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Thursday, 23 April 2020

JINN AN EVIL SPIRIT


JINN AN EVIL SPIRIT

By Peter Woodgate  

So here I am, hanging onto the railings of the Golden Gate Bridge, looking down at the cold dark waters of San Francisco bay.
    I am somewhat disappointed as I notice that, the advertised addition to this iconic bridge, is now securely in place. A safety net, stretching along the length of both sides and installed to prevent idiots, like me, jumping into oblivion.
Oh well, I’ll just have to figure out another way to end my miserable life. How did I get to this level of desperation? You may ask, well, I don’t anticipate being in this world much longer so I had better get on with the answer.

    It all started about three months ago, it was a day like many others and I was on my way home after a hard day in the city. That sounds exciting but I don’t want you to think I’m a financial wizard, the fact is, I sell vacuum cleaners, or at least I try. I had sold two that day, which was about par for the course, the commission from which would see me scrape through with my minimum target.
My wife would not be happy as these mediocre sales of late would not allow savings for “that special holiday” I had been promising for months. No, I began to feel a bit low as I approached the Robin Williams tunnel; this is the barrier between San Francisco and Marin County and a further thirty miles to my home town of Novato.
    I began thinking about poor Robin, such a great actor and yet he was unable to free himself from tragedy. What causes such depression? I asked myself. I’d pulled myself together as I approached the tunnel exit knowing the sign for Sausalito would soon be in view. I love Sausalito, a quaint little town nestling in the hills in a north-west corner of the bay. The Marina was always packed with beautiful yachts and the little high street yielded plenty of places for refreshments and a few shops.
    It was as I exited the tunnel that I started to feel the car pulling to the right. I was having to hold the wheel really tight to avoid moving into the inside lane and as I reached the exit for Sausalito I decided that there must be a problem with the car and let it take the slip road exiting the highway. Once on the slip road, the car was back to normal steering and as I took a right turn heading into Sausalito I thought how strange, but whilst I’m here, I may as well pop in to see my friend who worked in a bar along the front.
I parked in the town’s little car park and set off down the street towards the bar.
If it wasn’t for the fact that it was getting dark I probably would have missed it but as I passed this previously innocuous shop I was drawn in by the flashing red lights. I looked at the words as they flickered annoyingly, they spelt out “Carol’s Curios I sell everything guaranteed.” I found myself inexplicably pushing open the door and entering. I was met by a musty odour and the sight of hundreds of antique odds and sods.
   “Hello, I’m Carol,” a rather plump lady grinned at me from behind the counter, “everything here 50% off for today” she continued in a somewhat musical tone. I looked at the pile of dusty books on a table in front of me.
    “Go on have a look at them,” Carol gave me a smile as she extended her hand toward the books, “you won’t find these titles anywhere and you get them for 50% off, priceless.”
Feeling rather embarrassed I started to look at the titles, “Body at the foot of the cliff” by Eileen Dover, “The Haunted House by Hugo Furst, How to get rich by Robin Banks and Gone with the Wind by Donald Trump.
    “You have to be joking” I turned round to face Carol with a wry smile on my face, “these are made upright?”
“No, no” she replied, “they are all first editions and you get 50% off today.”
I was about to make a hasty retreat to the door when a bottle on the shelf behind her caught my eye. It was made of dark glass and was sealed by a clip stopper.
It looked quite old and the somewhat faded label had the words JINN A SPIRIT written on it, in bold capitals. “What’s that bottle there?” I pointed to the shelf over her shoulder. Carol was rather hesitant as she replied.
“Oh that,” she acted sheepishly as she took the bottle down and placed it on the counter. “This bottle” she explained, “has been in my family for over 200 years, I’ve been told that once opened it could be detrimental to my health and here it is still intact.”
“But what’s in it?” I asked Carol.
“It’s what the label says, that’s all I can tell you,” she replied.
I immediately thought of that stupid advert “it does exactly what it says on the tin.” I then looked at the words again, JINN, perhaps it used to be spelt like that 200 years ago. I was now completely curious about what this bottle contained.
After all, spirits are supposed to mature with age and this was certainly not young.
“How much do you want for it?” I asked, not wanting to appear too keen.
She hesitated for a moment before answering, “well it is priced at 20 dollars but, don’t forget the 50% off so it’s yours for 10. However, Carol Paused; I must get you to sign this disclaimer in which you agree that you have been warned of the potential dangers of opening this bottle.”
“Of course,” I said, “I don’t think I shall have any problems handling this little beauty, in fact, I will go home right away, can’t wait to sample the contents.”
I thanked Carol and left the shop heading straight back to the car and then home.
It might have been my imagination, but I felt sure the car ran more smoothly than it had for years and in no time at all, I was pushing the key into my front door lock.
    “I’m home,” I shouted out, expecting a curt reply, but nothing. Just silence until Molly, the cat, rushed past me hissing venomously. I walked into the kitchen and placed the bottle on the table, it was then I saw the envelope.
I picked it up and tore it open using my forefinger. I was never very good at opening envelopes and, as well as making a right mess of it managed to cut myself. I unfolded the letter and read the message in disbelief, my cut paled into insignificance as the words I HAVE LEFT YOU pierced my brain.
“The silly cow has gone and left me,” I shouted.  Molly, however just looked at me and hissed like a demented Banji.
    I slumped into a chair, feeling dejected and looked at the bottle on the table.
Time to get plastered, I thought, as I pulled the bottle towards me. As mentioned before it was one of those bottle-tops with spring clips each side and this ensured it remained air-tight. I released both clips eagerly and pulled the stopper out, making a loud pop. what happened next was beyond belief as white mist began streaming from the bottle. I stood there, mouth open, eyes staring, thinking, someone has bottled the famous San Francisco fog. The mist began to twist like a mini-tornado, then Poof, it turned into a little figure. It was about twelve inches in height, floating crossed legged and wearing just pantaloons and a turban.
    I was flabbergasted, but quickly came to my senses, “are you a genie?” I asked, “and do I get three wishes?”
“Don’t be so bloody stupid,” the little man replied, “I am a Jinn from Muslim Demonology, Genii are made up for children’s stories. After all, you wouldn’t have me terrorizing little kids, would you?. “No, you don’t get three wishes, if you did the first would probably be, I wish I hadn’t opened that bottle. You, my friend, will be horrified to know that you must obey my every command, and I, being evil, they will not be very pleasant.”

    So there you are, since that fateful day, I have been forced to carry out every evil deed imaginable, hence I have come to the end of my tether. Now that I find my initial plan has been scuppered I am moving away from the edge of the bridge and I am about to throw myself in front of this huge truck heading my way. I close my eyes and jump.
    What's this?  I am waking up; it has all been a dream. I am slumped over the table my fingers outstretched towards an empty bottle, the label spells out Gin.
I feel like death but am, thankfully, alive and begin to think logically.
It is known as “Mother’s Ruin” and no matter how you spell it, too much can destroy your life. 

   Copyright Peter Woodgate  

THE SPIDER’S WEB Ch 2


THE SPIDER’S WEB

By Bob French

CHAPTER TWO – BEIJING, CHINA

The mood on the top floor of CIA headquarters at Langley mimicked the uncertain weather outside; a storm was coming.  Harry Miller put the phone down and waited for the knock on his office door. It only took her two minutes to reach his office and he yelled when he heard her tap.
            “Come!”  Emily Michaels pushed the office door open and strode in; confident and not out of breath, having just run up three flights of stairs.
            “Sir?” Her Chief of Operations looked up and smiled.  Emily had completed 6 years in the US Marine Corps, reached the rank of Captain and had been awarded two Bronze Stars for outstanding gallantry in Afghanistan. When she ended her service, she went back to Harvard to complete her Masters in chemistry.  It was there that the CIA spotted her and five years later she was a fully qualified agent with a Masters Degree.
            “Sit.  We have a telex from our office in Beijing. They got a problem on their plate and don’t know what to do.”  He paused whilst he took a swig of his cold coffee.  “Do you remember the bugs that went viral in 2002 and again in 2014?”  She nodded.
            “The SARS and the MERS Sir; killed a lot of people around the world.”
            “Well according to this telex, it’s happened again.  It looks like the Chinese didn’t clean up properly after the first two viruses, and now they have a more deadly virus in country.”
            “The Pentagon thinks that both outbreaks were as a result of some kind of biological warfare test by the Chinese military.  The first test did not impress the MSS, the Ministry of State Security in Beijing, the second was an improvement.  Our boys in Beijing think that this is similar to the previous two viruses, only this time, they think that there has been some sort of accident and the virus has been carried outside its initial confinement area.”  He stared at Emily, then glanced at his watch.
            “There’s a chopper outside.  You got an hour to get your crap together and be on the 12:45 out of Norfolk.  Bud Westerbrooken will meet you in Beijing.  I want to know what the hell is going on.”
            The air was warm and clammy, as she stepped down from the TWA Air Bus.  Before she had reached the tarmac of Beijing, a burly, clean-shaven man, with very short hair caught her eye.  The second her foot hit the tarmac, she was ushered into the back seat of a blacked-up BMV cruiser.  The door slammed and she was thrown back into her seat as it accelerated out of the airport.  The man glanced in his rearview mirror. “Bud Westerbrooken, Section Chief. Welcome to Beijing Emily.  Hope you managed to grab a bite?  We start right away.”
            The CIA office was in the same compound as the American Embassy in the Chaoyang District of Beijing. Once inside, Bud guided her to the briefing room in the bowls of the building where several men sat waiting.
            “Right Guys. This is Emily Michaels from Langley.  She’s a chemist.  Right Abraham you kick-off.”  She had just sat down when Abraham, a tall bearded man with deep brown eyes pushed back his chair and flicked on the overhead projector.
            “OK.  We think that the Chinese are trying to create the ultimate chemical warfare weapon, that when released, will kill thousands, if not millions of people within a couple of weeks.  We’ve discovered that the centre of this latest outbreak is in the province of Wuhan, about a thousand clicks south of here and five hundred west of Shanghai.”  Emily leant forward.
            “What evidence do we have that this virus is a biological weapon?”
            Bud took the lead. “Back in 2002, the SARS epidemic kicked-off in the Guangdong Province. It mainly infected Far Eastern countries. Then in 2012 the MERS virus erupted in the Middle East with the same effects. Now, the same type of virus has erupted in Wuhan Province.  We looked into the spread of the first virus and we think we discovered the reason it only spread in the Far East.  The Chinese authorities had invited about twenty or so people from a variety of settlements in the Guangdong province to go on a free state-run holiday.  According to our records, these were the carriers and none of them returned.  Same thing with the second virus.  People were invited to take part in a competition.  The winners got to go on a free holiday to the Middle East.  Once again, none of them returned.”
            Abraham cut in.  “My theory is they are testing its effectiveness.  Each strain has become stronger.  If we can believe the reports, this latest virus appears to be very strong.”
            Bud cut him short.  “This is speculation.  If it’s an accident, we need to know the extent of the spread.  If it’s a weapon, we need to know its capabilities.  Either way we need to know everything there is to know about it.”
            “Have the Chinese Government made a statement?”
            “Their official line is that this virus has been caused by ‘wet markets’ where the hygiene standards are so poor, it’s allowed the virus to jump from animal to humans and they've tried to contain it, but lost control.”  No one spoke for a while.  Emily glanced down at the notes she had made on the plane.
            “Who else knows about the extent of this virus to date?”
            Bud stood, “As far as we know, no one, but it won’t be long before CNN, the BBC or Al Jazeera gets wind of it.  Emily, your job is to infiltrate the province of Wuhan and find out what really is going on and damned fast.”
            “Am I safe out there?”  The room fell into silence. Bud spoke again.
            “As far as we know, the State Police and the MSS are on the ground, besides, you have a diplomatic passport, so no one should bother you unless you start walking around taking pictures.”
            “What about the underworld; the Triad’s, The Company, or even the Russian’s.”
            Bud grinned.  Hell, at this stage even the Russians don’t know about this outbreak yet.”

Copyright Bob French

(To be Continued)

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.


Wednesday, 22 April 2020

WRITE ME A LOVE STORY Prologue


WRITE ME A LOVE STORY

By Janet Baldey 

Prologue

As I opened the door of my cottage, sunshine flooded in, its warmth washed over me.  I looked up at the sky, listening to the quarrelling birds in the trees and my spirits rose.   At last, the dead hand of winter was loosening its grip.   For almost another year the ache in my bones wouldn’t sing in tune with the bitter wind; spring had arrived and the golden length of summer lay before me.   Reluctant to break the spell, I stood treasuring the moment.   
Memories of hard silver frosts fading, I set off towards the smallholding, following the winding path down the hill.   Every now and then I caught a glimpse of the village nestling on the floor of the valley.  From this height, I could cup it in the centre of my palm, the houses were tiny and minuscule cars, like beetles with flashing eyes, trundled through its streets.  
         At one point, I left the track and walked a few yards across the verge towards a field.   Leaning against its gate, I could just see the remains of the camp:  under a shimmer of sunlight, it stood silent, a part of my life frozen in time.  Green veins of ivy crawled over the huts and tough purple mallow was pushing its way through cracks in the concrete. Gradually, nature was taking over; in a few years, nobody would know it had ever existed.  I turned back to the path, not really sure why I was there; I was only stirring up memories best laid to rest.   Georg was no longer part of my life and after so many years, I should have got used to the idea.   
The smallholding glowed under the sun as I walked up its drive.   When David took over a few years ago, he’d stripped away the ugly plaster, revealing its fine brickwork and had built on a couple of wings, extending it to right and left so that it now lay, curved like a bow.   But, before lifting so much as a finger, he’d taken me aside to explain why he needed to alter the family home so drastically.
‘It’s not a working farm any more, Mum.   We’re turning it into traditional farmhouse accommodation so it needs to be made as attractive as possible.   People must want to stay here, you do see that, don’t you?’
I remember a feeling of tenderness as I saw the anxiety on his face, but he needn’t have worried.   I loved its new look.  I didn’t even strongly object to its changed name.  No longer just the smallholding, it was now ‘The Olde Farmhouse.’   Inwardly I cringed but was grateful he’d preserved the original building’s one redeeming feature, the misty blue wisteria flowers that, each spring, dripped from its eaves like static waterfalls. 
Pushing open the back door, at first, I thought the kitchen was empty.   White light streamed in through the brand new picture windows, rebounding off the chrome and enamel surfaces in glittering shards.  Dazzled by its brilliance, I narrowed my eyes and squinted about the room.
         ‘Anybody home?’
There was a small movement in a corner and, as my sight adjusted, I saw David slumped over a small oval table littered with paper.
         ‘Hello, love.’ 
         He lifted his head and my smile faltered.  His eyes were streaked with crimson, reminding me of images I’d seen while researching a novel set in the Punjab.  The novel never came to anything.  I’m more suited to writing for children, but I’d never forgotten my research.  For dramatic effect, Indian actors push aubergine flower seeds under their lids to redden their eyeballs and David’s must-have rivalled theirs.   A layer of stubble prickled his chin and as I watched his fingers ploughed in nervous gestures through his hair, corrugating it into ridges. 
         ‘David! You look terrible.  Is anything wrong?’
         ‘Morning Mum.  Been up all night.  Trying to make sense of this lot.’   He waved his hand at the scattered paperwork.
         ‘Where’s Anna?’
         ‘Upstairs.  Sleeping, I hope.  She was up most of the night.’  His voice was terse.   With a gesture of hopelessness, he tossed down his pen.
         ‘Look, Mum, I’m sorry but I’ve some bad news.'  Avoiding my eyes, he picked up his pen again and tapped black dots into a sheet of paper. 
         ‘The business has gone down the drain.  We’re selling up.  There’s nothing else we can do.’
          For a moment I stared, frozen into silence, then my hands flew to my ears as if to block out his words. I shook my head. This couldn’t be right. Over the past few years, every time I called round they’d made some improvement, either to the house or garden.   There was always something new to see and with all the new gadgets following close, one upon the other, I’d imagined the business was thriving.
         ‘Don’t be silly, you’ve just had a new kitchen fitted’.   As soon as the words were out, I bit my lips.  The look on his face should have told me this was serious.   Desperately, I tried to make amends.   For both our sakes, there had to be some hope.
 ‘Perhaps, it’s just a case of too fast too soon?   Maybe you just need more time to get established.  You’ve worked so hard.  It’s bound to come right in the end.’
         He laughed without humour, an ugly cawing noise that made a mockery of my suggestion.
‘Try to understand, Mum.  We have no more time. We’re bust.  We’ve no bookings.   For months, it’s been just a few one-nighters, and they don’t cover the bills. Nobody’s holidaying in England any more.  They’re all going abroad.’
He paused and my face must have reflected my feelings because suddenly he stood up, reached out and drew me close.   My body slumped against his and I rested my face against the bony rim of his collarbone feeling the tears gathering behind my closed lids.   Although I no longer lived here, the smallholding had been my life and I couldn’t believe that now, after all that had happened, it was going to be sold.  A stranger would move in and take over my home and I didn’t think I could bear it.    
         Misunderstanding, David tried to comfort me.     
‘Don’t worry Mum. We’ll have no problem finding a buyer.  We ordinary folk can’t make ends meet but there's plenty of people with money to burn, itching to buy a place in the country.”  His voice was bitter. ‘Anna and I will be all right.   I’ve already got something lined up.   But, it’s you I worry about.’  He hesitated.   ‘We’ll be moving away but you could always come with us….’
         I stepped back, disentangling myself from his arms. Part of me wondered why I hadn’t been told before.   He must have known for some time, these things don’t happen overnight: but then David had always been like that, a little secretive.  I never really knew what was going on in his head.  In the past, whenever I’d caught him out in a white lie, or something he’d chosen not to tell me, I’d felt as if a lance had been thrust deep into my side.   Then, I’d remember my secret.   A secret so huge it made his petty lies insignificant.    It was a secret I’d vowed never to reveal and now that Sarah had moved away, it would die with me. 
         As so often in the past, I forced a smile. ‘I’ll be okay. I’ve got plenty of friends.’
It was a lie and we both knew it.  The truth was, for many years, I’d lived a solitary existence.   It hadn’t always been that way but times change.   If nothing else, life had taught me that.  When Frank and I had first married there had been a strong community of local farmers working small plots all over the valley but over the years most had left the land.  Large consortiums had taken over the vacant fields, the distance between farmhouses had increased and gradually the sense of pulling together had been lost.   It was the same with the village.   I’d lived here most of my life and had been on nodding terms with almost all the villagers.  But now, when I did my weekly shop, I felt out of place amongst the familiar maze of streets. Everywhere ‘For Sale’ signs were sprouting in the tiny cottage gardens; like alien vegetation, they were crowding out the hollyhocks and wallflowers.  Most of the people I’d known were gone and all the new faces made me feel as old as the hills that ringed the valley.   But I knew I could never leave.  This was where I belonged and the past had too strong a hold on me. I reached out and patted his arm.
‘You mustn’t worry about me, there’s always my writing.’
         David laughed again and this time the sound rang true.
‘You and your stories, Mum.   When are you going to write me one?’
         I froze.  That’s just what he’d said; just before he went away.
         ‘Write me a story, Flora.  One of love and loss and love regained.’  The words had sounded foreign on his tongue.
         ‘Mum?’
         I came to with a start, realising that David was speaking; he looked at me, a question in his eyes.
 ‘Sorry, just daydreaming.’
‘I said that sometimes I wish you’d married again.’
         I shook my head.  ‘Over the hill.’
         ‘Nonsense.  You’re still a looker.  But I suppose there was never any other man for you after Dad. ’
         My eyes flicked towards his face but it was in shadow and I couldn’t read his expression.
As I left, I passed a line of laburnum trees their branches bowed under their burden of liquid sunshine.  My shoulder brushed against the heavy blossom, releasing its musky perfume.   I remembered planting those trees just after Frank and I moved in.   The smallholding had looked very different then; just a single storey building with a swaybacked roof.   Damp patches had spread across walls that were peeling and discoloured as if suffering from some chronic skin disease.    At that time it had been just one up from a hovel but inside Frank’s head, it had been quite different.  He had plans.   We’d work hard, buy more land and live happily ever after.  I wandered back to the cottage, remembering things I’d not thought of in years.  As time went on, I noticed this was happening more and more.  Increasingly, I inhabited the past and dreaming the days away had become a habit. 
       Unlatching the door, I walked into my living room towards my writing desk, Georg’s words chiming in my head. Maybe, it was time to write that story. Another chapter in my life was drawing to a close; who knew how many more there’d be?  Maybe, this was a sign.  I sat down and reached for some paper, inserted a sheet into my typewriter and stared at its blank, white face.  Slowly, my fingers started to move.   They felt stiff and awkward at first, my movements were jerky and several times the keys jammed but then my nerves settled.   I was doing this for myself and Georg, nothing else mattered.


Copyright Janet Baldey

This is the prologue to a longer story, would you like Janet to post more?

Aunt Mabel’s Present


Aunt Mabel’s Present  

By Sis Unsworth

Aunt Mabel had a present; she’d kept since she was small,
it never had been opened, and she stored it in the hall.
Why have you never opened it, I politely once did say,
And what she then did tell me, I’ve remembered to this day.
She said it was a gipsy who gave the gift to her,
Who said it was more valuable than frankincense and myrrh.
The gipsy said it was a gift to have when she was old,
And never open it before, she was severely told.
So there it stayed for many years, the gift out in the hall,
I’ll open it when I grow old, she said as I recall.
What could the present be that remained securely locked?
We always tried to get her to open up the box.
She developed quite a phobia, I frequently was told,
Once the gift was opened, it meant that she was old.
She said I will not open it, I am still in my prime,
As she cut her birthday cake when she was 89.
Aunt Mabel at last left the earth, when she was 93,
The gift was still unopened, as was bequeathed to me
”Open it when you are old,” those words I did recall,
I took the present home, and placed it in my hall,
Whatever was there in the box, at last, we will be told,
The gift I look at every day but, won’t open till I’m old.

 Copyright Sis Unsworth

Tuesday, 21 April 2020

CORONAVIRUS


CORONAVIRUS

 By Peter Woodgate

A tiny thing I cannot see
yet it could be the death of me.
It enters through the mouth or nose
even the eyes and goodness knows
where else the little mite may go,
invading us and it will show
up, as a cough, headache or sneeze
and then gets carried by the breeze
Infecting Tom and Dick and Harry
who in turn will unknowingly carry
the off-spring of this amazing thing,
an enzyme surrounded by a ring
of fat, protecting it on its way
around the world leaving dismay.
It’s found a way, apparently,
of docking onto our cells you see,
like a rocket onto a station in space
where we thought mankind had won the race.
This object has no brain, they say,
it doesn’t live, not in the way
we know, so how can it do all this?
In ignorance, no doubt in bliss,
confounding brains around the world
and vaccines yet to be unfurled,
this lifeless, brainless, invisible cell,
rising from the depths of Hell,
achieves all this with consummate ease
whilst our leaders do not please
all those workers known “as key”
are failed, alas, no PPE.  


Copyright Peter Woodgate

Flash Coming Home & Poem Advice


COMING HOME


by Rosemary Clarke

It'll be good to be back; I wonder if they've missed me, I know I've missed them.  The old faces won't be there probably but they come and go and I'll be tucked up all nice and cosy in my bed tonight; wonder if I'll get my old room?

It's no good with these people, they live in a different world, different time; it's a puzzle even to get a cuppa outa  one of them machines, I know I could ask but they don't really wanna help an old boy like me do they?  Nah, I like the quiet, a nice stroll dahn the pier with the band playing - my missus she was a one for that, with all her bulk she'd glide across that floor like a ship in full sail and the mirrors...all got smashed, smashed up now, all of it.  We used to play pranks when I was a lad, scrumping and 'knockdown ginger' but not now, now it's nasty - like another planet to me now.
There was room for private enterprise then, lots of little firms, now everything's big; you still got a few, but big outfits are taking over and if a small one wants to survive it has to be big to keep up, stands to reason.

What got me in first time was being up a pole, some of that wire was copper you know anyhow, old dear's TV packed up, right state she was in, up road to phone electric cause everything went.  Would've bin dahn a bit sharpish but me trousers got hooked, can't take 'em off so I had to stay there.  Anyway with Electric feller came the rozzers so I was up a bleedin' gum tree; saw me with the coil of wire and the clippers in me pocket and that was that, first time!

There's bonuses; no tax, no bills, no worrying 'bout rent, grub on time every day...lovely!
We're driving up now to the gates of Chelmsford nick; as I said, there's no place like home.

Copyright Rosemary Clarke



ADVICE


by Rosemary Clarke

Cut the Red Tape
Let's be friends
This is how to make amends
Cut the cold efficiency
Understand it's you and me
Join together help us out
This is what we should all shout
Stop the fighting and the blame
Try and see we're all the same
Stop confusion truth be told
Then more of us will grow old
Instead of cut off in our prime
Cut the Red Tape
IT IS TIME!


Copyright Rosemary Clarke

The Assist.


The Assist.


By Len Morgan

A quarrel of starlings fight noisily, over scraps, outside their window. Another microcosm of life; two worlds in parallel, yet neither is aware the other exists.

“I’m dying,” he chokes, his body spasms.

I know, she thinks, tears welling in her eyes. Liquid emotions, puddling in her mind.

"What thoughts you harbour husband,” she smiles, disguising her anguish while hugging him close.

As one, the starlings take to the wing, at the instant of his passing; leaving behind an empty silent yard and an empty bittersweet heart.

She kisses his forehead, the taste is sour. Her cheeks moisten again as she pictures him smiling once more, in her mind's eye, no longer in pain.

She pictures their grave no flowers laid there, yet it’s easy to say goodbye. 

Placing the still smoking barrel beneath her chin she depresses the trigger a second time… 

The echoes die away, and for an instant there is silence. Then the starlings return.


Copyright Len Morgan