he fought back and beat them until they left him alone. He was twelve years old when he was riding home one day and his pony stumbled on a rock. Sam got off to check his hoof and a big cougar went for the horse. Sam grabbed the cat and they fought and he killed it…”
“Bullshit!” meanie growled. “No kid that age could kill a cougar without a rifle.”
I concealed my growing anger and replied:
“I don’t need to talk to you…”
“Ray didn’t mean to insult you,” oily said. “The story seems a little far-fetched. Tell us the rest.”
“Sam got bigger and stronger. When he was about sixteen he went to town, which was mostly owned by Mr. Phillips’ oil company. He met a waitress at the diner and he really liked her, but the riggers and roughnecks told him to leave her alone. There was a big fight and he whipped a lot of them, but she was scared and wouldn’t be with him. One of the roughnecks said she had a younger sister, if he’d wait for her, but Sam refused. Then someone from the oil company offered him a job. When he said ‘no’, the man said wildfires could burn his family’s ranch. Sam didn’t like that and punched him. That night he caught a couple of coyotes, tied torches on their tails and sent them into the oilfield. A couple of rigs burned, costing the company a lot of money, but they couldn’t prove it was Sam.”
“You’re saying he did it?” Meanie demanded.
“It was just a rumor.”
“What happened next?” Oily prompted.
“His mother and father were attacked in town one day. Some say the oil company was behind it, but no one knows. Then a bunch of men went to their ranch and tried to burn it, but there was a big fight and Sam chased them away. Nothing happened for a while, then the oil company started pressing the ranchers to sell. A couple of them went to see Sam and asked for help. He set up a nightwatch system to warn them if there was an attack. One night a bunch of thugs from the oil company came to a ranch that Sam was guarding. He ambushed them, beat them, then sent them back to town naked. They complained to the sheriff, who owed his job to Mr. Phillips, who said he’d look into it. On the advice of his friends, Sam joined the Marine Corps and went away for a while.”
“But something else happened before he joined the Marines,” oily prompted.
I quickly reviewed the event to be sure I told the same story that was in the record.
“He came home from school on the rez one day and found his parents dead. There had been a gun battle and there was a blood trail heading back to the oil rigs. He followed the trail and found three men wounded on the side of the road. They were trying to decide whether to go to the hospital, or go ask the boss to get them a doctor. They fought and Sam killed them. The sheriff, who was owned by the oil company, ignored the murder of Sam’s parents and started building a case against him. That’s when Sam joined the Corps.”
I didn’t tell them that he came to me for advice. I told him to join the Corps and that Bobby or Daniel would take care of his ranch. Oily kept eyeing me, trying to figure out how smart I was, but I made sure to look as dumb as possible.
“So how long was he gone?” Meanie demanded.
I shrugged. “Maybe two or three years. He was wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan and they discharged him. He came home to the ranch and did the same thing as his dad. He tamed wild horses and sold them and took care of injured animals.”
“The record shows he got into trouble sometime after that,” meanie said and pulled out a tablet and looked at the screen.
“He got into a fight, but the charges were dismissed.”
“He’s a real troublemaker,” meanie remarked, “always getting into fights.”
“Not so,” I snapped. “He was seeing some girl who worked as a bartender at the Last Chance Saloon. Her ex-boyfriend and some of his oil worker buddies jumped Sam one night. He beat them so badly they went to the hospital. The sheriff wanted to arrest him, but witnesses saw what happened and defended Sam and said the hooligans started it. Friends of the injured oil workers wanted revenge and they went to the ranch one night. They brought an old pickup truck, set it on fire and aimed it at the ranch house. Sam stopped the truck and pushed it back into their jeeps and trucks and they blew up. A lot of the men got burned, but nobody died. They couldn’t complain to the sheriff and they were afraid of Sam, so they left him alone after that.”
“Are you telling us he pushed the truck by himself?” Meanie sneered.
“Sam’s a strong guy,” I said softly.
“What happened after that?” Oily asked.
“Things were pretty quiet for a while.”
“Until Mr. Phillips wanted to build his resort,” oily stated.
“I don’t know about that,” I muttered.
“Bullshit!” meanie yelled. “Tell us what you know.”
I briefly considered giving them the shock of their lives when this old man kicked both their asses. But I realized they’d be back with reinforcements, so I told them the public version.
“The oil company took over most of the land in the Great Divide Basin for their oil rigs. Nobody who cares about the land wanted that, but Mr. Phillips is a rich and powerful man. One way or another he got what he wanted…”
“Talk more respectful about him,” meanie demanded. “He’s a friend of the governor.”
I was getting fed up with these hired badges, but before I could respond, oily said:
“Alright. Take it easy, guys. We’re just getting to what brought us here.” He looked at me and said: “Go on.”
I guess I decided to take the easy way out because I didn’t want any more trouble for Sam. It was probably a waste of time trying to make these jerks understand how some of us felt about the land, but I made one last effort.
“The Red Desert is the largest unfenced area in the 48 continental states. It’s got all kinds of animals and birds and should be preserved.”
“Yeah. Nice Dream,” meanie muttered. “But there’s oil there and money to be made.”
“There are more important things than money,” I responded.
Oily held up a placating hand. “Go on.”
“Mr. Phillips decided to build a big resort. I don’t know how he got the rights to public land. Probably bribery and threats…”
“That’s slander,” meanie yelled.
“Take it easy, Ray,” oily urged. “Hear the man out.”
By this time I was resisting the temptation to go inside, get my 1911 Model Colt .45 and send them on their way, but it would have meant trouble. So…
“One way or the other Mr. Phillips got a hold of most of the property he wanted. Sam led the fight to protect the environment and supported the hold outs who wouldn’t sell. About this time a woman came to town, Delia something. I don’t know her last name. She was real high class city type, and the sexiest looking woman I ever saw. Sam fell for her hard. I don’t know how she did it, but she cast a spell on him or something and he followed her around like a puppy. She got into his head and started him on drugs. He went downhill fast. He stopped protesting the land sales and challenging the building permits. He got weaker and weaker, ran out of money and lost his ranch. Then she dumped him. Some of his friends claim they saw her with Mr. Phillips.”
“What do you think?” Oily asked.
I shrugged. “What do I know? But it was a little strange that a slick woman like that would come here and get involved with a guy like Sam.”
“Are you accusing Mr. Phillips of using her to get him?” Meanie challenged.
“I’m just telling you what I heard.”
“You know about the explosion that destroyed the resort and killed all those people, including Mr. Phillips.”
“There was some talk about that, but I haven’t been there.”
“But you heard about it,” oily said.
“Yeah.”
“Do you know where Sam Zona is?” Oily asked.
“No.”
“Are you sure?”
“I said no.”
Oily said to meanie. ”Let’s go.”
As they were leaving, meanie turned to me. “We’ll be back.”
I didn’t say anything, watched them get into their SUV and drive off. Bobby came outside and stood next to me, watching the dust plume recede in the distance.
“I was listening from the back window. Is there any way those guys can find out that Sam bought that load of black powder from us?”
“Not if we don’t say anything. There’s no receipt or anything is there?”
“No.”
“Good.”
“You think Sam blew up the place?”
“Yes.”
“Where is he now?”
“Dead along with the others.”
“How do you know that?”
“I know Sam. He was reduced to a wreck of a man who had nothing left. They laughed at him on the streets and weren’t afraid of him anymore. They took away everything he had, then built that temple of luxury to destroy the land he loved. I knew what he was going to do when he bought that powder.”
“Why didn’t you stop him?”
“It was his choice, Bobby. He pulled himself together for one last fight and took his enemies with him.”
“That’s it? That’s all you got to say?”
I smiled. “Too bad the governor wasn’t there.”
He stared at me wide-eyed for a moment, then laughed and I laughed with him.
Gary Beck has spent most of his adult life as a theatre director and worked as an art dealer when he couldn’t earn a living in the theatre. He has also been a tennis pro, a ditch digger and a salvage diver. His original plays and translations of Moliere, Aristophanes and Sophocles have been produced Off Broadway. His poetry, fiction and essays have appeared in hundreds of literary magazines and his published books include 43 poetry collections, 18 novels, 4 short story collections, 2 collection of essays and 8 books of plays. Gary lives in New York City.
You can find more of Gary’s work here on Ink Pantry.
Wherever you hang paintings, the walls are willing.
And every heavy sculpture the floorboards are eager to hold up.
Wherever you put them, all are there to please you.
If works of art were lovers, you’d be the one they kiss.
BANQUET
I have an urge for everything forbidden from the lick of an ice-cream sundae to the blessed, unspoken parts of you. Sweet-bread and flesh. Lush tomatoes and the pleasure of your tongue. Peach juice dripping and saliva captured in a bright pink curl. Honey and salt from the jar, from skin.
What if… now there’s an unforgiving beast that never saw a feast it didn’t turn its back on. So many kept apart over the years. Opportunities sealed off. Possibilities banished. More regret than a heart can hold.
But forget the tempting foods and let’s concentrate on you. The pleasures of the table have their place but the bedroom is a banquet for the soul. You are ripe And I’m feeling adventurous. Now’s not the time to be tentative. Remember, safe means unfulfilled in my language.
FAMILY GALLERY
I keep the bastard locked up in a photograph just for old time’s sake. The eyes glare. The nose rises, mouth jerks sideways, in a snarl.
I get like him some times. I feel what he felt – that life can be a wretched, cruel and debilitating way to live. So I understand why he preferred a more honest reaction than a smile when the camera clicked.
But I have a marriage to sustain, friendships to maintain, a job to hold down, and an obligation not to burden other people in the world with my gloom and anguish.
So I keep the bastard locked up in a photograph. As a warning. As a stand-in even.
ALGEBRA
as wobbly as wounded soldiers we headed back to campus, smelling of smuggled beers, as prepared as we ever were for our afternoon class
me knotting fingers, you burping, we took algebra at its word, with A the finger divided by B the furrowed brow equaling X the endearing mind multiplied by Y the blurred vision times Z –
when the value of Z is Zzzzzzzzzzz
THE BOXER
He spent twenty years of his life trying to knock some guy to the canvas.
Now he’s brain-damaged, his ears ring constantly, and he doesn’t even know his own name.
He won fights and he lost fights. And he lost the fights he won.
A HOMELESS MORNING
Morning holds on to its darkness for as long as it can, resisting the early efforts of the sun to burn off shadow. In six a.m. catacombs, the homeless rise warily, their territory about to undergo its daily transformation into the site of an invasion. They cling to the pockets of black, alleys, doorways, subway corridors, the last shreds of shelter. But eventually, commuters hit the sidewalk like armies. Hands reach out, begging for change. Faces hide from the light.
John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in New World Writing, New English Review and Tenth Muse. Latest books, “Subject Matters”, ”Between Two Fires” and “Covert” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in Haight-Ashbury Literary Journal, Amazing Stories and River and South.
You can find more of John’s work here on Ink Pantry.
A silvered whisper caressed an old deer path in a woodland then faded into shadows as the night was transformed into the morning as the sun edging slowly over the mountain shinned its golden rays onto meadows where softly flowing streams awaited. Then far way in an ocean, the last greyish ray of moonlight skipped across the incoming tide filled with briny whispers as an apricot-coloured thread draped over the sand dunes, unraveling time as it approached. Then the tiny flame of morning, flickered into being, and dreams were swallowed up by a yawn.
The Night’s Beginning
As the evening neared, I listened to the lonely frogs croaking in a tiny pond: They seemed to be serenading the moon. As the day slowly whispered into shadows, and the night began its dark tour of duty to protect the hours from crumbling, I retired for the evening.
Stars, those tiny sparkling lanterns, were penetrating the sky. The breeze was balmy and soft, the country road silent, and night birds were singing softly. As the clock chimed twelve, the day vanished into the night and the moon became a mere glowing silver orb bouncing against the crimson horizon.
I watched the last hours of the day vanishing into silence, as the stars gazing from millions of light years away, were splashing in the sky. I waited for the night’s long hours to cover me, and as my breath mellowed, I faded into sleep, and memories turned into dreams.
So Much Forgotten
Fading visions of borrowed prayers, forgotten truths, and the faint quivering images of all my yesterdays floated inside luminous clouds like butterflies flitting in the breeze. Then as they merged with lonely songs of night birds, stars, flickering like Chinese lanterns, dimly glowed through dreams of whispering voices, and everything vanished into the past.
James has published five collections of poetry, and over 1850 poems in scores of national and international publications, such as The Ink Pantry, Sparks of Calliope, Nebo, Miller’s Pond, Penwood Review, Front Porch, London Grip, Minetta, The American Aesthetic, El Porto, Badlands Journal, Sparks of Calliope, and hundreds of others. He was twice nominated for The Best of The Net award, and four times for a Pushcart award, and was the featured poet, of the month in literary magazines, eleven times. He earned his doctorate from BYU and his BS and MA from California State Polytechnic University.
You can find more of James’ work here on Ink Pantry.
The great blue heron is a complex fantastic mystery to me, More grey than blue, with awkward elongated neck, Standing in the conical pond like a statue, Completely motionless, moving nary a muscle. The pond is grey the colour of a battleship And stands dark and still on what was once a golf course. As I stare, the pond turns ever darker and more impenetrable. The pond is Hardyesque—dangerous pond In which Eustacia Vye came to the end of her tragic days. The great blue heron reminds me of a pterodactyl, Flying through the air of millennia past. The bird finally stirs, slowly spreads its question wings, Gradually lifts the weight of its body, Which rests on skinny pickle wings. The great blue heron spreads those wings, And the creature lifts and careens Toward the cluttered gray skies and Skims against the low-hanging clouds and Flies into the reality that sits on me. It flies on, up—unhurried, unrushed, elegant, Grotesque, impervious, and beautiful.
Stronghold
I remember like a blazing star the driving to and hiking through Cochise Stronghold in southeastern Arizona, driving down a woebegone gravel bumpy road that appeared to collide with the Dragoon Mountains but the turned left and dove deeper.
Into the Stronghold, which as the name says was where in the mid-1800s was where the chief Cochise the Chiricahua Apaches lived and defied the U.S. government and the U.S. cavalry.
The hiking trail into the Stronghold is rugged but not impossible, climbs steadily and then passes magnificent colossal boulders that stand like the ghosts of Apache families.
If you let your imagination run wild, you imagine the boulders running free like the spirits of Apache families frozen in time.
The enormous boulders lean against one another, supporting one another, standing tall, conjuring apparitions of the past— A past that was both bucolic and tragic.
Never before have I felt a place so strong, so evocative, so powerful, so spiritual, so all- encompassing, so annihilating.
The ghosts of the Chiricahua still inhabit these boulder environs, these rock esplanades, still inhabit these precious and mysterious and lost canyons.
Still The People ride their pale horses and wave their mystery baskets from the strands of the cacti that line the floor of the canyon.
Still the Spirits of the Chiricahua follow us and surround us as we steadily climb the trail to an outlook that reaches all the way to Tombstone.
We pass a dammed-up pool where cattle slake their thirst.
We pass cacti that stand guard like lookouts on the side of the living breathing mountain.
It is a place that is dangerously silent, a place in which spirits and dreams float like weapons, their invisibility something palpable.
Lying on night in the Yates’s potent hot tub, we face the eastern wall of the Dragoon Mountains that capture the rays of the moon and shine like an enormous radioactive wall, shimmering and shaking and seducing our spirits
The moon is resplendent, alive, sly, awake,
Lighting the side of the cliff so that the infinite rocks glow, shine with extraordinary and mystical brightness, as if the boulders themselves burned with an internal light.
And we, gazing, captivated by the cliff, and the glaring mystic-rock, know that the inner light of past is glaring at us through the eyes of Cochise.
Christopher Johnson is a writer based in the Chicago area. He’s done a lot of different stuff in his life. He’s been a merchant seaman, a high school English teacher, a corporate communications writer, a textbook editor, an educational consultant, and a free-lance writer. He’s published short stories, articles, and essays in The Progressive, Snowy Egret, Earth Island Journal, Chicago Wilderness, American Forests, Chicago Life, Across the Margin, Adelaide Literary Magazine, Blue Lake Review, The Literary Yard, Scarlet Leaf Review, Spillwords Press, Fiction on the Web, Sweet Tree Review, and other journals and magazines. In 2006, the University of New Hampshire Press published his first book, This Grand and Magnificent Place: The Wilderness Heritage of the White Mountains. His second book, which he co-authored with a prominent New Hampshire forester named David Govatski, was Forests for the People: The Story of America’s Eastern National Forests, published by Island Press in 2013.
You can find more of Christopher’s work here on Ink Pantry.
I still remember your hands, thin as winter branches, holding that porcelain teacup, fingers trembling, but stubborn, never letting go.
Steam rose between us, a soft whisp of jasmine, twisting with words unsaid, your eyes watering from the heat— or maybe something else.
You asked me to sit awhile, though silence did the talking. The world seemed smaller, shrinking to the pattern of leaves on that old cracked saucer.
I watched as you sipped, pausing for breath, for memory, for the weight of the past pressed into the lines of your palms, folded away in every quiet sigh.
When you set the cup down, it made the smallest sound, a final note on an unfinished song, and I wondered how it is that some endings can break without ever making a noise.
Now the house sits empty, the teacup still on the table, waiting for a hand that won’t return, and the scent of jasmine lingers, traveling from room to room.
The Empty Chair
In the garden, a chair leans back, peeling paint, splinters of memory, a forgotten book resting on the arm, its pages curled like waiting.
Wind plays through untended herbs, thyme and basil spreading wild, their fragrance sweet and uncontained, like stories spun from the air itself.
A cat circles, then stops, ears flickering, tail suspended— an unheard call drifts through the trees, carried away with autumn’s yellowed breath.
Dusk settles in folds of orange, clouds unraveling like loose yarn— shadows stretch and take their places, the chair holding secrets or simply nothing.
Blueprints
They never finished building that house— a foundation poured and left to set, weeds threading through cracked concrete, framing rooms that will never hold warmth.
I walk there sometimes, over brittle beams, counting empty windows like ghosts, each one a chance to see out or in, each one a choice never made.
A rusted ladder leans like a prayer, reaching for rafters that embrace the sky, where stars pin blueprints of what could be, etched in constellations no architect planned.
Once, a bird nested in the hollowed walls, bringing twigs to cradle new life, and I wondered how she trusted the wind, how she believed in beginnings without endings.
I trace the outlines with my fingertips, a ghost in a half-made dream, feeling both loss and something deeper— a strange grace in the unfinished, where hope clings like ivy, never quite letting go.
Jeffery Allen Tobin is a political scientist and researcher based in South Florida. His extensive body of work primarily explores U.S. foreign policy, democracy, national security, and migration. He has been writing poetry and prose for more than 30 years.
Below the horizon the sun reaches up to touch the clouds once grey now brilliant orange and red sands splashing against the sky.
Then calm, fading back to grey as the sun emerges from below in a hemisphere orb scaring darkness into stretched shadows longing to merge again.
But patience…
Beneath gathers, extends over the ground toward a coaxing moon; the sun descends with red scratches on jet contrails, and orange-cloud pools flow into the night ocean, echo in abandoned shell.
BRIDGE MUSINGS
I want to be an old wooden bridge with slats missing, broken in dangling pairs in mid-air dive suspension.
I want to creak or crack warnings that never materialize or maybe they might. Creaks and cracks tickle my joy.
I might sacrifice a slat to test a hiker’s reactions. Oh, crap! They hung on. Whoo hoo! You’re gone. Bye, bye. It’s never my fault.
I’m an old wooden bridge; I can do what I want!
GRASS MUSIC
A field of brown grass sways in the wind; many girl concert-goers near swoon close to the rock-star singer.
Final wisps of smolder smoke spiral into the sky; dreams dissipate after the blaze burnoff.
Last night’s snowfall splotches the field in black-and-white motif; Holstein cow ghosts rest in herd mentality awaiting milking time in the barn.
Spring rain tamps ash into the ground quenching thirst for green sprouts to slice upwards separate then clumps conjoining into a field renewed; daughters and mothers sway to the music transmitted in wind rustling through air floating across the field.
FENCE GAMES
Down the wooden fence line rails hold hands as posts yell to the fence across the field, “Red Rover, Red Rover, send Lucy right over!”
RAINBOW BIRD
Two birds glide through the waterfall’s mist arcing rainbow colours separating one side from the other. Birds soar through the droplets beaded on feathers shimmering iridescent reflections.
Diane Webster‘s work has appeared in Old Red Kimono, North Dakota Quarterly, New English Review, Studio One and other literary magazines. She had micro-chaps published by Origami Poetry Press in 2022, 2023 and 2024. Diane has been nominated for Best of the Net and a Pushcart. She was a featured writer in Macrame Literary Journal and WestWard Quarterly. Her website is: www.dianewebster.com
You can find more of Diane’s work here on Ink Pantry.
You – such a dreamery born from Dionysian odes like tender day in Your winds – enchanted butterflies as the Golden Fleece – bewitched in my meek fantasy august paradise lost is thus found and so dreamy You lotus-like butterfly you – above volcanos with wing-bewitchment immortalized in the times I want to be such you and eternal thankful eyes a plethora of feelings shines in tender myths lands
I would be magnificent and gorgeous like some ghosts I will daydream over the soft foggy mournful morns I long for tenderness of a mayhap dreamy dew amaranthine but golden muse told me: Let’s go! dearest butterfly Your blood is like an ambrosia Your soul seems to be a pretty light eudemonia Your tender garden is at morning star so moony Your thoughts are dazzling moonglow awoken from fantasy
I yearn in winter for eternal Horace’s feelings created born in springtide from the Ovidian songs I am going to go to Pythia – temple in summer a naiad becomes for Artemis’ sake muse in fall
The Elegy to Orpheus
Your lute became supernaturally amaranthine. Its melody belonged to marvel of realm full muses. The tender Gods love you – Orpheus and your musing charm. And your homeland – worshipped each your dreamy song and ballads.
Soft birds and dazzling animals – they overwatched at morns, with each magnificent, amusing and marvellous gig. Thus. Your amazing-dreamed eagles loved too – the singing – envoys of the weal from edenic Olympic mountains.
The venom of viper had in itself somewhat pearly. It was such tear of Orpheus – overwhelmingly clean. Eurydice – the queen of muses on foggy days died. She – in eternal habitat-wizardry of Hades.
You have desired to retrieve her – the immortal being and to bring unto earth full of moony spell and the pearls. Hades and Hermes were enchanted from your dreameries. Eurydice adored in odes, in homeland of shadow.
You perished simply rent like the gentle stolen Golden Fleece, by angry, mythological creatures – troublemakers. On seat of death originated wonderful oracle. Its meaning was very juridic as well as dreaming.
If Eurydice thought in eternity about you, the lea of Thrace would come into leaf so picturesquely. The meek, lovely, small fawn says – the world I love you too. A butterfly carries repose of Gods amazingly.
Paweł Markiewicz was born 1983 in Siemiatycze in Poland. He is poet who lives in Bielsk Podlaski and writes tender poems, haiku as well as long poems. Paweł has published his poetries in many magazines. He writes in English and German.
You can find more of Paweł’s work here on Ink Pantry.
I am no phoenix, whose resurrections can boast an infinitude. My heavily bombarded system has not attained any hardihood. Frayed are the nerves that have not been forged with steel, and no brakes have been installed on my constant tears.
I am no serpent, who can slough her aged skin. I cherish every wrinkle that maps my plighted years. I spew no poison at foes or peers. And I still nurse my deep-rooted fears.
Cartoons
“My life is a children’s cartoon,” he used to reiterate in a vehement voice, a bachelor whose name I fail to recall.
I think of his statement as an appropriate metaphor for my own complicated discourse, with Tom and Jerry as an adequate trope for my domestic turmoil, with Remi and Heidi, whom I used to adore, as tales of the orphaned, but who would grow into a world as callous as a whore.
Don’t bury my candles
Don’t bury my candles in the dunes of your sand. They’re bound to scorch your barefooted feats, your roaming beasts, your scarcities.
Don’t suffocate my candles with the debris of your sands. They’re bound to flare up in your fitful sleep to contaminate your dreams and submerge the residue of your sanities.
Don’t enshroud my candles with the palls of your sand. They’re bound to leave holes in your troubled discourse in your diffident pauses.
DrSusie Gharib is a graduate of the University of Strathclyde with a PhD on the work of D.H. Lawrence. Her poetry and fiction have appeared in Adelaide Literary Magazine, Green Hills Literary Lantern, A New Ulster, Crossways, The Curlew, The Pennsylvania Literary Journal, Ink Pantry, Mad Swirl, Miller’s Pond Poetry Magazine, and Down in the Dirt.
Susie’s first book (adapted for film), Classic Adaptations, includes Charlotte Bronte’s Villette, Virginia Woolf’s The Waves, and D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover.
You can find more of Susie’s work here on Ink Pantry.
a hollow, deep, and wide, Amnesia took all bit by, no latest in my thoughts, sounds bloom like delicate petals, never do they depart, but chase and cherish tranquility.
Twilight
Star clusters under pool of visions Side by side at twilight, murmurs under Sparks cloud their route, gusts push back Waves in their calm basin, space grows
Beneath
Here, where earth and art intertwine, a mosaic of blues, greens, and reds, light moves through them, alive.
Golden spires, sharp and towering, pierce the sky, casting shadows that dance along green surrounding trees. On another side, long, slender stalks of deep blue glass emerge from the soil, stretching in thin, elegant lines
Beneath the vast glass dome, flowers bloom in pink and violet, mingling with the orange and red tendrils that curl and arc, wild and free, where boundaries blur and blend.
Here, where I stand beneath a canopy of glass, a man demonstrates an ancient craft of glassmaking, as a searing, molten orb turns to a sculpted form, glowing with the intense heat of its transformation.
Jennifer Choi is a passionate high school student whose love for poetry began at an early age. She finds inspiration in exploring themes of identity, love, and the complexities of the human experience through her writing. Jennifer aspires to connect with others through her poetry and hopes to contribute her voice to the literary community.