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Latest Stories

November 30, 2025
Horror Stories Syed Zeeshan Raza Zaidi

Voices Beneath The Waves

The wind had no mercy that night. Kund Malir stretched before me like a forgotten promise, the highway’s asphalt dissolving into sand and shadow. My car’s headlights barely pierced the darkness; the desert swallowed everything else. I had been driving for…
November 30, 2025
Crime Stories Andrea Tillmanns

Three

Michelle had fully expected to find one or two beer corpses in the tents in the garden the morning after her wedding. However, she hadn’t expected to find the body on the bricked round barbecue. Now that she saw her cousin lying there with the barbecue spit…
November 30, 2025
General Stories Syed Hassan Askari

A Guest From Moscow And Her Queen Of I.C.C

Professor Elena Viktorovna Moshnyaga always said one thing to her students in Moscow: “Intercultural communication does not live in books. It lives in people. “Anastasia believed her. Or at least she wanted to. So, when Elena told her about the short cultural…
November 30, 2025
Flash Fiction L Christopher Hennessy

Plugged In, Zoned Out

The city was a carcass. Neon signs flickered like dying stars over streets lined with broken glass, trash fires, and bodies nobody bothered to move. The cops didn’t like coming here much anymore. Too much static. Too much nothing. Too many junkies, as they…
November 30, 2025
Crime Stories Tom Kropp

Mayhem Master

As Scot walked away his sense of danger triggered. He glanced back. Out of the night in the pale moonlight numerous dark entities were converging along his flanks like wolves ringing an elk. They ghosted closer, closing in. Scot's hand under his coat stroked…
November 30, 2025
Fantasy Stories Frank Talaber

Welcome To The 21st Century, Mr. Claus

His contorted face will haunt the rest of my life, they all do, as his blood splatters adorned the wall in a macabre painting adding to the festive colors of the yuletide season. Making sure my contract was fulfilled I pumped two more silenced bullets into…
November 29, 2025
Flash Fiction L Christopher Hennessy

The Desperation Of A Man

In the drowned city of Nueva Esperanza, where the rain never ceased and the streets glowed with the like of broken billboards, Mateo lived alone in a crumbling tower. The elevators had long since stopped, so he climbed the stairs each night, counting them,…
November 29, 2025
Mystery Stories Dexter F. I. Joseph

Incomplete

She walked into the office, sighting him by the desk hunched over, seemingly looking tired of waiting for her. She made way to her seat, sat down and took her glasses off, gently placing them on the table. Watching his face and body language, she sought signs…
November 29, 2025
Flash Fiction Nelly Shulman

Game Over

It was never violent. The famous host, tall and spindly as a stork, perched at a podium where the all-powerful Machine, hidden somewhere deep in the bowels of the Propaganda Ministry, displayed a bundle of numbers on the screen. The host smiled heartily, and…
November 29, 2025
Science Fiction Stories Jim Henderson

Making Memories

Jared was half dozing at his desk, listening to relaxing ocean sounds on his phone, when a small alarm beeped and flashed on his computer screen, then another. He clicked on one and leaned forward to see the details. The alert gave a time hack and said,…
November 29, 2025
Crime Stories Tom Kropp

Vicious Valkyrie

 Supervisory CIA agent Kelly Oshanonhand stirred in her sleep disturbed by something. The moonlight beamed through a gap in the curtains of her hotel room offering some visibility in the darkness. Kelly had long, fluffy blond hair and bright blue--green hazel…
November 29, 2025
Science Fiction Stories Frank Talaber

Ponce De Leon Was Such A Bloody Idiot

I screamed in agony for a week; burning, every cell in my body on fire. The injections were easy enough, once a day for seven days. Being strapped up in bed beside several others screaming in a symphony of holy torture wasn't. "How are you doing, Mr. James?…

Ashley strolled by the maître de’s lectern as though she was in a garden instead of the Manhattan restaurant that had just earned its third Michelin star.  Carlo, the waiter assigned to their table, arched his eyebrows at the teenager, sighed over his some private thoughts and bit his lip until she passed.

“Darling,” her mother said, standing up.  “How was the flight?  Tell me all about Geneva.  You’re forty minutes late.  Did the car service delay you?”

“Mama.”  Ashley tossed her black messenger bag on a chair, air-kissed her mother and flopped into the adjoining seat.  “Tiresome, tiresome and Customs is so tedious.”

“Home for the holidays,” her mother said in a voice that trilled like a pigeon’s coo.  “There’s something so — I don’t know — deliciously Bing Crosby-like about Christmas.  Was school…?

“Also tedious,” she sighed.  “Daddy?”

Her mother snapped, “Don’t be awkward.  He’s moved out.  Phoenix or someplace where he can regain his testosterone.”

“Oh!”  Ashley brightened.  “I want to tell you I’m getting married!  This wonderful fellow at the école, Mohammed al-Fasi.  He’s Moroccan.”

“Ashley,” her mother said, inhaling sharply, “what the hell are you talking about?”

“Is that a rhetorical question or are you hard of hearing?”

“Are you out of your goddamned mind?  You’re sixteen years old!  I was 18 the first time I married, and only because I was carrying you.

Lucinda,” the girl pointedly emphasized her mother’s name, “we don’t plan to breed children.  There are people now — surrogates — who do that for you if you feel some atavistic urge.  Mohammed’s richer than Daddy, and marriage will give him a green card to become an American.  You can call our arrangement a humanitarian gesture instead of you having to write checks to starving people in Darfur.”

Carlo approached their table and struggled to keep from touching the teen’s mountain of tousled blonde hair.  She and her mother, both devoid of any physical flaws, were like twins separated by twenty years.  To Lucinda, he asked, “Something from the bar?”

The older woman shuddered, still digesting her daughter’s words.  “Vodka gimlet, rocks, Grey Goose.  Make it a double."

“Two,” Ashley said.  Carlo opened his mouth to request age identification when the girl continued, “Don’t even say it.  My father has a 15 percent interest in this joint.”  She gave Carlo her tiger smile.

“I can just see it,” Lucinda snarled, “you marching down the aisle in a burqa with Spandex and sequins.

“Ah, remind me to invite you and Daddy — if you can find his address.”

“Are you insane?” she asked, too loudly.  Heads turned at neighboring tables, hearing heresy in their dining sanctuary.  “Your Mohammed will be collecting extra wives like camels.”

Ashley said, “Don’t forget your grandpa was a Mormon.  He fled to Mexico with a wagon full of wives and the Army hot on his heels.”

Their voices rose, enunciating each syllable as though snapping off bread sticks.

“Your father and I simply won’t have this!  We’ll drag you back to school in America!”

“I am in America, so live with it, Mother Dear.  I divorce thee, I divorce thee, I divorce thee.  That’s how they do it in Rabat.”

Carlo hovered nearby and began shaking as their voices rose and patrons stared.  A kaleidoscope of memories crossed his face.— of Europe, death, slanderous accusations, and more recent events.

“Stop it!” he shouted at Ashley.  “If you were my child I would turn you over my knee and spank you.”  Glaring at Lucinda, he said, “If you were my wife I would lock you in the bedroom.  You are both rich, stupid people, ungrateful for what you have.  And, you make my ears burn, my eyes weep salty tears!”

Ashley spoke first.  “Watch it, you immigrant.  Next thing you know you’ll be serving food at a homeless shelter.”

Carlo’s back arched.  “I would gladly go where I am appreciated, and I appreciate the few things that I have.”

Patrons erupted in applause simultaneously.  “We’ve got you covered, Carlo,” a man with a deep tan shouted.  “Go for the goal, Carlo,” called a woman with silvered hair.  “Kick them out.”

Lucinda rose as though lifted by invisible strings from some heavenly institution.  “Come, Ashley.  We’ll go where we’re appreciated.”

The two paraded across the dining room floor the way saints might demonstrate their faith by walking on water.  Lucinda turned at the door and screamed, “And don’t you forget it!”

At that moment, a woman in bluejeans and a black coat pushed Lucinda aside and elbowed past Ashley.  Lucinda huffed with a “Well, I never…,” but fell silent as she saw the woman raise a small silver pistol.

The woman’s first shot shattered a crystal wall sconce.  In a voice pitched high with tension, she cried, “Carlo, you emptied my bank account.”  The second shot drilled a planter.  “You abused my niece!  She killed herself!”  Her third shot punctured the menu Carlo was holding to his chest for protection.  “And, you left the freezer door wide open.”

“There, you bastard,” she said as he fell forward.  “I got the last word in!”  Then, she turned the gun to her temple and fired a final shot.

Silence fell over the room before Ashley wailed, “Mommy, take me home.”  Her last word was drawn out in the howl of a wounded animal.

“My baby,” Lucinda whispered wrapping her arms around her daughter.  “What kind of world are we living in?”

#  #  #

 

Bio: Walt Giersbach’s fiction has appeared in Bewildering Stories, Big Pulp, Corner Club Press, Every Day Fiction, Gumshoe Review, OG Short Fiction, Over My Dead Body, Pif Magazine, Pill Hill Press, r.kv.r.y, Short Fiction World, The World of Myth, and a score of other publications. Two volumes of short stories, Cruising the Green of Second Avenue, are available at Barnes & Noble and other online booksellers.

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