Storming Negativities

By Rebecca Varley

storming negativities surround despite dissent.
evils present peril ever so ingeniously.
clad in vain, clever uniform, miniature menaces, one by one,
dive into orifices and swim throughout the protoplasm.
ALL ABOARD!!!
swimming about, maniacally, wreaking havoc in each organ. annihilating hope,
instilling insecurities, and eliminating ease.
stealthily inventing, impelling, and intensifying fears,
they maliciously manipulate each and every energy along the way,
cleverly, they raise a veil of trickery that prevents positivity.
pitiful self-loathing and hypocritical hate send the self askew.
deceived, depression reigns.
the leader of the troops? the wretched propellor of despair?
one’s self.
one’s victim. one’s tormentor. one’s salvation.

War

By Jennifer Williams 

Cruel truth of human mind
Graciously in shadows
Spilling blood of mankind
A howl from below
Savage beasts are free to feed
A lustful feast
Until one will succeed
This play of death has never ceased
The cruel course of controversy
Such a sad soirée
What of the cradling arms of mercy?
These beasts whose callous Fray
Is pointless in the end
For all the bitter dropping tears
With more left to lend
And nigh to silence our fears

Flasher Fiction

By Dr. Doug Ford, Associate Professor of English

It wasn’t because of you, wife. The police asked about our home situation, and I insisted that my bad behavior did not start with the marital friction—that it had nothing to do with the fact that you sleep on the side of the bed farthest from me; that it had nothing to do with the comments about my weakening sexual stamina; that it had nothing to do with the hungry looks you give the stock boys at the grocery store, or the fact that you French-kissed Archie Smee at the Christmas party or the vibrator I found in the drawer by the bed. The police say that men who dangle their body parts in public often have these problems, but I said that it wasn’t because of you, wife.

I also said it wasn’t because of the children. The police asked about them, too. But I insisted that it had nothing to do with Betheny and the time I walked in on her with what’s-his-name and what’s-his-name’s pants around his ankles and actually found myself apologizing to them for invading their privacy. Nor would I accept that it had anything to do with Steven’s newly shaved head, nor the Nazi paraphernalia he’s started collecting, nor what I swear is a snuff film in his DVD player. Nor does it have anything to do with the facts behind Steven’s assault and battery record and the bus-boy at the restaurant he tried to stab or the obvious awkwardness when we found out that the bus-boy he stabbed was the very same what’s-his-name I found with Betheny. The police say that inadequate men often feel further disempowered when their children take the kind of action they fear to take themselves. And I told Steven it was wrong to try to stab that boy, just as I will tell him that it’s wrong to dangle your privates in public.

And it wasn’t because of Archie Smee. The police caught that name when I first mentioned it, and they looked it up. They seem to want to look up everything. But I insisted that it had nothing to do with Archie Smee, despite the fact that I caught my wife French-kissing Archie Smee at the Christmas party, the very same Archie Smee who helped found Roy, McKay, and Smee, the law firm now defending my son who arguably did what his father should have done. I said that it had nothing to do with the pretty silver car Archie Smee drives and the fact that it drove past me one day, going, I don’t know, about 80, but not so fast that I didn’t notice my wife in the passenger seat, laughing, her hand God-knows-where. That it had nothing to do with the fact that I actually found myself waving as you went by, even though you didn’t notice. The police say that men who wave at their cheating wives often dangle their body parts in public.

No, I don’t accept that.

I say it had everything to do with the food in that restaurant, the terrible dry food and the horrible pictures of Quakers all over the walls. It had everything to do with the terrible service and the fact that the waitress wore clogs I didn’t like, not to mention her funny paper hat and the funny look she gave me when I brought both of them to her attention. I don’t even need to mention the obvious rudeness behind sending the bus-boy to escort me out, the very same what’s-his-name I caught with Betheny who doesn’t seem to be aware at all that Betheny is late and who therefore deserved to have genitals waved in his face.

The police wrote that all down. No, it had nothing to do with you, wife.

October Chill

 By Dr. Allen Culpepper, Associate Professor of English

October now: the weather holds clear as in
summer, though skies burn a drier blue
that deepens with the evening nip to thrill,
as autumnal sorrow’s bright, cold blade
enters clean, but when withdrawn tears flesh
of memory from its secret buried vault
and leaves it strewn across the backyard path,
where frost will make it glisten just at dawn;
the morning’s first chill breezes stir the branches
of the last remaining tree, an elm,
and it drops its final golden leaf.

Seeking

By Lynda Platone, Executive Assistant 

Seeking and searching in the pre-dawn;
Mists swirling silent across dew kissed lawn.
Wraithlike and pale in the soft, glowing light
She prays for the end of the long dark night.
An outstretched hand in desperate plea.
Cries for sweet comfort, tears falling gently.
How has she come to be so alone;
Why does she not have one to call her own?
Seeking and searching in the pre-dawn;
Mists swirling silent across dew kissed lawn.
She falls to the earth, her soul wrenched apart;
Will love once again find its way to her heart?

Bumps in the Road

By Sarah Ward, Elektraphrog Editor

Essence of hope in my soul
Rubs off on your weary eyes;
Lies that you listen to
Taunt and breed rich jealousy
Open the shackles restraining my truth:
I long for your heartbeat on my pillow.
Breathe silence into my ears.
Curse hindrances and the beast of salacity.
Demolish the end.
Forgive.
Grasp tightly
And we can travel together.