About this ebook
Anymore, it seems the world is on a fast track, a wide and hectically flowing track. Everyone is rushing toward something, but many times we have no idea what that something is. We want to get where we’re going now not later. Time is at a premium, but we want it in increasingly smaller increments: seconds not minutes. We want our communications, our information, and our very lives to happen ASAP.
No longer can we wait to talk face to face with friends and loved ones. We grab some electronic device and whip off a message, then decry the time it takes for them to respond. And those devices have to be the best and the fastest available (even if it means waiting in line for HOURS to get them). It's the same with our food. Microwave ovens, for example, once considered the epitome of speed and efficiency, have become objects of ire as we pound on them, berating them for taking seconds to warm our food.
We want instant gratification, ignoring the build-up and the journey. "Anticipation" has become a bad word.
Where are the quiet times? The times when we looked forward to being with family and friends; face to face, eye to eye, actually enjoying the time we spend together? The times when we put our feet up and lost ourselves in a great book? The times when we relaxed and let ourselves drift away into adventure, romance, action, mystery?
Those times can be yours again. All you have to do is jump out of the fast lane, get off the broad and rushing highway, open a book, and simply TAKE THE PATH to Elsewhere.
Take the Path Authors
The winning stories, and authors, from the Scribes Valley 2012 short story contest.Ronna L. EdelsteinCarrie RogersAlex G. FriedmanMary SmithRachel WorrellDavid EmpeyKathleen RatcliffeKaren DorseyMichelle Wotowiec
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Take the Path - Take the Path Authors
TAKE THE PATH
Copyright 2014 Scribes Valley Publishing Company
Published by Scribes Valley Publishing at Smashwords
This book is available in print from the Publisher
Smashwords Edition, License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this ebook with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Take the Path – A Foreword by the Editor
Wednesday Night Girl – Ronna L. Edelstein
At Your Grave I Stand – Carrie Rogers
The World Beyond the Shell – Alex G. Friedman
A Haunted House by Mary Smith
The Cherry Tree – Rachel Worrall
Cow and Cat – David Empey
Hell Found Me – Kathleen Ratcliffe
The Book – Karen Dorsey
Notes On Taking Up Space – Michelle Wotowiec
This anthology is dedicated
to those who
know what path to take
TAKE THE PATH
A Foreword by the Editor
©2013 by David L. Repsher
Anymore, it seems the world is on a fast track, a wide and hectically flowing track. Everyone is rushing toward something, but many times we have no idea what that something is. We want to get where we’re going now not later. Time is at a premium, but we want it in increasingly smaller increments: seconds not minutes. We want our communications, our information, our very lives to happen ASAP.
No longer can we wait to talk face to face with friends and loved ones. We grab some electronic device and whip off a message, then decry the time it takes for them to respond. Microwave ovens, once the epitome of speed and efficiency, have become objects of ire as we pound on them, berating them for taking seconds to warm our food. Libraries, places we once scheduled time to visit, to walk the aisles, to run our hands over the rows of books and smell them, are now at our fingertips; books downloadable as mere impersonal files we never touch.
Where are the quiet times? The times when we looked forward to being with family and friends, face to face, eye to eye, actually enjoying the time we spend together? Those times can be yours again. All you have to do is jump out of the fast lane, get off the broad and rushing highway, pick up a book, and simply TAKE THE PATH.
~~FIRST PLACE~~
WEDNESDAY NIGHT GIRL
©2013 by Ronna L. Edelstein
The water nibbles at her toes and swallows her feet, legs, and thighs. Still not satiated, it gobbles her stomach and chest, arms and neck. Only her head remains free from the water’s ravenous appetite. The water waits patiently, allowing Vera to decide whether she will deprive it of dessert by wading back to the shallow end of the pool or whether she will give it a final course by walking further into the deep end and letting it completely devour her.
Vera stands still, uncertain about what to do. She stares at the water, hoping to discover some sign—perhaps an image of her children or parents—that will lead her to choose life, but all she sees is the uncaring and unforgiving water. She contemplates turning around to give Doug one more chance to make amends—one more chance to pretend that he had not agreed to a Saturday afternoon at the pool with Vera, all the time knowing he would not extend the afternoon into an official Saturday night date. She will give Doug one more chance to blow her a kiss; if he does, despite her hurt, she will reach one arm out of her almost watery grave to grab the kiss and gently place it upon her lips.
But Vera knows that no kiss awaits her. In the silence of the backyard pool, she hears Doug gathering his legal files; when he thumbs through the pile to make sure everything is there, the papers whimper like the final flutter of the wings of dying birds. Vera hears Doug close his briefcase—the clamp snaps as if a squirrel were biting into an acorn. Then, the gate—the one her friends, the vacationing owners of the pool, never remember to oil—squeaks. Doug has left, leaving Vera alone in the water.
Vera again searches the water, silently willing Doug’s reflection to appear but, unlike Vera, the water seems to understand that Doug is not special enough to hold onto. Doug is neither tall nor handsome. When with him, five-foot-eight-inch Vera has to wear her flattest flat shoes and further hunch her already round shoulders to appear shorter. Doug’s thick black beard masks him in darkness, like a villain in the silent movies Vera learned about from Grandma. His teeth, as white as the chalk Vera uses on the blackboard in her classroom, gleam against his swarthy complexion, creating more of a smirk than a smile. Although Doug’s appearance unsettles Vera, like a dinner that does not agree with her or a play that haunts her long after the theatre has gone dark, she has spent the past four months in an adulterous relationship with Doug.
Left hollow by a disastrous marriage, scarred by a wallflower adolescence, and destroyed by a lifetime of jarring maternal judgments, Vera needs to find beauty and goodness beyond Doug’s unappealing façade; she needs Doug as if he were the life jacket drifting near the diving board. The fact that Doug wants to have sex with her—the phrase make love
would distort the nature of this unloving friendship…tryst…relationship?—gives Vera a de-luded sense of worth and self-esteem. She, the cockeyed pessimist, and he, the cocky controller, make an odd twosome, but all Vera cares about is being appreciated, even if the appreciation lasts for only brief gasping moments in bed.
A cloud floats across the sun, causing Vera to shiver in the momentary chill. The sudden coolness also reminds Vera that she cannot remain forever in the middle of the pool—too far from either the murky deep end or from the set of silver steps in the distant shallow end. One more minute, Vera thinks, just one more minute before deciding whether to move forward to a watery death or move backward to a quicksand life outside the pool.
Her best friends, the physician and his wife who live in the house with the pool, had warned her this would happen. Doug is a player,
the doctor had said. Doug will use you and abuse you,
his wife had added. Neither had mentioned the moral implications—that Doug was divorced, but that Vera was technically still married (as Vera stands in the water, she wonders whether being technically still married is like being a little bit pregnant) since the judge had not yet pounded his gavel and emancipated her. Vera contemplates foregoing drowning for the usual death by stoning reserved for adulterers. She pictures all of Doug’s past, present, and future lovers circling her, mocking her for her stupidity for falling in lust—love?—with such a Lothario, and hurling stones—large and small, round and sharp—at her breasts and belly and thighs—all the places Doug once caressed and kissed.
And Vera knows for certain that Doug has had—and will continue to have—past, present, and future lovers. One Wednesday night, just as she and Doug were about to enter his bedroom, Doug had received a call from his office. I have to go back to the office to pick up a file,
he said.
No problem,
Vera replied.
Wait for me,
he ordered.
Sure,
Vera acquiesced.
The minute Vera had heard the roar of Doug’s red sports car and seen the glow of the headlights through the living room window, she had gone to Doug’s study, sat in Doug’s black leather (the same black leather of his car’s seats) swivel chair, and picked up his datebook—also bound in black leather. She needed to assure herself that Doug, like her, stayed home on Saturday nights to wallow in Lawrence Welk reruns, and that he did not go out with other girls he deemed more suitable for the traditional date night. She needed to determine whether Doug would forever see her only as a Wednesday night girl.
Her sin of adultery had made reading Doug’s private datebook seem like a misdemeanor. Without hesitation, then, Vera had opened the book. While she found her name penciled in for the next few Wednesdays, the upcoming Saturday night page contained only one word: Barbara. Not Babs or Barbie or Barbra without the a, but Barbara, the perfect name for a society lady or executive. Vera had said the name aloud, enunciating each Bar-bar-a
syllable as if spitting wads of phlegm from her throat. She wondered where Doug and Barbara would spend their Saturday