Posts

Overmedicated Kindness

Harold Brinkman hadn’t meant to take three pills—just one. But the extra two rattled in the bottle, and in his foggy logic, it seemed kinder to balance the load. By the time the late-night news muttered its last half hour, the edges of his vision blurred, the ceiling fan warped into a slow-turning flower, and he felt as heavy as a damp quilt. Harold was sixty-two, thick in the middle from decades behind an insurance desk and never refusing seconds. He lived alone in apartment 3B, a rent-controlled one-bedroom in a brick block that smelled faintly of boiled cabbage in winter and cigarette smoke in summer. His evenings followed a sacred routine: slippers, tea, whatever PBS wasn’t interrupting, and bed by ten-thirty. But tonight, the pills tugged the floor far away and cast the hallway lights in a strange, golden glow. Somehow, he found himself fumbling a key into the lock of 3A. The key didn’t fit, but the door wasn’t latched. A small miracle, Harold thought in his haze. Inside, the air ...

Tangled Reflections

The air in the hotel room was thick and still, the single bedside lamp casting long, distorted shadows on the cracked plaster walls. On the narrow bed, two men lay tangled together. Roger, flat on his back, his breath coming in ragged sighs, felt the weight of the last half-lifetime of denial. Victor, propped on his side, his hand resting on Roger’s chest, stared down at him. His gaze was hungry, not for what they had just done, but for a word, a sign—some quiet confession that this was more than just a stolen moment in the dark. The silence buzzed between them, a dense hum of things that couldn't be said. Outside, the city carried on, but inside the room, the world had shrunk to the heat of their skin, the tang of sweat and cologne, and the long-denied truth that had finally burned through all their restraint. "We can’t go back from this," Victor said, his voice low and raspy. Roger’s eyes, hazy but sharp, flickered open. He shifted closer, a silent answer, a surrender. ...

The Second Draft

Gordon Avery didn’t know much about dreams. He never remembered his, hardly ever mentioned them, and if pressed would dismiss them as nothing more than the brain twitching after dinner. What he did know was that he’d been married to Margaret for forty-one years, he thrived on routine, and he’d never had what you’d call a gay thought—or at least, none he could recall. So he was stunned when, two months after the funeral, a man in a linen jacket and horn-rimmed glasses knocked at his door carrying a box of manuscripts and speaking in a tone that sounded rehearsed. “Mr. Avery?” the stranger said. He introduced himself as Alan Grigsby and offered a clammy handshake. “First, let me express my deepest sympathies for your loss. Margaret was… formidable. A truly brilliant woman.” Gordon nodded, stiffly. “Yes. She enjoyed her mysteries.” “Indeed,” Alan smiled in that secretive way. “But she wasn’t just writing mysteries. She was the anonymous author of The Bramblewood Affair series.” “The what?...