Matt Mercado

The Worst (Attempted) One Night Stand of My Life

I hadn’t been laid in some time and had learned that bachelor life was a complete fraud. For six months, it had been me drinking alone at night, sitting there like a monk who’d just discovered the treasure trove of internet porn. One night I landed on Beyond the Valley of the Ultra Milkmaids. A film, apparently, about art and culture. This was a new all time low. So when I found myself drunk on beer, smoking fruity flavored cigarettes, in Mexico, in bed, with a woman, it was naturally an accomplishment.

“Do you want to get naked?” I asked.

“You’re so strange.”
“Why?”
“What the hell kind of question is that?”

“What’s wrong with it?”

“You just phrase things very strangely,” she explained, “but yes.”

She got naked first. She stood at the edge of the bed. Long black hair. Olive skin. She was big. And not in the sense that she was fat. No. She was five feet and a hundred and twenty pounds of pure body. Big tits. Big ass. She was big where it mattered. Then it was my turn. I got undressed erratically. I took off my shirt. I took off my pants. I took off my underwear. I threw everything somewhere. Then there I was. Naked. Hard. Immediately.

“Look at me,” I said. “I’ve got this weird veiny curved thing. It does all sorts of tricks. You’ll get a kick out of it.”

She looked. “Wow!”

“That’s all you’ve got to say?” I asked. “Look at it. It’s so ugly.”

Then she climbed onto the bed with me. She was not shy about it. Nakedness was nothing to her, and I was the only one making the whole thing strange.

“Are you sure you can handle me?” she asked.

“I’ve been with a few women here and there,” I said. “And some of them were very crazy. This shouldn’t be a problem.”

“Maybe,” she said. “But you’ve never had anyone like me.”

“No?”

“What the hell does that mean?”

“It means I’m passionate and loyal,” she said. “But if you cheat on me, I’ll cut your dick off.”

She looked over at me and made a little snipping sound with her mouth. Then she grabbed my cock and kept doing it. Snip snip. Snip snip. She seemed very amused by the whole thing, which was troubling, considering what she was holding. I had just been threatened with losing my dick, and somehow my only thought was that Lorena Bobbitt had never looked so good. 

Then I mounted her. I’d imagined this moment many times over. I was going to be the kind of man who took control and said things like, “Many a woman has tried to saddle this bull, but none has come close.” I took every lonely night, every poorly scripted romance film, every accumulated ounce of bachelor frustration, and drove it into the mechanical act of sex. Thirty seconds and twenty strokes later, I fell to her side.

“It’s been a while, hasn’t it?” she asked.

“Yes,” I said. “But who cares if there’s a little rust?”

She sat up and smiled.

“Look,” she said. “I’m going to teach you about the body of a woman.”

“Alright. I’m listening.”

She spread her legs open.

“Pay attention.”

“Noted.”

“See this?” she said, pointing. “Those are the lips. They don’t do much.”

“And then this,” she said, going lower, “is where you go in.”

“I knew that one.”
“Congratulations.”

“And this right here,” she said, pointing at the little ball. “That’s the clit.”

“Oh, this is great!” I shouted.

“Why are you so excited?”

“The clit,” I said. “The fucking clit. I finally found it.”
“That’s good. I guess?”

There had been many great explorers. Amundsen had reached the South Pole. Nansen had crossed Greenland. Hillary had reached Everest. Armstrong had reached the moon. But for thousands of years, men had searched for something far greater. And now I’d found it. The clit.

“You better not forget this,” she said. “I’m giving you gold here.”
“I won’t.”

A little while later, we were outside. Still drinking and still smoking. Still naked. We talked about things for a while. She was a traditional lover girl. A deep believer in soulmates, marriage, and the general idea that two people could belong to each other forever. But this wasn’t Manifest Destiny type shit, and I was a guru of pessimism. I believed in right person wrong time, ulterior motives, and people eventually showing their true colors. 

“Don’t start,” I said.

“You never like to talk about your problems.”

“I do talk about them.”

“No. You just mention them then change the subject.”

“It’s easier that way. If I talk about them I just get bent all out of shape.”

“You onion,” she yelled. “You fucking onion. I’m going to take a knife to every one of your layers.” 

Then she grabbed me by the shoulders and pretended to stab me.

“Just tell me,” she said. “What’s your tragedy?”

“My tragedy?”

“Yes. Everyone has one.”
“I don’t like relationships.”

“Why?”

“I’m just not very good at them,” I explained. “I’ve been lied to, cheated on, used. But I’ve also done my share of lying, cheating, and using. So I get jealous. I expect things to go wrong, and when they don’t, I figure they will soon, so I help them along.”

“Then what do you want?”

“I don’t know about being alone. I just don’t want all the complications of a relationship.”

I was a better lover than a boyfriend and a better boyfriend in theory than in practice. The more serious things became, the worse I was at them. Meeting the family. Making plans. Answering questions about the future. I couldn’t stand that major league bullshit. 

“I’m a simple man. All I want is a woman I can eat with, sleep with, and sit in silence with, interrupted by the occasional burst of laughter.”
“That isn’t unreasonable.”
“It always becomes more than that. Then you’re depending on each other and making promises and planning your life around something where anyone could walk out whenever they wanted.”

“You think everyone is going to abandon you.”

“I know they can.”

“And that scares you.”

“It pisses me off.”

She went quiet. I grabbed another beer from the box, cracked the bad boy open, and took a long swig. Then I lit a cigarette and slammed the lighter on the table.

“Imagine coming home to nothing but the stink of dishes rotting in the sink while your woman walks out on you every fucking night. You ask where she’s going and she tells you not to worry. You ask when she’ll be back and she doesn’t know. Then you sit there alone and wait for her anyway.”

“I wouldn’t do that to you.”
“I’ve heard that a million times before.”

Then she told me how she was loyal. That she would never cheat. That she wanted something real and wouldn’t disappear when things became difficult. I had an answer for every one of them. I told her I’d heard loyal from the lot lizards, forever from the runaways, and I love you from the loveless.

“I could take care of you,” she said. “Help you. Lighten the burden.”

“I can’t trust that, I just can’t. Because in the moment I need you is the moment you can destroy me.”

“I’m not going to destroy you.”

“I’m not saying you will.”

“Yes, you are. You’ve already decided what kind of person I am.”

“I’m trying to be honest with you.”

“So am I. But every time I tell you how I feel, you tell me why I’m probably lying.”

“I don’t think you’re lying.”

“You just think I’ll become the liar later.”

“Maybe.”
“This isn’t fair.”

“I know.”

“Then what am I supposed to do?”

“I don’t know.”
“Believe me. Stop making me answer for every woman who came before me.”

“Trust me. I’m trying.”

She looked away and smoked for a while.

“I can’t keep proving something I haven’t done,” she said.

“I’m not asking you to.”

“You are. Every time I tell you I care about you, you don’t believe me.”

I chugged the rest of the beer and set the bottle beside the chair. Then I punched out my cigarette on the floor.

“I don’t know how to do this any differently,” I said.

“You could let me help.”
“And if you leave?”

“Then I leave. But I’m here now.”

I looked at her. She was angry, probably frustrated too. She had small tears welting up in the corners of her eyes she wouldn’t let fall.

“I don’t want you to leave,” I said.

“Then stop pushing me away.”

“I don’t know if I can stop.”
“I’m not asking you to change tonight.”

She wiped her eyes and reached for another cigarette. I took it from her, lit it, and handed it back. I wasn’t a fan of change. The status quo was safe. I knew how to sleep alone, eat alone, sit up drinking after anyone else had gone to bed. There was comfort in knowing exactly what the next day would look like, even when it looked like shit.

The next few days were easy. We ate when we were hungry, slept when we were tired, and could sit outside drinking and smoking without needing constant noise. She remembered how I took my coffee and always handed me the first cigarette from a new pack. She was dangerously close to completing the dream of the ideal woman.

A few days later, she drove me to the airport. Neither of us knew when we’d see each other again, if ever at all. There were countries between us, separate lives to return to, and all the complications I had spent the night telling her I didn’t want. 

“If this is where it ends, I understand,” I said.

“And you’re alright with that?”

“I’ll be alright.”

“There you go again.”

“No,” I said. “I’d rather it didn’t end.”

She held me for a while. And I kissed her lips and looked into those coffee brown eyes one more time. Then I picked up my suitcase and walked into the airport. But it didn’t end there. We kept calling, kept visiting, and slowly I stopped pretending that whatever existed between us was temporary. There were the laughs and the fights and the eating together, some sleeping together.

What had started out as a solution to six months of non action, and a good excuse to put almost a thousand miles between me and my problems, became something unexpected and, at first, unwanted. It’s been almost a year since our attempted one night stand. We’re engaged now. The wedding is planned for next year.

Jade McGregor

Fun with Nick and Jane

I am fucking David Foster Wallace’s dead body when Jane asks me if she can covalently bond with Donald Barthelme. I say absolutely not, immediately recalculate, plot the dosage of Zoloft against the balance of Quetiapine, decide why the hell not. 

When I arrive home, Nick is pissed. I point out that Jane is already being fucked by a white person and has a well-established history of clinical depression and prodromal syndromes. Nick is not impressed. Nick punches me in the cunt. Brian says the next time I see her, tell Jane fuck you, because he sewed her button back on her coat the other day and she never said thank you. 

Myriam wants to take off my pants, and I say no. I look for Kristina Born—Kristina is nowhere to be found and will not respond to my friend request, either. Nick tells me he saw Jane and Myriam on the bus; he misses Jane. I probe him for further information—probe being the psychotherapeutic term for “encourage more speech”—and determine that he has mistaken Carolyn for Myriam, which makes more sense. 

I read nonfiction after Carolyn’s play, still bitching about my parents and the unfairness of DNA and the exponentially marginalizing structures of epigenetics, not to mention the socio-commercial use of scientific survival in creating selfhood-crippling evolutionarybrainwashing mechanisms. I miss half of Jane’s piece because I am busy trying to relieve myself of interpersonal unease and uric acid and other phenomena my body cannot absorb. Myriam does not come, although she was invited. 

Afterwards, I find the nearest funhouse and fuck Leonard Cohen and F., my orgasm ripping on and on over the treetops like a nitrous-oxide gunshot, a manic balloon ejaculating across the horizon.

Martin Appleby

Paint-By-Numbers

Sometimes when reading poetry
I feel like a grumpy old man
scoffing at abstract art, declaring
“a child could have done that”

Lines and stanzas
pass over my head like
encrypted codes 
I cannot crack

Somebody recently read my book
and described my writing as
“the antidote for pretentious,
indecipherable poetry”

I’ll take that

My poems may be more 
paint-by-numbers than Jackson Pollock
but at least you’re picking up
what I’m putting down

Right?

HSTQ: Spring 2026

horror, adj. inspiring or creating loathing, aversion, etc.

sleaze, adj. contemptibly low, mean, or disreputable

trash, n. literary or artistic material of poor or inferior quality

Welcome to HSTQ: Spring 2026, the curated collection from Horror, Sleaze and Trash!

Featuring poetry by Gabriel Bates, Willie Smith, Eric Robert Nolan, Donna Dallas, Charles Rammelkamp, Salvatore Difalco, William Taylor Jr., Dmitriy Kogan, Damon Hubbs, Daniel de Culla, James Callan, Casey Renee Kiser, M.P. Powers, Andy Seven, John Yohe, Wolfgang Carstens, Ronan Barbour, Ben Newell, Taryn Allan, Arthur Graham, and Todd Cirillo.

FREE EBOOK HERE

Todd Cirillo

A Sacred Space

There is something comforting
in the hum of people and the jukebox music
of a Friday night.
A liquor lullaby
that can soothe and strip away
the pain of the week 
and the disappointment of the world.
Like that soft return to the womb
people talk about after they have taken
a weekend yoga or regression therapy retreat—

but much drunker.

James Callan

Beautiful Head

An opulence of cock
champagne foam
down the shaft
A bounty of boobs
and caramel thighs
caught in fishnet fabric
bursting with butt
pulsing with need
a moving muscle
in my pocket.
Crystals and mirrors
smoke and scents
perfume and sweat
Sit on my lap—
can you feel it?
Techno beats
and sweet teats
disigner heels
on woolly feet.
Love that shade
on your lips
around my finger
on my schlong
and the rings are cold
like your ice blue eyes
that you insist are green.
Can we get a second opinion?
Okay, so they’re green.
I get lost in those eyes
getting lost in the heat
of the moment
and the throng of
limbs and giant asses
bumping my legs
and concussing your
beautiful head.

Casey Renee Kiser

I’ll Take Disco Inferno for $500

Remember when you pushed me off a cliff?
I do. I survived 
and thrived. And even came back 
to thank you.

I waited a while by your coffin. I waited
for you to get over your fear
of coming out:
showing your TRUE FORM

And when you finally stuck out
a rotted arm to test
the safety of the moon; the star sass,
the bat-friendly atmosphere, wondering
if you could grab a quick BLOOD BEER
(….creak….) is it late enough???

I slammed the last nail right in!
And I would’ve pushed you
in that coffin
off that same cliff. But I was kinda done
with giving FREE RIDES

Mother, won’t you listen
to my bedtime story, since you’re
LOCKED IN FOR THE NIGHT

That burn box you sent me–
I return the flames to sender! Surely,
you remember popping me out
Year of The Dragon. If you wanna talk
fire,
I’m your girl. I’ll even GET OUT
the disco ball.

***

Alex S. Johnson

The Way of the Raccoon

The raccoon placed his paws on the table. Above him, a single naked lightbulb swayed.

“Cigarette?” asked Detective Joe Oroborus.

“Man, you guys are old school. No thanks,” said the raccoon.

“According to a witness statement, you were last seen in the vicinity of the thermite bomb attack wherein…”

“Hello? Excuse me? Do I look like I’m capable of setting off thermite?” He directed their attention to his paws. “Opposable thumbs, see any?”

“Well, no, but…”

“Thank you.”

“Not so fast, clever Sam,” said Joe’s partner, Sweetback Glide. “Also according to the witness, you’re an anthropomorphic fantasy character. Gripping never poses any obstacle for you guys. Am I right?”

“Well…”

“Oh, lighten up,” said Joe.

“You lighten up.”

“Fuck you, man. Just, fuck you.”

“Excuse me,” said the raccoon, “but aren’t you two taking the Good Cop/Bad Cop thing into new and perilous territory? And unless you have any actual evidence against me, I demand you release me. I have garbage to root through.”

“The last time you rooted through garbage, it was under your alter ego ‘Dr. Racky,’ and it was medical waste…specifically, embryos. You were planning a new race of gene-tweaked super-raccoons with opposable thumbs. Admit it! Admit it under oath!”

“Know the rules of evidence much?” asked the raccoon.

“Huh?”

“You heard me. I demand to speak with my solicitor. This outrage has gone far enough. This trial is out of order. This whole proceeding is whacky to the 9th degree. Justice! Justice!”

“You can’t handle the justice,” said Glide.

“I’m not saying anything until you hook me up with some justice,” said the raccoon sulkily.

“But we’re straying from the point,” said Joe. “We need to focus on the main theme, not this pie in the sky malarkey. You, sir, are a rootin’ tootin’ criminal of the first water!”

“Objection!” screamed the raccoon. “I so fucking object!”

“He’s got a point,” said Glide. “We need to stick to the facts. Nothing but. I shared a cell with a raccoon once and they’re very factual.”

“But…”

“I was on the inside for a very specific reason, undercover, to expose that gang of anime characters…the Big Eyes Bunch. They were planning to hold the manga genre hostage unless their demands for panty porn and tentacle action were met in spades. I mean literal spades.”

“But that’s just…overtly surreal,” said Joe.

“Spot on,” said Glide. “You’ll make a fine detective one day.”

“One day? I was doing detective spade work in the garden of earthly delights long before you poked about in your mother’s womb…looking for the good nutrition angle. I was…”

“Crap, utter crap,” howled the raccoon.

“What is it now?”

“I’m walking right out of this pop stand and you can’t stop me. Then I’ll keep walking until I find some garbage, and if it does happen to consist of embryos, so much the worse for the sting operation, because…I’ll make those clones anyway. I’ll hybridize, I’ll gene-tweak, and I’ll keep going until I have that army they warned you about in the slammer. Yes, doggo frens, I’m talking about the last army you see before you wake up in a pool of your own freckles…rubbed off forever…”

“The mind boggles,” said Joe suddenly. “This suspect is a lot weirder than both of us working together, very hard and very fast. He’s got it all over us. I say we pardon him and let the next set of detectives work the clones over.”

“Very good, sir.”

A sudden tendency to microfinetune quantum reality resulted in the outsourcing of this story temporarily to Swedish biker cranksters.

George Gad Economou

Bar Fights And Repercussions

“the fuck’s going on?” I asked the bartender as I climbed
on my barstool; the only one left unoccupied in the crowded
bar by the port.
“some military ship docked today; Americans,” she replied, while
running around filling up mugs of green beer.
“fuck,” I spat under my breath. to her credit, she ignored several
jumping thirsty guys to get me my triple Four Roses and large draft beer.
after a swig that emptied half the lowball, and after lighting a cigarette,
I looked over my shoulder at the barroom. all the small tables were covered
with empty mugs and bottles of beer, and swaying, slurring young men
were clinking glasses and making grandiose proclamations about
their manhood and their conquests. ten women, all in barely-there outfits,
entertained the tables, accepting free drinks and grabbing crotches, telling
big lies about what they were feeling up. Jeanette was one of them; surrounded
by three bulky young men; young enough
to look like they should be sent back to junior high.
I chugged my remaining drink, and the buxom bartender, whose name I could
never fucking remember, poured more Four Roses over the ice cubes that
hadn’t had time to melt.
“it’s her job,” she reminded me, I guess because she saw some
red coloring my cheeks.
“I know,” I grumbled and kept my gaze focused on my drink.
“you ain’t no sailor, are ya?” the young man next to me said; also with a buzz cut, and
clean-shaven, too fucking young to be out in the world without parental
supervision. I was long-haired, with a full beard, in a dirty t-shirt and a worn-out
leather jacket.
“what gave it away?” I asked.
“I thought this was a bar only for sailors.”
“it is. I’m just the local barfly with special privileges.”
“what makes you so special?” he pursued. he was looking for a fight.
I lit a cigarette, and blew a plume of blue smoke on his face.
my regular haunt, where I could get a backup of fifteen bloodthirsty bikers
was several blocks away; and I didn’t have any phone numbers.
I didn’t care. Jeanette was getting harassed by three morons, while another
moron was trying to pick up a fight.
“look, kid,” I said. “you want to fight, go pick on one of your drunk friends. I’m
not getting entangled in your bullshit.”
“we’re out here protecting your godless country,” he said. “I won’t fight my brothers.”
“go fight Commies, then, if you can find them. the Soviet Union collapsed
long before your parents even thought about having a kid.”
“you’re a fucking Commie,” he accused me.
“quit yelling, or you’re out,” the bartender threatened him; I raised my glass at her.
“fuck you,” he told her. “the only reason you’re serving drinks is because you’re
way too ugly to be a whore.”
without thinking, I put my hand on the back of his head and used his face to smash his beer mug.
he started wailing like a little kid that got stung by a bee,
holding on to his face as blood started painting his fingers crimson.
I barely managed to finish my drink before several of his buddies
dragged me off my barstool and started stomping me.
I was drunk enough to take the pain, and high enough not to
remember much of how more than a dozen combat boots
made sure not an inch of my body and head remained intact.
I lay on the floor, a bloody, broken mess, when the bartender
called for backup, a couple of bouncers, to remove
all the assholes. they helped me up, I got a free Four Roses,
and Jeanette abandoned her suitors to come to me.
“are you okay?” she asked, her hazel eyes emanating worry, and perhaps
even affection.
“I’ve survived worse,” I mumbled. even touching the brim of my lowball with
my swollen lips was painful. at least, a good gulp helped numb the pain.
“come on, I’m taking you to my place. you need to rest.”
I didn’t resist when she put her arm around my waist and led me out
of the bar, under the murderous glares of the rest of the sailors.
“why did you have to get into a fight?”
“the little fucker insulted the bartender,” I explained.
“you just cost me a lot of money,” she said.
“you know I can’t pay for that.”
“and you know I don’t care.”
she was a Florence Nightingale in a whore costume, and that
was why I really liked her.
we reached her apartment—she had to drag my carcass up the
staircases—and she tossed me onto the couch.
“thanks,” I said when she gave me a brimful lowball of cheap bourbon.
“drink up, this is gonna hurt,” she said and without another warning
started rubbing an alcohol-soaked rag on my bloody face.
I flinched, winced, and drank, trying to hold back the tears.
“it was a very brave, and stupid, thing to do,” she said, and kissed my
swollen lips.
“emphasis on stupid, huh?”
“you think she hasn’t heard worse?”
“probably from better,” I chuckled dryly.
“exactly.”
she kissed my lips again, and for a few moments we just
stared into each other’s eyes. she was a prostitute; I was a drunkard.
we should have been a match made in heaven.
it was never meant to be.
however, for that one night, the night she decided to take care of me
instead of taking home paying customers, we truly became one—thankfully,
none of the fuckers that beat the shit out of me attacked my dick and balls.
after I finished my drink, in two gulps, she took me to
her bed; there, she showed me that chivalry is still rewarded.
I had cracked ribs, two strained arms, and potentially a concussion.
if I had died while sleeping on her squeaking bed, after coming inside her,
I’d have died a happy man. I didn’t die. death doesn’t want me.
the devil has ensured I live to be a hundred just to avoid me.
I woke up, hungover and beaten up. she made me
coffee, then I had to go home to get drunk.

Patrick Carella

Swallowed Whole

The leviathan parks itself outside my apartment.

No engine hum. No warning. Just there.

Every night, the same: a flicker of streetlight, a fluorescent stutter—and then the rot appears.

Maybe it’s visiting me because I was shaken the first time I saw it. It was years ago. I was driving to the arrivals terminal and there it was—slouched on deflated tires behind Kennedy airport, on the Rockaway Expressway. Just a bloated carcass—rectangular, heat-swollen—“EMERGENCY RESPONSE UNIT” scrawled across its aluminum side in flaking letters. A red cross peeling, looking like sunburn—or something worse.

A 60-by-12-foot self-propelled trauma unit—complete with operating room, burn beds, and auxiliary power. Fully functional. Never truly roadworthy. Its mobility wasn’t for transport, but for greeting the wreckage.

It had once been a storage trailer for outdated airplane seats.

Now it hunched there, on the tarmac—obsolete before it ever touched a single life.

The new ambulances fly.

Yet it keeps showing up.

Something in it logged my reaction—and decided to mess with me.

They built the unit after Flight 66 dropped from the sky. June 1975. A Boeing 727 slammed into the approach lights at JFK and tore itself across Rockaway Boulevard—113 dead, fire trucks stuck in gridlock, no plan, no help. That crash gave birth to the hospital on wheels.

Its doors were sealed for good after what came to be called the Black Drill of ’87.

It wasn’t called that officially, of course. Officially, it was a full-scale simulation—a standard triage exercise meant to test the Mobile Emergency Trauma Unit under real-time pressure.

There are no public records. No photos. No news articles. Just fragments. Anecdotes. Whispers passed down from bitter Port Authority retirees and nightshift orderlies with thousand-yard stares.

The trauma unit skulked out just past midnight. It was supposed to rendezvous with a staged crash site near the old cargo terminals. Somewhere en route, it disappeared from sight. Disconnected from radio. It went dark for almost three hours.

When it reappeared, it was parked in the middle of Runway 13L. Doors locked from the inside.

Twelve training dummies had been loaded aboard earlier that day for simulation—each tagged and cataloged by Port Authority staff.

Only eleven were recovered.

But they found a twelfth.

Not rubber. Not tagged. Not breathing.

A real one.

Unidentified. Mid-twenties. No ID. No pulse. But coagulated blood stood in jelled defiance at the base of the stretcher. The body wrapped in singed bandages. Autopsy report—if it ever existed—was never released.

They say one nurse never spoke again. Just walked off the job and into the Sound.

A doctor built a fallout shelter in his backyard and died six months later of dehydration, muttering about how he never saw a body he couldn’t account for.

The unit was decommissioned quietly. Shelved. Ignored. Left to rot outside, on a forgotten tarmac. Yet it hovers—like a bad dream for those who were there.

A drunk retiree at a medical evac reunion swore he saw a young, Italian-looking kid watching the Drill from his car. Said he was holding a clipboard.

Vanished before anyone could get a look.

I imagined the stillness inside—the unused dressings in yellowing boxes, the dust sitting on scratchy blankets inside the triage unit.

Not memory. Something low and cold squeezing the base of my heart.

Years later, its ghosts roll in nightly on cracked tires. I still hear them. The crews. The surgeons. Still prepping. Outside my window.

Tonight, I give in.

I walk out of my apartment building and the air is different—dense, electrical.

The unit sits by the curb, almost breathing.

It’s around two a.m. No sign of human life on either side of the double yellow lines. But the air is alive. The dense drizzle dowses the unit in a kind of sweat.

Up close, it’s massive—a bumpy aluminum shell, shifting around corroded steel bones.

Strange. None of the neighbors ever mentioned seeing the unit. No one ever complained about it taking up ten parking spaces.

I walk up to the doors. The latch gives.

Inside, it’s dead quiet. A time capsule of dust and unused triage.

And then: a stretcher.

An old clipboard.

The patient name: mine.

Date of intake: June 1987.

No vitals. No release.

It returns for a moment. But it slowly fades. Replaced by something secure. Reassuring.

I look toward the front of the vehicle: a driver—stooped, motionless. He’s wearing the soiled uniform of an orderly, circa 1980-something. He turns. Smiles.

The doors close behind me.

And we’re gone.

Wheels lifting.

Like a plane that never lands.

Like being buried with the lights still on.

Like always.

I used to wake up.

Now I just wait.

For the hush of night.

And the sky, weeping from the seams.