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Showing posts from May, 2020

The Space between Atoms 3

At least it looked like a castle.   Weary with fatigue, Terah lacked the motivation to cross the bridge.   The energy required to lift even one worn boot was too much.   He stood staring across the expanse that married New Jersey to Pennsylvania along I-80.   Probably because the Appalachian Trial, this interstate bridge had a pedestrian lane for vagabond hikers like himself.   Back when he was at least partially employed, he’d driven through the Gap many times.   The dramatic cliffs along curves that teetered above the Delaware River would be an inspiring sight, he always thought, if one didn’t have to keep one’s eyes on the road.   Now that he stood here, oppressed by the magnitude of nature and his own insignificance, he rubbed his eyes on a dirty sleeve.   A castle?   In Pennsylvania? Back in his Scotland days he’d visited many medieval castles.   America was just being “discovered”—“exploited” was the more accurate word—when the era of castle building slowed.   Cannons proved n

The Space between Atoms 2

There’s a certain freedom in being obscure.   Like with the murder.   Her name might’ve been Danielle.   That’s what she said, but then again, sex was seldom a matter of being honest.   Terah had met her in the classroom and although he knew the trope was tired—he’d been a writer—he’d also been a professor.   He’d known the subtle pressure of constantly refreshing populations of young coeds.   And hiring someone as an adjunct was an invitation to become a drifter. He wasn’t a predator.   He was just weak.   Besides, grandfathers on both sides had been teachers that’d married their students.   It’d been common in those days, and what made some time-honored family traditions illegal?   Shouldn’t that itself be illegal?   As long as both parties are mature and willing.   Such thoughts kept him company on the long January walk. Once out of the poisonous orbit of New York City, New Jersey was a pretty state.   Here in the west it was hilly and almost rural.   He was far enough inland n

The Space between Atoms

The cruel beauty of winter settled like frozen ashes on the ruined church.   There was something obscene about seeing faith exposed in such a naked state—once warmly felt and capable of erecting soaring cathedrals now reduced to failing to pay the mortgage on a relatively modest chapel in a small town until some squatter’s fire claimed it.   The half-hearted efforts of the weary Stanton Station fire-fighting volunteers left it smoldering on Epiphany. Terah Economy kept far from the scene, knowing it wouldn’t be difficult to trace the conflagration’s origin.   He’d never burn down a church intentionally.   His former career had been precariously canted in that direction, like a tallship in a typhoon.   Being homeless in Stanton Station was easier than it had been in New York City.   The handouts could be better in Midtown, and even for educated derelicts like himself the homeless shelters seemed less appealing than an appliance box over a subway vent on Broadway.   The cops occasion

Novel Idea

I’ve been thinking that this blog could use a little attention.   My problem is—well, one of my problems—I lead a double life.   I write fiction under a pseudonym because my real nym is tied to a respectable job.   So it goes. One of the solutions to my double life is that I could start putting some fiction on this blog.   Good idea or no?   I have a novel on which I’m working and it won’t likely find a publisher, so I could start pasting it here, in serial form. On the other hand of my double life I have a nonfiction book under my nonfiction name that is currently due at the publisher’s.   I need to spend time on that too, and I have a job.   And the lawn isn’t going to mow itself. So I’m thinking that instead of neglecting this poor, but truly loved, child of a blog, maybe I could feed it fiction.   That would at least keep it alive.   Right now it’s like a cactus, getting water only a few times a year.   Is that a mixed metaphor?   Can water be food? When dail