SCARLET LEAF REVIEW
  • HOME
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • ABOUT
    • SUBMISSIONS
    • PARTNERS
    • CONTACT
  • 2022
    • ANNIVERSARY
    • JANUARY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
  • 2021
    • ANNIVERSARY
    • JANUARY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • FEBRUARY & MARCH >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • APR-MAY-JUN-JUL >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
      • ART
    • AUG-SEP >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • OCTOBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • NOV & DEC >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
  • 2020
    • DECEMBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • AUG-SEP-OCT-NOV >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • JULY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • JUNE >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • MAY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • APRIL >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • MARCH >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • FEBRUARY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • JANUARY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • ANNIVERSARY
  • 2019
    • DECEMBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • NOVEMBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • OCTOBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • SEPTEMBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • AUGUST >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NONFICTION
      • ART
    • JULY 2019 >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • JUNE 2019 >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • ANNIVERSARY ISSUE >
      • SPECIAL DECEMBER >
        • ENGLISH
        • ROMANIAN
  • ARCHIVES
    • SHOWCASE
    • 2016 >
      • JAN&FEB 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Prose >
          • Essays
          • Short-Stories & Series
          • Non-Fiction
      • MARCH 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Short-Stories & Series
        • Essays & Interviews
        • Non-fiction
        • Art
      • APRIL 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Prose
      • MAY 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Short-Stories
        • Essays & Reviews
      • JUNE 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Short-Stories
        • Reviews & Essays & Non-Fiction
      • JULY 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Short-Stories
        • Non-Fiction
      • AUGUST 2016 >
        • Poems Aug 2016
        • Short-Stories Aug 2016
        • Non-fiction Aug 2016
      • SEPT 2016 >
        • Poems Sep 2016
        • Short-Stories Sep 2016
        • Non-fiction Sep 2016
      • OCT 2016 >
        • Poems Oct 2016
        • Short-Stories Oct 2016
        • Non-Fiction Oct 2016
      • NOV 2016 >
        • POEMS NOV 2016
        • SHORT-STORIES NOV 2016
        • NONFICTION NOV 2016
      • DEC 2016 >
        • POEMS DEC 2016
        • SHORT-STORIES DEC 2016
        • NONFICTION DEC 2016
    • 2017 >
      • ANNIVERSARY EDITION 2017
      • JAN 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • FEB 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MARCH 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • APRIL 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MAY 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • JUNE 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • JULY 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • AUG 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
        • PLAY
      • SEPT 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • OCT 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • NOV 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • DEC 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
    • 2018 >
      • JAN 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • FEB-MAR-APR 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MAY 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • JUNE 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • JULY 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • AUG 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • SEP 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • OCT 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • NOV-DEC 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • ANNIVERSARY 2018
    • 2019 >
      • JAN 2019 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • FEB 2019 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MARCH-APR 2019 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MAY 2019 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
  • BOOKSHOP
  • RELEASES
  • INTERVIEWS
  • REVIEWS

THOMAS ELSON - SHORT-STORIES

11/23/2020

0 Comments

 
Picture
Thomas Elson’s short stories, poetry, and flash fiction have been published in numerous venues such as Calliope, Pinyon, Lunaris, New Ulster, Lampeter, Selkie, Pennsylvania Literary Journal, and Adelaide Literary Magazine. He divides his time between Northern California and Western Kansas.    

HELPLESS
​

“Again.”
“Again.”
“Again.”
“Once more.”
Her son slid down the wall onto the hallway floor. He saw what they did.
‘Oh, God.”
“Jesus.”
He was helpless.
Helpless - while the woman who bore him was laid out with chest exposed and shocked with paddles by men overfilling their pale blue uniforms.
 
Helpless – while the woman who walked him to school, who intervened at school, who repaired his injuries, provided inoculations, taught him how to use a spoon, throw a ball, speak in public, who worked third shift to support him, visited him in confinement, never condemned his behaviors; his one constant amid the turmoil he created; as that woman who was never helpless was laid out on the floor, surrounded a stranger who said,
“Again.”
Silence. 
“Again.”
Silence.
“Stop.”
Then, lifting the paddles, said,
“Time of death…”
 
 
THE END

​

THE DIVINITY*
​

​One hundred and forty-eight people gathered in the hall.
One person could not make it but sent a three-page letter.
One hundred and forty-seven signed the book.
Only one did not.
One hundred and forty-one, over the years, had spoken with her about children, spouses, abuse, rapes, fears, shortcomings, debts, dreams.
One hundred and thirty-seven had been hired by her.
Twenty-three had their jobs saved by her.
Four had been fired by her but came anyway.
Everyone knew it was the last time.
One photograph was taken.
One woman in the center of the photograph.
All were smiling.
One hundred and forty-seven signatures on the back of the photograph.
Twelve words on the front: From all those you saved at St. Matthew’s Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
 
* Divinity: collective noun for a group of neonatal intensive care nurses.
 
  • THE END -

RULES IN HEAVEN
​

​Before you get too comfortable here, let’s review the rules.
First, there are certain verities:
All of you are different.
Each one of you was wrong.
There is no adoration. Fawning does not work. I am not that small.
Do not pray. Prayers do not matter. I never really listened to them anyway. Your arrogance offends me – as if I required reminding what you need. Besides that, you failed to ask for the right thing.
For kindness and empathy: read Matthew. If you only acted out of self-interest, at least you did something.
There are two main rules:
Do not do anything you did before.
            What you did not do does not matter here.
THE END



ON HER THIRD STEP
​

​            A right turn onto Seneca Street, left at McCormack, past the high school - where it began with adjoining lockers – then up the small hill, over the railroad tracks, the stop light, over the Arkansas River, look to the right and see the spillway, then more railroad tracks, past her best friend’s house, two more blocks east, turn left, go north for a block and a half, then on his left the numbers, 1045-1043 – the street numbers of the duplex. Only three steps to the shared porch. The same route he travelled years earlier, first hesitantly, then eagerly, then greedily.
            The street was both lush and bleak, scattered with vehicles without bumpers, fenders, doors, radio antennas, wheels, or hubcaps. Vehicles in streets, front yards, elevated or embedded a few absent tires, others absent axels. Vehicles once for use now for cannibalization or neglect.
#
That night was terminal. He didn’t know it yet; but more likely than not, she had an inclination.
He would see her only one more time. He didn’t know that either.
            On the third step of a shared porch they had rested on, stood against, and lingered near for years - her widowed mother’s half a house. The kind of slap-dash housing folks lived in back then.
Housing where wind could be heard through the windows. The wind a low whine, sometimes mellow, more often shrill and mean, but always demanding. Winds that delivered consecutive blows with such force that memories long tucked away were shaken loose. Houses modeled, remodeled over generations until they stood as they were in the beginning with pitted white siding, unpainted porches, two halves with two doors and two windows facing the street. A visitor could be shotgunned through the door, into the living room, kitchen, past bathroom, then into bedroom and out the back door without being invited inside.
Their lives charted by a single path dictated by the times – the early sixties which means the fifties, but learned from the forties, and dictated during the thirties. Her grandmother’s life sewn into her seams. His grandfathers’ life a trumpet that would lead him his entire life. Both carried expectations as blinders. The only issues were the peripheral vision allowed with those blinders, and how long until they were yanked off.
Her world remained as small as her house – one classroom in one city with one spouse and one set of friends. From house to high school to college to classroom – a life within eight city blocks.
            His world had multiple roads – graveled, paved. Rutted. Smooth. Mapped. Unknown - until, years later, after paneled offices near the Potomac, the Mississippi, and San Francisco Bay, he was on the same street in the same town where he had begun.
He, in his bespoke suit, had seen a current picture of her – a weighty, dyed or maybe wigged blond of a color not found in nature, her posture boisterous, ankles and wrists thick wearing a checkboard of orange and white that emphasized everything wrong. He preferred the black and white version when she was erect with dark hair framing an eager face, eyes focused on the world in front of her.
#
That night on the left side of the third step of the duplex was their last time whose first time began with adjoining lockers and the door she opened that struck his head as he turned to look at her. No words, just mutterings. No actual plan, they just were drawn together, just yes and yes, then yes.
There were no smiles on that terminal night only attempts to recapture better times. Times of firsts, of anticipations, feelings, touches. One year, two years, three years. The school years, Christmas vacations, summer jobs, the nights, dates, parties, movies, games, arguments, parking – airport, drive-ins – parents’ cars, permissions, acceptance, then graduation. Then, their final night as a couple. Three years. In all that time he was never invited inside.
For years he carried her in that empty spot. They were broken by something forgotten, never understood, mendable had they a few more years of maturity and experience.
On that night, when futility hit, he rose from the step, kissed her, held her, kissed both cheeks, kissed her again, took her hand, and did not let go until distance and time released her for him.
THE END
 

ZERGER PARK
​

​            He loved this park above all others – far surpassing Central, Golden Gate, Riverside, and all in between – this pocket park with swings, monkey bars, small merry-go-round, sandboxes, a forbidden maypole, and the water tower next to the wading pool all within walking distance of his family home, the family businesses, and the church.  
It was the wading pool he remembered as he drove by and saw himself stepping into the shallow water dressed in yellow shorts and matching yellow shirt holding his mother’s hand. He saw himself and his mother with her reassuring and encouraging smile, when, for the first time, he stepped into water not in a bathtub.
            Now old, ailing and worried, a full life of multiple degrees, with more initials after his name than letters in it, careers blown away by himself or time, multiple adventures on either side of a judge’s bench, forays on either side of bars horizontal or vertical, he prayed he were able to discard the shadow side – just eliminate it, take a scalpel and destroy that side of his life.
            If only he had not produced that forensic financial audit; if only he had not made those deposits; if only those accounts had not been created; if only he had behaved better, been better; if only he could do, not do, undo things; if only he walked and made decisions in sunlight, eschewed the shadow, opened the books, took the notes, asked the questions, accepted the answers, held the hand, held his own hand, held any hand, repressed that certain word, answered that certain call, did not answer the other call, saw more, said less, said nothing; if only he could begin again as that little boy with his mother in the wading pool at Zerger Park.
THE END
 
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Categories

    All
    A. E. WILLIAMS
    ALAN BERGER
    ALEX WOOLF
    ALFREDO SALVATORE ARCILESI
    ALINA CVETKOVA
    AMANDA BRADLEY
    AMBER BRANDAU
    AMBERLYNN BENNETT
    ANITA G. GORMAN
    ANITA HAAS
    ANNA LINDWASSER
    ARYTON WISE
    AYAN DAS
    BARRY VITCOV
    BEK-ATA DANIYAL
    BELINYA BANZE
    BEN GILBERT
    BIJIT SINHA
    BILL CARR
    BILL MESCE
    BILL WILKINSON
    BRAD SHURMANTINE
    BRIAN YEAPLE
    CAITLIN KILLION
    CAITLIN MOORE
    CAROLINE TAYLOR
    CASSANDRA HOERRNER
    C. C. KIMMEL
    CHARLES CONLEY
    CHERYL PENA
    CHITRA GOPALAKRISHNAN
    CHRIS COLLINS
    CHRISTINA REISS
    CHRISTOPHER COSMOS
    CHRISTOPHER JOHNSON
    CINNAMON WARING
    CRYSTAL "CRYS" LOPEZ-RODRIGUEZ
    DAMIAN MAXIMUS
    DAMION HAMILTON
    DAVID LIGHTFOOT
    DAVID POLSHAW
    DAVID ROGERS
    DESTANY TOLBERT
    DOUG HAWLEY
    DR. RICHARD AULT
    ELLIE ROSE MCKEE
    ENDA BOYLE
    ERIC BURBRIDGE
    ERNESTO I. GOMEZ BELLOSO
    FRANCES KOZIAR
    GABRIELLE SILVESTRE
    GARRETT PRANGE
    GARY P. PAVAO
    GEOFFREY HEPTONSTALL
    GEORGE LUBITZ
    GLYNN GERMANY
    HALEY GILMORE
    HANNAH DURHAM
    HARMAN BURGESS
    HAYDEN MOORE
    JAC0B AUSTIN
    JACOB FROMMER
    JACOB VINCENT
    JAMES WRIGHT
    JILL OLSON
    JING "MICHELLE" DONG
    JL WILLING
    J. N. LANG
    JOANNA ACEVEDO
    JOHN F ZURN
    JOHN HARVEY
    JOHN HIGGINS
    JONATHAN FERRINI
    JOSELYN JIMENEZ
    JOSEPH R. DEMARE
    JOSEPH SHARP
    JR.
    JULIA BENALLY
    KARL LUNTTA
    KATALINA BRYANT
    KATE TOUGH
    KEITH BURKHOLDER
    KEMAL ONOR
    KIARA MUNIZ
    KIERAN J. THORNTON
    LAYTON KELLY
    LEISA JENNINGS
    LOUISE WORTHINGTON
    LUIS CASIANO
    LYNDA SIMMONS
    MARY BROWN
    MATTHEW BARNINGER
    MATTHEW MCAYEAL
    MAXWELL STANNARD
    MICKEY J. CORRIGAN
    MICK MCCGRATH
    MIKE LEE
    NATALIE HAMPTON
    NDABA SIBANDA
    PATRICK NEENAN
    PATRICK ROSCOE
    PHYLISS MERION SHANKEN
    PUSHPANJANA KARMAKAR BISWAS
    R. G. ZIEMER
    ROBERT P. BISHOP
    RON RIEKKI
    ROSS MAYO JR
    R.R. UNDERSUN
    RUDOLFO SAN MIGUEL
    RUTH Z. DEMING
    SAVONTE HICKS
    SEAN FISHER
    SEAN WAYMAN
    SHAN BAE
    SHELDON MCCARTHY
    SHEVLIN SEBASTIAN
    STEPHEN FAULKNER
    STEVEN PELCMAN
    THOMAS ELSON
    TINA STAGER
    TOBIAS ROBBINS
    TOM UKINSKI
    TYHI CONLEY
    VICTORIA ANN MALONEY
    VICTORIA NAVA
    VON BOLO
    WENDY BENDLER
    WU ALLAH-FERNANDEZ
    XIAOCHEN SU
    ZACK MURPHY

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • HOME
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • ABOUT
    • SUBMISSIONS
    • PARTNERS
    • CONTACT
  • 2022
    • ANNIVERSARY
    • JANUARY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
  • 2021
    • ANNIVERSARY
    • JANUARY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • FEBRUARY & MARCH >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • APR-MAY-JUN-JUL >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
      • ART
    • AUG-SEP >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • OCTOBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • NOV & DEC >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
  • 2020
    • DECEMBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • AUG-SEP-OCT-NOV >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • JULY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • JUNE >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • MAY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • APRIL >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • MARCH >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • FEBRUARY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • JANUARY >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • ANNIVERSARY
  • 2019
    • DECEMBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • NOVEMBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • OCTOBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • SEPTEMBER >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • AUGUST >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NONFICTION
      • ART
    • JULY 2019 >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • JUNE 2019 >
      • POEMS
      • SHORT-STORIES
      • NON-FICTION
    • ANNIVERSARY ISSUE >
      • SPECIAL DECEMBER >
        • ENGLISH
        • ROMANIAN
  • ARCHIVES
    • SHOWCASE
    • 2016 >
      • JAN&FEB 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Prose >
          • Essays
          • Short-Stories & Series
          • Non-Fiction
      • MARCH 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Short-Stories & Series
        • Essays & Interviews
        • Non-fiction
        • Art
      • APRIL 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Prose
      • MAY 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Short-Stories
        • Essays & Reviews
      • JUNE 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Short-Stories
        • Reviews & Essays & Non-Fiction
      • JULY 2016 >
        • Poems
        • Short-Stories
        • Non-Fiction
      • AUGUST 2016 >
        • Poems Aug 2016
        • Short-Stories Aug 2016
        • Non-fiction Aug 2016
      • SEPT 2016 >
        • Poems Sep 2016
        • Short-Stories Sep 2016
        • Non-fiction Sep 2016
      • OCT 2016 >
        • Poems Oct 2016
        • Short-Stories Oct 2016
        • Non-Fiction Oct 2016
      • NOV 2016 >
        • POEMS NOV 2016
        • SHORT-STORIES NOV 2016
        • NONFICTION NOV 2016
      • DEC 2016 >
        • POEMS DEC 2016
        • SHORT-STORIES DEC 2016
        • NONFICTION DEC 2016
    • 2017 >
      • ANNIVERSARY EDITION 2017
      • JAN 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • FEB 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MARCH 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • APRIL 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MAY 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • JUNE 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • JULY 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • AUG 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
        • PLAY
      • SEPT 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • OCT 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • NOV 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • DEC 2017 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
    • 2018 >
      • JAN 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • FEB-MAR-APR 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MAY 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • JUNE 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • JULY 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • AUG 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • SEP 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • OCT 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • NOV-DEC 2018 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • ANNIVERSARY 2018
    • 2019 >
      • JAN 2019 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NONFICTION
      • FEB 2019 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MARCH-APR 2019 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
      • MAY 2019 >
        • POEMS
        • SHORT-STORIES
        • NON-FICTION
  • BOOKSHOP
  • RELEASES
  • INTERVIEWS
  • REVIEWS