Issue 117 June 2023

Table of Contents

A Tiger in Eden

by Dafydd McKimm

June 2, 2023

They walk a safe distance apart, the woman who will become a tiger and the lover she will devour, a distance that to outward eyes appears wholly lacking in suspicion.

She often feels a strange unease when walking through a city park, those patches of manicured green set among the gallant, tiered facades of Georgian houses, white as wedding cakes, slices of wild country rendered palatable–and yet here she is, being led by him past couples whose heedless affection tolls out an implicit judgement on their forbidden one, to some secret bower, away from prying eyes, where words like cheater and adulteress will not clamour, where their hunger for each other can be sated in silence.

He guides her to a shaded corner, where a red brick wall separates them from the street. Beyond it, she hears cars going by, chatter, the melancholic progression of Greensleeves–an old love song composed by the murderous Henry for his Anne Boleyn–emanating from an ice cream van.

On the brickwork, the branches of a horse chestnut cast long shadows, and down its trunk, on this hidden side, runs a scar. Lightning-strike, he says, and then taking her hand, he slips through the scar slick as an eel, drawing her with him into another world.

* * *

She emerges into paradise: afternoon sunlight flickers through branches laden with fruit; at her feet, wildflowers form a tapestry on the forest floor; a doe drinks from a crystal stream; there are no people.

Soon, they are fucking like rabbits in Eden’s arbours, committing their love unseen.

* * *

This must be the last time, she tells herself after–a conviction that lasts to the butt of her post-coital cigarette.

If only there weren’t so many complications, she thinks, nuzzling her nose into his neck, if only there were no others to hurt.

Others.

Complications.

She cannot even bring herself to think their names, as if unnaming them will negate her betrayal of them, as if it will make their as yet undiscovered wounds disappear.

As if sensing her unease, he untwines himself from her and says he will be right back, that he’s going to get some ice cream from the van they heard outside the park, in a different universe entirely.

She lies in the soft grass for a time, alone, wishing that she could stay alone forever, for who could she hurt, who betray, if she were marooned in this garden, away from the web of all that entangled humanity. Of what concern are morality and empathy to a castaway, after all?

But before too long, she begins to miss him, wonders where he has got to, wonders with increasing urgency as twilight trickles into the garden and the moon rises like an ivory tower behind the trees. She searches for the scarred tree, but the memory of its location has vanished along with him, and the darkling forest is vast.

* * *

When the sun rises, she admits to herself that he is not coming back. She imagines him lying in a hospital bed, comatose, or cold on a slab, struck by summer lightning. Eventually she accepts that to cover their crime, he must have betrayed her, too–left her to rot in paradise, confined their adventure in evil to fantasy and dream.

She thinks of resuming her search for the tree, but perhaps exile is a fate she deserves. Perhaps this is justice.

* * *

In the garden, the sun rises and sets countless times. Soon, all thoughts fade, leaving only the sweetness of fruit plucked and eaten from trees; she traps small beasts with twine from her fraying clothes and cooks them over a fire lit with her dwindling Zippo.

She sinks into the simplicity of the place, into its moral vacuum.

* * *

As the years fall away, she hunkers down on all fours and hunts rabbits and lambs, devouring them raw and bloody. Hair sprouts on her shoulders and limbs, rust red and umbra black, casting the human in her into eclipse. She begins to forget that she was ever sapient, and all those apish concerns seem to her a strange dream, which grows less vivid the longer her claws and fangs grow. She begins to believe that he and everyone else were simply a reverie she had while sleeping off a satisfying meal.

* * *

When the man returns, the tiger is crouched in the long grass, sun dappling its fur. He is holding two cones topped with white, sweet-smelling cream and repeating the same set of syllables over and over again to the empty grove.

He looks like he expects to find someone waiting for him, someone he left only a few moments ago–strange, when the only other heart that beats in the grove belongs to the tiger, who lies there all but invisible, still and silent as death.

A feeling, like hunger but hotter, darker, worries the tiger’s guts, but it pushes it down, deep, for the man is moving to and fro and it must focus on the movement.

He calls again, and the last moment before the tiger sinks its teeth into him, he sees it, eyes amber and flashing, leaping from the long grass.

Soon, alone once more, the tiger lovingly cleans the bones with its coarse tongue.

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To Rise, To Set

by Rich Larson

June 9, 2023

As Sava approached the dais, her heart felt like a hummingbird caged behind her ribs. Her palms were slick with sweat, but she dared not wipe them on the sunshine-yellow robes she had hemmed so carefully this very morning. Her teacher’s last words of advice echoed and blended with those of her grandmother: You must recall your lessons perfectly when you meet a Magistrate of the Imperious Sun, Whose Cruelty Is Mercy, Whose Armies Have Scoured a Thousand Lands.

The hall of learning was illuminated by an enormous globular lamp, dazzling as the Sun itself. The Magistrate, reclined on the dais in his great chair, nearly matched its brilliance: bent body swathed in pure white robes, frail arms heavy with gold. The features of his ceremonial mask were harsh and pitiless; its carved halo seemed to flare and seethe about his head. Even from the shadow of the mask’s eyeholes, his gaze was searing.

Sava came to a halt at the measured distance, and sank on trembling legs into a bow. “Our school is humbled by your presence, Magistrate.” She forced the words through her dust-dry throat. “May the Imperious Sun ever shine.”

“The Imperious Sun shines on all its subjects.” The Magistrate cast a look across the rows and rows of students kneeling in the closed hall, then returned his gaze to Sava. “Even those of the lesser provinces.”

Sava felt his eyes rake across her sharp-boned face, her dark skin. She knew the next question.

“Where were you born, child?”

“The Southern Strands, Magistrate,” Sava said, swallowing its true name with practiced ease.

The Magistrate gave a slow nod. “A region that has come only recently under the light of the Sun,” he said. “Yet though you belong to a crude lineage of hunters and nightfishers, I am told you are the most promising of all this school’s acolytes.”

Sava felt a small rush of pride at that fact, but only deepened her bow.

“And now you will demonstrate what you have learned,” the Magistrate said, with just a hint of boredom. “Recite the Fourth Cant.”

Sava drew a deep breath. “As the Sun scours rock and earth, unblinking, unwavering, so shall our empire scour all lands of false ways and misteachings.”

“Tell me an example of a false way.”

“In the Great Steppes, before they were reached by the light of the Sun, northerners worshiped the Galloping Mare.”

“In what manner?”

Sava saw the one fair-haired teacher flush, and felt a small churn of guilt when she answered. “It is said they debased themselves with their pack animals.”

“Truly vile,” the Magistrate said, though his voice betrayed relish. “And how were they corrected in their misteachings?”

“They were purified and refined, Magistrate,” Sava said, churn worsening in her belly. “In accordance with the Seventh Cant.”

“Rightly so,” the Magistrate agreed. “Now, recite for us the Twelfth.”

Sava clenched her slippery fists. “I will be pleased to recite the Twelfth Cant, Magistrate,” she said hoarsely. “But first I will elucidate the Seventh.”

Shock rippled across the faces of the teachers; murmurs sounded from the corners of the courtyard. The Magistrate himself froze for an instant. She was the only one watching two students from the crowd — sharp-boned, dark-skinned — creeping toward the great lamp, hauling a heavy bag.

The Magistrate leaned back on the dais, gave a careless wave of one gnarled hand. “The Seventh is a personal favorite,” he said. “Speak well.”

“Thank you, Magistrate.” Sava blinked, steadying herself. “As the Sun’s benevolence falls equally on all, so too must its wrath. For this reason, purification is carried out in a very specific way. Whether in the barbaric north, or the barbaric south.” She spoke louder. “Through a system of lots, the life of each conquered subject is tied to ten others. When any individual is found guilty of old practices, they are seated on a dais not so different to this one, from which they observe their ten kin or countrymen be herded into an iron cage and burned to death.”

The soft-stomached among the students flinched. Sava continued.

“The individual is then made to bathe in the ashes of the dead, coated in hot sap, and forbidden to wash. For this reason, my grandmother who raised me was pale as a ghost. Because she wore the ashes of my parents, and eight others. Even the faintest smell of cooking meat caused her convulsions.”

The Magistrate made an odd noise in his wattled throat.

“She had the hollow eyes of a ghost, as well,” Sava said. “But despite this, she taught me very well. She taught me the true name of our home and the true destiny of our people.” Sava found her hands dry at last, all fear pushed out by her grandmother’s courage. She raised her voice to almost a shout. “And finally she sent me here, to this wondrous city, to this wondrous school, not to learn — not to memorize the endless cants of hypocrites — but to teach.”

Before the Magistrate could rise from his chair, before the guards in their clumsy ceremonial armor could block her path, Sava sprang. With one hand she tore off the Magistrate’s mask, revealing him veined, wrinkled, terrified. With the other she retrieved the knife, the one she had honed, night after night, into its sacred shape. The knife she had kept hidden for long weeks, and finally stitched into the lining of her robe this very morning.

“I come from Lunat, from the obsidian shores where Moon first bathed in Sea.” Sava stared over the panicked crowd to her fellow conspirators, ready at the lamp with their dousing powder. “I teach you this: We will not be purified. We will not be refined.” She raised the crescent blade high. “And if we are left no other path to freedom, we will extinguish the Imperious Sun with its own blood.”

She tightened her grip, recalling her lessons perfectly, and struck in sudden darkness.

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The He-Bear

by Daniel Galef

June 16, 2023

I was a guest in the palatial country cottage of a Russian Countess while certain financial puzzles were being teased apart in London. A simple rest cure for overtaxed nerves necessitated that I force myself to swallow prescriptions of sea air, the Bolshoi Ballet, and breakfasts in bed of poached Fabergé eggs.

And yet this afternoon I was not reposing in the pedicured garden of the Countess’s villa, but stumbling through the woods of a hairy little mountain known locally as the Czar’s Pate with Alois, another of the Countess’s guests. The artless architectural painter had been at the villa an unknown duration longer than I, and it is not impossible that the Countess recommended our excursion for her own sake rather than ours—but to suspect that sweet old lady of such shrewdness would suggest a Slavic capacity for torture at a degree not recognized since Ivan the Terrible.

The sun in her splendour shone her radiant face on all creation, thawing frozen lakes and misers’ hearts, nursing the winter wheat from the sleeping soil, turning the marigolds’ heads in humble worship, and turning the back of my neck to roast beef. Because I had once stolen a newspaper from my neighbor at the London Rhopalic Club, or some other indiscretion remembered only by my personal devil, my guide possessed, and shamelessly abused, a small Czech accordion which apparently permitted only two different tunes—“Ach, Du Lieber Augustin” was the first, and the second, to quote Alois’s toothy witticism, “isn’t.”

My eyes assaulted by sun, my ears by the screeching squeezebox, and my flesh by the harmonizing gadflies, I cherished my few senses, until those too came under dire. Stopping to rest in a small clearing, Alois withdrew from his hiking pack, like an Israelite priest revealing the Covenant, a string of smoked herrings for his reeking luncheon.

As it happens, I do not care for smoked herrings. As it happens, however, some others do: Alois, for one, and also the Russian brown bear. The latter stumbled in from the bushes at the edge of the clearing like the Red Knight making his grand entrance at a Christmas masque. More than anything, however, the interloper possessed an uncanny resemblance to my great-aunt Lady Athanasia, who possesses an ill-fitting fur coat and, after a certain quantity of brandy, lopes almost identically.

The bear peeled back its black lips to bare its arsenal of teeth the size of chessmen and reared up on its hind legs to the height of a lamppost, looking hugely changed from its relatively benign appearance on the arms stamped on the Countess’s letterhead. Even at her most fearsome, as when she discovered the butler nipping at the brandy, Aunt Athanasia did not achieve quite this level of ferocity.

The protocol for such encounters had been mentioned in passing in a penny novel I had once read set in the Canadian frontierland. “Quick!” I hissed to Alois. “If we back calmly out of the clearing together, we run much less risk of setting off the beast’s territorial instincts.” (I later realized I may have been thinking of the procedure for pacifying the Klondike Moose, but nevertheless I maintain that my plan possessed pedigree.)

There came no reply, and, worried the artist had fainted from fright, I turned just in time to see Alois’s hastily cast-off backpack falling to the earth as he ran at full speed through the clearing and out in an Alois-shaped hole in the shrubs, leaving me to fend for myself.

Of course, I might have done the same thing had I been favored by fortune with a head start. But I didn’t, and a hypothetical insult cannot measure against the reality of one.

Luckily, I had practice standing perfectly still from my days performing competitive tableaux vivant on the Ballyhoo quad, and had kept my hand in after being sent down by pretending not to be home when the vicar came round for tea. Unlike anything else I had absorbed in my school days, be it Greek or green chartreuse, this talent had not so soon passed from me. By immediately and with immense concentration impersonating the statue of Nelson in Dublin, I aimed to prevent myself having my arm torn off at the shoulder and thus improving the resemblance.

After polishing off the string of herrings and investigating my ascot for a petrifying moment, the bear made a contented and leisurely exit into the brush, leaving in his hairy wake all the broken bits and bobs spilt from the mauled rucksack, including Alois’s accordion—which was miraculously intact in the midst of the destruction. I felt a sort of respect for the forthright manner in which the bear pursued his aim, without recourse to half-cloaked intimations and garden-party politics.

As Alois had in his haste departed without his pack and thus without the benefit of our map, I set off in a direction I favored for the pleasing coloration of the flowers along the trail. I soon happened upon Alois sitting in a sort of yogic posture at the bottom of a steep run of gravel, holding his right leg and rocking wisely. His grimace seemed as likely to have been out of sheepishness at confronting me whom he abandoned as it was to have been out of physical pain. Like a thorough medic, I gave the limb a few trial blows to be certain.

“Ah! Careful, chap! I twisted my leg.”

I might have gotten devoured!”

“Yes, but you didn’t. And a hypothetical injury cannot measure against the reality of one.”

I was forced to admit his argument, and our limping constitutional back to the villa was passed in a bitter, but egalitarian, silence.

When I took my leave from that romantic region the following week, holding my handkerchief to my eyes to disguise my lack of tears, Alois had yet to drum up the expense of a new accordion to replace that so callously destroyed by the he-bear.

PATREON EXCLUSIVE: BEHIND THE SCENE INTERVIEW WITH AUTHOR DANIEL GALEF

FFO: What other work of yours would fans of this story most enjoy?

If you liked this (or if you hated it, or were indifferent to it) then you might enjoy my first book, Imaginary Sonnets, which you can order or preorder from Able Muse Press. Every poem in the book is a piece of flash fiction with line breaks—they are all persona monologues with different narrators, based on different episodes in history and mythology. It’s also a little Victorian-inflected in some places, as the premise is inspired by two Victorian narrative poets, Browning and Eugene Lee-Hamilton, but the styles and voices vary from page to page.

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Lapis Lazuli

by Tania Fordwalker

June 23, 2023

In Sesara, only the rich wear bright colours. My knight shines in the armour I buff for him nightly, glossy as a jewel. My clothes and skin are the colours of the earth. We stand together with two days of desert at our backs and a forest of black thorns before us. My heart is a bird in my chest.

I was twelve when the slave traders came from the ocean and stole me. To the Sesarans we Arn all look the same. I was always tall and strong. An unscrupulous trader shaved my head and sold me as a boy to fetch a higher price, and I live as a boy still, because it is better than what waits for me as an Arn girl in this country.

My new master is a field knight and I am the best help he can afford. Sesaran boys have been in no hurry to volunteer as pages since the dragon came.

It only takes knights and lords. One week ago it came on silent wings at dawn and snatched a princess. She was betrothed to a foreign prince, the match planned to unite two kingdoms.

This is all I know of her: She is beautiful, as princesses are, and she has yellow hair, as princesses do, and on that day she wore a velvet dress as blue as the centre of the sky. Her prince went into the thorns to save her and never came out. Desperate, the King posted a reward. Eight more knights vanished into the black grove.

The princess lives. The pages who returned alone heard her crying from the ruined tower among the thorns.

“Stupid little chit.” My knight squints into the thorns, at the place where creepers have tangled a ladder of green up to the tower’s one window. “Why doesn’t she just climb out?”

Yes. I wonder that too.

The princess is worth a great deal of gold to my knight. I tie our horses. I pass my knight his helmet and sword, and follow him into the gloom, ducking around thorns longer than my arm.

I smell the dead.

A speared knight hangs twenty feet above, rotting in his shining steel shell. Three more dangle like baubles around us. There is the prince, upside-down. His blue cloak curtains his mottled face.

We reach the base of the tower before the thing that took the princess slips from the thorns behind us.

It’s easy to see how everyone saw a dragon: it moves like the wind itself, swift and shapeless in the dim light. Those reptilian feet end in curved talons, but what people took for black scales are vast oily feathers.

“My god,” says my knight.

The creature is a hundred times the size of the ones that flitted from the thorn bushes of my childhood. I remember crawling into their bowers and examining the stolen beads and shells and feathers arranged inside. Once I found a piece of lapis lazuli, blue as the centre of the sky.

I wrench my knight’s helmet from his head and fling it away. “Sir, take off your armour!”

“Are you mad?” He hefts his sword. The bowerbird shrieks like metal on granite.

I turn and claw up the tower, tearing my hands on thorns. My knight’s answering scream snaps off like a cut rope. I hear a sound that has no name: a thorn piercing metal and flesh. It goes: SCREE-ICK.

Halfway up the tower, frozen by the fresh silence, I stop and turn.

The bowerbird fixes me with one oily blue eye. Then it turns away, adjusts my twitching master on his thorn, preens, and settles down to roost.

I know how to save the princess. I climb all the way to the window before I wonder if I should.

For me, there will be no gold. An owned thing cannot own things. I could bring back twenty princesses, but there would never be any gold.

In the tower, rotted leaves and dirt push in drifts against the mossy walls. The princess sleeps curled up, golden tangles in a tattered blue dress, living lapis lazuli. Those who buy and sell my people wear bright colours. The bowerbird will come for them all. I only need walk away.

The girl scrambles up and looks at me. Tears have cut twin white paths through the grime on her cheeks. She is no more than twelve.

I wonder how she felt when her kingdom sold her to a stranger.

Slowly, I crouch and offer her my hand. “Do you want me to take you away?”

Her eyes flick to the window. “How?”

“I can make you invisible.”

She looks at me, wondering, and slips her small hand into mine.

Together we take off her gaudy dress. I rub dirt on her skin and tangle leaves in her hair until she is the colour of the earth, and we walk past the bowerbird and out into the open sky.

Originally published in Andromeda Spaceways #58 (2013). Reprinted here by permission of the author.

PATREON EXCLUSIVE: BEHIND THE SCENES INTERVIEW WITH AUTHOR TANIA FORDWALKER

FFO: What’s the most difficult part of writing a flash fiction?

TF: The length! No matter the format, I tend to draft long. If I’m meant to write an 80k-word novel, my first draft is sure to come in around 100k. My flash pieces always begin around the 1400-word mark. These initial drafts always leave me despairing as to how I’ll cut off a third of the thing to get it down to size. Of course, once I re-read the cut-down final result, I can’t remember what all those extra words were for, and I certainly don’t miss them.

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