Issue 3.10
November 2025
Craig Dobson
The Winter Sea
The Winter Sea
In waves, paint peels 
from a restless door.
Rags of dry weed rush past,
thumped by gusts.
The sea fades. Clouds compress,
fossilizing a gull’s crooked line. 
I close the door, still the room.
Outside, the wind gnaws.
Dunes settle in the gloom. 
Only the brocading shore betrays a border.
And further out, like fallen stars, 
white-tops wandering the dark.
Neal Mason
Fright
Fright
Early season, but fully-grown waves
slap the pier’s legs, rides and stalls
sullen as though yawning and regretting
leaving their beds, so only a lad
with his lolly braves the Ghost Train’s
skeletons and cobwebs.
He counts his pocket-money pennies, chooses
a seat and faces the dark. The only passenger,
he’s rocked as the train enters primordial
night, ancient fears lurking,
the ride advertised as the most frightening
in any amusement park.
A coffin gapes eerily, something touches
his shoulder, a siren wails. A cowled figure
leaps up, the train swerves,
avoiding a satanic face, but the boy
licks his lolly; to him, this
is as tame as fairy tales.
A week later, on platform one, he stares
at an open-doored train. His school group,
uniformed, noisy, boards while he freezes,
admonished again, unseen devils
and monsters haunting the recesses
of his petrified brain.
Frederick Pollack
Last Post
Last Post
A lieutenant has been ordered
to lay a revolver on the table
in a general’s cell, and leave.
He deposits the gun, but doesn’t leave.
“Why do you hesitate?” comes
a dull voice from a face
beyond the cone of the pale hanging lamp. 
“I’m sorry, sir.”  “You’re supposed to omit
the formalities,” says the voice.
“I’m curious: how do I strike you now?”
The lieutenant wonders if the heavy smell
in the room comes only from this occupant.
“The way,” he says, “the light catches
the braid and medals but not your face
is … Rembrandtesque.”  “An artist,”
the prisoner half-chuckles. “They’re letting
anyone in, now. What else?”
“I’m not sure what you did,” says the lieutenant,
“though rumors abound. It must be bad,
for the general staff to keep a secret.
I’m wondering, if it was a sexual
peccadillo, would you ask of me
a valedictory … service, which, 
I hasten to add, I must refuse.
If money was involved, will you attempt
to bribe me? Or might you shoot me—
though the gun contains only one bullet—
to vent some final spleen?”
“All these describe *your* state of mind,”
says the prisoner after a moment,
“not speculate on mine. I’m disappointed.”
“What is your state of mind, then?” asks the lieutenant.
“A sort of confirmation,” says the general.
“At the academy I learned how war
changed with the invention of gunpowder.
Considering this over time, I discovered
a larger, truer interpretation
of our craft. It isn’t
a regrettable, hopefully minimized
byproduct. As you know, we all die, even
civilians.” He raises the revolver.
“You’re perhaps too young to grasp it, but with years
the ‘three little words’ so famous in youth
are replaced by others, of which two
are ‘instantaneous’ and ‘painless.’”
Jonathan Ukah
A Thing to Remember
A Thing to Remember
Lest we forget the way to cradle the sky,
and follow the narrow path of our exit,
we must remember the little things of light  
and the big things that will not unmake us; 
how to make our path low, our feet nimble,
sharpen our eyes and wear the clothes of the time.
Even withered leaves look upon us with scorn,
while the thorns of fallen places disdain us,
if we deny our tears to fertilise the arid fields.
We must meet the winter wind with warmth
or the summer sun with a chilly calmness
when we carry our hearts in our fiery chest
and hand them over to those with open palms.
Not contented with walking on the bare ground
I raised my head and leg to the next hill to climb,
a steep land on a slope with mounds of sand,
rocks dominating, pebbles and grass rising
towards the withdrawing sky in a twilight.
It’s time I asked my father for a ladder
that will scare the sky into coming down,
hills rise at my approach and the earth grins.
The stars have no more pomposity remaining
than the moon has an assumption of its humility,
when I reappear behind the horizon with a ladder,
a thing impossible when we fought the lion,
but now taken for granted, doused in a dream.
My father did not understand how the living,
born to descend into the seventh universe,
should learn to climb to seven hills or mountains,
or perhaps attain to where the sky ends in white.
It must be the undoing of the stars that we are here
thinking of how rivers grow into mountains,
or oceans become weary of swimming in valleys,
but now decide to take possession of the sky,
when their dominion is more than the earth can take.
My father said that no ladder leans on the clouds,
without training on how to carry wilting weights.
Yet, if the earth stays on the earth, sky in the sky,
how do we put these things up or bring them down?
Darrell Petska
Last Will and Testament
Last Will and Testament
...and to the kiddos I award my old jalopy, Earth.
Although I've driven her hard,
she's still got some miles left under the hood.
Reverse is shot so there’s no going backward
and the emergency brake’s been overused to death,
but she’ll get you where you want to go 
given a few repairs, workarounds and a kind word.
Remind the kiddos the ol’ girl tends to overheat.
She also floods easily, and her steering rods are
rusted and bent which could send her out of control 
if you're not vigilant at the wheel. The features
that made her special are mostly worn out.
She’s down to the basics—yet she still rolls along.
Granted, I didn’t maintain her the way
I probably should’ve, though that saved me
lots of money and a world of bother. The kiddos
get her “as is,” just as I got her from my old man.
If they have the will and the means, maybe
they can spruce her up a bit.
Earth was once a pretty sweet ride.
If the kiddos wreck her now, after all this time,
it’d be a damn shame. They don’t make ‘em
like that anymore. Please mention there’s only
one key—they’ll have to share. And caution them
to take the potholes easy—there’s no spare in the trunk.