Pass Cherry Street, cross the tracks and take a right on Fourth. You’ll hear the jazz before ya see the place. Bring her some hooch, and I mean the good stuff. You tell Charity that I sent ya. She’ll treat ya right.
– WC 42
Photo from Wikipedia.
Portfolio including poetry and flash fiction from micro fiction to short stories and a bit of photography thrown in for good measure.
Pass Cherry Street, cross the tracks and take a right on Fourth. You’ll hear the jazz before ya see the place. Bring her some hooch, and I mean the good stuff. You tell Charity that I sent ya. She’ll treat ya right.
– WC 42
Photo from Wikipedia.
When did my baby son become a tightrope walker?

– Written for The Blog Propellant weekly photo prompt. WC 564
“Kitty,” he said in response to the feline song we heard carried on the wind.
“Yes,” I confirmed, and he giggled proudly.
The full moon was large and close and shone like a spotlight on the alley below. He patted his chubby little hands against the window and smashed his nose on the glass, excitedly trying to see the location of the kitty’s performance.
I smiled at his unruly blond locks glowing in the moonlight like a halo around his cherub face.
“Kitty!” He shouted and laughed whole-heartedly scrunching his eyes and clapping his hands.
“That’s right,” I said encouraging him.
Oh, to be a child with eyes so full of wonder, “Bedtime, Ben,” I informed him, gathered him up amid the typical protesting, and began our “night-night” routine.
With Ben tucked-in, I rested nearby and was eventually lulled to sleep by his dreaming mumbles and baby snores.
I abruptly awoke, or so I thought when I felt a breeze from the open window. The curtain was fluttering and flapping against the wall. I was certain I closed that.
I didn’t see Ben in his bed.
In a sudden panic, I ran to the window and leaned out over the fire escape. I heard shrieks of laughter echoing through the night, and I frantically searched for his little silhouette.
My mouth fell open, and my heart jumped when I spotted him high above the street, among the crisscrossing clotheslines strung between buildings. “Impossible,” I said to no one. “Ben!” I yelled his name.
“Mommy look!” He joyfully replied. He balanced precariously on one of the lines, a balloon in his hand and a cat nuzzling at his leg.
I stumbled out onto the ladder, terror rising; I rubbed my eyes not sure of what I was seeing.
He wobbled back and forth with the wind tousling his hair and whirling the balloon around in circles. I could hear the cat meow as it turned on the line. It seemed to lead the way further from the building. Ben began to follow.
When did my baby son become a tightrope walker? I thought, horrified.
“Ben, listen to mommy,” I pleaded, “go back toward the building, to the window.” Another laugh, another meow, but he didn’t comply. I climbed a step higher on the ladder and reached out in vain.
My foot slipped, and I tumbled down in slow motion onto the grate. “Beeeeen!” I shouted on my way before suddenly seeing only darkness.
I was startled awake by the loud clanging of metal on metal as the garbage truck picked up the dumpster in the alley. I sat up on the futon, immediately looking for Ben. He lay quietly in his bed arm wrapped around a large black cat who was watching me intently.
I hurried over to him, checked his breathing and ran my hand through his hair.
He stirred a bit and without opening his eyes he mumbled, “Kitty.”
I raised an eyebrow and looked the cat in its tense green eyes. “Hi,” I said. He meowed. I patted his head, and he purred approvingly.
Ben shifted under his blanket again and said through his pillow, “Bwoon,” and the arm that was around the cat pointed up.
I tilted my head sideways and looked up at the ceiling where I saw a balloon bouncing around from the draft coming through the open window.
A thrown pebble
just skims
the surface,
rippling an otherwise
still reflection.
Dare we peer
beneath?
What do we discover
looking back
through
the distortion?
Poetry is.
– Photo from Pixabay.com.

Bleeding Purple Rain
When Doves Cry the Prince is gone
Last day of all time
Today, I will commit our departed Prince to the heavens.
I took over the family business. Some think it’s morbid. I don’t see it that way. Everyone dies and for the dead it isn’t sad. We mourn their absence, and then I orchestrate the send-off.
Since the first Mars Royal Colony, my family cared for the dead. Today, I will commit our departed Prince to the heavens.
The prepared body is loaded into the chamber. I shuttle it into the atmosphere. The people gathered below appear as ants.
I set the timer and pull the release launching the casket. The explosives detonate, and fireworks light up the dark of space.
I watch purple rain shower down on the red planet.
– Written for Microcosms (17). Prompts were Astronaut/Purple Rain/Drama. WC 110. Photo from Wikimedia Commons.

“Now you know I am not Satan.”

– Written for Ad Hoc Fiction weekly contest. Word Prompt was “pinch.” WC 150. Photo from Dave Winer.
“Don’t pinch me!” She squawked.
“Looks like you’ve found yourself in a pinch.” He grinned.
“Stop. Seriously, your puns are stupid.” Celeste said in her usual monotone way.
“You know I’m funny.” Lu poked at her, literally and figuratively.
“Lu! You need to stop following me around. I have chores to do, and mom is pissy.”
“Aww, come oooonnnn, I’m boooored.” He whined and flopped upside down on the couch with his feet in the air.
“Why did I get stuck with Satan as an invisible friend?! Arrrg!”
“Now you know I am not Satan. That’s good ‘ole pops, and unless I can learn to be bad, he will never let me come home, and you’ll be stuck with me.” He smirked.
She gave him the evil eye.
“Oh my God! I am never touching a Ouija board again! That is unless it will help me get rid of you!”
Silent, in the night it came. Gliding and sliding along the shore, the green snaked toward the sleeping village. At dawn, it and the children vanished.

– Written for Shapeshifting 13 (#50). Color Green and Photo Prompt. WC 26. “The Green” was awarded 2nd place in this contest. Photo by AP Photo – Bullfax.com.
