Posts

The Professor's Unexpected Impulse

rofessor Theodore Blume had never been a man of impulse—yet here he was, three mai tais in, wondering if impulse might finally suit him. At sixty-four, his wardrobes consisted of creased khakis softened by age, margins of texts crammed with his looping script, and a succession of disappointments so neatly measured he could time them by the drip of honey on his oatmeal and the last bitter sip of black coffee. He packed for vacations with lists scribbled in charcoal-flow fountain pen, the very ritual that once comforted him now felt suffocating—and still he managed to lose his reading glasses while they perched atop his nose, as if his mind drifted elsewhere. He had spent nearly forty years teaching Classics at a damp-evergreen college in the Pacific Northwest, where his students didn’t remember spectacle—he offered little—but the tremble in his voice when he read Sappho, the soft Aegean cadence he bestowed on Catullus. His colleagues joked that Theo would only retire when they laid him ...

The Belly Rub

As the sun sank behind the rooftops, casting long shadows over the narrow street, the little Italian restaurant glowed with a soft amber light. Inside, the scent of simmering garlic, warm bread, and herbs drifted through the air. At a quiet corner table, James sat across from Frank. They had met only weeks earlier through a mutual friend, and this was their first time alone together. James was in his late fifties, of average build, his salt-and-pepper hair cropped neatly, though a few unruly strands betrayed his careful grooming. Frank, by contrast, was shorter, heavier, with a full, rounded belly that strained gently against his shirt buttons. His hair was mostly gray, thick and tousled, and his ruddy cheeks seemed to glow in the restaurant’s candlelight. Frank laughed mid-story, his voice rich and unrestrained, hands moving as he spoke. His eyes crinkled at the corners, and his smile was infectious. James found himself leaning in, drawn by Frank’s energy—there was something earthy an...

The Fall and Rise of Raymond Knox

Raymond Knox had once held the city in the palm of his hand. Not the tangible city—the one with its cracked sidewalks and weary tenants shivering beneath threadbare coats—but the city that glistened in the glow of headlines and the reflections of opulent ballroom mirrors. He was the very embodiment of certainty, a man of enormous stature both in presence and reality, with a glamorous trophy wife, a rapidly growing fortune, and something even more intangible yet ever-present: a name that effortlessly opened doors at the slightest mention. His voice was a mellifluous melody, his timing impeccable, and his charm was magnetic. Yet, behind the charismatic facade, there was an insatiable hunger. Beneath the civic veneer lay decay: clandestine mob connections, debts whispered in shadowed backrooms, and the one vice that invariably found a politician’s Achilles’ heel—gambling. He started with horses, moved on to cards, and eventually chased anything that promised a rush of sensation. The down...

Tracks of Temptation

Gerald always told himself it was harmless. The hobby had begun modestly enough—an old HO gauge set inherited from his uncle, a dusty box rediscovered in the attic after a leak in the roof. Just a small loop of track and a battered Union Pacific engine with a few mismatched freight cars. He'd set it up one rainy Saturday in March, curious more than anything, and something had clicked. Or perhaps re-clicked. Like a switch long forgotten. Now, it was July. His den had been transformed into a half-finished countryside tableau, strewn with plaster molds, tiny resin sheep, bottles of paint, tangled wiring, and invoices he tried not to look at too closely. He pushed open the door to Whistle Stop Hobbies with the same blend of guilt and anticipation that an alcoholic might bring to a liquor store. The chime above the door jingled in a cheerful, accusatory way. The place smelled of old paper, plastic model glue, and something faintly sweet—possibly jelly beans. “Afternoon!” called the man ...