PASTURE STATUES by Alfredo Salvatore Arcilesi

PASTURE STATUES

By Alfredo Salvatore Arcilesi



Millie mooed.

Cate mooed with her.

The cow stared at them.

Millie giggled at the old joke, a pure, authentic song.

Cate giggled with her, exaggerated, trembling notes.

The cow stared at them.

Millie continued to pet the cow's cheek. Cate stroked the other, looking for signs of impatience in the otherwise stoic animal, searching its blank yet somehow knowing eyes for knowledge of her charade. What made her want to release the scream that had been lodged in her throat for inconceivable minutes was how Millie, sitting comfortably in her numb arms, was so far away from screaming—Millie, who had every justification for adding her shrill voice to the one behind them.

She hadn't asked Millie if she was all right; doing so would have given her the impression something was wrong. She hadn't asked Millie her actual name; as far as the little girl's amiable behaviour indicated, they had known each other all their lives, and names didn't matter. She hadn't asked Millie her age; from the moment she took the little girl into her arms, she could tell the small human being was no older than her career.

Three-years-old, Cate mused again, as she transferred Millie from one desensitized arm to the other, careful not to break contact with the cow. Three years, and once again she imagined the retirement banner, growing longer and larger as the idea cooked in her mind, advertising the pitiful number.

Cate was grateful for the brown-and-white animal's presence. Moreover, she was grateful that the cow was the first thing Millie had noticed. She wouldn't have thought to mosey on over to the cow; instinct—training—would have told her to immediately transport the dishevelled little girl to her car, and there they would have waited for the next routine steps. And then she would've known something was wrong, she thought. And then she would've started screaming.

A scream perforated the ambience, a cocktail of pain, fear ... and perhaps a note of anger.

“Mooooo!” Cate issued her loudest impersonation yet. Millie echoed her sentiments, prolonging and exaggerating the bovine language until it devolved into more giggling.

Another scream smothered the laughter, and for a terrible moment, Cate thought she felt Millie stiffen; thought she saw registration on the little girl's suddenly sagging face.

“Moo mooooo moo moo moo mooooo moo,” Cate interjected, the single word spoken in the rhythm of conversation. She fixed upon Millie's eyes, hoping the little girl would take the bait, ready to shift her little body should she decide to go peeking behind her back, toward the scream.

Millie's bowed lips glistened, saliva pooling as she gathered her thoughts about the conflicting sounds. Cate readied her own lips with another string of nonsensical cow-speak, when Millie broke out of her trance, and fired off a meaningless statement of her own: “Mooooo mooooo mooooo”—laughter—“mooooo moo moo moo.”

Relieved, Cate kept the dialogue flowing for as long and as loud as was necessary to beat the intermittent screaming from Millie's ears. As their banter rose and fell with the outbursts behind them, she imagined how the others must have seen them: vulnerable backs; a revolving red light highlighting Millie's arms wrapped comfortably—Or is she in shock? Cate couldn't decide—around her neck; mooing from unseen lips; the cow itself unseen, blocked by their combined bodies. How unreal it must have appeared to them.

How grotesquely real it was to her.

How beautifully real it was to Millie.

A terrible thought returned Cate to their cozy huddle: This is your first time, isn't it? The scream she struggled to keep deep down in her gorge threatened to erupt. It occurred to her that this cow—not the pair grazing further down the fence, dangerously close to the break; not the calf flanked by several adults; not the others standing nonchalantly, lying nonchalantly, living nonchalantly; not the countless others that might have been a blur in Millie's passenger window—but this cow might very well have been the very first cow Millie had ever seen.

Cate mooed, and wondered if Millie could detect the underlying melancholy. You don’t need to meet a cow, she desperately wanted to assure the little girl.  Not now. Not like this. She was certain that when Millie was one day no longer a size fit for one's arms—There's no guarantee of that, Cate sadly reminded herself—she might learn to hate the cow. All cows. The way Cate hated them for what they had done to Millie. To her.

To Millie's mother.

The human sounds behind them were less frequent now, quieter, the pain, the fear, the anger—if ever there was—giving themselves to realization. Cate hoped Millie's mother would soon forget how to scream—hoped her mother forgot her daughter's name. This line of thinking was drenched in selfishness, but Cate had accepted it ... for now; may guilt torment her later. It was just that she and, more importantly, the cow had worked so damned hard to keep Millie occupied.

Or are we keeping the cow occupied? Cate thought for the first time.

She looked into the animal's eyes, glossy black islands surrounded by thin halos of bloodshot white. Pulses of red light, rotating like an angry lighthouse—an eye of its own—searched those eyes, much as Cate was doing now, for knowledge.

Do you see the red light? she mentally transmitted to the cow. Do you understand it? Did you see what happened before the red light? Do you understand what happened?

The cow stared.

Do you understand that this little girl I'm holding, the one mooing at you, the one petting your face ... do you understand that her mother is the one who killed your calf?

Based on its indifference, she couldn't tell if the calf was blood-related to the cow. Would he or she—Cate couldn't tell which—bite Millie if it understood the situation behind them? Would he or she reconsider biting if it understood the whole thing had merely been a matter of a broken fence? Would he or she refrain from seeking revenge upon Millie if it understood that the calf had wandered through the broken fence, onto the asphalt, and before Millie's mother's car? Would he or she rethink their potential bite if it understood that Millie's mother had, from the looks of the finale, done her best to avoid the calf, but instead clipped its behind, sending her speeding vehicle into the ditch? Would he or she accept that the calf had been mercifully put down, quickly and painlessly, unlike Millie's mother, who found herself wrapped deep within her metal womb, gasoline-for-placenta everywhere, unable to be reached or moved, lest she perish sooner?

The cow stared.

Cate focused on Millie's silhouette within the animal's sheeny eye: Do you understand?

A voice answered the question. Cate couldn't make out the words, only the harshness of the voice. She sensed an approaching presence, and immediately understood what was happening. In a voice tailored for Millie’s benefit, Cate said, “Please, don't come any closer,” and resumed mooing along with Millie.

“Officer?” The voice didn't sound so harsh. Perhaps it hadn't been at all. Perhaps, Cate decided, she was prejudiced against voices outside of her and Millie's precious bubble.

Cate sensed the intruder take another step forward.

“I said don't,” Cate said in her rosiest voice.

“Officer, I need to examine the little girl,” the soft voice said.

The well-meaning plea incensed Cate. She's fine. I checked her when I pulled her out of the car. Some scratches, a few bruises, but she's fine. I checked her. And I named her. She knew someone close to Millie must have known her real name, but for tonight, in her arms, the little girl would take the name of the first girl Cate had lost on the job.

Footsteps crunched behind them.

“Don't,” Cate emphasized, momentarily breaking her character of utter serenity. Before the intruder could interject, she added: “I ... just give us a few minutes, okay?”

And then what? she thought.

Once again, she caught Millie's silhouette in the cow's eye. Do you have a father? Grandmother? Grandfather? Uncles? Aunts? Anybody? Do you know your name?

What would become of Millie when Cate decided enough “few minutes” had elapsed?

What would become of the little girl when the cow was gone?

The intruder's footsteps—a paramedic just trying to do her job—retreated, but Cate sensed she hadn't gone far; Millie did need to be examined.

She realized the screaming had died. It made sense to her, not because the outcome was inevitable, but because the paramedic now had time to check on the only survivor.

But they still had a few minutes.

And so Millie mooed.

Cate mooed with her.

The cow stared at them.


Perfection is my middle name. by Joseph Krebaum

Perfection is my middle name.   

By Joseph Krebaum


To determine whether or not you are the right fit for this position, we require that you fill out a brief questionnaire. This should take about ten to fifteen minutes. Please take your time and answer these questions to the best of your ability.            


  1. I am a hard-working individual. 

    1. Strongly Disagree

    2. Disagree

    3. Neutral

    4. Agree

    5. Strongly Agree

  2. I accomplish tasks in a timely manner.   

    1. Never

    2. Sometimes

    3. Often

    4. Always

    5. Depends on how you look at it.    

  3. Sometimes, I can be too much of a perfectionist. 

    1. No way

    2. Well, kind of 

    3. I used to avoid hard “d” and “t” sounds.  

    4. I used to be mute.   

    5. I still sometimes struggle with “d” and “t,” so I hide my lack of self-confidence by saying words without producing the sharp sword sounds of “d” and “t.” 

  4. I can speak fluently and clearly. 

    1. I couldn’t speak very much, or at least, not as much as I used to before all of this began.  

    2. There were these noises that I used to make. I called them “elephants” because trying not to think of an elephant when you’re told to not think about an elephant is impossible. Anyway, I turned them into this sacred ritual that I did so I could move on with my day. And because I tried to avoid making the elephants by not saying the consonants, I kept my mouth shut.

    3. You wouldn’t know, would you? You wouldn’t know how I felt like suffocating. How I could just feel the strain inside my throat. The imaginary knife grinding against it so hard, I was so sure I’d see blood on my hand if I placed it below my chin, even though it was all in my head.       

    4. My life was a living nightmare. I’d wake up from dreams and lose sleep over sounds and phrases that just didn’t feel right on my tongue. Too wet, too soft, just not crisp enough! I had to do it. I had to make those elephants, or I would never find comfort again.     

    5. Eventually, I stopped doing the rituals, but I was still laser-focused on avoiding “d” and “t.” The elephants, the elephants! They kept marching back to haunt me, trampling my throat. It got so bad, you wouldn’t even know! There I was at my high school in the middle of March, bashing the back of my head against a wall repeatedly, overwhelmed by the elephants, feeling completely hopeless, and in desperate need of water for my drying throat, even though I couldn’t drink liquids until I had corrected the sounds …            

  5. If something bothers me, I just grin and bear it. 

    1. At least, that’s what I try to do at first. 

    2. I don’t even think that I can count the number of times I’ve let my obsessions control me. 

    3. I read too much into what people say to me. Conversely, I read too much into what people don’t say to me. If I see someone’s neck get slashed or shot or injured in any way, shape, or form, that image lingers, and I think, “What if, what if, what if …”    

    4. One time, I was upset that a guy on Tinder “unmatched” me. That my family was at the store. That I recently posted all twelve songs from my concept album on Facebook for my friends to see, only to find that only one person liked just one song from it. That when I went over to the computer to send my psychologist a cry for help, I ended up playing an impossible game where the only goal was to  avoid getting an I-beam symbol after clicking on the Google search bar at least twenty times. Understandably, I failed. Not so understandably, I grabbed a kitchen knife, went into my room, and cut my left arm several times as intrusive thoughts flooded my brain. Like “I’ll always be alone” and “No one likes my work!” I looked down. The cuts were white like the interior of a doctor’s office, and I decided to stop because harming myself just felt ridiculous at that point. Then, the marks bled, and I was like, “Oh, shit! That can happen?” And it wasn’t until then that I finally reached out to my psychologist, ashamed of what I’ve done. 

    5. Really, I try my best to put on a smile and fake it until I make it, but I never do. The smile may be fake, but the additional pain of my muscles straining and stretching out to form it is real.              

  6. I find that I am happiest when I have work to do.      

    1. Bullshit!! 

    2. You must not know what it’s like to breathe or sigh in an unusual manner for god knows how long.  

    3. Or blink like the battery light on my dad’s laptop computer, only much more rapidly, and with much more vigor than some silly electronic slit. 

    4. Or press my lips against a spoon or a fork (especially the metal ones) repeatedly after mistakenly letting my teeth touch it. 

    5. Or even hurt myself again on purpose after hurting myself once by accident because everything, and I mean everything, has to happen twice.        

  7. I find myself so caught up in what I’m doing, I don’t want to stop.   

    1. Oh, shit. I just let my fingernail puncture the soft flesh of my thumb. 

    2. I am pressing my thumb and index finger together, hoping to get the right sound and the smooth sensation of skin rubbing against itself like car wheels on pavement.  

    3. I still cannot answer this question because I have been doing this for five straight minutes, and I am telling myself that I will never move on with my life unless I can get two of my fingers to collide the way I want them to without letting my fingernails dig into my skin ever again. 

    4. I’m going to kill myself! 

    5. Please let this be over. 


We will get back to you within five to seven business days. Thank you for taking the time to fill out this simple job questionnaire!    



Pretty Again by Jolie Vega

Pretty Again

By Jolie Vega


Stitch.

By stitch. 

I can fix you 

and make you whole again. 


A lolling head 

can be affixed 

with sturdy iron bars. 

Decaying skin 

can be drawn together, pretty

with red ribbon.


Cloudy eyes

can be removed 

delicately, carefully

replaced with 

gleaming, polished glass. 

Bright blue.


Bloodstains 

can be wiped up.

Sticky towels still sit

in my laundry basket.

Foul odors can be removed,

replaced by stuffing. 

Black garbage bags

leaky, crumpled

still sit in the basement. 

Deep red pools. 


It’s true. 

I’ve been so lonely.

But you are patient 

you are kind

you don’t mock me 

demean me 

demand me

to fulfill your every wish. 

Instead you lay in that ditch

missing, twisted

every which way.


Were you thrown away too?

A display piece for a man who detests 

the human beneath the skin?

Beauty is the only important thing in the world

I fear.


It’s ok. 


Stitch. 

By stitch. 

Since we are so alike

I’ll fix you

make you whole again. 

Maybe in a new dress

dark blue 

you can pretend to be happy too. 


Race for the Mind by Judy Knott

Race for the Mind

By Judy Knott



Sorrow looks back, worry looks around, faith looks up.

Ralph Waldo Emerson


Her fingers unknowingly rake thick Arizona

sunset hair. Forcing knots, release of tangled fists.

Heavy-lidded from night deprived of dreams. 

Subconscious swollen with yesterday's ghosts.

Dissonance aches solution and final rest.


Anxiety sets agitated pace on

deep ruts of intimate track. In frantic pursuit

of refuge for shadows of

weighted worry and spirits of unrest.

Lap after lap, section after section, 

every seat taken.


It’s standing room only.

 A tumultuous crowd of

vagrant, familiar haunts and wrenching concerns

in the audience today. 

The checkered flag drops and they’re off.

We have Anxiety desperate to win and in the lead, 

Chronic Impatience behind at close-to-crash second

and Weary Frustration lagging at distant third.


Remaining Roots by Carlene English

Remaining Roots 

By Carlene English

 

My backyard was once a jungle.  

Birds traveled far, all gathered there like Times Square. 

Amidst the city, I found refuge in the sea of feathered friends, performing their rehearsed dance to one lonely judge. 

 

Running the show like a mad orchestral conductor, stood one towering tree, alone and free.  

Branches like open palms offering autonomy to each hummingbird, sparrow, and finch.  

 

This crowded harmony ended abruptly as tall lumbermen stole the heart of their jungle.  

Now all that lies are dusty pencil shavings laden in solace, sprinkled upon the conductor's grave. Mourning his death, I wait outside for the citizens to return, but they don’t linger on his absence, 

absence, 

absence. 

Though, 

he remains underneath. 


THAT FIRST CAR by John Grey

THAT FIRST CAR

By John Grey


So you don't need me to countersign the loan.
And your fake ID has been packed away
with your pennants and Foo Fighters CDs.
You can vote for president.
No doubt it'll be for the other guy.

All that's standing between you
and manhood is a car.
The truth is you can't afford one.
You have a license
thanks to my instruction and patience.
But these days,
when it comes time to impress the ladies,
the operative words are "can I borrow?"
You're anxious when you do that.
There's an uncomfortable
half-hiccup in your voice.
It's one of those very few times
when you're still a boy.

I remember my first clunker,
how real freedom finally arrived
boxed in metal
with fake leather upholstery
and a smell worse
than a mechanic's armpit.
My mother worried that I'd be killed.
My father's pride
did laps of his face.
I'm my own father now,
and even a twinge or two of my mother.
I want you independent, on your own.
I want you here and safe.

Like me,
when the moment does come,
you'll grip the wheel,
tap the accelerator a little,
inch out onto the street,
slowly fill the spaces
that the automobile leaves for you.
Like me,
you'll no longer be like me.


The Plot by Madelene Przybysz

The Plot

By Madelene Przybysz


I let the flowers die in the garden plot of my mind,

the ones that were planted the day I shook your hand.

They started curiously

bloomed too soon 

and the short-lived beauty was lost.

It's no one's fault they’re decomposing.

They were left unattended

became overgrown

full of weeds

and underwatered.

The vines that climbed wore no fruit

and though it should have been communal, the gate was always locked.

I had thieves before who took too much and thought you'd do the same,

but in return you never hopped the fence and ended up taking nothing …

Which still left me feeling insane.

Now the plot turned back to a rich soil

hopefully better prepared for the next.

… If I'll ever let them …

It will be a while though before I plant again.


The Willow by Lauren Handely

The Willow

By Lauren Handely

Wispy willows wind through thorny trails, thick with thistle, with the exception of one that encroaches on the lakeshore. The leaves of this sole invader droop low, and stroke the water’s surface. It’s as if their own weight had become too burdensome for the branches they cling to.

Beneath this tree rests a woman, hunched over, with long hair that slumps past her chest. It mimics the willow leaves, as it too reaches downward for the water. However, the strands of black opt for a different target, a leatherbound book that the woman clutches with both hands.

The ancient leather is wounded in many places, its internals are not much better. The pages, thoroughly soaked, cling to one another, as if their lives depend on their closeness. From their corners, water still drips, steadily like a watch tick. 

The woman gazes downward. Her damp lashes, one still cradling a lone tear, are like a drop of morning dew, sleeping amongst the grass. She traces invisible lines in the cover, passing over the faded title of the book. 

Most of the distinguishing marks had long since worn off, leaving only the imprints of wear and time to identify it. In this way it is not dissimilar to a child’s first stuffed bear, aging only in deterioration, as the child grows.

It would be less of a shame, if the book had been only a toy bear, and not the woman’s diary. Fabric could be put out to dry, paper not so much. There would be no saving the drowned memories, now forever sealed inside the mess of fused paper. A single mistake has erased over a decade of her life. The words of her former self would never again see the light of day.

The woman had hoped to keep them for eternity, and she knew one day her own mind would fail her. The paper would hold onto the parts of her past that threatened to slip through the cracks in her head.

Wordlessly, she rises to her feet. Her willow hair blows back in the wind with the motion. Her gaze passes from the beloved book to out across the water. The scent of decaying plant life and aquatic creatures worms its way into her awareness.

The ocean was always the most romantic of the family of water. There was only the scent of salt that blew in across the endless blue. However, this is not the case for his younger sibling. 

The lake reeks of death, and his unkempt shores yield not shells, but bloated carp and tangles of algae. Even still, the willow leaves come to lie gently on his skin, trusting in the reservoir of decay.  

The woman clutches the journal close to her chest, close enough it could feel her heartbeat. Then she takes it into one hand, and hurls it as far as her frail arm allows. For a moment she expects it to skip like a stone, perhaps held afloat momentarily by beloved memories, but it does not. It sinks, suddenly and silently, below the surface.

The willow shivers, night air agitating the sleepy leaves. The woman feels the same chill run through her. Night air moves in, as she watches the remaining daylight begin to bleed out into dusk. 


To Your Knees by Nancy Bandusky

To Your Knees

By Nancy Bandusky


I know your pain is real.

And it's still here.

You think I've given you more than you can handle.

You think I've given you more than you can take.

You fear that you are going to …

Break.


You buckle and fall.

To your knees you surrender.

You think you're alone but you find

I'm there.


For when I drive you to your knees,

You're safe as you can be.

I have you in the palm of my hand.

Holding you.


I hear you cry out to me.

Why don't I take it all away?

Why can't your life be free of despair?

Why do you have such pain and strife?

Why do I allow this …

In your life?


You buckle and fall.

To your knees you surrender.

You think you're alone but you find

I'm there.


For when I drive you to your knees,

You're safe as you can be.

I have you in the palm of my hand.

Holding you.


I've always been there

Holding you

In the palm of my hand.


Watching Over by R.G. Ziemer

Watching Over

By R. G. Ziemer


On a bank of the Fox where the river narrows 

The great dark Potawatomi leans into the wind

Hunched in a rough robe of bronze

Cradling in one hand his cold calumet.

The People of the Fire have named him Ekwabet, 

or Watching Over, 

As if his solemn gaze and strong demeanor

Offered some protection to this city on the water.

Despite his stoical expression he is surely stunned

To wonder at the crowded world before him,

Lofty buildings of brick and stone, 

Copper-topped pavilions, towers, arches and gazebos,

Throngs of people scurrying like ants along the avenues,

Traffic wheeling slowly over the Main Street bridge.

Who could blame him if he turned and cast a wistful look upstream,

But there’ll be no going back,

his children’s children gone the other way,

Just like his fathers’ fathers, 

all that water over the dam,

To foam and swirl like memory along the concrete piers and footings

Before continuing downstream. 

And so loyal to the land, true to the river, 

The Indian holds his pose and keeps his vigil 

Over the home fires and the waters of the Fox.