Monday, October 7, 2024

COLD, WEST VIRGINIA ANGEL By Manny Grimaldi

           


        

Catching the words Incredible Hulk and Metamorphosis before I learned Incarnation and Immaculate Conception, you’d have known Hardy Boys mysteries and Father Knows Best weren’t my ball of wax. Stan Lee had nothing on me. The authors of the Scriptures knew aliens. They called them angels, archangels, cherubim, and their offspring with the daughters of men, Nephilim. They came from all quadrants, inner and outer, of the galaxy. They whispered every language, reading the mind at a moment’s thought. 

Can you see me too? I’ll tell you. Today I wonder when I should forgive them. Perhaps I wouldn’t have to if I never held them liable. To think of a story as this is to write alone, speak alone, and create new friendships until they are exhausted. Fixations eat me when I’m not masturbating. Well, that’s not the truth.  

In 1966, I hauled stereos and sewing machines from Marietta, Ohio down Interstate 77 in wonder whether the hairy Mothman would touch down near Point Pleasant, West Virginia again. Seven serious friends and one sober preacher heard screeches from the leather beast when it called them. The Ford Econoline van’s AM radio distortion was enough to switch it off on it greetings of a howl. Ahead I saw someone in black, coming from a flash and red fire, and all there was—a smile from this thing, it didn’t talk like a man, it was so gentle, so tender. He sounded like a Brother of the Lord telling me, no fear. No pain. Does that comfort me? I suppose it did. I thought a simple hand out to him, and he took it, he spoke his name, my name is Indrid Cold. Be not afraid, I go before you always. He knew I left Golden Virginia tobacco in the door. My mother’s cancer killed her when I was four. I looked into the sky. The voice came gently, at a wind’s whisper — your mother’s — breast. Are you happy with me? he asked, the smile never passing from his lips. The heat from the air around his fingers singed my eyes, a blistering solo on a banjo, a fluttering dance around a naked light bulb under new moon. 

The sky above, one star his he said, showing me with boney reach his finger poking blazes above us where it was archangels who leave their tread. We climbed atop a rest area pavilion, traveled to the nearest sun to ours, Proxima Centauri, to ground me 4.24 light years away, and stood. He asked me was I ready for the next stop in my mind? Choose it. I gaped into the field of perfect pinholes glad that I was the only one. Indrid Cold whisked me where thought bent. Clouds reflected on a pocky, rained river that surrounded us: jellyfish, manta and eel, he smiled you, how do you feel?  

This being the story of so-called cryptids in 1960s West Virginia, what are cryptids but animals or beings disputed, and poorly documented? Appalachia has a few. Mothman, Tommyknockers, Indrid Cold. Today, I think of the perennial game of telephone at summer camps. Counselor supposes a sentence, passes to a child, inherited down to the last one, where: I cast my nighted color off becomes Fred said he wears colored nighties to bed, hee-hee hee-hee-hee. Because, we have the world wide web’s echo chamber to bounce balls around the room T.V. bingo style, any combination of storytelling is possible. What is important to me? I economize, and a stronger pictures emerges, distilled, like corn whiskey. When seeing her out my front door, I tell my daughter to watch for the glimmers, pockets in the frost bearing more warmth than stars, because I’ve seen an angel carried on devil’s wings on these roads, taken me to a home, a more delicate peace, and this is my choice to remember. The images we want to hold before us hold the depth and clarity that define us, and all decisions from there are thus made. Why do you want to remain in a self imposed prison of designs made for you?

“What do you do for a living sir?” the ten-year-old redheaded girl asked, bicycle casually parked as if floating off hooks on the brick pillar in front off the drugstore.

“I work at the slaughterhouse. I make bologna and parcel pig’s feet,” he smiled peeling back his cheeks further than usual.

She was curious.

“Why do you like to work in slaughterhouse?”

He paused considering her age, spoke anyway, “I like the lights when they leave the animal.”

“Why are you smiling at me?”

Overhead, black hawk helicopting angels land on jungle field—lights, holocaust red and steady near the front wheels—the eyes. Wind whispers a secret to the girl.

“Do not be afraid. Many children will lose all freedom beginning this day, in this town. No one will play freely. Mothers will call them in before the sun begins to set. The minds of your generation, the children of your generation will turn from play and conversation to devices and whirling beeping noises. Legend of Zelda. Pac-Man Fever. Nintendo Switch. Dungeons & Dragons. People will show pictures of what they had for dinner and cut people apart with computers. Do not be afraid. You are coming to safety with me.”   

To bury myself in spite and spit, letting that boyhood bully have his way. Tim covers my face in his oozing schnoozle. Carhartt work boot plants hate between my ribs. I cough against gobs of him. Screaming impossible. Mouth tightly closed. He drains into my nose at a snail’s creep, then a rush into my throat. I taste him, finally yelling out to God. There is no one in this group of wanton kids to stop him. Nothing happens. Tim kicks me in the side. I can’t remember what I did. This was the story of my life. The visitor told me this would happen again, someone else in my place. Screams just as piercing. Only I would cry.


The house we lived in stood on a tiny knoll surrounded by unkempt alley ways, a neighboring magnolia, my Jacob’s ladder, and in time my father built a Ham Radio tower eighty feet into the air behind the utility shack. Into the attached garage, he escaped with the equipment. Next door, he condoned the business carried out in his absence. It was a lonely time. I sought many hours awake alone, time awake with others too much to bear, and always with a book in an attic next to a frigid AC unit running all year long. Frank Herbert, Bram Stoker, Robert Louis Stevenson, Edgar Allan Poe, The Films of Bela Lugosi — you get the picture.

Shortly before dawn I come down for water, carpeted stairs creak, afraid of every one step — my mother could come running and louder than me, shouting I would wake my father, even a child knew that was insane — and at four steps, all four feet failed me I fell.  

A voice caught me flying, arresting gravity in his grip.

“You are looking for someone to see you and hold you — you don’t want to die, you just don’t want to live like this anymore, right?” 


I didn’t know how to feel about he said, the man in the black fire. He wasn’t speaking. I heard him behind burning eyebrows.


“There is only one way. Treat yourself as a person who deserves the love you want. Don’t wait to be a better boy before you take this chance. Let go. Let be. And someday leave your son alone, he will yell for help as you do. Don’t rub eggshells and coffee grounds on that crop to make yourself a bigger man, to make you seem stronger. Leave him to see your faults as perfectly as he does. Let things be. Do not be afraid.”

I am in my bed with a twinkling water, with that the smoke fire absorb into his person, and he folds in on himself into winking light. Gone.

What’s more important? Having a bottom line, an answer to all and everything, or your life? The Hebrews called this question, our stargazing away from the center, a primal curse, something we might call up as the debate of the chicken and the egg. The boy left his mother in a state, unable to weather her foolishness at the steps on the stairs. They were pretty things, weren’t they? Screaming invalid and a thirteen year old doctor. The boy hungered for true bread. True, it was the day of the Lord’s death, and time for prayer.  

Today no one came. The boy thought, they’ve all pulled a Simon Peter and denied him all over again. Without footsteps, without sound, a flutter and a hollow.

He can’t say who he was. This one never met a stranger. This one handles black machinery, feathered and dusty, a clawed red-eyed embrace, and this man comes in a grey striped suit something interested, saying, “Be still and know I am your friend.”  

The child is safe, yet freezes unsure, “What’s that book in your hand? Can I have it?”

The book Ulysses, by James Joyce, he took, flipped to its tattered first page, read Introibo ad altare Dei, “I will go up to the altar of the Lord,” underlined in lemon green highlights that turned purple under the focused beams of the winged moth cascade on the Good Friday altar of St. Raphael Archangel tumbledown shack chapel—Raphael the healer.

“It’s yours. When I’m finished.”

The boy sat smiling next to his friend, closing his eyes. Indrid Cold read his mind. The visitor left, the ragamuffin book disappeared, the child scampered to the vestibule through the rudimentary nave of the West Virginia Catholic backwoods shack, past the font.  

The kid knew where the priest kept the muscatel.

He drank very slowly, and from then, began by indirections to find a new home out.




Manny Grimaldi is a writer and editor living far to the west of Appalachia in Derby City, Louisville. He edits Yearling, a Poetry Journal for Working Writers, and has a forthcoming book with Whiskey City Press in the coming year. Publications include Crossroads Literary, Disturb the Universe, and Moss Puppy magazines, Pegasus journal for Kentucky State Poetry Society, Jerry Jazz Magazine, and Club Plum.



Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Your Dark Traveler By Heath Brougher


Your shadow doesn't have any hands. 

Something seems to have bitten them off

in the blaring daylight. You felt it eek down

your back for the briefest of seconds

and painlessly yet perniciously sink 

its razor teeth into the pitchy depth of your 

sunless spot laid out on the asphalt. 

Your pile of lightlessness seemingly conjured 

something incorporeal to attain livelihood 

and attack the black stain eternally 

attached to your feet. 





Heath Brougher is the editor-in-chief of Concrete Mist Press and former poetry editor for Into the Void Magazine, winner of the 2017 and 2018 Saboteur Awards. He is a multiple Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net Nominee, he was awarded the 2018 Poet of the Year Award from Taj Mahal Review. He is the author of 12 books and has a new book forthcoming titled "Beware the Bourgeois Doomsday Fantasy." He has spent the last few years editing the work of others but is officially ready to get back into the creative driver seat. 



Saturday, June 29, 2024

Kneeling To Resuscitate Freedom by Kevin M. Hibshman and Merritt Waldon

 



Blind man wallow
Glory dreams rocket
Skull will flower with proper irrigation
Alluring beauty
Mortality's kingdom of silence
Here is the truth
Don't breathe a word of it
Many factions underground
Molding future days like auto parts in vast valleys of the dead
We dissent, quite uninterested in tactless reason
The medic arrives
It's a seventeen year old girl wearing a hippie dress and no undergarments
Kneeling to resuscitate freedom
Manufactured underground







Kevin M. Hibshman has had poems published in many journals and magazines world wide.In addition, he has edited his poetry zine, Fearless, since 1990 and is the author of sixteen chapbooks including Love Sex Death Dreams (Green Bean Press, 2000) and Incessant Shining (Alternating Current, 2011).

His current book Cease To Destroy from Whiskey City Press is currently available on Amazon.




Merritt Waldon is Southern Indiana poet who has been published in Road Dawgz, Sun Poetic Times,

The Brooklyn Rail, Be About It Zine, River Dog #1, Sparring with Beatnik Ghosts, Americans & others anthology fourth edition, Crisis Chronicles, Cajun Mutt Press, Thye Rye Whiskey Review, and Fearless!.

At midnight Christmas night 2020, cajun mutt press released Oracles from a Strange Fire by Ron Whitehead & Merritt. He lives in Austin, Indiana.

Monday, June 3, 2024

We Are Gregor: The Gregoring By Alex S. Johnson

with a tip of the hat to Jeffrey Thomas

I am Gregor's lost suns sinking below the infernal Urizen
I am the Lord of Hades stuck to Gregor's back in place of the wings she lost
I am the temperamental siren Gregoria Batshit Myhellya Jaxon here to raise some furries and furies
I am sex starved galactic oversoul Queen Gregorina the accordion-hearted with bosoms to bury ya
I am the carrion thousand yard flash flesh feast of Gregors scraped off a liminal portal adjacent to Punktown
I am the spectral crypt of Gregor the Unsound
I am dearly and deeply departed King Gregorassa the Bold, drove armies over a cliff rather than commit more war on innocents
I am a fresh minted microchip implanted in the All-Gregor brain
I am the high sustain of Gregor amplifiers make Murder One sound more like a whimper than a bang
I am the beginning of the first microzonal instantiation of the Gregor 1 Project in a pocket dimension
I am the shades of Gregor driven far from Newton's tree
I am time elapsed Gregor descending a staircase in outer space with minutes to go
I am Hollywood Gregor tending his throne on the seat of cold eternities
I am the bees stung kisses tasted reluctantly then fiercely then nevermore
I am the Gate, the Portal, the Tomb and the Maternity Planet Pope Gregor the Dead
I am the bread of Jesus Gregor died and resurrected on the Tree of Life
I am the Qlippoth art-realistic atomistic hell roots of Gregor never a beggar always a wealthy man
I am providential Gregor unsealing the lost art of sunshine
I am Uncle Sam's plan of assembly line Gregors
I am the slaughtered plants of Gregors in biopunk rhizomes
I am Gnome Gregor hunched over a map to Never.
I am forever.






Alex S. Johnson is the author of the acclaimed horror and Bizarro short fiction collection The Doom Hippies and the creator of numerous anthologies including Axes of Evil: A Heavy Metal Horror Anthology. A rock journalist and former college English professor, Johnson currently resides in Sacramento, California, where he runs Darkest Wine Media. He expects great things from his forthcoming ultimate haunted house novella, La Maison Infernale aka Last House by the River Styx, written in collaboration with JC Macek III. 

Sunday, June 2, 2024

Something Fresh by Lee Andrew Forman

The dawn of hunger, a rising sun of pain and despair—I watch as it crests the horizon. It lazily casts its light upon the morning sky, and those still living beneath it. It is a reminder. That we’re still alive, still at war with the ravenous pains in our bellies. It is also a reminder that we are not dead, equally dire in its effect on the heart, mind, and soul.

We crave the reaper, plead that we may be taken, but instinct forces us to go on. To try. To feed on rot and share it with the flies and their tiny white young. They dance the ballad of birth, death, and the in between all at once. I envy their candor.

They don’t mind being served. If they do, we wouldn’t care enough to disallow them from tickling our throats on the way down. And I suppose you could say we don’t mind being served in the same sense. Our gluttonous predators certainly have no concern. And if they do, just like the maggots, we will never know.

Clever they are, these beasts who climbed the chain all the way to the top. They maintain our numbers. They know not to exhaust their source. Sometimes they let one or two out of a group live. But it doesn’t matter. They’re sure to be consumed. It’s nothing but inevitable.

They prowl the remnants of this once-great city, mostly beneath the light of the moon. We hide in ruined buildings, under crumbling brick and mortar. Like rats. And like rats we’ve become.

That’s why I help people.

I invite them in. Offer whatever food I can spare. Give them a place to rest their head for a night. It’s always been my way, even before the world crumbled into an endless cycle of torment. I may not be a hero, but I ease the suffering of those who cross my threshold. I enjoy watching the slight decrease of tension in their face. They don’t quite smile, but there’s a hint of relief behind their lips. Even their eyes change. The hard, blank stare dulls, their eyelids relax, pupils expand. That’s my favorite moment. Each and every time, I get the same thrill, knowing I’ve eased the pain of a fellow human being.

Once they lay their head to rest, I watch as their chest rises with each breath. I watch. And I wait. I know their agony is over; they feel no more pain, no famine, no fear. They’ve gone to sleep, as peaceful as one can be in a world where all but one thing is on the bottom of the feeding pool. Where hope is a dying star, dimming in a bleak and empty universe. Where survival is a near-futile effort.

That’s why I help people. Not only is it in my nature, but it is also in itself, a strategy. A way to prolong the poor excuse for an existence any of us might have. To watch one more sunrise, to reveal yet another day upon this Earth, and whatever scraps it might bring. Those horrid things may be clever, but so am I.

There used to be a saying about safety in numbers. But I don’t get by on luck. I play with hidden cards. There’s no shame in cheating anymore. And there’s no one to slap my wrist if I get caught. So I do what that which needs to be done.

Once my guest is in a deep sleep, trapped in whatever paradisical dream or dread nightmare they may be having, I go to work. My blade is sharpened, ready and waiting. It serves well, this tool of compassion. It cuts deep, smooth, with ease. There’s no struggle. No screams. The throat is always best. Just a gurgle of blood entering the lungs as their breaths shallow with each inhale. The sedatives in the food they accepted keep them nice and unaware. This kindness must be performed in the utmost humane manner. Anything else would be cruel.

I only want to help my fellow brothers and sisters meet the ghost they so wish would take them with his scythe. Death is not unkind, it is only neutral in its final nature. As am I, his merchant among the people. I do this with no malice or joy. I only desire to eat something fresh from time to time…






Lee Andrew Forman is a publisher and author from the Hudson Valley region in New York. His fascination with the macabre began in childhood, watching old movies and reading everything he could get his hands on. His love of horror spans three generations, starting with his grandfather who was a fan of the classic Hollywood Monsters.

Lee has published three books to date, The Bury Box, Zero Perspective, and Fragments of a Damned Mind, along with numerous short stories in multiple anthologies. He is a co-owner of Sirens Call Publications, a regular contributor to The Lift, and writes non-fiction pieces for various periodicals. Lee is also an administrator and member of the horror writer’s group Pen of the Damned, where you can find a new piece of fiction each week. Website: Lee Andrew Forman Blog: Pen of the Damned Facebook: Lee A. Forman Instagram: @leeandrewforman
Twitter: @leeandrewforman



Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Under Glass By John Patrick Robbins

Much like an insect, I will keep you.
A pin through the heart agonies not counted.
The message is not fully encrypted; it is just ignored.

The wounds healed, yet untreated, the poison has infected the blood.
Cold is the vessel left to its own vices; it becomes something far worse.

One too many shots taken to the head, you appear complete and perfectly fragmented within.

I recall things that erode my emotions yet lose everything that I once did cherish.
Like worn photographs lost to a fire.
I am kept here a prisoner in the trappings of a position, esteemed and tormented to a slow death.

I hold what others desire as I would happily abandon within a moment's notice.

All roads intersect eventually as the intelligent question while the narcissist keep running until the moment they drop dead.

I do not seek sympathy or the understanding in the arms of some tormented idiot equally  fucked as myself.

I just wish to know what's beyond a two-way mirrors view beyond eyes that judge what they themselves cannot do yet are ever so eager to watch self-destruct.

Remote living is a mutually viewed joy in an ever-so-twisted undiagnosed disease.
For all those that fly are not birds, more so insects dissected and viewed underneath the microscope's glass.

Prisoners of other's hate masked in pathetic ego.
Pinned in agony for others to study what should be only admired from a distance or simply left the fuck alone.

There is no escape.





JPR, is a southern gothic writer his work has been published in Lothlorien Journal Of Poetry, Horror Sleaze Trash, Spill The Words Press, Impspired Magazine, Fixator Press, Disturb The Universe, The Dope Fiend Daily and Piker Press.

His newest book is Midnight Masochism from Black Circle Publishing. 
His work is often dark and always unfiltered.