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Laws of Flight

by Darren Greer

DALTON LIKED TO GO when there was no moon. I, on the other hand, would have liked to fly across the face of the moon — to turn and plummet through the moonlight down to the river, to catch myself just before I tumbled in, to will myself to hover. I would have tried it, but Dalton wouldn’t let me.

He was older, but only by seven minutes.

The number seven is important, he said.

There are seven spots on a ladybug’s back.

Seven days in a week.

A mammal’s neck has seven bones.

Dalton was smart. His teachers said he had the highest scores they’d ever seen.

We often wondered what it was in the seven minutes that made such a difference. What happened to him while he was out? What happened to me while I was in? Because we discussed it so much, I could see myself inside my mother. Feel myself there, enveloped in her, floating, flying even then, as Dalton — bawling and flecked with gore — was being born, being laid on a table, being sterilized and swabbed clean for this new world.

“I remember it,” he said.

Our parents were scared of us.

My father spent all his time in the fields and the barn, and my mother yelled at us when she heard us talking about black holes and non¬linear equations and growing pumpkins the size of houses by tinkering with their genes. “It’s not normal,” she said, “and it’s not right.”

Dalton said they were superstitious. “They believe in God,” he said, as if that was all the proof he needed.

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Laws of Flight

by Darren Greer

DALTON LIKED TO GO when there was no moon. I, on the other hand, would have liked to fly across the face of the moon — to turn and plummet through the moonlight down to the river, to catch myself just before I tumbled in, to will myself to hover. I would have tried it, but Dalton wouldn't let me.

He was older, but only by seven minutes.

The number seven is important, he said.

There are seven spots on a ladybug's back.

Seven days in a week.

A mammal's neck has seven bones.

Dalton was smart. His teachers said he had the highest scores they’d ever seen.

We often wondered what it was in the seven minutes that made such a difference. What happened to him while he was out? What happened to me while I was in? Because we discussed it so much, I could see myself inside my mother. Feel myself there, enveloped in her, floating, flying even then, as Dalton — bawling and flecked with gore — was being born, being laid on a table, being sterilized and swabbed clean for this new world.

“I remember it,” he said.

Our parents were scared of us.

My father spent all his time in the fields and the barn, and my mother yelled at us when she heard us talking about black holes and non¬linear equations and growing pumpkins the size of houses by tinkering with their genes. “It's not normal,” she said, “and it's not right.”

Dalton said they were superstitious. “They believe in God,” he said, as if that was all the proof he needed.

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from Everything Good by Steph VanderMeulen

“Why are you so mean to him?” Lydia asked Duke that night. She sat on their bed and braided her sun-streaked hair to keep it from getting caught in her armpits when she slept.

Duke stood on the other side of the bed and appraised the skin on her shoulders and arms, freckled and brown and gleaming with Nivea. He undid his belt, shucked off his trousers and yellowing briefs. “I won’t let my son be a goddamn fruit. That’s why.”

He pulled the covers back and got in beside her. He lifted her nightgown and laid a hand on her belly, circled his palm across it. Lydia’s eyes glittered as she leaned in close and brought her mouth to his ear. The hairs on Duke’s neck rose.

“No,” she whispered.

The next morning, he got his old twenty-gauge from the shed and loaded it with buckshot. He took the boy into the forest for the first time. A wood and wire fence bordered their property, and they crossed over it.

“Duke! For God’s sake!” Lydia shouted after them from the porch. He did not look back, only thrust the shotgun into the air.

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from Snowshoe, by Matt Cahill

“DAD-DY.”

Daniel’s voice in the dark, pleading. That shy kid. Never gets in trouble. I wish he did. He doesn’t have a lot of friends, it seems. It takes every bit of my patience to get him to tell me what goes on in his life. When I ask whether he has friends he’ll turn away and look at something else. One time, when I asked Mina if we should be concerned, she did the same thing.

I love him. Don’t understand him.

“Daddy.”

I used to get angry. I used to yell back. Not any more. I sit up and take a minute getting used to not pretending I’m asleep. I hug my knees, wishing I could rest my head on them and close my eyes and make the last two years disappear. I touch the floor with my bare feet, thankful that the furnace is working. The floorboards creak, cool to the touch, but I’ve done this enough to know that it’s best to not be overly careful about making noise. If I’m too quiet, it could feed into whatever it is he thinks he’s hearing or seeing. If I’m just another monster to him, I’ll be truly alone.

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from Glass Houses, by Andrew Wilmot:

ONE NIGHT, THREE WEEKS after his thirteenth birthday, Ned got hard and stayed that way. The skin of his chest started to prickle and grow firm in the early morning hours. Drowsy and half-dreaming, he thought maybe a spider had crawled between his sheets and bitten him on the sternum. But when Ned moved his hand across his chest to scratch the point of irritation, he felt his fingers strike something smooth and slick, felt his nails glide silently over a surface he knew, immediately, was wrong. He threw back his sheets to look down at his torso, and saw the stars and the moon on the surface of his body—reflections from outside his bedroom window. He saw his heart and his organs beating, churning inside of him, housed by skin as transparent as glass.

Ned could not remember precisely what happened next. He could not recall the deafening scream that woke both his parents, nor could he picture the veil of white panic that fell over his mother’s face, causing her to faint at the sight of her son’s new skin.

Ned’s father, ignoring his son’s continued shouts of terror and confusion, picked his unconscious wife up off the ground, carried her from the bedroom, and pulled the door tight. “You’re just lucky she’s man enough for the both of you,” he said to Ned the next morning.

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(excerpt from Laws of Flight by Darren Greer)

DALTON AND I USED to fly to the river.

The river runs right through the centre of town and then makes its way through the country all the way down to Mill Village and Liverpool, to the sea.

It was our favorite thing to do, to stay just twenty feet or so above it, side by side, sometimes holding hands and flying as fast as we could go until we got to the end. Our speed was never so great as when we flew the river.

We knew every crook and every pool. Every eddy and every fall.

We could do it in our sleep.

“We do do it in our sleep,” laughed Dalton.

We never flew the river alone because of the ocean.

When you reach the end of the river and come out on the water endlessly stretching before you, it’s hard to know when to stop. You don’t want to stop. You want to keep on flying further and further until you discover where it ends. It’s almost as tempting as the stars.

Dalton said if we didn’t have each other we might not stop. We might never come back and so be lost forever. So we made a rule that when we go we only go together, where Dalton could always tell me to stop and turn around.

And I always did. But it was hard.

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Coming soon! Laws of Flight, our new e-single by Darren Greer, author of the just-released novel Just Beneath My Skin and the ReLit Award-winning Still Life With June.

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Cecile’s lower lip sticks out. “Tell me how you are.”

“I’m fine.”

She leans into my shoulder. Khalid is looking over our heads at the big-screen hockey. “Really fine?”

Cecile never believes anything is good unless it’s in a book or on TV. She only talks about the problems in her life: the leak in the bathroom ceiling, her mom bugging her to get married, her sister’s eczema. The right answer for Cecile is something that is wrong.

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St. Peter put his hand on David’s shoulder. “Here’s the deal. All you have to do to get into Heaven is get over the gates.”

“That sounds pretty simple.”

“Does it?” St. Peter asked. He pointed towards the top of the gates, which now seemed impossibly tall.

“How high are they?” David asked.

“Depends on who’s looking at it,” St. Peter said.

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Share the Story, Read the Story!

Here's your chance to read, for free, Somehow There Was More Here by Danny Goodman - a writer Scotiabank Giller Prize-winning author Joseph Boyden (The Orenda, Through Black Spruce) calls "an old soul, one who can actually capture and crystallize the modern experience."

If the page for Somehow There Was More Here is shared a total of 1000 times or more on Facebook and Twitter, we'll post the entire novella - online, free to read - for an entire month!

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from Everything Must Go by Jeff Dupuis

“I’ll give you a dollar apiece for Rope, Vertigo, Blade Runner, and Evil Dead 2.”
“We agreed on the whole box for fifty.”
“I changed my mind.”
“You baby boomers think you’re entitled to everything, don’t you? Stop wasting my time.”
The mellow rushes out of my room as if a fire alarm had been pulled, and I notice how empty it all feels. The turtleneck indignantly clip-clops down the stairs, leaving empty-handed. It takes a lifetime of entitlement to cultivate a tool like that guy, kinda like those thousand-pound pumpkins that win ribbons at county fairs.

A man in the throes of a breakup sells all of his possessions on Kijiji and Craigslist in Jeff Dupuis' Everything Must Go. Read an extended preview and/or buy the ebook single.

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from Submission by Suad Ali

He does something with his eyebrows. “Turns out, one of his kids is sick. Really sick. His supervisor still won’t give him a ticket. He starts to lose it. Realizes it was a big mistake coming here. Skips work one day, gets fired, starts drinking.”
“And he kills the supervisor?”
“Bingo.”
Noor keeps washing dishes, drying, policing her tidy apartment. She lives here rent-free, but her employer promised a larger and more luxurious space. You can buy almost anything in Dubai, though integrity can be difficult to procure.
“People are awful. People are shit. Especially in this place. Get me another beer, okay?”

A young woman in Dubai reflects upon contradictions inherent in all cultures in Suad Ali's Submission. Read an extended preview and/or buy the ebook single.

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from Wolves by Naomi K. Lewis

KEEP A STORY SIMPLE. As simple as possible. Learn to recognize the blink-blink of maybe I don’t believe you. Learn to meet glances with a kind of, that’s okay; I get by just fine with my one arm. Adults stepped out of the way for me, and stared while pretending not to, especially when I limped. After the sling and cast came off, I’d some days tuck one arm into my jacket again, when I really needed that one-armed-boy feeling—but never when Mom was there.

In Wolves by Naomi K. Lewis, a young man's escalating lies destroy his relationships, alienate his loved ones, and land him in hot water with police. Read an extended preview and/or buy the ebook single.

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