Every Day is Someone’s First in Purgatory

by Samuel Piccone winner of the 2021-2022 Kay Murphy Prize for Poetry issue 76 My wife’s stethoscope necklaces her with the soon-to-be-dead, a stack of red manilla drags her out the door, “Just shoot me already.” The owner who calls to remind her he’ll hang himself if she doesn’t save his cat is calling again. There’s […]

I Cancel Your Plane Tickets

by Rita Mookerjee issue 76 since you won’t be coming to the island the way we’ve been planning for months, it’s a pretty ideal time to break the news to me. After weeks of fighting, I pull up pictures of the bamboo hut on the water that we chose, though we  knew that a single ceiling fan […]

Sand Dunes

by Amy Kolen issue 76 Though it’s only late morning, the sun has already burned off the clouds in the thin air, leaving the snow-capped Sangre de Cristo Mountains as brief white blazes in the sea of blue sky. Behind me, Medano Creek, one of the waterways that seasonally flows through the Dunes, creating, in […]

The Wolf Indicator

by Jacqueline Berger issue 76 A good man avoidsthe no-fly zoneof a daughter’s body.That leaves arms and hair and feet and back and shoulders and kneesand calves and ankles. He’s been dead for a decadeand you still can’t put into words, can’t or won’t,but today the new hygienist, young, gay, fresh from training,really wants to talkabout your teeth.So now […]

The Marvelous Curve

by Andrew David MacDonald issue 76 I. Uritz was shelving some tattered hard covers when the gunshots went off. He didn’t bother stopping. Whenever someone tried to escape, they were shot. Uritz liked the smell of the old books and focused on that instead of the noise. An alarm bell ringing followed the gunshots, and […]