Shooter Flash: “Drift” by Sammi LaBue

Alex wore her half of our heart necklace long after high school, but when they found her across the bay, she wasn’t wearing jewelry. Just her long hair around her neck like a noose of wet string. 

She finally moved to New York from Tampa two years after I had. She lived in Queens and I lived in Brooklyn, but we made Beach Day an official weekly holiday, no matter the weather, to remind us of home, and I got her a job at the bar where I worked.

She found me in the walk-in refrigerator during the shifts we shared. I’d mix cheap vodka with cranberry juice and slices of lemon, our seventeen-dollar happy-hour cocktail, and she’d talk about her new friends, her roommates, her artsy kind of sadness. The refrigerator’s vacuum seal suctioned us in behind her, as if to preserve us. 

*

We’d walk down the beach warp-powered by the Adderall she brought. I thought of our purse of shells and treasures, our iPhones and keys left behind, thinly veiled by faded bath towels. But she’d say, Let’s never go back, smiling. 

Days would slip by without a whisper from Alex. “Sometimes friends drift apart,” Mom said when I called her instead. Then Alex would be back again, our teeth hard-set against the cold of the walk-in. Her voice sounding more and more like the silent void of her voicemail.

Want an adderall, a xanax, anything else? The sand-stained coin purse started to fill with chalky blue-and-white pills – nothing like sea glass. 

*

Still on for Beach Day?

Is it going to rain?

Meet at DD, right?

Im Here

?

I waited outside of Dunkin Donuts flipping between my doppler app and messages and back again. A green mass crept across the screen pixel by pixel.

When the smell of rain had washed over the roasted nuts cart and the car exhaust, Alex appeared with her hands shoved into the pockets of her leather jacket. I was getting worried. She wasn’t wearing her necklace. Where’s your bag?

After the intersection, she threw a laugh over her shoulder then ran across the boardwalk and down to the beach. I chased after her, rain needling my skin.

She dropped her clothes in the sand. The metallic reflection of the waves striped her skin, her hair melted out across the water’s surface as she waded deeper. 

Alone on the beach, time expanded as she pushed out and out. 

I remembered bike races to the beach back home and how you could eat the heavy evening heat right out of the air. 

I remembered her theory about being adopted, even with her mother’s round, clamshell eyes, those straight eyelashes, the scattered sand freckles across her nose. 

I remembered the first day she showed up to work drunk, when she breezed past the walk-in window.

The storm faded as fast as it arrived, and then so did she. I could see her. I could see her, until I couldn’t. Like a star stared at too long in the night sky, she flickered out as the lifeguard’s whistle blared. 

* * *

Sammi LaBue is a Brooklyn-based writer and educator. She founded Fledgling Writing Workshops (Best Workshop in NYC, Timeout 2019) and is the author of Words in Progress (DK 2020), a creative writer’s guided journal. Her writing can be found in Literary Hub, Glamour, The Offing, Mutha Magazine, Hobart, and Sonora Review, among others. She received her MFA from the Vermont College of Fine Arts, is The Penn Review’s 2024 Poetry Prize winner, and has recently finished a dual memoir written in collaboration with her mom.

Issue #18: Nightlife

When night falls, new worlds open up. The time after sunset is typically the domain of romance: dinner dates, cocktail flirtations, dancing as a prelude to going home together. Bad things, also, happen more easily under cover of darkness. Criminals prowl and monsters lurk. For Shooter’s Nightlife issue, many writers were drawn to tales of the latter, and so this edition ended up developing a pulsing vein of supernatural horror.

It also turned out to be a particularly strong edition for poetry. Featuring the work of ten poets (including the 2024 Shooter Poetry Competition winner, Maryah Converse, for her political “Web of Resistance”), the issue opens with two poems that capture something of the essence of the night: “as you light up” by Dilys Wyndham Thomas and “Shivering Out” by Paul atten Ash. (The latter takes the form of a “golden shovel”, plucking lines from Sylvia Plath’s “Full Fathom Five” and using each word at the end of each line in his poem: “You float near / As keeled ice-mountains / Of the north, to be steered clear / Of, not fathomed.”)

Partygoing – raves, gigs, midnight celebrations – feature in Miguel Cullen’s “Deep Mourning Dream”, Laurie Eaves’ “Ode to My Favourite Security Guard at Kentish Town Forum” and Warren Woessner’s “New Year’s Eve – Tribeca – 1984”, yet the euphoric antics are frequently laced with sadness, loneliness, or nostalgia. Casey Lawrence’s short story “The Hunt” also stalks this terrain, though with a delicious supernatural twist.

Sleep, of course, forms another obvious element of the nocturnal realm, along with one of slumber’s mortal enemies: offspring. In her poem “nightly rodeo”, Michelle Penn crafts a delightful lyric metaphor for this sort of challenge to sleep. Two prose pieces – the fictional “Acetaminophen” by Charles Cline and non-fiction “Sleepless Nights” by Laura Healy – arrive at the intersection of sleep and children, and take off in very different directions. “Zones”, a poem by Jeff Skinner, plays with the idea of counting sheep in different time zones around the world. In “Little Slices of Death”, another personal memoir, Lisa Simone Kingstone charts the impact of drug-induced insomnia upon her life during cancer treatment.

Two fiction writers, Ross Anderson and Harley Carnell, explore the devastating emotional and physical impacts of night-time shift work in “The Sleep of Reason Begets Monsters” and “Long Night” respectively, about suicide hotline workers and food delivery drivers. Jenny Danes, in “Case History”, and Gillian Fielder in “Standing on the Bridge” evoke similarly resonant, poignant scenes of confusion and distress in their poems.

For the most part, the writing in the Nightlife issue conjures states of fear and menace, loneliness and struggle, but two prose pieces also inject joy and humour. Craig Aitchison shares his fascination with bats in “Small Packages of Delight”, while J D Strunk’s “Clean Kill” depicts a midlife-crisis camping trip gone wrong with comic suspense.

And yet, even there, fear still plays a part – so if you tend to be spooked by the shadowy forces of darkness, perhaps best to enjoy Shooter’s Nightlife issue as part of your sunlit breakfast reading.

To order a copy of the Nightlife issue, or any other edition, please visit the Subscriptions page.

Shooter Flash: “Teenage Kicks” by Billy Craven

When we were young, there was a man in our town named Shotokan. He was pale and balding and sported a ponytail that was at once tragic and defiant. More importantly, he could dodge bullets.

Growing up in the suburbs in the 1980s, bullets were hard to come by so we were forced to take him at his word which I, for one, did happily. Anything that broke the monotony of housing estates and skinheads and the endless talk of unemployment was to be applauded. Whether you believed him or not, the very idea of Shotokan dodging bullets was a chance to dream of something beyond the ordinary.

Dodge might be the wrong word actually. As he explained it, it was less about dodging and more about bending the flow of the bullet around him. Everything had a flow, and everyone had the capability of disrupting that flow, but it took years of training, concentration and discipline. On summer evenings he would stand in the middle of the green wearing full karate garb. It was his Gi, he informed us, much to the delight of my friends. He had studied martial arts throughout Asia. He had mastered Bushido, Aikido and even Shen Long, and he was held in the highest esteem on the island of Okinawa. Along with his Gi, he wore a black belt with three red tips. He said the black of his belt was the darkest shade possible and the red was a reminder of the blood on his hands. When pressed on this he would get a faraway look in his eyes and remind us that Karate should only be used in self-defence, a lesson he had learned the hard way. 

Shotokan was the subject of ridicule among my friends, and though I laughed along with them, I noticed that nobody dared mock him to his face. The potential of his fighting skills and his supposed mastery of the dreaded Dim Mak technique kept the sceptics in check. And even if there were those who doubted his tales of unsanctioned death matches, the fact remained that standing in the centre of the green in his pristine white outfit performing his kata while twenty teens and children waited impatiently for a game of football, took courage. 

To me, his powers bordered on the supernatural and I would watch fascinated as he worked his way methodically through his routine, half expecting him to conjure a fireball in his gracefully twirling hands. He didn’t punctuate his movements with any sound effects, no hi-yahs or Bruce Lee wails, but the whip-crack of his loose fitting Gi as he performed roundhouse kicks and Karate chops against invisible enemies accompanied his strikes. He was a study of poise and concentration. His moves went from meandering and balletic to sudden and violent in the blink of an eye. None of us knew where he lived, which only added to his mystique, and we would never see him approaching the green. He was always just there, as though he had materialised from the earth beneath him. He became a fixture of the summer of ’88, as ingrained in my memory as the European Championships and Ray Houghton’s winner against England. I can still see him, side-kicking and leg-sweeping his way across the grassy surface, oblivious to everything but the imagined foe in front of him.

The summer was stuttering to a close and my thoughts were turning with apprehension towards secondary school. I’d been working up the courage to ask Shotokan if he would consider taking on a pupil, when he abruptly vanished. There was joy amongst the youth of our estate as they reclaimed possession of the green, reestablishing football in its rightful place above Karate. And while I shared in this general happiness I couldn’t help but wonder what could have caused his sudden disappearance. Had he returned to Okinawa to avenge his murdered Sensei? Was he fighting in some underground tournament on an exotic island in the Pacific? Maybe he was in Nepal, high up on a snowy peak, bending bullets, time and space to his will. I really didn’t know, but I was content to leave it a mystery, to let my imagination fill in the blanks. His absence would only enhance his legend and if, like me, you prefer the legend, then at this point you should stop reading. 

It was my friend Daragh who showed me the article in the local newspaper. He was waiting for me at the top of the road, a football in his hands. He handed me the ball and took a page from his back pocket, unfolding it carefully, like a treasure map. And there he was, not Shotokan, but Sean, his smiling face pictured above the caption: Sean Murphy (29) of Leixlip Park was struck by a car and killed in the early hours of Saturday morning. Grief and shock nestled in my stomach. I felt sick and strangely betrayed. He hadn’t gone anywhere. He wasn’t mystical. He wasn’t even Japanese. He was Sean Murphy. He was mortal, and now he was dead. Daragh folded up the page and snatched the ball from my hands.

 “You’re trying to tell me he could dodge a bullet, but he couldn’t dodge a bloody Toyota!” he laughed. He turned and booted the ball onto the green where a group had gathered to play. “Come on. You’re with me. We’ll be Brazil,” he said, chasing after the ball. I watched him run away and found I couldn’t follow. As he disappeared amidst the roiling bodies, I turned away and walked slowly home. 

It was late August and the summer evening light was waning. The sky in the west was a deep amber and the first chill of autumn could be felt on the breeze. In Japan, the people of Okinawa were sleeping soundly in their beds.  

*

Billy Craven is a teacher living in Dublin, Ireland. He has had short stories and poetry published in a variety of literary magazines including Ram Eye Press, The Madrigal and Paper Lanterns. His first full-length manuscript was longlisted for the Mercier Prize. Twitter/X: @billycraven2

Shooter Flash: “Death of a Ladle Man” by Jet McDonald

Food had an algebraic quality in the prison canteen and Big Beef’s ladle was a large part of the equation.

X + ladle = Y

Where X was the most delicious part of any given meal and Y was the complete dish that arrived on any given plate. Although Big Beef’s ladle operated on an unpredictable scale, it was informed by clear mathematical principles, based on a system of nods, winks, and glass shards hidden in the palms of those with indeterminate sentences. Like most mathematical principles it hummed away quite happily beneath the surface of everyday existence without the need for explanation. To question how the ladle operated, or indeed to confront the operator, would be to question the integrity of an otherwise perfectly calibrated system. There was only so much meat and there were only so many scoops. Who had what could only be defined by the weighty apostrophe of Big Beef’s ladle.

So when he turned vegetarian and refused to man the stew bucket, the law of the ladle was thrown into a freefall of relativity that even the most erudite inmates found hard to grasp. Who would now judge the quantum of meat rationing? Who would explain the prison hierarchies that existed only within Big Beef’s muscly brain? Even the screws seemed restless, rolling the skeleton keys between their fingers like holy relics. 

The last straw was when Big Beef started listening to Leonard Cohen. There was only one vinyl record in the prison library, Death of a Ladies’ Man, and by common consent no one took it out to spin on the ageing turntable in the self-help section. The days were maudlin enough without the lugubrious poetry of a brooding Canadian. But Big Beef played it again and again and again.

The governor chose his moment. With two screws by his side he cornered Big Beef in the spirituality stacks.

“You gotta cut us some slack.”

“I ain’t for it.”

“No-one’s for it.”

“I mean I ain’t for no more Leonard Cohen.”

“Lose the double negatives.”

“I want more Leonard Cohen. Not less.”

“But it’s upsetting everyone.”

“I’m getting Love and Hate.”

The Governor peered curiously at Beef’s knuckles.

“The album Love and Hate. His Nashville period. Interlibrary loan.”

“If you don’t mind me asking,” said the Governor, with the kind of temerity that knows its place in the hierarchy of more violent mathematical forms, “why this sudden fascination with Leonard?”

“I speak with Buddha.”

“And what do Buddha and Leonard Cohen have in common?”

“Leonard loves Buddha.”

“And where did Buddha come from?”

“In the recreation yard. Next to Larry Lasso.” 

Larry Lasso was a brick tied to a rope, tied to a bag of drugs, that appeared over the prison wall on high days and holidays. The Governor and the other screws followed Beef back to his cell where he showed them the wall of bricks he had been building over the past year, one above the other; little quantums of material reality.

“You’re building a Buddha?”

“Nah. Buddha is in the bricks. Always the same. Always different.”

“I see.”

But the governor didn’t see. So he called in the chaplain.

“Why does Big Beef see Buddha in the bricks?”

“Buddhism operates under a series of contingencies in which each event is dependent on those around it. Every crime is a punishment. Every punishment a crime. Love is hate. Hate is love.”

“I see.” 

But the governor didn’t see. So he called in the librarian.

“Why does Big Beef see Buddha in the bricks?”

“Buddha believed in an interconnected universe hidden by a veil of consciousness. Part and whole are repeated again and again in Buddha and Cohen’s work, consummated in an ecstasy of ego death.”

“I see.”

But the governor didn’t see. So he called in Larry the Kebab.

“I think you might eligible for early parole.”

Larry smacked his lips.

*

The chaplain said they couldn’t build a wall tall enough to keep Big Beef in. So they had to use a wrecking ball to get him out. They played that Leonard Cohen record one last time as Beef made his way through the prison gates, his ladle by his side on the plywood base of the coffin. The small dent in his skull was echoed by the small dent in his ladle and had the fingerprints of Larry the Kebab all over it. But no one bothered to check.

“Friday night,” the governor told anyone who would listen, “is kebab night.”

“Freedom,” said the librarian, “is on a three-week loan.”

* * *

Jet McDonald is a writer, musician and psychiatrist. His first novel Automatic Safe Dog was nominated for a BFS Award. His second (non-fiction) book Mind is the Ride was shortlisted for a Stanford Travel Writing Award. His band The Woodlice have toured nationally and played on BBC 6 Music.

Shooter Flash: “Almost to the Point” by Jon Fain

After an early dinner on their last night in Provincetown, Rob and his daughter Mandy walked to the beach. Light reflected off the water, dappling the waves, and glimmered past a slow-moving boat, also lit up. There were mingled smells: grilled food, the sea, Mandy’s perfume.

The flash of Mandy’s phone reflected off her windbreaker. She’d barely spoken to Rob since he’d told her to stop taking empty water bottles out of the wastebasket. She would line them up on the dresser in their room, as if this was going to magically recycle them.

Besides her added height, she’d gotten moodier in the six months since he’d seen her last. She could switch on the sulk, a steady drip-drench. He didn’t need to share a wet blanket threaded through with I-Don’t-Want-To-Be-Here.

“If you’ve got something else you want to do, go ahead,” he said.

A staircase led from the beach to the parking lot behind the inn where they were staying, next to the sushi place where he’d watched her pick at her food. She could go join the kids from the night before, or maybe meet a new group on Commercial Street.

After she started to jog away, Rob called, “Not too late!”

She kept running on long bare legs, dark shorts, darker jacket, into the twilight. Fourteen was young, although sometimes not so. Forty-four was too, though also not really. 

The first time Mandy said she wanted to go explore on her own, he’d come out to this same spot, watched white sailboats anchored in the bottle-clear shallows. Then he’d walked along the water, the bay ruffling blue eastward. Ahead of him, a large dock, part of a complex of multiple buildings, stretched over the sand. It was a well-known cruising spot. The night before, after Mandy had fallen asleep, he’d considered it. Instead, he just remembered what it had been like under there. 

There was no reason to go there during the day unless you were a seagull or something looking for scraps. He’d taken out his phone and called his office to check on their progress with the new patient-focused software.

When she was eight, Mandy told Rob she liked that he was a dentist, because “people are scared of you.” At twelve, as Rob and Mandy’s mother Andi were splitting up, Mandy said that she’d read how a lot of dentists committed suicide, and she made him promise he wouldn’t do that after he moved out. Rob gave her some additional facts: her grandfather and great-grandfather, also dentists, had not done so. She said okay, maybe Grandpa, but since she’d never met her great-grandfather, how did she know he wasn’t lying? Like you lied to my mother, Rob thought she would say next.

Rob started walking the way his daughter had gone. He kept letting her go off on her own. They were supposed to be spending time together. 

When he came to the top of the staircase and into the parking lot, he was surprised to see her there. They met at the trunk of his car, as if they’d planned it.

“What happened?”

Mandy shrugged. She didn’t seem upset, just bored, or distracted. 

They went back to their room. Mandy had the bed and Rob the fold-out couch. He wasn’t being cheap, getting one room; he thought it would give them more time together. Luckily, there was a communal bathroom on their floor that was vacant most of the time while she was installed in their private one.

“Dad, did Mom tell you?”

“What?”

“Remember when you said I’d learn about life and death when I had a pet?”

He’d told her a lot of things. How could he not be a good parent? His patients were all kids. He asked them what flavor polish they wanted, bubble gum or mint? He played Santa with his gift bags of toothbrush, mini-toothpaste, and floss.

“Did you know Lila… We went to the vet and they put her to sleep?”

Andi had told him Mandy preferred to be called Amanda now, but whenever he forgot, she didn’t react. He hadn’t heard about the dog.

“I think she got sad when you left.” 

That was two years ago, he almost said.

 “Dad, is there something you want to tell me?” she asked after ten minutes passed, after he’d picked up his book.

“About what?”

“Why did we come here?”

“To spend time togeth—”

“Is there something you want to show me?”

“Besides that I love you very much?”

One reason that people came to Provincetown was surf-casting on Race Point. Rob thought it might be interesting to watch, if not actually to fish. But the weather had been cold for early October, and then it had rained. Mandy didn’t like that they would have to drive on the beach to get there. Cars and trucks on the sand were damaging to the environment. You might not encounter the dolphins your plastic bottles were endangering but you would hear the sand crabs cracking under the all-wheel-drive.

Rob turned on the TV. The screen showed the guide for all stations, and he scrolled through it. 

“Mom said you and your friend Ben met here, and maybe you wanted to show me the places you went.”

Andi would probably never forgive him. But would she ever stop trying to define for their daughter who he was? 

“Ben’s gone,” Rob said. 

“Does that mean you’re coming home?”

Speaking of suicide, he almost said.

He flicked through channels. Mandy went back to her phone. Outside, the tide was easing in. By dawn, the water would have risen under the large dock down the beach. Then, as the tugging of the new day drew it back, birds would hop along the wet-packed sand, beaks busy at the bubbles of buried things.

*

Jon Fain is a writer and editor living in Massachusetts. Some of his recent publications include short stories in A Thin Slice of Anxiety and The Argyle Literary Magazine, flash fictions in The Broadkill Review and Midsummer Dream House, micro fictions in Blink-Ink and ScribesMICRO, and a chapbook of flash fiction, Pass the Panpharmacon!, from Greying Ghost Press. Twitter/X: @jonsfain

Shooter Flash: “Drive” by S L Krutzig

The truck was Soda Pete’s pride and joy, pistol-silver and not a mark on it. He’d drive it three miles an hour round the high-school parking lot, engine growling so deeply you’d think it might pounce. Most girls – the prettier ones anyway – had taken a ride in that truck, but not Ida. She kept herself to herself and gave Soda Pete and all those other jocks a wide berth.

Still, she went to the football games like everybody else, cheering when the Roosters made a touchdown, smiling but shaking her head if a boy offered to buy her a hot dog or a slushie. Like her mama said – give a boy an inch and they’ll take a mile, and it was true. So Ida gave them no way in, and for the first two years of high school got a whole lot of sneers and jeers in return. Now, for the most part, the boys who’d eyed her and the green-eyed girls who’d noticed just left her alone.

But Soda Pete rocked up new this year, having moved to Kansas from Minnesota – hence the name, though boys sniggered about some other, secondary meaning. He hadn’t given up on Ida yet, having graduated from asking her out to hollering about her frigidity every chance he got.

Ida didn’t care. She had friends, the ones who didn’t care either. While most kids were obsessed with their crushes or the Friday game, she had her eyes cast over their shoulders, scanning for the world beyond high school. The world beyond Kansas.

All the same, for now this was the world she was stuck with, so after the game Ida walked down the track to meet Sass and Marcie-Lou at the field where kids gathered on Fridays. Without having to turn around, she knew who was on her tail when she heard the growling grow louder behind her, until it pulled level and Soda Pete leaned out the window on a burly forearm.

“Hop in, I’ll give you a ride,” he grinned. Ida shot him a quick smile in return, tight-lipped.

“That’s ok,” she said. “I’m alright walking.”

“What’s the matter, you need a limo or something? Don’t be scared, I’m not gonna hurt you. C’mon, hop in.” The field was coming into view. Ida gestured at it.

“We’re here anyway. It’s fine,” she said. “Thanks.”

Soda Pete scowled. “What’s the matter with you? You think you’re too good for anybody?” He threw the truck in reverse and shimmied behind her. Startled, Ida jumped aside, but not before he’d blasted the truck through a muddy puddle and sprayed her from head to toe.

“Stuck-up bitch!” he hooted out the window, roaring past.

“Jesus, what happened to you?” said Marcie-Lou as Ida turned up. Sass grimaced and rustled up some napkins.

“The usual,” Ida said, watching Soda Pete’s friends double over as he held court beyond the bonfire, leaning against his truck. The boys were on a high after their win. The mood was victorious, footballers high-fiving and cracking beers, girls tossing their hair and slinging glances. Soda Pete went to grab another beer and stopped to talk to Michelle along the way, whose flutey laughter floated over on the evening breeze. Ida started walking off.

“Hey!” called Sass. “Where you going?” 

Ida didn’t stop until she reached the open door of Soda Pete’s truck. No one paid her any attention; they were too used to making a point of ignoring her. She hauled herself up and, sure enough, he’d left the keys in the ignition. She slammed the door and turned the key. The moment his truck roared to life, Soda Pete noticed.

“What the—” he muttered, and started shouting, stumbling and slipping in the mud as he tried to race back. But Ida had the truck moving, and all Soda Pete and his boys could do was holler and watch as she tore around the field, Soda Pete red in the face and screaming bloody murder. Ida gunned the truck through the mud, girls squealing as the wheels sprayed up dirt and boys backing away. Ida hung out the window, one hand on the wheel.

“I thought you offered me a ride?” she yelled, skidding out of Soda Pete’s way, his face apoplectic, his truck decked brown. “I decided to take you up on it!” Even if she could only go round in circles, not quite sure how she was ever going to stop.

*

S L Krutzig is a reporter covering breaking news and government in Boise, Idaho. She has had short stories published in The Milk House, Revolution John, and PovertyHouse, and flash fiction in RiverLit. She was a finalist in the 2021 Hemingway Shorts Literary Journal Short Story Competition.

Shooter Flash: “The Power of Five” by Natalie Horner

If I don’t flick this light switch on five times, a member of my family will die. Five of us in total, one flick per person.

I don’t like odd numbers. If I flick the switch five more times that will equal ten, an even number. But that will be more than five times, twice more than the number I need. 

I have thirty seconds to decide before the clock strikes 5pm. Five o’clock is when I flick the kitchen sockets on to start dinner.

Time is not an odd number. 

Time is relative and how many relatives do I have? Five. 

Flick. Flick. Flick. Flick. Flick.

Dash for the kitchen, five seconds left. 

Flick-kettle. Flick-microwave. Flick-oven. Flick-steamer. Flick-coffee maker.

Clock strikes 5pm; made it in the nick of time.

I don’t even need all these things for tea. I’m only having five chicken nuggets with five splashes of ketchup. I could turn off four and leave one on. 

Four plus one equals five, maybe?

Yes, it’ll work. I haven’t done it before but the power of five is there. 

Flick. Flick. Flick. Flick. 

Nope, I don’t like it. Flick oven off. Five times. I guess I’m not having tea.

The phone rings five times before I answer.

“Hello, who’s speaking please?”

There are sobs. “John, John, John. It’s Mum, Mum, Mum.” Her power of three. “It’s your dad, dad, dad. He’s dead, dead, dead.” Her voice becomes a whisper.

“What happened, Mum? Tell me?”

“I don’t know.” More sobs. “Did you change with the power of five?” The world crashes. “Did you change with the power of five?” I hear the echo. “Did you change with the power of five?” 

*

Natalie Horner is from South Yorkshire and lives with her husband, son, and a cat called Puss. While continually adding books to her TBR pile, she has completed her first novel and is working towards publication. Twitter/X: @WriterNat1122

Shooter Flash: “Extramarital” by Dana Harris

They were sitting around the patio table beneath the fawning summer trees: Phil, his wife Manda, and her lover Dom Traynor, who had come over for dinner while his wife was away. Manda had prepared a sumptuous meal, as ever, and kept the conversation bubbling, topping up the lulls like champagne flutes. She was always in her element when entertaining. 

Phil was well aware of the true nature of his wife’s “friendship” with Dom. As long as it didn’t disrupt their marriage, however, he saw no reason to confront her about it. He worked hard, they had three kids, he liked his life. Why ignite a bomb fuse? He knew full well he’d neglected Manda emotionally over the years, so he was fine with turning a blind eye now. She always maintained the utmost decorum, outwardly.

Having served the coffees, Manda settled back into her wicker armchair with a satisfied smile. While all three admired the garden view, Dom extracted a cigar from his blazer and cut the end. Fireflies danced in the night air; moonlight glinted off the oily surface of the swimming pool. Dom leaned across the table to offer Phil a cigar.

“No, thanks,” he said, waving it away. “I don’t smoke.”

“Go on, darling,” Manda said. “You could have one this once.”

“I don’t smoke,” Phil said, bemused. Manda’s lips tightened. Dom leaned back and lit his cigar. Smoke curled away and melted into the darkness.

“Can you help me with the plates,” Manda muttered to Phil. As she had already gathered up the china and silverware from her side of the table, Phil picked up his plate and followed her into the kitchen.

“Why couldn’t you just take the cigar? Just to be sociable,” she hissed, rounding on him.

“Manda, I don’t smoke,” he said again, incredulous. “I don’t want one.”

“It’s not about that. It’s about being sociable.”

Feeling the heat rise in his chest, Phil turned and went back outside to the patio, Manda hot on his heels. Dom was flicking a thick end of cigar ash into the shrubbery, his feet up on a neighbouring chair.

“Go and find an ashtray,” Manda instructed Phil, who wandered back into the house and returned with a heavy crystal bowl from the library. The scent from the cigar was thick as woodsmoke. Phil cleared his throat as he settled back into his seat and wondered how long he should wait before excusing himself to watch the evening news. Even Manda couldn’t help but give in to a restrained cough.

Behind Dom, a grey plume of smoke thickened from within the ornamental hedge, becoming fully apparent only when a crackle of flame leapt out of the darkness, quickly licking at the drooping foliage of the surrounding trees. Manda shrieked as Dom lurched from his chair, knocking it over, while Phil snatched up his phone to dial emergency services.

The fire truck arrived in minutes, blaring its horn down the sweeping semicircular driveway and screeching to a halt beside the tower of burning pines. The trees beside the house now formed a single flaming torch, wrathfully licking the clapboard siding while Manda wailed and clutched her face. 

“I’m so sorry,” Dom muttered repeatedly, looking stricken, while Phil stood by grimly and watched the firemen swarming between their truck and the inferno, yelling and training their hoses upon the blaze.

“Well,” Phil said, turning to his wife. Ash, floating around them like snowflakes, had settled on her coiffed hair and turned it grey. “This is sociable.”

*

Dana Harris has published short fiction on Quick Brown Fox and recently completed the University of Toronto’s Creative Writing Certificate. Alongside her day job as a paralegal, she is currently working on a post-apocalyptic romance novel. She lives in Toronto.

Submissions open for “Nightlife” issue

General submissions are now open for Shooter’s Spring/Summer 2024 issue, themed “Nightlife”.

Writers should send short stories and non-fiction of 2,000-6,000 words and/or up to three poems by the deadline of May 12th. Stories, essays, memoir and poetry should relate to nocturnal happenings: dating, working the night shift, crime, clubbing, dinner, sex, partying, witchcraft, ghosts, childbirth, insomnia, even nocturnal wildlife.

The theme is open to wide interpretation, but writers should adhere to the submission guidelines. Other opportunities currently open to writers include the 2024 Shooter Poetry Competition and Shooter Flash, which accepts entries on a rolling basis.

Shooter Flash: “Sabbath” by Rebecca Klassen

Mum called it Suicide Sunday and had done so since she was a girl.      

‘A day so boring you wanted to kill yourself,’ she told me. I wondered if other parents said similar things to their teenagers. 

Throughout her childhood, she’d adhered to the Sabbath traditions of duty and no play, though this was more under her parents’ guidance than God’s. Post church, she would sit on the stairs in her best clothes and listen to the heathen neighbour children through the wall, blowing recorders and laughing. She’d been round there once for tea. The mother had given them sugar sandwiches and let them gouge holes in the lawn with sticks. 

‘Mind my bloody azaleas,’ the mother had told them. Mum had repeated ‘bloody’ to her mother and had never been allowed back.

When my grandfather died, Mum was a freshly divorced, single parent. With grandfather gone, Nana expected Mum to attend Suicide Sundays again with me in tow. The new criteria no longer required Mum at church, though we were told it would be nice if we came along once in a while. Only knitting, reading, and watching Songs of Praise were permitted in Nana’s chintzy sanctum. Watching other programmes risked a brazen ‘hell’ or ‘bugger’ slipping into the atmosphere to sully the day.   

One late autumn Suicide Sunday, I pivoted round and round on my backside in front of Nana’s gas fire, hoping that, like a rotisserie chicken, I would eventually cook on all sides. Nana worked her knitting needles. Mum stretched so that her feet almost touched the fire’s orange bars, the heat making her tights give off a plastic smell. I watched Mum nodding off, imagining having to grow up here every day. A new family lived next door with the sounds of computer game music, squabbling, and giggling coming through the walls.   

As the gas fire reddened my cheeks, I suddenly stopped pivoting as I remembered the crumpled piece of paper in my schoolbag. 

‘Mum?’

‘Hmm?’ 

‘I’ve got cookery class at school tomorrow. I’ve got to take ingredients in.’

Mum’s eyes flicked open. Nana’s needles stopped.

‘What have you got to make?’ 

‘Apple crumble. Sorry, I forgot.’

Both women were on their feet.

‘What’ve you got at home?’ Nana asked Mum.

‘No apples, that’s for sure.’ 

Nana went to the kitchen, Mum close behind. Cupboards banged over notes of infuriation.

They returned, Mum carrying a bag. 

‘Nana’s only got Braeburn apples. We’ll have to see if we’ve got the other ingredients at home.’

‘Can we go to the shop for the rest?’ I asked.

Nana shook her head.

‘You should’ve told me yesterday,’ Mum said to me. I’d always wanted to leave Nana’s before Songs of Praise, but not like this. Mum apologised to Nana.

Nana shrugged. ‘Sometimes life throws us trials.’

The drive home was quiet. Intermittently, I apologised. Mum said she knew I was sorry, yet there was no talk of forgiveness. 

‘It’s always up to me to sort these things, never your father,’ she said. After that, I stopped apologising. 

I couldn’t picture where my father was or who he might be with, and I didn’t know when I would see him again. Even though her father was dead, Mum had the same dilemmas, but the similarities didn’t unite us. 

When we got home, Mum put the butter, wrapped in its golden foil, on the kitchen table.   

‘We need oats too,’ I said tentatively, ‘because it’s a healthy crumble.’ 

‘Bring me the recipe.’

I brought her the forgotten list, which she read while I brought Nana’s bag of Braeburns to the table. Mum weighed and decanted ingredients into plastic tubs. Little white clouds billowed; granules were spilt. She banged the cinnamon jar on the counter. The clumps wouldn’t burst, so she threw it in the bin. I put the tubs into the bag with the apples. The butter remained unweighed on the table. Mum put away the scales and muttered as something tumbled from the cupboard. 

‘Where shall I put the butter?’ I asked. Mum rounded on me as more clutter fell from the cupboard. 

‘Up my arse!’ she yelled. 

‘Okay, but you’ll have to come to school tomorrow.’

My words floated precariously into the air. They’d been a gamble, particularly on a day we didn’t laugh. Mum said nothing as she put her face in her hands. The silence built over the hum of the fridge. I wanted to cram the words back into my mouth and fill my cheeks with the trouble they’d caused. Then her shoulders shook as her legs folded. Her hands dropped. She was laughing, shaking all over.

*

Rebecca Klassen is co-editor of The Phare. Her work has featured in more than forty publications including Mslexia Best Short Fiction, Popshot, Ellipsis Zine, Burningword, Barren, and The Wild Word. She has won the London Independent Story Prize, and was shortlisted for the Oxford Flash Prize and the Laurie Lee Prize. She regularly performs her work at Cheltenham Literature Festival and Stroud Book Festival.