POWER CHORDS

by Milo James Fowler

You got me ringing hell’s bells. – AC/DC

~*~

Emaciated by time, the hollow-eyed wraith at the cash register drew on his smoldering cigarette and released a ragged cough.

“You play?” he croaked.

I glanced up from the book of guitar chords, a dog-eared paperback with coffee-stained pages, but at forty-nine cents a real pawn shop bargain. “Yeah.”

“Bored with the standard crap? Those open chords and whatnot?” He spewed smoke like a dragon in its final throes. “Looking for more advanced stuff, huh.”

“Something like that.”

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THEFT

by Jonathan Cullen

Stealing gets easier with practice. And lots and lots of time.

~*~

Peter Mason brushed the dust off his hands, propped his broom against the wall and walked down the fourth floor hallway of the hospital searching for a patient to steal a few hours from.

He nudged open the door to a semi-private room with a slight creak and looked inside. The lights had been off for hours and the two patients were asleep. Peter leaned back into the hallway, glanced up and down, then slid into the room.

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ANGELS UNAWARES

by Clay Waters

Vengeance is mine, sayeth the Lord.

~*~

May as well be in retrograde orbit around Venus, Mickey thought, sitting in a neo-backache chair in the law office of Fortnam and Concini as another weatherless day in Burbank drifted outside the window. The drone of regulated air felt soothing yet also necessary, as if they inhabited a geodesic space station for the sweatless affluent.

Bringing the kid had been a mistake; Concini remained unmelted. The lawyer looked at the young girl, swallowed up in the deep leather sofa, clutching her ugly-ass doll, and said “Couldn’t get a baby sitter?”

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THE TEMPTER IN THE SHADOWS

by Kevin R. Doyle

Guilt can be a powerful temptation as well.

~*~

Father Robert stood in the cubicle and looked over the interior of his church. This late at night, only a few people resided in the pews. One woman, dressed in black, had just lit a candle. Robert knew she still mourned the death of her youngest child a year before. Farther back an elderly couple, two of the regulars of his parish, knelt together and prayed, so close their shoulders touched.

And another figure. It sat in the pew farthest back, next to the church doors. In the dim electric lights, it seemed more of a shape than a substance. Father Robert watched it for several minutes. It didn’t move, neither standing nor kneeling and, as far as the priest could tell through the darkness, not even praying. It merely sat there, straight in the pew, and looked ahead.

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BURYING THE PAST

by James Rawbone

To forgive, not forget.

~*~

Last year’s leaves were a brittle carpet underfoot as he strode through the woods. A small casket was tucked under one arm; his free hand grasped a spade. His shoulders were hunched under the black leather of his trench coat, and he glanced to neither side.

Every so often he stopped to listen, but the trees were wrapped in a dead silence. Nothing moved; no birds called, there was not the snuffle of hedgehogs or the sudden scamper of rabbits. The woods lay sleeping this short February afternoon as if the cold had frozen the life within it. The pale sun was already casting long, weak shadows as the man looked up to the grey sky and shivered.

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THE UNDYING

by Gail Dennehy

When even the undead are dying, it can’t be good.

~*~

He had watched the boy for several hours. Not as emaciated as some of the others in the house, the young man was still beautiful. Already lost in a chemical haze, the child’s eyes glowed with an almost supernatural light. He found himself attracted and continued to watch him as the boy tied off his arm, inserted the syringe, and emptied the drug into his vein. Patient as always, he waited, and watched again until the stupor receded, and the boy began to nod into a natural sleep.

Then, he fed. He could taste his satisfaction, like imported sherry trickling warm down the back of his throat. He walked away, leaving the addict drained on the floor of the shooting gallery.

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