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Stupid, Silly Ideas: Fiction by John J. Dillon
Dominant Species: Fiction by Kenneth James Crist
Hello? Flash Fiction by Ian C. Smith
Burden of Proof: Flash Fiction by Anthony Lukas
The Taste of Blood: Flash Fiction by Cindy Rosmus
Rosie: Flash Fiction by Billy Ramone
This Is Where It Happens: Flash Fiction by Louella Lester
Sentenced: Poem by Paul Hostovsky
Doc Hawk: Poem by Daniel G. Snethen
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The Price of Okra: Poem by Damon Hubbs
Radio Signals: Poem by Michael Keshigian
A Widow Without a Honeymoon or a Sugar Daddy: Poem by Tom Fillion
Watch the Unwatchable: Poem by Luis Cuauhtémoc Berriozábal
Lingerie: Poem by Peter Mladinic
Holden and Jane: Poem by Cindy Rosmus
Late August Afternoon on the Porch Reading Charles Simic: Poem by Anthony DeGregorio
Alligator: Poem by Anthony DeGregorio
Everyone Says I'm Looking Well: Poem by Bernice Holtzman
The Refrigerator Door is Broken: Poem by Bernice Holtzman
My Wives: Poem by John Grey
A Vivid Imagination: Poem by John Grey
Roafie: Poem by Craig Kirchner
Side Effect: Poem by Craig Kirchner
Tides: Poem by Craig Kirchner
the walking heart: Poem by rob plath
room # 5: Poem by rob plath
vincent the flower: Poem by rob plath
my mother now like the wind: Poem by rob plath
The Difference: Poem by Elizabeth Zelvin
Goliath: Poem by Elizabeth Zelvin
Lilith Goes Trans: Poem by Elizabeth Zelvin
Ultimate Peace: Poem by Elizabeth Zelvin
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Dark Tales from Gent's Pens

Ian C. Smith: Hello?

111_ym_hello_luis.jpg
Art by Luis Cuauhtémoc Berriozábal © 2025

Hello?

by Ian C Smith

 

I jerk upright, awakened by a close voice. Its eerie echo rings through my silent awareness. Leaving the light off, the light I read by when jangled nerves defeat sleep, I sidle from sheets, my thoughts, combative and fugitive, electric. A man’s sotto voce, intimate, smoothly spoken, Hello? After that, nothing.  I steal past walls, wardrobe, opened doors, picking up my ready boots, keys, wallet, on the way. An intruder? Not inside my bedroom as first thought. Beyond the window? This middle of the day awake in the middle of the night is nothing new.

Earlier, I exercised in scoured light, tattoos covered, running rain-logged streets, wheeling abrupt 360s, scanning, always thinking, always, as I do on each haphazardly changed route, sometimes imagining my body’s chalked outline fenced by witches’ hats. Easing the front door open, I hold my breath. Empty footpaths. No different parked vehicles. Scrunched scoria leading to the back yard would announce nocturnal visitors, so too, strategic chimes on the side gate. Boots on, I tread softly, feeling I waste my time, time short now, mind a dark sermon. So much for tiptoeing too far on the wild side.

No shadow shifts. No sound, not a sob. Unlocking the back door, I re-enter my lone existence, senses stretched. Bedroom window shut, it had to be inside. In this utter stillness I feel no one was here. My unfinished jigsaw puzzle, a man outside a whitewashed cottage by a fragrant harbour fondling a dog’s soft ears, sits on the table. He probably jokes with folk at the local inn, gathers accoutrements. My few photographs they told me not to take, mostly kept unseen, stare accusingly in the streetlamps’ reflected refulgence.

That voice still a flirtatious earworm, its suave tone encouraging now, I log on, too awake to rest. Checking emails, these severely restricted, my mind wanders to when I tangoed, when beginnings never knew endings, sifting memory for joy when my name was different. Gravid with guilt, I cede to logic, wishing with savage hope to trawl back what prowled my dreams—night dreams my salon now, the abandoned, some faceless—when I shattered fitful sleep talking aloud, long to see once more who was greeted when I said, Hello?

                                                                  

Ian C Smith's work has been published recently in BBC Radio4 Sounds, Cable Street, Griffith Review, Stand, &, Westerly, and is forthcoming in Abstract, and North of Oxford. 

Luis Cuauhtémoc Berriozábal lives in California and works in the mental health field in Los Ángeles. His artwork has appeared over the years in Medusa’s KitchenNerve Cowboy, The Dope Fiend Daily, and Rogue Wolf PressVenus in Scorpio Poetry E-Zine. 

In Association with Black Petals & Fossil Publications © 2025