Adult Conversation (A Flash Fiction Story)

My name is Josh Miller. Gina Davis is my friend. Not the actress. Gina my friend is no actress. We’re in our thirties and have been friends since childhood.

I sat with my friend in a bar, Hemingway’s, a few blocks from the Cathedral of Learning of the University of Pittsburgh. The lunch crowd had cleared out and the late afternoon crowd had not arrived yet so she and I pretty much had the place to ourselves. We had just gotten our third pitcher of beer. The Pirates were on two of the four big screen TVs and a sports-news broadcast was on the other two. My friend and I sat at a table for two against the wall under all the framed snap shots of former customers. Gina and I were waiting for our barbecue wings and blue cheese dressing.

Gina said, “What’s with all you guys about giving head? Every guy I’ve ever gone out with, the first thing he wanted to do was to stick it in my mouth. These days the first thing a man wants a woman to do is suck him off.”

“Do you give head?”

“Sure I give head. Lots of women don’t but lots of women do. And to tell you the truth I like giving head. But there’s more to sex then giving head.”

“Do you swallow?”

“If I’m going to do all that work getting him and myself all hot and bothered you bet I’m going to swallow.”

Our wings came. We ate our wings and finished our beer, paid, left a tip and walked outside into the late afternoon warm sunshine.

I said, “Why haven’t you ever given me head?”

“Josh, dear, I wouldn’t want to ruin a beautiful friendship. Bye bye.”

“Bye, Gina.”

The End

Girls Gone Wild (A Short Story)

The Last Nude Photos (A Short Story)

It’s another warm and sunny day in Pittsburgh this Memorial Day weekend.  For all of you readers and writers the Old Soldier has three sexy stories for your reading pleasure.  The stories are sexy not pornographic.  Here at the Gazette you will find lots of fiction and articles on writing, too.

So sit back, take a break from blogging, grab a cold beer and relax with some of the best very short stories on the Internet.

A Day In The Life Of A Blogger (A Very Short Story)

Checked the page views of my blogs.  Walked to “Little Italy” in Bloomfield in Pittsburgh and bought a newspaper and had two beers at Del’s while watching the news on one of the HDTVs.  More murder and more war.  Bought supplies at the supermarket and walked back to the apartment.  Tried to work on a flash fiction idea, writing in my three ring notebook.

This woman comes home from work and finds her husband passed out drunk on the living room floor.  She kicks off her shoes and sits on the sofa and looks out the picture window at the lawn that needs mowing and she smokes a cigarette.

The husband comes to.

“Jake,” she says.  “I’m getting a divorce.”

“Leave me alone,” he says and goes back to sleep.

Thought for a moment.  Then ripped the page out of the three ring notebook and threw the page away.

The End

This Man and This Woman in Love (A Short Story)

The Death of Karaoke  (A Short Story)

Woman, Wife and Lover (A Short Story)

Nude Photos (A Short Story by Guy Hogan)

This Is Some Of My Old Amateur Nude Photography

This story takes place several years ago.

Staring up at the dark ceiling and wearing only boxer shorts the young man thought, the woman I love is abandoning me.  The young woman this man loved slept next to him, her breathing deep and rhythmic in the bedroom of the off-campus apartment in Pittsburgh the two had shared together more than three years now.  The man had always known this day might come. 

All through their undergraduate days he had worried about the possibility and now that day was here and she was leaving in a few hours to catch a plane and there was nothing he could do about it.  How could he blame her when he had accepted a fellowship and committed to staying and teaching while she had been offered a free ride for three years on the west coast?  It was a sweet deal for her and you didn’t turn down a free education with stipend from one of the best graduate programs in the nation.  But a three year separation could be fatal to even the strongest relationship and he and she had had their ups and downs like any other young couple.  He just didn’t want to chance losing her.  He didn’t want her to go.

After living together nearly two years, he had asked her to pose nude for him and was surprised when she said yes.  He thought it would be fun to take photos of his girlfriend nude.  He bought four reflectors, four stands, several 250 watt bulbs and six disposable cameras with 24 shots each of black and white film.  He wanted the shots to look artsy.  He used only a couple of props and the backdrop of each shot was all white. 

When the 8 x 12 prints came back he first mounted the 40 best ones in an expensive, black leather covered photo album with pearl-white pages and then later that day the two of them sat down together side by side at the kitchen table, sipping chilled wine with the local classical music station on the radio, and they went through the album, slowly.  The photos had a glossy finish and looked like pin-ups from the 1950s.  Several were very good.  He asked her why she had gone through with it and she told him she had wanted to do it for some time but had to find someone she trusted.

He felt her start in her sleep, and then she caught her breath.

“No, don’t,” she called out.  “Please don’t.”

“Lisa?”

“Oh,” she said.  “What a lousy dream,” she said.  “What a lousy, lousy dream.”

He reached up and snapped on his reading lamp.

She said, “I dreamt the fucking plane crashed.”  She was on her back and her eyes were shut and the palm of her right hand was on her forehead.

He didn’t say anything.

“I mean you and I were walking on this beach, this beautiful white-sandy beach holding hands.  Just the two of us.”  Her hand left her forehead and rested on her waist.  She wore an under shirt and panties.  The summer night was pleasant enough so there was no need for covers.  Now she stared at the ceiling, trying to remember.  “Then this old couple came walking toward us.  At first I thought I knew them, but I didn’t.  Then all these people on this plane, strangers, men, women and children all screaming and crying because the plane was going to crash.  I could feel the plane falling.  I could feel it dropping out of the sky.”  She looked at him.  She turned to him and he held her.  He felt the warmth of her breath on his chest.  “It was so real,” she said.  “It was awful.  I don’t like flying anyway.”

He held her close.  He knew he had to say something.  He had to say something and he knew how important the words would be.  She trusted him.

“Well,” he said, “there’s always Amtrak.”

“The west coast by train?”

“Very scenic.”

“No,” she said.  “That’d take forever and it’s just a silly dream, anyway.”

He kissed her hair and then reached up and snapped off the light.

The End

********************

Behind the scenes:  Most of my stories are pretty well grounded in reality.  Years ago I was a student and then a member of the Pittsburgh Filmmakers where I studied and made several short Super 8 films.  I had access to equipment and the facilities.  It was during this period that I asked several young women to pose nude for me so I could take their pictures and start building a portfolio.  In the back of my mind I was thinking maybe I’d be able to make a living at it.  It turned out to be a fantasy; but I did get a short story out of it.

********************

Here’s A Site That Pays You Money To Write

The Topless Dancer (A Short Story)

Girls Gone Wild (A Short Story)

********************

Read the Gazette and it’s all free.  Here you will find flash fiction, very short stories and short shorts.  You will find articles on writing fiction and commentaries on everything from the state of America to insights into local news. 

And if you happen to be a blogger or a writer submit a story.  The Gazette is always looking for Guest Writers.

Be sure to check out “More Short Short Stories” in the sidebar on the right, the newest addition to the pages of the Gazette.

Everybody, enjoy your weekend.

Guy Hogan
Editor/Publisher

Tainted Love (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Tainted-Love.683751 

Sex, Booze and a Short Memory (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Sex-Booze-and-a-Short-Memory.646921

The Good News (A Short Story)

James Parrish had signed a contract with a small, but well respected publishing house for his first novel.  He was a thirty-year-old second year MFA student at the University of Pittsburgh.  He phoned Philadephia from his off-campus apartment in Pittsburgh to tell his mother the good news.  He was sitting on the sofa.  Unexpectedly, his older sister Terri answered the phone.

“Oh, hi, Jimmy.  Well, I’m going to do it.”

“Do what?”

“You know.  Get the divorce.  I went over yesterday to try one last time.”

“You’re back home?”

“Where else am I and the kids going to go?”

“I guess I should call home more often.”

“He kept getting up doing things.  He couldn’t sit still.  He couldn’t look me in the eye.  Is gambling that important to him?  I make 35,000 a year.  He makes nearly three times that amount and we still live pay check to pay check.”

“I know.”

“You know what he had the nerve to say to me?  He’s been gambling since junior high and he’s not going to stop now.  Three kids and fifteen years of marriage mean nothing to him.  I give up.  I absolutely give up.  He’s never lifted a finger to help around the house.”

“I know.”

“The bank phoned two weeks ago and said if our mortgage fell another month behind they’d foreclose on the house.  The mortgage is his responsibility.  So what did he do with the money?  I had to come up with two months back rent.”

“He’s always gambled.”

“Yes he’s always gambled but nothing like this.  This beats all.  He’s sick.  He’s really sick.  He needs help.  Well, after yesterday the damn place can fall down on his fat head.  You should see it.  And you should see the lawn and hedges.  I hope the neighbors call the township.  I am so sick of it.”

He heard tears in her voice.

“Listen,” she said.  “I have to run Mom to her dental appointment before the kids get home.  You want to say a quick hello?”

“Sure.”  He waited.

“Hi, Jimmy.”

“Hello, Mom.”

“I was wondering when you would call.  I tell you never a dull moment.  Your father wouldn’t have put up with it.”

“It’s too bad about Terri and Greg.”

“That’s the one thing I didn’t have to worry about with your father.  He did his dirt like any other man but he aways did say a man was no man if he didn’t take care of his family.  In over forty years of marriage at least I didn’t have to worry about that.  I never would have thought it of Greg.  Oh, well, he’ll pay now.”

“You won’t be in the house by yourself any longer.”

“Being by myself never bothered me.  Okay, okay.  Gotta go.”

“Love you, Mom.”

“Oh, honey, I love you too.”

As soon as he put down the receiver the phone began to ring.  He stood, staring down at the ringing phone.  After a moment, he walked to the kitchen and brought back a glass and an open bottle of beer.  He sat on the sofa and drank the beer and waited for the ringing to stop.

The End        

********************

Vietnam in the Mist (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Vietnam-in-the-Mist.643749 

The Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette is always open to short story submissions.  Writers should read and follow the submission guidelines.  New and aspiring writers can get a free critique of their stories.  Click on the Free Help For Writers tab at the top of the page.

Pittsburgh 1983 (A Flash Fiction Story)

The warm summer night waited outside.  Inside, these two sat in the air conditioned low lighting near the dance floor.  She attended the University of Pittsburgh and now sat looking down at her hands holding the tall glass of crushed ice and mixed fruit juice on the table top.  Several couples danced.

She said, “I’ve never had a stranger ask me to come home with him.”

He said, “I’ve seen you around.”

“I’ve seen you around, too.”

“We have one thing in common.”

She looked up.  He nodded at their drinks.

She said, “I hate the taste of alcohol.”

“I don’t, but that’s another story.  How old are you?”

“Twenty two.”

“No boyfriend?”

“We broke up.”

She took a swallow of her drink, watching him over the glass.”

Six steps lead up to the dance floor.  Colored lights flashed under the dancers’ feet.  A DJ in a glass booth played the music.

She said, “Any more questions?”

“Ask me some.”

“Are you married?”

“No.”

“Children?”

“I’m thirty three but no children.  At least none that I know of.”

“Everyone here seems to know you.  Is that what you do?  Come here to pick up college girls?”

“I don’t do one night stands anymore.”

“Oh,” she said.  “You’re looking for something steady.”

“Sure.  Aren’t you?”

“Well,” she said, “I don’t know you and I’m definitely not in love with you.”

“Have you ever been in love?”

“Once,” she said.

“And?”

“He couldn’t pass up any freebies.”

“How old was he?”

“At the time twenty one.  We were both juniors.”

“Well, you can’t expect–”

“Why not?  Why is it so difficult for you men to keep your cocks in your pants?”

He took a drink, putting the glass back down gently.

She said, “I like you a lot less.”

She got up, picked up her drink and walked away.  She walked in between the empty tables, down the two steps, across the aisle to sit at the bar.

He got up with his drink, went up the six stairs, through the dancers, down the six stairs to sit at the bar on the other side.  Some people he knew came in.  He sat with them at the tables.  By ten o’clock it was crowded.  He danced.  By last call he was ready to leave.

Forbes Avenue was full of students, walking and driving.  His car was in the shop and he didn’t have the money to get it out; but he started a new job Monday and he was sure he could keep this one.  He had a two year plan to get back on his feet.  He was at the corner of Forbes and Bouquet when someone called, “Wait up!”  He turned to see who it was.  The young woman from the bar came running up to him.  She didn’t look straight at him.  She tried to catch her breath.

She said, “If I agree to stay with you tonight do we have to do anything?”

He thought a moment.  Then he said, “I wouldn’t get any sleep.”

“Does it have to be all your way.  Don’t I get any of what I want?”

“What do you want?”

“To be with someone.  To know someone’s there.  Just to have–”  She looked away and wiped at her eyes.

Students kept streaming past.  Cars made Forbes Avenue a river of lights.

He said, “What’s your name?”

“Janette.  Janette Mitchell.”

Later, that night he was in his briefs on his back on the bed in the dark.  She was on her stomach in her bra and panties with his arms around her and her head on his chest, an arm over his midsection and one leg between his two legs.  They ignored the bulge in his briefs.

She said, “Did you actually kill anyone?”

“In artillery you don’t want to be close enough for them to see you.”

“Women and children, too.?”

“Sometimes we wasted villages.”

“How old were you?”

“Nineteen.”

“Do you think about it?”

“Sometimes I dream about it.”

“I could never kill anyone.”

“You’d be surprised.”

“I could never.”

“You’d let them kill you?”

No answer.

He stared at the faint shadows playing on the dark ceiling.  It was Sunday morning.  A comforting breeze blew through the window screen.  She stayed motionless against him.  The heat of her body was making him uncomfortable.

He said, “When I got back to Pittsburgh I broke up with my fiancee.”

She raised her head.  “Why?”

“She wanted to live in her nice safe world with all her nice safe possessions.”

“So?”

He didn’t answer.

“Didn’t you love her?”

“Oh, I loved her.  I just couldn’t live with her.”

After a moment, she lowered her head back down on to his chest.  They stayed motionless.  He closed his eyes…He caught himself falling.  He stared at the faint shadows that played on the dark ceiling…

She eased out of his arms, stood beside the bed and began removing her bra and panties.

“Hush,” she said.

The End

********************           

Vietnam in the Mist (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Vietnam-in-the-Mist.643749 

********************

If you write flash fiction, very short stories, sudden fiction, postcard fiction or short shorts and would like to be published in the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette just click on the ”Call For Submissions” tab at the top of the page, read and follow the guidelines and e-mail the story.  You’ll receive an answer in 48 hours.

Guy

The Sanctuary (A Very Short Story)

Scott Delaney and Dave Bowman sat on high stools and drank mugs of beer at the bar in The Sanctuary which was near the main campus of the University of Pittsburgh.  This was before The Sanctuary went out of business.  It was Thursday afternoon.  Scattered among the stools and tables were several customers drinking, laughing and talking.  Some were eating.  One read The Pittsburgh Press.  Another did homework.  Over the sound system came music from a radio station that specialized in rock from the sixties and seventies.  That night was beer blast night at The Sanctuary which meant two skins at the door and two bits for each small plastic cup of beer there after.  Scott was going to return later that night.  He always enjoyed beer blast night.  He was thirty five and had just found a new job.  It wasn’t much of a job but it was a job.  He started Monday.

“They’re two totally different crowds,” his friend Dave Bowman was saying.  Anyone could see the friend lifted weights.  “Here I never knew what to expect.  You get a really mixed crowd here.  I’d walk up to someone and tell him he had to leave.”

“‘Who the hell are you?’ he’d say.”

“I’m the bouncer.”

“‘Oh, yeah.’”  Dave grabbed his crotch.  “‘Well bounced this!’”

“Across the street,” Dave went on, “it’s kiddie land.  Mommy and Daddy foot all the bills and gave them a new car for high school graduation.  I doubt if half of them have ever even seen a fight let alone been in one.  So, one night I’m off duty drinking at the bar.  You should’ve been there.  Four paddy wagons took a shit load of them out for underage drinking.  All false IDs.  No way for the doorman to tell.  They have them printed up professionally.”  Dave swiveled slowly on his stool away from the bar and looked around.  He said, “Man, you don’t know how much I miss this place.”

The End  

********************

Young Love (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Young-Love.634887

Hills Beyond The Bridge (A Short Short Story)

He was too weak to get out of bed and slept on his back under a white sheet in the white room, only his head uncovered by the sheet.  I sat in a chair beside the bed.  Another skeletal old man slept under a white sheet in the other bed.  Through the screen of the open window I could see a railway bridge with green hills beyond the bridge, the bright blue sky full of swiftly moving white clouds.  On the white pillow, my father’s dark brown thin face began to turn toward me.  He was cleanly shaved.  What hair he had was cut close to the scalp.  The room smelled of urine.

“Hugo?” the face said.  “Is that you?”

“Yes, sir,” I said.  “It’s me, Dad.”

“Is your mother here?”

“Tammy’s bringing Mom.”

He was trying to make me out.  I was fifty six and he was ninety two and his sight was nearly gone.

“Are you doing okay?” he asked.

“I’m doing okay, Dad.”

“School okay?” he asked.

“School’s fine.  I might even have a talent for teaching.  Better late than never.”

“That’s right, champ.”

In his youth he’d been a pretty good light heavy weight.  He’d fought under the lights of Madison Square Garden.  The face seemed to be smiling at me.  I couldn’t tell.

“I’m going to be published,” I said.

“Good, good,” my father said.  “That’s what you always wanted.”

“It’s just a local weekly, but they want to showcase my stories.”

“Good.”

“Maybe someone will want to publish the entire collection, but at least it’ll help me get a job after my fellowship runs out.”

“You staying in Pittsburgh?”

“I’ll never leave Pittsburgh.”

“It’s a good town,” he said.

“It’s a good town.”

“It’s been a good town for me and your mother.  I wasn’t always good in it but it’s a good town.”

“It’s a good town.”

“Well,” he said, “you kept at it all these years.”

“All these years.”

I had just turned twenty when I got back from Vietnam and told him I was going to be a writer.  He told me writing was a hobby for rich white boys.  During the year I was in Vietnam I sent home to Mom most of my pay.  It was this that he had used to get my two brothers and two sisters, all younger than I was, and Mom out of the ghetto and into the suburbs.  It wasn’t that he hadn’t been trying to get them out.  He was a truly fine electric welder at J&L and then US Steel and he drove a jitney out of the Hill District, too.  It was just that he could never get them out until I sent home those nice, fat checks every month for a year.

“Maybe,” he said, “maybe things would have happened for you sooner if you didn’t have to help me.”

My throat tightened up.  “I wasn’t ready.  I wasn’t ready in my twenties or my thirties or even in my forties.”  For years I drank too much, slept around and had contempt for regular employment.  It’s probably why now I don’t have a woman and family of my own.  I’ve always been a bad bet.  The reason I joined the army at eighteen was to get away from him coming home drunk and beating up my mother.  I wanted to kill him.

“No, Dad, I wasn’t ready.”

“Well,” he said, “I want to thank you for what you did.”

My throat tightened up.

He said, “Now you got your shot.”

“I got my shot.”

Footsteps were coming down the hall.  I looked around.  Mom and my sister Tammy came quietly into the room.

The End

********************

The Writing Of “Hills Beyond The Bridge”

My father was a wife beater but then he was the only father I had.  He’d stopped beating my mother around the time I was thirteen years old but the memory of the beatings is why I left home as soon as I turned eighteen and could sign myself into the army.

My father had many good qualities.  He was a proud, dark-skin black man who had grown up in the South and suffered all the humiliations of segregation.  He came North and became a good professional boxer and after his boxing days were over and he gave up his hand-to-mouth small time mob activities (because of my mother) he took a steady job as a welder in the steel mills of Pittsburgh earning a very good living for a working class man (black or white) for his growing family.  My mother was the reason for his transformation to respectable, hard working middle class husband and father.  She was the best thing that ever happened to him.  But he did like his liquor.

Whenever he and my mother went out and he drank he’d come home and beat her up.  She was a beautiful, fair-skinned black woman, a natural brunette, and I think in some ways she must have been threatening to him.  He got jealous if other men looked at her.  When she stopped going out with him the beatings stopped.

Although he instilled in me the ideas of mental toughness, pride in learning and being good at a skill (writing for me) and pride in my manhood the memories of the beatings filled me with shame and anger.  I loved and feared him and at times probably hated him.  I know after he died my dreams were full of the two of us angrily shouting at each other and a couple of times coming to blows.

“Hills Beyond The Bridge” is my fictional record of the last time I saw my father.  There was no funeral.  He was cremated.  As with much of my fiction the story is 90% true.

Guy Hogan (Editor/Publisher)

Young Love (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Young-Love.634887

Nineteen (A Short Short Story)

I never saw him again.  It was the Summer of Love.  I knocked on the door and a voice said to come in.  When he saw me he got up from behind his desk and came around and shook hands.  His office looked like any other office except for the kinds of books on the shelves and the Christ on the cross on the wall.  His desk was polished and the papers stacked neat and he wore an ordinary suit.

“Sit down, John,” he said.  “It’s good to have you with us.”

“Thank you, sir.”

He sat behind the desk.  “You look well.”

“I’ve put on weight.”

“Being back home will do that to you.”  He smiled.

I nodded.

“So, how is everything going?” he asked.

“All right.”

“No problems?” he asked.

“No problems.”

“Everything fitting back into place?”

“More or less.”

“No after effects?”

“I wake up at night not knowing where I’m at, but outside of that nothing.”

“Good.  Very good.  So when can we expect you back?”

I moved uneasily in my seat.

“You do want to come back,” he said.  “Don’t you?”

“I want to come back.”

“Then come back.”

“I don’t know.  I don’t know if I can come back.”

Once when Mom was very sick and I was still a little boy, he came to our home with a basket of fruit and prayed on his knees in his new suit beside the bed as she lay pale and weak under the covers.  At home on top of the television/hi-fi in the living room was the picture of my mother and father, both very young in their wedding clothes holding the large Bible he gave to them.  In the bottom drawer of the chest-of-drawers in my room at home was the Bible he gave to me and I took away with me and did not read and finally never did read.

“Reverend, it’s just that everything’s changed now.”

“Changed in what way, my son.”

“Nothing’s the same anymore.”

“God’s love for you hasn’t changed.”

I felt embarrassed and resentful.

“John,” he said, “listen to me.  You’ve just come from a terrible place.  At your age you’ve seen things many of us will never see, should never see.  Horrible things.  What you’re feeling now can only be dealt with through God’s healing love.  You must ask God to come back into your life, to heal your heart, to touch your soul, to fill the emptiness and bitterness with His all encompassing love.  It is not for us to judge God’s will.  We cannot judge God.”

“I’m not judging God.”

“You must pray for guidance, my son.”

“Why?”

“You must pray for guidance to live by His law, not by man’s.”

“We all die anyway.”

“Death is no obstacle to God.”

“We all end up the same way.”

“Death is not the end.”

“Oh, it’s the end all right.”

“It is not the end.  Everlasting life is God’s promise to us.”

“I don’t believe it.”

“John, God does not lie.”

“I don’t believe it.  I don’t believe it.  I just don’t believe any of it.”

He was a wonderful preacher and became pastor to one of the largest congregations in this city.

The End          

********************

Vietnam in the Mist (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Vietnam-in-the-Mist.643749

Divorce (A Short Story)

I stand at the upstairs bar. Two couples walk in. The doorman checks their IDs. The one girl must have a pretty good fake ID. She comes closer and I see the irises of her eyes are violet. She’s a stunner. A shoulder-length mass of shiny auburn curls frame her face. Both couples sit at the bar. She’s on my right. The rest are farther down. The DJ plays “Don’t Stop” by Fleetwood Mac. The girl plays air guitar. She leans toward me and says, “Great song.”

“Yeah.”

When the song ends, she wants to know, “Are you an alcoholic?”

“What?”

“Are you an alcoholic?”

I’m wearing a black leather jacket, a black pullover jersey, a wide black leather belt and tight faded blue jeans with black motorcycle boots. I’m thinner, my brown hair is touching my shoulders and I hope the gray is not too noticeable.

I go, “I hope not.”

“My parents say people who go to bars alone are alcoholics.”

“It was either stay in or go out alone.”

“You’re not dating?”

“Well, no. You could say I just broke up.”

“I’m dating six different guys.”

“Do they all know each other?”

She tries to explain who knows or doesn’t know who, confusing both of us. I think she’s nineteen. The young guy next to her wears an old denim jacket with the collar turned up. He talks to the other couple with his back to us. Telling her date she’s going to the bathroom, she slips downstairs with this preppy type, a white sweater tied by the sleeves around his neck. Ten minutes later she’s back sitting on her stool. “Rock Steady” by Bad Company comes from the speakers.

“So,” she lowers her voice, “which one should I pick?”

I lower my voice, “No way for me to tell.”

“I mean which one looks the best?”

“What kind of looks do you like?”

“I mean with me. Which one looks best with me?”

She’s wearing this lovely, expensive looking, dark blue long-sleeve blouse with a high stiff collar, black slacks and black flats. Her skin is flawless. Those violet eyes.

I tell her, “The one with the sweater around his neck.”

She throws her head back and laughs and claps her hands. She has good, white teeth.

I lean in close and whisper, “How old are you?”

She whispers back, “Sixteen.”

She and her friends leave. The place gets crowded. Too crowded. These two young women work their way to the bar. From the speakers comes “Love Hurts” by Nazareth and the joint is a madhouse.

“Let’s stay here,” the blonde one says to her friend. She turns to me and says, “You mind moving down some?”

I’m standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the young guy on my left. “There’s no room.”

“There’s lots of room.”

Her hair is crimped and hangs down to her waist. A black minidress seems to have been tattooed on her. She looks fantastic in it. She’s pretty. A hint of makeup. Lovely, strange hazel eyes. She talks to her friend while her butt presses up against me.

Her friend is in a looser white mini. She seems to be the younger one of the two. Brown skin and nice makeup. Her black curly hair so short I can see her scalp. Dark brown eyes and high cheekbones and a very kissable mouth. The three of us get to talking.

The blonde says to me, “Call us Mick and Stick.”

I go, “What do you do?”

She says, “I hang out.”

I ask, “You in school?”

She says, “I just hang out.”

“How long have you been hanging out?”

“Nine years.”

“Nine years? You must do something.”

“I work out.”

“You don’t have a job?”

“My folks own several apartment buildings and one day I’ll just manage one of their apartment buildings.”

The dark one says, “I’m going to be a doctor.”

Mick? Stick? She’s dancing in place or doing what young people call dancing: sex standing up.

“You’re pre-med?”

She nods and watches me watching her undulate. She turns slowly in place all the way around and then when she’s facing me again she puts two fingers in her mouth and sucks on them. She pulls them out with a pop and laughs loudly. She has a wonderful laugh. The blonde rolls her eyes.

Later, I have a fresh bottle of beer. Nearly everyone else drinks from little plastic cups. Mick and Stick have moved on. A voice says to me, “Here you are all alone standing up against the wall.”

It’s Brian. He has a full bottle of beer. We sit at one of the small tables in the short hall between the barroom and the dining room. The other tables are filled with young couples probably on dates.

Brian says, “I saw Marybeth.”

“Who?”

“Marybeth. You know. Marybeth Jenkins.”

“That redhead in our old poli-sci class we both dated. You’re kidding. How long ago was that?”

“Yesterday I saw her.”

“What do you mean you saw her?”

“She was strung out sleeping in a doorway.”

“No she wasn’t.”

“I got her name.”

We work on our beers. “Gimme Shelter” by the Stones is coming out of the barroom behind me. I look up at this table of diners, probably a family.

He says, “I gave her a twenty. She didn’t know me.”

I try to think happy thoughts. This cutie in a gray sweatshirt with the Pitt logo on the front of it comes walking out of the dining room toward me.

I call out, “Go Panthers!” and smile.

She calls back, “Go fuck yourself!” and walks past.

Brian explodes into laughter. He pounds on the table. “The look on your face.” He sits there laughing, wiping the tears from his eyes. It takes awhile before he settles down. I try to think happy thoughts.

Finally in control again, he says to me, “Bobby has a new band.”

Bobby Coleman is around our age.

He says, “The local college radio stations play them pretty good.”

I finish my beer and stand up. “Still doesn’t get him jack.”

“You never know.” He finishes his beer and stands up.

“He’s been at it since he was a kid.”

“Just don’t you give up.”

“One good thing.”

“What’s that?” he says.

“We waited till the kids were grown.”

“That’s one good thing.”

“The only good thing.”

“I’m here for you.”

“I know.”

Outside, we separate. I stand and watch the on rushing headlights of the right to left one-way traffic. I watch the flow of students. I take in their faces, gestures, clothes and hair. Some of them are shouldering backpacks.

The End        

********************

Love Hurts (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Thoughts/Love-Hurts.668183

A Great American Beauty (A Very Short Story)

Patricia Rossellini Antonnelli was eighteen. Her father owned a construction company. Her home was the only home with twelve foot pillars around the ground floor in a neighborhood of very nice homes.

At Boyce Campus none of the other female students could compete with her beauty. The male students made assumptions about her. It was as much of a burden as a gift to look that way. She still had to learn how to handle the impact her face and taut yet voluptuous body had on both sexes. Then too in hot weather she didn’t wear much.

Scott Delaney made no assumptions. She trusted him and needed a friend. He had a car. Everyone thought they were dating. When both got their associate degrees he transferred to Duquesne University, the same urban school in Pittsburgh she transferred to. She was by far the most striking female on campus.

Scott had no interest in journalism. It was his major. He thought journalism was a practical step as a career while he learned to write short stories. He was bored silly. He dropped out of school. He lost touch with his Italian-American beauty. He never kissed her. He never got his hands on that spectacular body.

Still, how many men can truthfully say that in college they were the best friend of one of the great beauties of their generation?

The End

********************

Love Hurts (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Thoughts/Love-Hurts.668183

Back In The USA (A Short Story)

I was desperate for a girlfriend. I was twenty-one-years old. I was back from Vietnam and discharged from the army. I moved out of my parents’ suburban home into an efficiency in the city. My parents did not want me to go. I couldn’t explain to them how I needed a place of my own, a life of my own. It would have hurt them. The world they lived in, I did not live in any longer. I would never live in it again. I enrolled in a university in the city and joined a fraternity.

One Friday evening in early December, after hours of study in the library, I went to a party at the fraternity house. A long, improvised bar was set up in the big front room. A fraternity brother played records on the stereo system. The music was Motown, not psychedelic. I didn’t want to take a trip in my mind. I didn’t like being alone. A few couples danced in a roped off area.

Drinking my beer from a plastic cup, I stood with my back to the bar to see who was there. The SDs were present and that always made me happy. The initials stood for Sisters of Delta. They were dedicated to partying with our fraternity.

Several Delts and SDs were putting down some nice moves on the dance floor when I saw Bruce off to the side pointing a finger in this guy’s face. Larry stood behind Bruce. They were fraternity brothers. A few SDs and Delts sat at our reserved tables where I’d left my books, notebooks and fatigue jacket. I’d kept my Delta jacket on.

I didn’t know the new guy. He must have been a guest. He slapped Bruce’s finger away and that would have been it if several Delts hadn’t grabbed Bruce, Larry and this new guy. We didn’t need trouble. We didn’t need the university coming around.

After several beers, I was starting to enjoy the throbbing feel of the party when Bruce said to me, “Let’s school him.”

“Who?”

“This is our party, our house.”

“Let it be.”

We were standing at the bar. Larry was on my left.

“There you go again,” Bruce said, “punking out of a fight.”

Bruce downed his shot and pushed away. He bumped several people. They looked at him. One of the bartenders refilled my cup.

“What’s with you?” Larry said.

“Did this bonehead steal some money?”

“He was hitting on Karen.”

Karen Daniels dated the president of our fraternity.

“Karen’s cool,” I said. “She’s not helpless.”

I’d joined the fraternity to meet girls. Everyone knew Larry. He was a great dancer and could always get dates. Bruce thought he was a tough guy. I would’ve loved to have seen him in-country.

Larry stood a few feet away. Three honeys stood in a semi-circle in front of him. They looked up into his face and laughed delightedly at something he said. One looked at me and smiled, then looked away. A moment later she did it again. She looked up a third time and beckoned me over.

Before I could start over, Bruce pushed in beside me. I wanted to smooth things over with him.

“Let’s do a shot,” I said.

“You can’t buy me nothin’.”

“He’s just a guest.”

“He’s chickenshit!”

“Be serious.”

“Serious?” he said.

“Be real.”

“Real?” he said. “Why don’t you make me real?”

“Bruce, maintain.”

“Go on,” he said. “Make me real.” Then he said, “Baby killer.”

“Cool it!” Larry squeezed between us.

Bruce was shouting at me. Larry got Bruce headed toward the door. I finished my beer, crumbled up the plastic cup and tossed it into the trash bag of a large trash can behind the bar. Karen Daniels came up and asked me to dance.

“I don’t feel like dancing.”

“Pretty please with kisses on it?”

She took my left hand and led me through the crowd. The dance floor was crowded. People were having a good time. The bass line of the song made you swing your hips. We had to dance close together in the crush.

“You know how he is,” she said.

“He called me a baby killer.”

“What does he know?”

“Is that what everyone here thinks? That we’re all freaked out baby killers?”

“What do they know? What do any of them know? It’s no fun dating the president of the Delts, either. It’s no fun partying every night.”

I leaned back and gave her a long, good look. She smelled of lilac. The warmth rose from her body. Most of the girls were wearing minis. Karen was wearing one, too.

“I know,” she said. “It’s too short.”

“So?”

“Rick says all my minis are too short. Who needs it?”

Later, I sat alone at our reserved tables. Larry came over and sat down.

“Where’s Bruce?” I asked him.

“Gary’s,” he said. “All the new SDs are there.”

“I’m sick of him.”

“No harm done.”

“I don’t want to be around him or people like him. Understand what I’m saying? Not anymore. Not any damn more. Life’s too fucking short.”

“What the hell are you so fired up about? Let it slide. One of the new SDs wants to meet you. She thinks you’re hot. I said I’d bring you.”

The party was going on all around us. I sat a moment with the party going on all around us. I stood up, took off my Delta jacket and put it on the back of a chair. I put on my fatigue jacket. I slowly gathered my books and notebooks.

Larry said, “He’s your Delta brother.”

Outside, it was night. A heavy snow was falling. At least an inch had fallen already. The small commercial district was lit up for the holiday season. As I walked through the falling snow, people hurried past me. Most of them carried packages.

The End       

********************

Vietnam in the Mist (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Vietnam-in-the-Mist.643749

She Had Large Firm Breasts (A Very Short Story)

B.J. Kent asked Judy Lamar to join him after class for a couple of beers, his treat. Judy said sure. It would be the fourth time in two weeks that Judy had said yes to joining B.J. for a few beers. B.J. was sure Judy liked him. He sure liked Judy. Judy had large, firm breasts and wore low cut tops.

The two left their classroom in the Cathedral of Learning of the University of Pittsburgh and headed for a bar. Only a few customers were in the bar when B.J. and Judy walked in. He and she sat at the bar. Usher was jamming on the jukebox. After their second pitcher of beer B.J. said to Judy, “Another pitcher?”

“One more,” she said. “The next time we’re here it’s on me.”

“Great.”

The other customers left. The bartender brought their pitcher of beer and said, “I got to run downstairs for awhile. If anyone comes in tell them I’ll be right up.”

B.J. looked in the mirror behind the bar. Judy was talking about a particular professor who always stared at her chest when he addressed her. B.J. wondered what would happen if he placed a hand on one of her breasts. As she talked, her face turned toward him, he kept his eyes on her face. Then B.J. started sweating. He knew what he was going to do.

Judy stopped talking to drink some beer. B.J. stood up and stood behind her. He placed his hands on her shoulders. She put down her glass and smiled into the mirror behind the bar at him. B.J. thought, she probably thinks I’m going to do something romantic like give her a back massage. Using every ounce of courage he had, B.J. slid his hands down inside her top and inside her bra. He cupped both breasts in his hands. In the mirror, her expression was one of complete surprise. She froze. He began massaging her breasts.  The nipples of her breasts got harder. Her body swayed with his massaging.

“B.J.!” she said.

He yanked his hands out of her top. The bartender opened the door from the basement and walked behind the bar lugging two cases of beer. Judy swivelled on her stool and faced B.J.

She said in a low intense voice, “This is not the right place.”

The End

Girls Gone Wild (A Short Story)

Sex, Booze and a Short Memory (A Short Story)

Ohio (A Very Short Story)

In Pittsburgh at the Boyce Campus of the Community College of Allegheny County everyone wanted to do something.  No one knew what it should be.  Student leaders telephoned the other branch campuses.  Their students were in the same predicament.  Energy was there, but leadership was lacking.

It was as if government had declared open season on students.  Scott Delaney was sick knowing American troops had fired on unarmed American students.  What the fuck were they doing on a university campus with live ammo, anyway?

“Oh, well,” said a buddy who had served in the 1st Cav (Airmobile) in Vietnam with Scott one year before and now attended the same community college campus.  “What do you expect?  They’re national guard.”

The End

********************

Young Love (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Young-Love.634887

Just North Of Saigon (A Very Short Story) by Guy Hogan

AFP mess kit; similar to US military mess kits.

AFP mess kit; similar to US military mess kits. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Specialist Fourth Class Scott Delaney held his open mess kit in his left hand as he stood sweating in the chow line, his M-16 rifle slung from his right shoulder.  Six 105mm howitzers painted a dull green squatted in the shimmer of the heat and the glare of the sun, their barrels pointing in high trajectories toward the cloudless blue sky.  There were no trees in the battery area.  The grass was trampled flat.  A knee deep stream formed part of the perimeter.  Infantry was dug in along this side of the stream.

On the other side of the stream, under the cooling leaves of many trees, stood a thatch roofed hut in the tall green grass.  The grass swayed gently in the breeze.

An old man in a shallow upside down funnel shaped hat came walking back from his fields.  Long stringy white hairs grew from his chin.  His clothes seemed to be black pajamas.  He walked barefoot, his face and hands burnt dark brown by the sun.  He carried primitive tools on his right shoulder as he had done every day the battery had been in this secured area.

On this day one of the grunts along the stream shot at the old man.  Then there were other scattered, lazy shots.  Then light automatic weapons fire.  M-79 and 50 caliber heavy machine gun fire.  Finally, most of the grunts along the stream were firing at the old man.  None of the officers or NCOs said anything.  A few of the grunts were laughing.  The old man was torn to pieces.  Scott got his hot food and left the chow line.

Sitting on the rim of his upside down helmet in what little shade he could find, Scott Delaney did not begin to eat until his food was cold.

The End

Vietnam in the Mist (A Short Story) www.authspot.com/Short-Stories/Vietnam-in-the-Mist.643749

Young Lust (A Very Short Story)

The Frisbees were different colors, sailing in long lazy trajectories through the cavernous Civic Arena in Pittsburgh.  The lights went down.  The band was led onto the stage by flashlight beams pointed at the floor.  The audience stood to clap in unison with the music.

The young woman Scott Delaney was with put an arm around his waist.  She looked up openly into his face.  Scott had been back from Vietnam six years now but she made him feel like a teenager again.  Nothing seemed to have consequences.  It was easy not to think of consequences with her pressed up against him.  Near the end of the concert thousands of tiny flames flickered in the vast darkness.

She and Scott ended up parked on a back road in the suburbs under a clump of trees under a moonless black sky of millions of stars.  He had no rubbers and she wasn’t on the pill.  In the back seat they went all the way.  The windows fogged over.  After it was over and still breathing hard, they held each other tight.  Her skin was damp and very warm.  The car smelled of sex.  He sensed she had already started to worry.  Suddenly, he started to worry, too.  How could he have been so stupid?

She phoned him several days later to say she was late and she was never late.  He felt his world shift as he stood holding the receiver.  She phoned again two days later to say happily it was all right because she had started and there was nothing to worry about.  He felt his world slide back into place.  His relief made him feel selfish and small.

But he knew she was relieved, too.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 831 other followers