The Circle

excerpt

Bevan Longhorn sits in his room, reading his morning newspaper. He takes a sip of
coffee and decides he doesn’t feel like drinking it; usually, he has consumed two cups
by this time. The news of the day is not much different from the news of yesterday
and the day before; plenty of crime on the front pages, to show readers a world most
people don’t like to look at, although it’s before their eyes all the time. People try to
erase the real world and replace it with the magical world of television.
He wants to get up and go out; yet, he thinks, ‘What the hell do I want to go out
for this morning?’ It’s a morning heavy with clouds, heavy as his heart feels right
now. The first days of October have been cooler than September and people are
wearing light jackets and windbreakers. He needs to organize his paperwork and
prepare for the following morning’s work, yet he cannot concentrate on work at
the moment.
The hell with it, he thinks and his mind goes to the terrifying thought of
doing something very bad. What can he do to change the great myth called
regulation? What can he do to stop the misery that they unleash out there?
No, I amnot Matthew. I have a duty; I have to stay and perform what will be
my last task in the office regarding ‘The Circle’.
He gets up and puts on his jogging suit to go for a walk; there is a small
walkway along a park a few blocks away. When he reaches the park, he realizes
it’s crowded with people, even though it’s quite cool. He takes a few minutes to
look around; Yes, it’s chilly, yet a walk in the park will help him feel better, he
thinks. He looks around and feels more alive, yes, he feels better already. He
carries on; before him walks a young, big- breasted woman who moves the
cheeks of her ass quite enticingly and he decides to pay a bit more attention to
her. His eyes take hold of the woman’s buttocks as they move from one side to
the other; Bevan stares and then laughs at himself for looking at her in that way.
An older man, obviously frustrated about something, perhaps with the
movements of the young woman’s ass, walks with a cane in his hand, and since
he cannot keep up with the pace of the young woman’s ass, would love to stick
his cane where he cannot put his hand. As Bevan walks past him he hears the
man’s breathing, so fast and erratic. He turns and says to the older man, “Are you
okay?”
“Who the hell cares?” the man growls and keeps walking.
Perhaps this is the best answer one can expect from an old man frustrated
with himself who doesn’t know how to vent his frustration. Bevan keeps walking
and passes him without another word.
People have anxiety about their lives and anxiety about their future…

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562817

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0978186524

In Turbulent Times

excerpt

Nora looked into the fire with a fixed stare. ‘The first two weeks, Joe, were sheer hell. When the first few days went past I thought nothing of it. Then that sudden awful fear—real fear, Joe—that I might be pregnant. You must try to imagine what it was like. I wanted to die just to be rid of it. By the time the third week was over and the fourth began I was certain of the worst. I resigned myself to it. I had to marry Liam. He was the child’s father. And I had to marry him quickly. I was banking on the baby being late, as first babies often are, so that those who counted back nine months might give me the benefit of the doubt.’ Nora smiled wryly. ‘I thought of you the whole time, Joe. I knew you were going to ask me to marry you. I had even started putting things away. I was saving …’
Nora covered her face in her hands and cried with heart-rending sobs. No matter how much she had wept before, she had not yet dried up inside. Joe rose from the armchair and knelt beside her, comforted her. Her crying stopped. She lifted her cup, drank some tea, set the cup down again.
‘Three days after we were married my bleeding started.’ Again a fleeting smile of irony. ‘So cruel, Joe. How can God be so cruel? Not just to me. But to you also. The finest man in the world.’ Nora reached out and took Joe’s hand in hers, held it tightly, turned it, looked at the palm. ‘You’ll find someone else, Joe. Someone pretty. Someone good. Someone … Oh Joe, I’m so miserable. I wish I could die.’ She threw her arms around his neck as he was kneeling before her and cried again, her cheek against his. She clung to him for a long time in silence, then withdrew her arms and dried her eyes and cheeks on a handkerchief retrieved from under the sleeve of her dress.
‘I brought you a little gift,’ Joe said. He stood up and pulled the present out of his pocket. ‘It’s a Russian doll.’
‘She’s pretty,’ said Nora, standing beside him. ‘Carved out of wood.’
‘That’s not all,’ said Joe. ‘See? There’s another one underneath. And look, yet another. And another. And another.’ He lined the complete set of dolls—amazingly ten of them—along the fender.
‘She’s such a teeny wee one,’ Nora said, picking up the last of them.
‘That’s when she was a little girl,’ said Joe. ‘Driving the boys wild.’ His voice trailed off. ‘Anyway, I thought you’d like them.’ He stacked them into one again and handed it to Nora. ‘Inside that teeniest one, Nora, is my heart. I’m giving it to you to keep. It’s always been yours anyway. It’s just wrapped up differently now, that’s all.’
He took Nora in his arms and kissed her, held her to him tightly. Fresh tears flowed down her cheeks.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562904

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763270

Kariotakis – Polydouri, The Tragic Love Story

History
The lips smiled in the spring dusk
when sixteen years old
since then they’ve turned silent
grown old in their hearts
back then they started as friends
two dry leaves on the soil
then they separated
during a sundown in autumn
now each with a pale mouth
bow and kiss their shackles
before they lean deep down
and pass into the earth.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562951

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763459

Introspection

Alpha
I summoned my blind Destiny
stirring onto the rose petals
between the tone of my voice
and the dream of the hungry man
causeless as I was
the child and the pain of my mother
redness of the grapes
laughter of moonshine drinking
on the first day of September
and the cicadas had already
fulfilled the purpose
of their annual goal
I summoned my blind Destiny
sauntering over unused chords and
over myths that burdened my memory
at the end of summer that
brought tears to my eyes
when I sensed my transition
toward that holy, opposite shore
the lightness that reigns
where I was meant to stand as
vigilant beacon guarding our love

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763777