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The Park Toilets

The sun lingered low in the expansive sky, draping a warm, golden hue over the park's lush greenery as Harold leisurely ambled along the winding path. His plump figure swayed gently with each step, creating a rhythm in sync with the tranquility around him. The scent of freshly cut grass filled the air, mingling with the cheerful, distant laughter of children engrossed in their play, crafting a serene and idyllic backdrop for his afternoon stroll. In these precious moments, Harold found a deep sense of solace, a temporary escape from the confines of his cramped apartment and the relentless weight of his daily routine. As he rounded a gentle bend in the path, the sight of the all-too-familiar public restroom came into view. It stood as a dilapidated structure, its once-vibrant paint now peeling away like layers of forgotten memories, and the door hung slightly ajar, swaying with a faint creak. Despite its sorry state, Harold felt an urgent need to relieve himself. He paused for a bri...

Golf Seduction

Archibald “Archie” Templeton was a man of routines: a polite greeting, a well-cooked roast, and a handshake firm enough to convey sincerity without bruising. A retired insurance adjuster and widower for five years, he lived alone in a spotless bungalow on Sycamore Lane. His Hawaiian shirts were organized by hue, his calendar marked with little rituals—Wednesday’s newspaper, Thursday’s meatloaf, and Tuesday golf at Ridgewood Pines. Golf was a novelty. He’d agreed to join a Rotary Club charity scramble, drawn more by sandwich platters and sunshine than competition. But somewhere around the fourth hole—after he’d driven the wrong ball and teed off from the ladies’ markers—he heard a voice behind him: “You lining up for the green or planning to annex it?” It was Stanley Dupree. Stan had been part of Ridgewood’s landscape as long as Archie could recall—always tanned, impeccably pressed in whites, with a half-smile hinting at secrets. Rumors swirled about his past: cruise-ship dancer, Liber...

Ritual and Release

The letter had been a constant presence in his coat pocket all afternoon, though it held no warmth—just twenty-three neatly typed lines on cream bond paper, signed with a signature so familiar it awakened something in Richard that he hadn't allowed to surface in years. He sat alone in the reading room of the Bath Club, a place where silence was king and the wallpaper was unchanged since the Falklands War. Even at fifty-four, he exuded the aura of old money and effortless authority: his suit was custom-made, his brogues polished to a shine. He was the chairman of the museum board, a trustee of two hospitals, and had recently been appointed to the Honours Committee. His peers respected him, and younger men sought to emulate him. He had a lovely, if somewhat distant, wife, two grown daughters, and a view of the river from his drawing room in Belgravia. However, there were nights when he would sit up suddenly in bed, gasping, caught between arousal and shame, as a phantom voice whisper...

The Depths of the Pool – 1965

The locker room at the YMCA smelled of tile soap, old steam, damp wool, and cedar. Arthur stood just inside, his canvas bag slung over one shoulder, his heart fluttering like a trapped bird. The sign on the door—“No Swimsuits Allowed”—was simple, yet it seemed to tower over him now. He hadn’t entered a communal changing room since college, and back then everything had been more discreet. Here, in this welcoming Midwestern town, he was literally expected to shed his clothes among strangers. He edged toward an empty bench and began to unbutton his shirt, fingers both practiced and hesitant. All around him, the room was in motion. At the far end, Ronny Blake, the high school auto shop teacher, laughed as he slapped his towel against the bench. He was a bear of a man—broad through the shoulders, soft at the middle, with dark chest hair curling like ivy. He stretched confidently in the nude, chatting about carburetors as if he were picking produce in a grocery aisle. Nearby, Walt—a wiry man...

Abandoned Diaries

The late morning sun beat down with a flat, unforgiving glare as Gary Matheson maneuvered his dented Econoline van into the back lot behind Starline Storage. The blacktop shimmered with heat, already soft beneath the tires. He shifted his bulk in the seat—belly pressing into the steering wheel, the mesh of his cargo shorts bunched uncomfortably between his thick thighs—and muttered under his breath about the heat. At fifty-four, Gary moved like a man who’d learned to make peace with gravity. He was built wide and heavy, with the doughy softness of someone who’d long ago stopped squeezing into spaces he didn’t fit. His chest sagged beneath the sweat-damp cotton of his flannel shirt, which hung open over a stretched-out tank top. His beard, once gingerish, was now a coarse gray flecked with tobacco stains, and the dome of his head, mostly bald, shone like a patch of wet clay beneath the ballcap he tugged lower. But Gary didn’t mind discomfort. It was part of the job. And discomfort somet...