Zoe Hollingsworth

Well Earned

It’d been about six weeks since the day they’d run into each other at the downtown library. Grace supposed they were seeing each other now. It’d happened quickly, the weeks passing without her even really being aware. 

Grace liked the way Adrian held doors open for her. He teased her about her white-knuckled driving. He was smart. He had what turned out to be a very good job as a industry colorist. She could overlook the way he seemed to occasionally disappear, zoning out staring at mirrors or streetlamps and during movies and even sometimes in conversation. He seemed to want a companion he could relax in total silence with, and she was used to filling this silence, in any way possible. She equated this to the awkwardness of their first date last summer—they’d been mismatched because she was so frazzled, being new in town, and he was so gentile. It’d unnerved her at the time. But things were different now. Her various liaisons had made her brave. Grace felt she’d completed a step, been allowed to move up: she liked having someone real to go out with on a Friday night now, getting out of the Valley and away from her computer screen. 

A weekend in late March, or was it early April? They had a good time. He took her to the Catalina Jazz Club on Sunset. They ordered steaks and watched a pickup band play Oingo Boingo songs and he let her finish the chocolate pot de crème, scooping the graham cracker dust from the corners of the plate. Grace got buzzed off three glasses of Sonoma Coast chardonnay. A warm wind pushed her into him on the street, and they kissed for the first time: his lips were soft and determined pressed against hers. She didn’t dislike it, feeling oddly helpless in his arms. He grabbed her by the back of the head, forcing her into place. It hurt a little, but she let him. The thrill reminded her of her long-term penpal, GHOSTLOUPE. She imagined that was how he’d kiss her. This bled one fantasy into another, and she was beside herself by the time she got home, aching down there for hours. Very quietly in her bedroom, after midnight, Grace masturbated, her mouth dropping into an ah of shock at her body’s hasty, shuddering response. She felt less ashamed afterward, now that there was a real person involved. 

Her first time at his apartment, they’d had a strange conversation. She’d been admiring his vintage cameras. He had three or four on the side table next to the door: she recognized a 35-millimeter, a cracked rainbow strap curled around it; a vertical folding camera, and an old Kodak brownie from the 70’s. 

“Have you ever shot anything on these?” She asked.

“Oh yeah,” he nodded, moving forward to touch the lens cap of the 35-millimeter. “This one is a family heirloom. I’ve shot all over the city with this one. And the brownie I like to take out sometimes. Developing is a bitch though, I need to do it at work.”

“What do you like to take pictures of?” Grace asked.

His face seemed to cloud instantly. She was starting to notice it a bit, like a curtain falling, whenever something came up he didn’t want to talk about. 

“People, mostly.” He said this curtly. “Do you want me to take your picture? I could do that right now. Here.”

Grace blanched. “Oh no, I was just curious, I wasn’t—”

“I think you may need to earn it first.”

“What?”

“You haven’t earned it.”

She faltered, staring at his grave face. She’d suddenly lost points somehow. “I—okay, if you say so. I didn’t, like, mean anything by it.”

“No.” He was agreeing, but it felt like a condemnation. His gaze dropped from her to the cameras on the table. Then something seemed to change, a beat passed, and he was back. 

“Sorry,” he said. “It’s just—this equipment is delicate and very old. And I have a—I guess it’s a sense of privilege, when it comes to capturing a subject. It’s a very vulnerable thing. It’s very intimate.”

You brought it up, she thought, nodding her head sagely, backing away from the table. 

“But,” he was saying; his voice changed and it was suddenly loftier, happier. He grabbed her by the hand, twirling her around with his arm extended. “You, my dear, may have earned other things.”

“Oh yeah, what’s that?” She asked, mimicking his playfulness, trying to lighten her own heart. Hoping for a kiss, anything to sweeten up the moment. 

“Follow my instructions,” he said to her pointedly. He was grinning, but serious. 

“Okay.”

He dropped her hand, and she stood there stupidly, waiting. 

Adrian smiled, enjoying her visible awkwardness. When his admiration had waned, he said:

“Remove your clothes, please.”

Grace made a face. “Here?” She asked. She looked at the couch, turned around to glance at the TV, then back to Adrian, who was nodding, stony-faced. She remembered she was supposed to follow instructions. Right. 

She sighed loftily, partly to curb her beating heart. They hadn’t yet slept together. They’d only made out on the street and in his car a few times—and to her surprise, he hadn’t even tried digging his fingers into her underwear then. Their knowledge of each other in these details was still unexplored territory. Her face was on fire as she sunk to the ground to remove her shoes.

“No,” he said. “Stand up.”

She eyed him silently, and stood back up. She kicked her shoes off, not bothering with the laces. He watched, one hand on his chin, as she wriggled out of her jeans and, sighing loftily again, lifted her arms to take off her t-shirt, draping both on the end of the couch. 

She hesitated in her bra and underwear. 

“Both of them,” Adrian gestured. 

Grace’s eyes had lost some of their brightness. She stared at a spot past his head as she slipped herself free of the bra—a little mesh thing he liked quite a lot, light violet, with halter straps keeping her nipples pressed tightly against the fabric. 

The briefs, navy blue, were opaque and covered both cheeks, giving everything a wide berth. Angles and cuts and nothing else to see, really, other than the tiny, wedged impression of her sex in the fabric. 

A roll of flesh dimpled together sweetly at her waist as she curled to ease the underwear down. Muscles reflexed as she curled back up, and he could observe where baby fat had given way to cellulite, and where she’d remained lean. She was shorter than his Arctic Fox. Her body was, broadly, a pear: her breasts, freed from the mesh bra, were small and white, pale nipples inverted on her chest, her waist narrow enough for him to wrap both arms around and have overlap. Her hips widened out from here, surprisingly so—into a large ass which was wide and shapely, practically an entire ocean’s surface he could imagine resting his head on. 

She held her powerful thighs together stiffly. The little triangle between them was clustered with a soft swath of brown hair, a flesh-colored slit in the middle. He wished he could put his tongue in it right then and there.

“Good,” Adrian said. “Very good. Now—turn to the wall, please.”

Grace looked as if she were starting to disassociate: he knew the expressions. As long as she followed his voice, it was fine for the time being. He’d get her out. He was very happy with her. She turned slowly from him and faced the gray wall. 

“Put your hands on it.”

Her palms sought the gray, flattened out. She stared at this, concentrating on the color. Grace imagined living inside an entirely gray world. She was suddenly chilly, and tried not to shake. She wasn’t sure what was happening down below, the sensations were confusing, and so she kept her legs together. She felt oddly hungry, a grumbling erupting in her stomach. 

“Spread your legs, please.”

She’d been afraid of this. As she readjusted against the wall, taking a spread-eagled stance, she felt air reaching new parts of her in the front and back. Out in the open like this, helpless, all she could do was wait for whatever was going to happen next. 

He came up behind her. She could feel his breath on her neck. Her ear. His lips seeking her hair. He kissed her neck. He breathed through his mouth, forcing warm air into her hair which sent quiverings up and down her spine. She felt drugged as he crawled her this way, taking in the poison through his breath, saliva, and she almost cried out when a hand also suddenly sought her ass, gripping tightly, digging the nails in. 

He kept his hand here, on her ass, in an expert hold the entire time, while his other hand began to explore her. Tentatively at first, until it began to use the moisture provided and seek out a wider, sweeping gesture. 

Grace was in a state, a place she’d never found herself. She couldn’t move. Sensations were beginning to rise—ones she’d brought herself to before, of course, but never in the presence of another and never upright like this, arms taught and trembling, as she struggled to control the rocking rhythm of his hand, which had grown enormous, and a terrible pulsing, like deep vibrating velvet, which also grew until she was gasping and squeezing her eyes shut and the word “No,” escaped her lips. 

The moment Grace whispered “No,” he knew she was starting to come. He held onto her tightly, as she was trying to get away from him, drooping and sinking towards the floor, her legs like wet clay collapsing. When she cried out it was cough-like: not the sound of someone mimicking pornos or movies they’d seen, but involuntary. This pleased and aroused him, the authenticity of it. He liked how she naturally fought it, too.

The release had triggered something in her legs, and Grace stood there, her body curling inward, hot hands sliding against the wall, trying to keep herself vertical. She breathed in loudly through her nostrils, feeling like a winded rhino and wishing he weren’t there, wishing she could just go to the bathroom and get herself together for a minute. She concentrated on the gray world two inches from her face.

“Good,” he whispered in her ear, finally releasing his grip on her ass. It was stinging a bit. The room was eerily silent. 

***

Fifteen minutes later, Grace was sitting in her car on Franklin Avenue, trying to light a cigarette. Her hands kept shaking, but after a couple of tries, she got it. She pulled away from the curb without thinking about where she was going, her mind blank, one hand resting lightly on the turn signal switch. 

It was late, not many cars on Barham. Her left hand, holding the cigarette out the window, was sturdy only by the time she’d descended back down into the valley, bottoming out at the Forest Lawn and Pass Avenue intersection. She was rounding the corner at the Warner Brother’s buildings, glancing at the familiar tan gates, the Hot Dog Haus across the street where she’d once gotten sick outside. 

He hadn’t offered to let her spend the night, but she wouldn’t have accepted, anyway. The evening seemed over, at any rate. He’d watched her closely as she pulled on her jeans, leaning against the arm of the couch. There wasn’t much said between them, and Grace felt strange, almost frightened of him as she gathered her things. Her crotch was still pulsing like a beacon, a humming filling her body which was not unlike the need she’d cultivated online with GHOSTLOUPE. 

But that had all been fantasy. This was real, and she felt a new humiliation in it, that she’d come so hard and fast, as if this cheapened her, made her slutty. It’d felt forced out her, the pleasure itself incidental. She couldn’t read where his true interest lay, exactly, in regards to her. 

This thought popped out in her head as she sat at the light on Olive Avenue. She was surprised it hadn’t occurred to her before at some point. 

He hadn’t thought it a good idea to try and get her to stay. He knew her discomfort well, and watched calmly as she avoided his gaze, grabbing her things. He was used to women not looking at him afterward. He was reminded briefly of the previous girl’s last path through the apartment. But Grace wasn’t angry or hurt, she was confused. Wrestling between pleasure and fear. It was best to let her go. He downplayed his goodbye, smiling sleepily at her, standing in the open doorway. Despite a growing fondness, or perhaps exactly because of this, he closed it in her face. Through the keyhole, he watched as she turned and, as if in a trance state, walked to the elevator alone. Turning back to the living room, he raised his fingers to his nostrils. The smell of her lingering effluvium was practically a drug; he felt woozy for a brief moment, standing there with his eyes closed. 

Adrian knew the drive home would probably be enough, but if not, he’d hear from her in the morning. He was pleasantly surprised when about two hours later, while he was reading an article on the toilet, she texted him. He clicked over to the message, eyebrow raised. 

-I had a good time tonight. 

She was sitting on her bed as she sent this. Safely bathed in the soft orange lighting, returned to an adult womb, where her parents slept soundly down the hall and, cautiously, she’d made herself come again. Lying on top of the covers, breathing heavily, Grace asked herself what had been so frightening about the evening, after all?—he’d wanted to please her. That was nice. The separation and the time to think had made the eerie feelings she’d experienced in his apartment fade away. Or maybe she’d just deleted the shame, purposefully, all of it—the strange sense of unease which had followed, the feeling she’d been violated somehow, like something had been involuntarily taken from her. 

It’d been surprisingly easy, standing in the kitchen in the stove’s half-light (which her mom left on whenever she was coming home late), absently eating chips from the bag on the counter and going over the scene again. She’d enjoyed fighting him. That was what had made it so intense. He’d known this all along. 

When she woke up the next morning, Grace was absolutely starving. Her mother found her at the kitchen table, reading an article in Entertainment Weekly about Jennifer Lawrence’s favorite swear words, and eating an enormous bowl of Cheerios. 

“How was your date last night?” Her mom moved around the kitchen, jiggering the coffee pot, dabbing at her eyes with a paper towel she ripped from the holder.

“It was nice, actually,” Grace said brightly. She was in a good mood. She preferred talking to her parents in the morning to all other times of day. The sun threw a transparent yellow angle on the dining room table, and she thought all the sudden how easy, how beautiful everything was. 

She pulled out her phone to show her a picture of Adrian. It was his main photo from the app.  

Her mother wrinkled her nose from over her shoulder. “He looks kind of like an actor that could play a vampire on one of those Gen Z shows, doesn’t he?”

Grace couldn’t help herself. She burst out laughing, and couldn’t stop; she inhaled a cheerio, and started coughing. Her mother slapped her on the back a few times, frowning pleasantly. She moved Grace’s braid back and forth a few times, as if playing absently with her own. 

Jonathan S Baker 

Clown Cuckold 

for Red Skelton

Calliope music fills the air
one sad faced hobo 
seated in the comfy chair by the bed
where his lady is being filled like a Volkswagen 
by an impossible number of Bozos. 
When the big finish cums 
her face is painted
and he’s hit with a cream pie.

Willie Smith

Rainbow Yellow

Cello-mellow when Rainbow Yellow takes the cake, 
and the recluse unpacks her violin, 
while the widow keeps, on her hourglass, time. 
That night the trio played the Neptune Blues, 
Satan sat in – pitchfork open tuned; 
black satin cowboy shirt, striped pants tight zipped. 
Yellow blew her sax, like a whore in the black, 
prostitute, for once, to toot her own horn, 
alone with her love, 
enough dollies the life to change. 
Yellow’s love – in real life – stripped, 
down at the Reality Club, 
Mister Satan in perpetuity owned. 
Gail crossed over the line one night, 
let a good Christian boy huff her soiled rag; 
boy held near to Second Coming 
unholy tokes of bloody smoke.
And once the Christian glimpsed God, 
he shot poor Gail dead. 
Since God told him do it, 
the good old boy walked, charges dropped. 
Nothing more hazardous than a Baptist 
smoking a bloody clout, 
specially if with God he got clout. 
Yellow blew her heart out 
those Neptune blues. Satan Himself 
held back his customary sneer, 
eyes bright with brimstone tears,  
cleavage of his hooves 
showing through his Jesus shoes.    

From the Top Shelf: A Six Ft. Swells Anthology 2005-2025

From the Top Shelf: A Six Ft. Swells Anthology 2005-2025
Six Foot Swells Press
174 pages

An interview with Todd Cirillo

HST: Over the years both Horror Sleaze Trash (HST) and Six Ft. Swells (SFS) have published many of the same writers, including William Taylor Jr. and yourself among others. For HST readers unfamiliar with SFS, why don’t you start by introducing yourselves?

SFS: Six Ft. Swells Press is a small publishing house that specializes in After-Hours Poetry. It is poetry for truck-stops, bowling alleys, soccer moms and barrooms. We strive to create connection through common experiences, stressing an economy of language. We are attracted to lean, clear, straight forward lines that tell a story. Our philosophy is, if the poet has to explain their poem to the audience, then the poet has failed. Our goal is to make poetry accessible, interactive and fun. Poetry for non-poetry fans. It was started in 2005 by myself, Julie Valin and Matt Amott. It remains us three to this day. 

HST: Last year saw the 20th anniversary of SFS Press. How’s it feel after so many years out to sea?

SFS: Julie pointed out that it was our 20th anniversary and suggested we do some spectacular things to mark the occasion. To be honest, I didn’t get a true sense of the importance of it until I was putting the anthology together. It is like being out at sea for so long, that life just goes up and down with the waves, no real sense of time until you run aground. When going over all the poems from all the extraordinary poets over the years so many moments flooded my being. I recalled editing this poem, drinking with that poet, falling in love with that one, getting this poet published for the first time, costuming up for Mardi Gras with that one, encouraging many of them in their work. When the anthology was completed and I looked at it from 10,000 feet, so to speak….I smiled…I was truly proud ya know?

What I am really proud of is that after twenty years, we still hold true to our same poetic values and what excites us about poetry. Our books are distinct, people recognize a Six Ft. Swells Press book and, most importantly, the friendship between myself, Julie and Matt remains intact. We are poets, publishers and pirates.

HST: Tell us a bit about the latest anthology.

SFS: The anthology: From the Top Shelf: A Six Ft. Swells Anthology 2005-2025 was one of the four celebrations that we produced last year, the others included publishing Jake St. John’s book, The 13th Round, a first-ever book by myself, Julie Valin and Matt Amott: Three Poets Walk Into a Bar and we put together a huge party to launch the books in California.

The anthology was a way for us to celebrate and thank the poets and the press. It gave us an excuse to throw a party and bring old friends together or at least try to get in touch with some and find out who still speaks to us. The collection brings together the best After-Hours poets in the country. Poets who were published for the first time or are nationally known: Wolfgang Carstens, William Taylor Jr., Madeline Levy, Ann Menebroker, Bill Gainer, Amber Decker, Carey Floyd, Marilyn Souza, Jake St. John, ourselves and others. These are poets who should be read more widely. Plain and simple.

The anthology spotlights well-crafted poetry that celebrates connection whether over drinks, dreams, jukeboxes, heartbreak or first kisses. Poems meant for non-poetry lovers. The poems affect the reader and every poem is written by some of the best writers in the country. Plus, another high point of the collection is that it is a quick read.   

HST: What makes a poem “good” in your opinion?

SFS: My belief in what makes a good poem is that poems should be like a cherry bomb, providing the biggest bang with the fewest words while telling a good story. The use of common language and style to allow the reader/listener to connect and identify with that story, “hey that happened to me!” or at the very least relate to it, not be alienated from the work. A good poem is crafted and revised, like the track listing for one’s favorite album, meant to elicit big feelings from it. Lastly, my philosophy, as with Six Ft. Swells Press, is if the poet has to explain their poem to an audience, the poet has failed. 

HST: Leave us with a few poems from the anthology.

SFS: Certainly.

Pirate’s Alley
William Taylor Jr.

I’m drinking absinthe at a little table
outside a 200 year old bar in New Orleans,
blocks away from the chaos and noise
of Bourbon St. tourists.
It’s midnight in August and 100 degrees.
It’s quiet here, everything old and pretty.
A black cat with pale green eyes
sits a few feet away and looks at me
without expectation.
I raise my glass and the sweet
liquid burns my tongue a bit.
I am one with Poe and Baudelaire,
channeling the ghosts of ancient poets
as the bright indifferent moon
hangs above.
Even the man-bunned guy at the bar
with the Bermuda shorts
can’t ruin this for me.

Moving
Ann Menebroker

The memory is sweet
and embraceable.
The slow, hands-all-over dance
with the turn-on in your life
pressing lips to your soft ear.
People all around, making touch
more exciting. A soft sweater.
A rough hand.
Something in the way you move
making the room too warm.
A trumpet blowing out its
sex, confetti, falling over everyone.
The floor is too small.
The world is too big.

Wolfgang Carstens
the human animal

possesses
an uncanny ability
to justify any action
after the fact:

if the devil
didn’t make us do it,
we were drunk,
stoned
or temporarily
insane.

when all else fails,
we blame it
on love.

BUY A COPY HERE

Charles Rammelkamp

Perspective

When my friend Rodney 
showed me a poem 
about excruciating anal itch
at the age of five, his mother,
fearing pinworms, those small,
parasitic roundworms that 
infect intestines, sticking 
her finger into his anus
the poem ending, “pretending
I didn’t like it,”

I vividly remembered
my own daughter,
same age, scratching
at her own butthole,
making the same complaint,
me doing my parental duty,
and my immediate reaction,
I could be arrested for this!

I only learned later
Rodney’d been fourteen at the time –
another fresh perspective.

Ivan Jenson

Thanks But No Thanks

I have given
a damn about
you in the darndest
ways darling of mine
who shuns the only one
who ever truly cared
when your chips
and your mood
and the very sun
was down and out
in the gutter
with the roaches
and the rats
as you spiraled
into that clinical
low and had to be
triaged by a team
of doctors and nurses
who had to
resuscitate and revive
your once bright
and shining
personality
and all the while
there was me
and my big heart
and wide smile
watching over
the proceeding
and believe me
I was the one thing
you were craving
and needing
as your spirit
was bleeding
and now that
you are feeling like
you’re yourself again
you shun the only
person who showed up
in rain, wind, sleet and snow
and I can plainly see
you’ve got your groove back
just like in a tearjerker movie scene
and I can just sigh with relief
and finally say goodbye to you
my real-life Netflix drama queen 

Daniel de Culla

I LOVE AMSTERDAM

Artist unknown. Postcard purchased at the Amsterdam Flea Market.

It was March 2001, in the city of Amsterdam, “Kingdom of the Netherlands,” a rich, beautiful, and lovely city, later designated “World Book Capital” by UNESCO in 2008, renowned far and wide for its abundance of culture and sex, where the words of Saint Augustine once rang true: “Prostitutes act in the world like the bilge of a ship or the sewer of a palace: Remove the sewer, and you will fill the palace with stench. Similarly, with respect to the bilge: Remove prostitutes from the world, and you will fill it with sodomy.”

On March 21st, a Friday declared by UNESCO for the first time as “World Poetry Day” during its 30th General Conference in Paris in 1999, I traveled to a Literary Gathering that weekend, from Friday to Sunday, in Amsterdam. I was invited by World Poetry, an invitation I accepted, although I had to pay a registration fee for an identification card with a blue lanyard to wear around my neck, plus all travel, accommodation, and living expenses.

This Gathering was held under the theme “Peace and Love Through Poetry,” and poets from all over the world: Canada, China, Colombia, India, Israel, Japan, Korea, Puerto Rico, Spain (myself), Switzerland, Tunisia, and the USA—gathered to listen to and read poetry and present books. The voices of the attending poets resonated throughout the hall, their many languages translated into English throughout the day.

Among everyone present, the Koreans and Japanese stood out the most, creating a genuine connection of poetic brotherhood. We were able to listen to each other and be together united by the desire to bring about Peace and Love in the World and to change these difficult times we are living through.

On Thursday afternoon, we had our tickets and were to meet at the Met Hotel Amsterdam, 3.8 km from Vondelpark, the Van Gogh Museum, and the Moco Museum, both 4 km away. Most of the participants were staying there. I stayed at the Rembrandt Square Hotel, located in the lively Rembrandt Square, just over a 10-minute walk from Dam Square and the Rijksmuseum.

The poetry readings took place in the morning from 10:00 to 12:00. The afternoons were free for everyone to do as they pleased.

On the first day, March 21st, the presentation took place with a greeting from the Delegate for Culture of the Amsterdam City Council, thanking us for holding this Literary Encounter open to everyone and wishing us every success.

I took a moment to approach her and ask if I could meet with her the following Saturday, as I wanted to give her some gifts from my city of Burgos. She told me to come to her office at 12:30 after the poetry reading.

I did so, and she received me very kindly. I gave her a miniature figure of the Fountain of Flora and a gold-plated pin of a lady with the city’s coat of arms. She gave me a beautiful navy blue silk tie with an imperial ship embroidered in the center, which I always wear to weddings, communions, and baptisms.

She also gave me a Swiss watch, which I put on as soon as I left the City Hall, and which I later gave to a sex worker. On this first day, before noon, I read my poems from “Exquisite Poetry,” which included references to La Celestina (The Calixto and Melibea’ Loves) and Dulcinea del Toboso (Don Quixote’s platonic lover).

In the afternoon, I went to visit the high-roof barges anchored in the canals, where it’s legal to consume marijuana, hashish, magic mushrooms, and even marijuana pastries, with edible bulbs planted in large pots, and on some, to have sex; the owners encouraged you to visit the Temple of Venus, the Erotic Museum, as well as the marijuana cafes and massage parlors offering happy endings.

I resolved not to attend the Encounter again until the farewell day, Sunday.

From the first moment I started trying everything, Amsterdam tasted like sex and marijuana to me. On Saturday, after my visit to the Delegate of Culture, I spent the entire day exploring the city’s more sensual areas, such as the Red Light District, also known in Dutch as “De Wallen,” where prostitution is offered from behind windows.

Around two in the afternoon, I reached into my pocket, took out some money, gave it to a beautiful prostitute, and pulled out my penis, intending to give her three or more good stabs. But, since I was already hard, I found myself ejaculating next to the bed, unable to do anything, my semen left for the use of her establishment.

Afterwards, I had time to visit Madame Tussauds, located in Dam Square, where I spent the whole night partying with hippies and young prostitutes, to whom I said, showing them my erect penis:

-Do you want to be my girlfriend? Do you want to taste this good stuff?

They answered me, grumpily:

 -Get thee behind me, Satan!

Go to the Red Light District, or fuck off. Or suck your a dick like a dog.

I also walked past gay clubs, but I didn’t go in, not even out of curiosity; although they had some gay men and others dressed as women at the door inviting us in.

On Sunday, at ten in the morning, or maybe ten-thirty, I went to the best flea market in Amsterdam, the IJ-Hallen Market, which is the largest market in Europe and attracts visitors from all over the world. There I bought this beautiful postcard by an unknown artist, which reminds me of the service I received from a beautiful prostitute on a barge on one of the main canals; I don’t know if it was the Herengracht, Prinsengracht, or Keizersgracht, all fed by the Amstel River.

There, in the restroom, a pretty young woman was offering her cunt while sitting on the toilet. Behind three or four perverted men, who looked Chinese or Korean to me, I waited for half an hour longing for her to open her hole after cleaning her cunt with a sponge and drying it with a dish towel.

I gave her a quickie, asking her as I came:

-Bardomera, do you never let me penetrate your back hole?

She answered with a smile:

-No. This is my only position.

Before leaving, I gave her the Swiss watch that the Delegate of Culture had given me.

-Why this? she asked.

-Because I was satisfied.

The truth is that the watch had stopped around five in the morning.

Joseph C. Bernert

Summer 2013 Part 2: There Was No Moon

I packed the pipe with weed and kanna and tobacco and whatever else was close enough to fall in, scraped the blackened resin from the bowl and smoked that too. I laid outside on the lawn chair in the bastion of midnight darkness. The smoke tasted wrong, it engulfed my mouth. I laid into the chair, Hurt by Johnny Cash playing into my earbuds. I lit a hand rolled cigarette, the same lighter. I stood up and leaned downwards, stumbling to pick up the bottle of Southern Comfort. I held it in my hand, my eyes glazed over staring at the copper colored liquid. I took a swig of it and downed it with the rest of my cigarette. I stepped back inside, put on jeans and the long-sleeve shirt I laid out. I threw on my socks and put on my black boots. I dug around the shelf in the closet reaching for the flashlight. I was home alone, maybe it had been a day, maybe it had been three. Time did not matter. I locked up behind me because that’s what you do when you leave.

The air in the July summer was damp and stale. I could already feel sweat pooling under the shirt before I’d made it off the porch. The trail of smoke from my cigarette followed me down the brick path. I stumbled onto the driveway and began walking onto the road. The sweet rot of the ground and the sour edge of the booze bled through my skin. I staggered my way up the paved road. Each step I found myself trying to further catch my footing. I didn’t turn the flashlight on. I let my eyes adjust badly and continued walking. My boots dragged where I expected clear ground, catching on things I didn’t bother to look down at. Every sound came in at the wrong volume, too close or too far away, leaves scraping together, insects clicking, my own breath louder than all of it. I kept moving because slowing down just made it worse, that made me notice how shitty everything felt, how each step lagged a half second behind the decision to take it.

I put the earbuds in and let Cisfinitum run, the same low, dragging sound I’d been leaning on all summer. It didn’t push or pull, just pressed down evenly, a dull pressure that sat on top of everything else and kept it from breaking apart or coming together. The woods refused to offer me any form of silence. The sound flattened what little depth there was, smeared distance so I couldn’t tell what was close and what was farther off, and I kept slowing down to listen even though I already knew it wouldn’t help. The music didn’t match my steps or the ground or the dark, it just stayed there, heavy and continuous.

By the time I reached the dirt road towards the woods everything felt delayed. The incline walk up the dirt road up forced my footing a half step off. It made me sway until I figured out which way was up again. The music pressed harder, not louder, just heavier, and it made my head feel thick like it was packed with wet cloth. I tried walking straight and kept veering without noticing, clipping my shoulder on a tree, then another, each hit dull and irritating instead of sharp. My mouth stayed sour and dry at the same time and I kept swallowing like it would fix something. I pulled out my flask from my pocket, swishing the whiskey through my mouth. Trying to lubricate my mouth and only succeeding in burning it.

Each step upwards brought me closer to the woods. I wanted to find fear. I lit another cigarette off of the one I was smoking. My boots gnashing into the top end of the incline. The only light was the distant house lights, fluttering between trees. All of the sounds piled on top of each other and refused to separate themselves. My breath, leaves, insects, all mashed together until I couldn’t tell what I was listening for anymore. But I had made it to the start of the trail. It took longer than I had hoped.

I’d forgotten about the kratom until it was already all over me. My legs wouldn’t shut the fuck up, kept dragging me forward like they’d made their own plan and didn’t bother to loop my head in. The tea had settled all the way in by then, hot and jittery in my muscles. But it kicked wrong, like the gas pedal was stuck while the rest of me was stalling out. My engine was on fire and my thoughts had stripped thin, drenched in paint thinner and a shitty off brand naphtha. There was no weight to them, my thoughts slid off before I could grab hold, but my body kept grinding along anyway, boots chewing dirt. I’d speed up without meaning to, then hit a wall inside my head and slow down hard, standing there swaying while my legs twitched like they were pissed at me for stopping.

The path bled out of the trees in pieces. It was pitch dark and I could not triangulate where I was going. I kept losing my way and finding some part of it again, packed dirt where other people’s feet had worried it down and then nothing but leaves and roots. I trenched on further, until I didn’t, I stepped off without meaning to and didn’t bother correcting, branches brushing my face, catching in my hair, snapping back into place behind me. When I reached the oak tree, I ran my fingers up and down its dead dark. It was stripped and crooked. I collapsed underneath it because my legs were pulsating and I needed them to shut the fuck up for a few minutes.

I pressed my back against the trunk, drank again from my flask, and lit another cigarette. I tried to stay steady, but my hands would not stop shaking. I pulled the flash light out of my pocket and clicked it on. I realized in my stupor that I had not checked if I changed the batteries since I left. The beam jittered, washed over the ground, over my boots, over the tree, and I killed it again as soon as I knew it worked. I left a piece of fruit at the base of the oak without looking where it landed, missed the spot I thought I was aiming for, and didn’t fix it. It was tradition to leave some sort of offering to the giant dead oak.

I pushed forward through the haze of low hanging cigarette smoke. The sour burning taste of cheap whiskey engulfed my taste and nostrils. The sound in my ears kept dragging everything down into the same thick, wet stillness. I kept the flashlight dead and drifted where the ground let me, where it didn’t argue too hard. The darkness never looked as it should, it was  not empty, nor full, it just crowded in a way I couldn’t oscillate. I walked into branches I should’ve seen coming, bark scraping my arms, leaves slapping my face and then disappearing like they hadn’t been there at all. Sounds kept firing off half-formed and out of order, something skittering, something heavier shifting and then stopping, and every time I turned toward it I felt late, like I’d missed the cue by a second and now the whole thing had reset without me. I tried to slow down, tried to move quieter, and just ended up louder. My boots crunched into fallen leaves and brackish dirt.

I lost track of how I was moving. I started cutting angles that didn’t add up, circling back on myself without meaning to until the same brush snagged me twice. Any form of balance kept slipping in and out, feet landing wrong, knees locking up to keep me from going down, my hands coming up uselessly like there was something to grab. I kept thinking I heard breathing that wasn’t mine and then realizing it was mine, too fast and too close, and that didn’t make it better. Every time I focused hard enough to try and pin a sound down, everything else crowded in, insects, leaves, my own steps, all of it mashed together until I couldn’t tell what I was reacting to anymore.

I went farther in just because my feet kept taking me there. I told myself it was on purpose, like I was testing something, but that didn’t stay put long enough to matter. I kept waiting for fear to show up and do something to me, flip a switch, knock the air out of my chest, anything sharp enough to register. It didn’t. I walked deeper anyway, then turned around without knowing why and walked back the way I’d just come, then stopped and changed direction again, paranoia flashing up and dying off before it could settle on anything real. The woods wouldn’t line up into a scare or a quiet, just stayed noisy in the wrong way, a low static that made every step feel wrong right after I took it. I tripped on something and almost went down, caught myself hard and stood there wobbling, heart kicking like it was about to matter. Nothing followed. I didn’t slow down. I didn’t try to be careful. I kept pushing through the dark, eyes scraping for a shape or a break that never showed, irritated all over again when there was nothing there, annoyed at myself for still expecting the dark to finally do something different.

This place used to make sense to me. I’d come out here before and it felt like space, like somewhere you could move without being watched. That feeling was gone now, or maybe I was. Things had already started slipping before this, I just didn’t know how to mark when it happened. The house was gone. The one that was supposed to mean something. My mother was still there but not really, her mind breaking off in pieces I couldn’t follow. School had already closed its door. Welding, gone. That part of me gone with it. None of it lined up cleanly in my head, it just pressed in all at once, heavy and sour, like standing too close to something burning. Being sober made it louder than I could handle. Weed stopped doing the job by itself. It had to be cut with other things, bent out of shape, made worse on purpose. I wasn’t trying to feel better. I was trying to feel less like myself.

I caught myself leaning on a tree in the darkness. In a daze. Lost in thought. It was when the light shone upon me in pieces, warm flashes breaking across my back and shoulders. I turned too late and saw it up on the hill, a bright white beam held above me, and a person behind it I couldn’t make out, just a shape standing there looking down. I pushed myself off the tree and drunkenly staggered, my legs kicked like a flooded transmission forcing me up straight. I fumbled for the flashlight, fingers thick with cigarette residue. I clicked it on and pointed it uphill toward the light. My arms shook enough to make the beam unsteady. Was this what I was looking for? I pleaded with my mind, begged for it. But there was no fear. No sense of dread. Every survival sense had been flooded with drugs. I had burned out my flight or fight response. I just stood there. My flash light shining on the figure on the hill. Neither of us said anything. Our beams crossed and hung in the damp air.

After what seemed like an eternity, I dropped my arm, turned the light the other way, and continued further downhill. I killed my flash light and kept walking. I remain unaware if it was my disappointment or my finger that turned off the flashlight. Their light stayed on me for a second or two longer, long enough to feel it on my back again, and then it slid off somewhere else, leaving me walking blind like nothing had happened.

At the bottom of the hill the ground went soft and wet and I walked into it anyway. My boots sank a little with every step, pulled at me, made me work harder than I wanted to, and that alone felt insulting. I kept expecting something to rise up out of it, some shape, some thing that would finally justify how far I’d gone, and nothing did. No monster. No animal. Just me, slogging forward, full of that heavy, useless feeling that sat behind my eyes and wouldn’t move. The disappointment came on slow and stupid, thickening with every step, like the effort itself was feeding it. I thought about laying down and letting the water take me, letting the mud close over my boots and then the rest of me, just to see if it would. I drank what was left in the flask instead. It burned and didn’t help. I kept moving through the marsh because stopping felt worse, because even sinking forward beat standing still and feeling how empty it all was.

Time was fucked by then. I didn’t know where I was and I didn’t have anything on me that could tell me. The iPod was dead. The flashlight wasn’t there. I checked the pocket again anyway. Even if it had been, there was nothing to shine it on that would’ve made it click. I kept moving because that’s what I always did, because the ground always sorted it out eventually if I didn’t interfere. That idea stuck for a second and I realized I’d used it before. A lot. Kitchens. Zukey Lake. Hamburg Pub. Boomers. In and out, over and over, days blurring, jobs ending without really starting. Direction felt thin, like it had been rubbed down to nothing. Every way I tried collapsed into the same flat nothing. I kept walking because stopping felt heavier.

The alcohol was gone before I noticed it leaving. What was left was the buzzing, the tight ache behind my eyes, that flat, dry pressure that meant I was mostly sober again whether I wanted to be or not. I kept moving through the dark anyway, trees sliding past in pieces, the forest breathing around me without rhythm. There was nothing overhead. No moon. No stars. I remember tilting my head back like that might change something, like maybe there’d be a crack in it somewhere, some light leaking through I hadn’t caught yet. There wasn’t. The dark stayed solid. I sat down without deciding to, then tipped the rest of the way over and let the leaves take me. I don’t remember choosing to sleep. I just stopped holding myself up.

My eyes opened to darkness. No sunrise. No birds. I pushed myself up. I began walking again. The trees broke in places and through them I caught the occasional square of yellow light from a house farther off, someone else awake or not bothering to turn anything off, but it didn’t tell me much. I kept trudging through the woods not fast and not careful. The ground smoothed out in stretches and then fell apart again, and I followed whatever gave the least resistance, cutting through brush, stepping over fallen limbs, correcting only when my feet forced it.

The ground evened out into a paved road. Trees pulled back just enough for the air to thin and the dirt under my boots went from soft and grabby to hard and pressed flat by tires. The path didn’t turn into anything else. I stood there for a moment, then another, waiting out of habit more than curiosity, and nothing came of it. I fished out my lighter and found my last cigarette. I limped the road back the way I knew it went. I wanted my mind to be empty, but it kept screaming at me. It kept telling me that I had no worth and no value. It kept telling me I was a failure. I kept looking back, not out of habit, but because the drug come down was amplifying the paranoia. Nothing followed me. No headlights passed. The road stayed empty.

When the house came back into view it looked the same as when I’d left it, dark and shut up. I unlocked the door, stepped inside, locked it again, and set the keys back where they belonged so I wouldn’t have to think about them later. I grabbed a bottle of water from the case by the door and drank it without stopping, then opened another and finished that one too. My mouth still tasted wrong but it dulled it enough. I didn’t turn on any lights I didn’t need. I went into the bathroom, furiously brushed my teeth, and laid down in the shower with the water running. The heat stayed steady, the steam evaporated the filth off of my skin. I crawled out of the shower and passed out naked across the hallway floor. 

Eric Robert Nolan

Confession

Poetry is
pornography for the heart,
lust in the lexicon.
It is ever The Nude Girl.

At its best,
it renders white pages into flesh tones and dark downy darts
between legs.
It renders text
into sex.
Mouthing the round words curved by assonance
renders them as breasts.
The firmer consonants
slide against the tongue like areola.

And I like it like that – it should be lewd and low.
It should be stuffed under mattresses, hidden in pockets,
and, at first, glimpsed furtively
when no one is looking.
Part of me will never want
to show poems to my mother.

Catholic school nuns
Persuade their victims by rote:
“Our Father, Who Art in Heaven,
“Hallowed be Thy Name,”
but vulgar little boys like me
hallowed the sounds of vowels
and clutched at consonants privately.

The Sisters were moving towers —
black masts sailing
up and down between the desks.
Their paddles fell like falling spires
against the inattentive.
“Jesus loves me, this I know.
“The grownups hurt my knuckles, though.”
Curious boys will always
eye the girls in the even rows.

I, low,
nursed my favorite heresies in whispers —
paganism in the pages —
and easily adopted other Gods.
I, a secret Heathen,
Took Poe’s “Raven”
as my inner golden calf.

And poetry
nurses the Sin of Wrath.
At my desk I told myself
in inner ceremonies
I privately hoped
I’d someday pick the perfect words
To finally tell God
I never loved him either.

Jay Passer

Daiquiri

The music pounded through the floor. It was a constant. Up through the floor, down from the ceiling, 1990, Seattle, Casa del Rey, Broadway, Capitol Hill. I was fresh as a steaming a.m. turd, relocated from San Fran, 24 years virile and ready to fuck the world. Tats on the fingers and all. I’d been inhabiting the studio apartment all the way in the back on the first floor with avocado green walls and view overlooking the building’s garbage receptacles and the Seafirst bank parking lot for several months – with time being non-linear and such, the struggle to differentiate is palpable – head in the clouds, or buried underground – brain like fried fish, or submerged in a public toilet… I only knew a couple people in the building. Cheap rent, wastrels, subverts, a carnival lodging splat in the thick. The I-don’t-know-who up there hammering at his drum kit day and night, like a series of earthquake tremors… I run up the stairs ready to raise hell, bam-bam-bam! on the door, which after a beat flies open with a Rastafarian linebacker filling up the doorframe, and I’m all, uh, yeah, so you’re a drummer, huh? Cool, like, holy shit and stuff, you hit really hard, man, like John Bonham on steroids, I mean, uh, y’know? Shaking a bit, I must admit. The dude was a fucking leviathan. But apparently with the power of Jah coursing through him. Yah, man, no problem, I can tone it down some. Peace. And he closed the door so gently you’d think a little infant baby was sleeping in there. Well fuck me, I thought. I went back to the avocado walls and the desk scavenged from the alley behind Broadway. And my ancient 1940s-in-the-Bowery manual typewriter. Because I was a poet and I had to make my own noise and as unmusical as it was clack-clacking away like a tiny locomotive in my head it calmed the demons and lubricated my ego like Crisco on a stale biscuit. The swish across the hall aptly cracked, oh, that’s just Monsieur Ivan hard at work on the next Great American Novel. That’s ATM, girl. Party every night at mi Casa es su Casa, ATM the unofficial aficionado. A tall thin Greek specimen with the blackest, longest, curliest tresses I’d ever seen on a man. Oh, honey, they’re not real, he lisped. They’re extensions!It’s what he did, his active career. Apparently, a vast percentage of the coifs of the early Seattle grunge movement were the product of ATM’s hair-tying abilities. You actually make money doing that? I make bank, little man, as he reached out to finger my side-locks appraisingly. What I could do with your pe’ot, sweetie… Dude! Get the fuck! ATM whinnied. I vowed to shave my head as soon as I could get my greasy Sephardic hands on some clippers. Later in the night, after several beers and multiple hits of pot, I asked ATM why his parents named him after a cash machine. You poor thing, he pouted, it’s Etienne, EH-TEE-EN, get it? En francais. You vulgar little man you. Etienne had a nice friend that lived in the basement apartment right beneath mine, under the stairs. Her name was Daiquiri and in the same sentence with the straightest face imaginable Etienne added, and her sister’s name is Brandy. You gotta be fucking kidding me I said. Welcome to Seattle, Monsieur! Daiquiri was the first bona-fide grunge groupie I’d come across. Repurposed print dresses from Betsey Johnson’s, honking Doc Marten’s, kinky hair past her waist of every conceivable tint and pigmentation, expertly tied by the deft digits of St Etienne. Not to mention generously doused from head to toe with patchouli oil. Daiq, hot street-smart cross between Raggedy-Ann and Goth Barbie. I didn’t want to love her because she stank and treated me like a little brother when really, I was probably 3 or 4 years older. Oh Eye, she sighed, oh Eye, you’re such a good friend. She’d try to read one of my skittish ditties, her eyes attempting to focus with great pains. She simply couldn’t. I’d read it out loud while she, happily relieved of the effort, smoked a cigarette. She’d light a joint. She’d sip a fruity concoction. She’d light a pipe. Several pipes. Weed? Kif? Dank? Why not? But Daiq preferred crack. Her patchouli aroma was amply spiced with acrid permeations of tart, chic, swank, chi chi, decay, decomposition, death. Oh Eye, she’d sigh. Up on the roof, on dilapidated lawn furniture, we partied through the summer – in the pit of the avocado, at Etienne’s pad – the replica of a Salvation Army thrift store’s window display – spilling over onto the granite stoop of the Casa del Rey – the carnival of our nation’s happening musical hub bop-bopping by on Broadway. I was the good friend who naturally wanted to fuck my good friend Daiq who was, naturally, a fucking junkie. But did I really want to fuck a junkie? Granted, Daiquiri had all the requisite hotness covered: length, curves, youth, hipness, surface gaiety, childlike naïveté – attributes to exploit and annihilate. Such traits in the female species, presented on a silver platter, perhaps in a state of delirium, or altogether unconscious… I could just… I would just… ahem. But to repeat. The music pounded up through the floorboards, up, through my thin futon mat, into my earholes and sonically attuned body, with a thick thumping bass that vibrated my bones. I leaped up despite the time – day, night – I was as unaware as a temporarily unemployed person could be, attuned not to the Gregorian but to depths of shadow, incomparable values, black ‘n fucking white, drunk-ass plaid, bleak and snap, dying, crying, wiggling, jerking, spurting, bleeding, vomiting, dreaming. I leapt up across the room out the door down the stairs. At Daiq’s door I pounded. If I couldn’t pound Daiquiri I sure as shit could pound on her door. Daiquiri was dead to the world. I tried the knob. Unlocked. Well, shit. I pushed it open and entered, shoving aside piles of clothes, shoes, a smorgasbord of bric-a-brac, made my way to her bed, a Victorian wrought-iron contrivance. I spied a naked, pale white foot with toenails painted canary yellow. I clutched. I pulled. I yanked. I shook. Not dead. Undead. I mounted the bed and crawled across Daiq’s inert form to the headboard shelving where the boombox was booming. Daiquiri never knew I was there. What did you expect, darling? Etienne simpered – a come-hither invite to dip into her Victoria’s Secret-clad honey-pot? You silly little man you.