Some Semi-Janky Whiskey, TBD

47.5 minutes. Prompt at the end.

The street I lived on was a quiet street. I knew this. I was comforted by the easily sloped sidewalks and the well-maintained lawns in front of each cookie-cutter house. The houses weren’t as bland as they sound though. Rather than a stale box of nilla-wafers, our neighborhood and its tightly packed houses were more like a Tupperware container of Gran-Ann’s most eclectic gingerbread cookies during the holidays. You could easily say they were all the same cookie and baked by the same woman, but each was crisply different.

I also knew every corner of these quiet streets. The bump in front of Mr. Lewis’ house rolled nicely under my bike on the weekends. The shade under the tree near the Reynolds’ was our saving grace during the hot summers just a few months ago.

It seemed like every corner also knew me. It’s difficult to put into words, this feeling. But the feeling you get when you sit next to a stranger is so much different than when you sit next to a friend who has known you for years. This neghborhood and all of its bumps and shady repreives was like that kind of friend. It knew me.

What happened next wasn’t what you’d expect of a lifelong friend.

I was off to school, like any good kid of those days. Before the days of divine independence (otherwise known as the internet), I couldn’t do much to contest the boredom of waiting for the bus. I stood. I sat. I half-sat-half-leaned against the wall. I thought about my lunch. The rice and kielbasa Mom prepped the night before was one of my favorites. The same rice and kielbasa that somehow spurred the ire of Rachel. She was the girl who was just one of the guys. Just one of the asshole guys though. I don’t think anyone appreciated the friends she held. For real though, how does someone make fun of rice and sausage?

It was during this mind-trek that I heard them for the first time. It was like a softened tapping on a cold smooth surface set to a rhythm that was odd. It transfixed you a little. At the same time though, it sounded like an exhausted creep, one who ran too fast to keep up behind you during gym class. I re-balanced my weight off of my wall-based stance and glanced to the right. What I saw didn’t really make a lot of sense.

I saw three wolves. They were huge. I had never seen a dog that size before. The biggest I had ever seen was Gran-Dan’s Border Collie (Shen was her name; she was nice). These wolves had to have been nine times the size of Shen, maybe ten. The one in the front was grey, and the two behind it were silver. One could say they were grey too, but there’s a distinct difference between grey and silver and this distinct difference was the same for the wolves. The two in the rear shimmered.

I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. This was my street. This was my home street. I looked behind me wildly and quietly as I hugged the back end of the bus stop. Maybe this was a dream and I’d see a castle or a giant tree fort where JT’s house was. This would be the clear signal that there was nothing real about this situation and therefore nothing to fear, but it was still JT’s house behind me. It was still his stupid poster hanging on his bedroom window. I blinked a few times to make sure. JT’s window poster of Pikachu stared back at me.

I slowly turned my head back towards the animals to assess their approach. I only saw one. The grey wolf was looking directly at me. It wasn’t looking at my legs, arms, or general shape of my body against the bus stop. It was looking directly into my eyes. Somehow, itsgaze kind of hurt. And then I realized it: the other two silver wolves were gone. The grey wolf was alone in the street, hunched down as if it had a bush to hide behind, as if it was stalking me now. I stepped out of the bus stop and immediately felt my heart sink. The soft tapping accelerated from zero to sixty and I knew the silver wolves were after me. I lunged forwards, each foot quickly exceeding the next. I could hear the steady and fast approach of the wolves. I was no match for them.

I felt like I had only gone a dozen feet for so before I felt them on me. A firm grasp around each of my shoulders closed tightly. It felt secure. My legs stopped moving, and I fell limp, ready to give myself to this strange end. Though my body went limp, my posture straightened. My shoulders went up yet my head drooped down still. I saw my hair feather gently in the wind and my toes drag on the sidewalk. I was gaining speed. I saw my toes lift above the sidewalk. This had to be a dream. A moment later I was far removed from my previous comfort of the bus stop. I was soaring above the wolves that still looked up at me and chased my toes, but they were well out of reach. Well, I guess I was well out of reach. I finally decided to look at what was holding on to me. It had to be some kind of devil spawn. A harpy. Maybe a winged succubus. But it wasn’t.

The wind rushed wildly between us and my hair thrashed around. I saw a eagle. An eagle nearly as large as those wolves. It’s brown feathers contrasted by its golden eyes made for quite a sight. It stared ahead for some time and finally down to me.

“Don’t worry,” it said, “I’m not going to eat you. Can’t say the same for those wolves though.”

Fading to black, my eyes closed and my head went limp. I didn’t really understand it then, but I was in for one wild weekend.

Today, while running from a dog, you discover that your feet are slowly leaving the ground.

Hectare, Cabernet Sauvignon, No Year (Medium, Red)

1 hour 10 minutes 10 seconds of writing.

8 minutes 8 seconds of closure.

11 minutes and 11 seconds of editing.

First-line prompt: There was a little noise.

There was a little noise.

“Cecelia, holy shit, what did I just tell you! I said watch yourself! You okay?”

I thought to myself that if that wasn’t the loudest whisper I’d ever heard, it was definitely the quietest yell.

Vern, if that was his real name, reached for the lamp on the desk that was wobbling in a concerning way. My shoulder didn’t hurt all that much, but it easily spoke to me that it had collided with something that wasn’t expected. Vern’s eyes looked like they had seen something that wasn’t expected. Though still attractively blue, they weren’t as reassuring as they were when we had first met just last month. Back then, they were a warm blue. They welcomed my thoughts and listened to my lips. Now, they were wide with a bit of a twitch in the way they moved. They would eventually meet mine and try to reconnect a sense of comfort, but that twitch was hard to ignore.

“Are you sure you’ve got the handle on that end? Do you need to take a break?”

“I’m fine, don’t sweat it,” I managed to say as I took the final steps around the corner. “Here, here. Let’s set it down here.”

A low grunt grumbled out of my mouth as we set the large chest down. My shoulder now decided it was more important to flaunt its pain. I reached for my arm instinctively.

“Cecelia, if we’re not ready for this right now, there’s still time to back out and try again another time. We can regroup with the others, explain that something felt off. Trusting your gut comes first, you know. This kind of stuff happens all the time.”

Even now, in the midst of the robbery that he and his team had planned for months, tediously and without missing the finest details, he found a way to be reassuring. If I had been in his shoes, I would have been losing my collective shit. Internally, my resolve would have been scorched and charred, nerves frayed from one end to the next. Externally, my eyes would have been more than a bit wide. They would have been narrow with fury and scanning for my antagonist’s weak spot. There would have been hell to pay. I am not composed when a plan doesn’t come together.

“Cecelia, did you hear me? We can regroup if we need to.” He paused for a moment. Vern then reached for his earpiece, “Sharon. Sharon, are you there? Sharon, come in. We’ve got a -“

“No, Vern, I’m fine. Let’s keep going.” I finally replied. My mind was elsewhere.

Sharon’s voice crackled through our ears, “Say again. Sorry Vern, I didn’t catch that last part. What did you say?”

“Vern, I’m good. Let’s get this going. We’re running out of time,” I pleaded.

Vern looked at me a second longer before replying than he normally would. He’d normally reply as quick as his smile would appear. No smile came this time though, just a look of concern.

“Alright, just be careful, okay?” His look of concern was abated, but unresolved. He quietly moved back to his end of the trunk, and gripped tightly with both hands. He looked at me and gestured his head down, signaling me to assume the proper form and stance that I had studied over the last two weeks.

“Vern, what the fuck? What did you say?” Sharon’s voice chimed again in our ears.

“Sorry, Sharon, it’s fine. Nothing to worry about. False alarm.” he replied.

“Wait, what? What did you see? Is everything alright? New girl, what’s he talking about?”

“Hey, sorry, it was nothing. I thought I had seen something but it was just one of the streetlights in the window’s reflection. My bad.” I lied. Odd, I thought to myself, I hadn’t been able to lie this well in a long time.

As Vern and I continued to move down the long hallway, the trunk’s handles squeaked and its weight swayed side to side. It wasn’t uneasy, but it it felt determined to remain a nuisance. Like a child submitting to his car seat, but ready to create a painful trip to the grocery store, it waited.

“Cecelia, look at me.” Vern said.

He sounded like what I imagined a future husband would sound like around the breakfast table on a cool Sunday morning. One with breakfast and coffee at the dinette table, and a window open with the sound of a Chickadee dancing around the backyard. He would have been checking on his fantasy football team, and I would have been checking my emails, looking for a reply to my farmer’s market application submission.

I looked at Vern, and he gazed quietly back into me. After a few seconds, he slowed to a stop. He set the trunk down, and crouched low. I still held the trunk’s handle with my hands, gripped tight and nearly numb.

“Sharon, we’re done here. We’re taking the trunk back. It’s only been…” he paused a moment as he checked his watch. “Eight minutes. We have time to get it back to Mr. D’s office, re-route, make the exit and meet up with Red.”

“Holy fucking shit, Vern. What the fuck just happened? Talk to me, what’s going on?” Sharon was yelling now.

“Gut feeling is bad. Something isn’t right.” Vern said.

I set the trunk down reluctantly. As much as I didn’t want to admit it, I had the same feeling as Vern. It was maybe the overall heist, but more likely something between Vern and I.

“Shit.” Sharon sounded defeated. “Well, get your asses out of there. New girl, be careful.”

Vern and I made our way back the way we came. We moved through the familiar end of the long hallway, around the corner and through the rest of the offices. Mr. D’s office was easy to differentiate from the others in this section of the building, not by any visual distinction though. But if I haven’t studied thirty different angles of Mr. D’s door one hundred times each over the last two weeks, then I was a crazy person in a 1920’s insane asylum. The door slid open quietly just as it it had before, but more awkwardly this time as we held this three hundred and sixty-seven pound, two-hundred and thirteen year old, wheel-less, and slightly creaky mahogany trunk.

“Hold on Cecelia. My side needs to be on the left.” Vern whispered.

“Oh, that’s right. Wait, are you sure?”

“Yes. This is the left side. Come this way.”

We dosey-doed around Mr. D’s office, making sure to reset the scene just as it was before the office had locked up, before the lights had gone out, and before the alarm system was interrupted. We dropped it into place and made one more scan of our surroundings before starting our exit strategy.

“Hold on, the card.” I stated, pointing at Mr. D’s window that overlooked Warren Blvd. and the distant city skyline. An unfocused mind could lose itself in that skyline’s fine details. The glitter of city lights in the late-evening darkness was a rare kind of beauty.

Vern gingerly walked across the room, picked the card from the window, and rubbed off a bit of the adhesive residue from the window. After looking at the card’s previous resting place from another angle, he rubbed a bit more.


“Wait, where’s the trunk?”

“Don’t worry about it, Red. Just drive.” Vern’s comforting voice had transitioned into weariness. It was in fact 3:00 am, things hadn’t gone according to months of planning, and he and I hadn’t exactly made the most of the team’s scheduled rest period the day before.

“Fucking shit.” Red didn’t really say this to Vern or me, more to herself than anything. “I told Sharon this felt like a shit show. She never listens to me though. Fuck.”

Red accelerated through the turn, knowing that there would be no other drivers on the road at this hour. She merged onto Warren and made note not to drive off too fast. God knows her Crosstrek had more than enough after-market parts to hit zero to sixty in less than four seconds.

“She isn’t going to be happy about this,” Red said.

“Sharon will understand. She’s been here before,” Vern said.

“Not Sharon, dip shit. Angel.”

“Oh. Yeah. Well, we’ll get to that when we get there.” Vern’s voice wavered a little bit, but quickly resumed composure.

His eyes met mine and silently plead to me for the first time since I met him.

Benziger, Cabernet Sauvignon, 2016 (Medium Red)

51 minutes 10 seconds

On every full-moon night, your friend goes missing. Is it because of what you think it is or something else entirely?

“Juliet! Is everything okay? Juliet!”

The hall lights flickered and rattled as Sarah rushed down the hallway towards Juliet’s room. Her mind wavered through the evening’s events, unsure of how it all started and concerned about what had happened. She thought Juliet had been acting different since school had started only a few months ago, but tonight was something different all together.

“Open the door!” Sarah screamed. “Juliet, open the door right now. Are you okay? Juliet, answer me!”

Sarah continued to pound on the door while the sirens in the hallway blared and pounded ten fold on her head. She felt like she was going to be sick.

“Sarah! Sarah, you need to get out of there right now!”

Through the dizzying noise, Sarah heard something to this effect come from down the hall. She looked towards the sound and saw Holly peeking her head through the exit door, hands covered over her ears, and yelling with what seemed like all her might.

“Sarah get of there right now! The building isn’t stable!”

Sarah gathered her senses and pulled her fists from the instinctual punishment they were laying on the door. Her fists were white-knuckle tight. As she quickly made her way towards Holly, she tried to unlock her fists, but they were numb and didn’t respond to her commands. She looked over her shoulder before exiting the door and a second later the ceiling in front of Juliet’s door collapsed.

Moments later Sarah and Holly stumbled onto the moonlit lawn of Greston Hall. The other residents were scattered along the yard, each with phone in hand and each looking more confused than the last.

“Holly, have you seen Juliet?” asked Sarah. “I’d been texting her earlier but I hadn’t heard from her since just after dinner at seven.”

“No, I texted her last night about some studying we had to do this week, but I haven’t heard from her at all today,” Holly replied. ” Do you think she is still in there?”

“God, I don’t think so. I hope not. She was meeting up with a guy she met last week in class. Normally when she goes out like this she’ll text me when she gets back home safely, but I never received a text or call this time.”

Sarah opened up her phone again and quickly scanned through her texts, messages, and multiple missed phone calls. None of them were from Juliet. She called Juliet’s number again, the eleventh time this evening.

Just before the phone started to ring, voices erupted and screamed. One blood-curdling scream broke the night’s low murmur, and several more followed suit. Students were running away from the building, stumbling over hedges and curbs, but Sarah and Holly moved around the building’s corner to get a better look at the commotion. It was hard to see in the low light, but when it came into view, Sarah felt her blood drain.

Where Juliet’s first floor window used to be now harbored a gaping maw of shadow and smoke. Sarah could see the mangled body of a student sprawled twenty feet or so away from the building. She recognized his neon red jacket from the picture that Juliet had showed her the other day. He wasn’t moving.

As her trasnfixed gaze loosened on the poor man’s body, her gaze tightened on the ruptured chasm and the figure that emerged from it. It stood nine maybe ten feet tall, and glowed pale like the full-moon’s unobstructed light. It pulled itself forward, gripping the crumbling wall’s frame with long grotesque fingers tipped with talons that looked like glass. It wore shreds of fabric, something that may have once been a dress, but a dress of a distinct pattern: the black fabric with white toile ravens of Juliet’s favorite night gown.

Sarah gasped and held her hand to her mouth. She looked behind her and saw Holly was far gone, running back down the opposite lawn. Sarah looked back in horror towards the damage in the front, only to see Juliet fully turned looking directly at her.

Claret, Bourdeaux, 2018 (Medium Red)

40 mins 30 secs

The Sound of Winter.

Sharon didn’t much care for winter. It reminded her of the final months with David. Those months were too cold for her liking, but never quite cold enough for him. He would use this thick-skinned nature as a reason for many things.

The promise of a comforting, warming hand always seized her attention at the start of each Saturday morning. She’d briskly ready herself so that she could be ready at the door as soon as he was. She felt as if that would impress him somehow. It never did. They would walk out the front door with a quick peck by the sidewalk, but without a smile. She always wondered where his smile was.

They frequented the Winter Market on Main Street, often greeted by friends or welcoming shop owners. The calm murmur of the crowds carried gently along the rows of the market until they clanked against the bustling nature of the cafe on the corner, Cafe Canary. It was a friendly clank. David’s voice was low and bumpy. It would waver between a low powered vacuum and a bag of laundry dropped heavily on the floor. They passed the time with small talk, and mindlessly looked at crafts and wares. Sharon delighted in the smallest details on the smallest items. Miniature clay figures with tiny buckles on tiny top hats were so intricately crafted; she marveled each time she saw them. She never looked at normal sized things that closely. She would coo and gesture David to see each of her new discoveries. He would approach without interest and leave just the same.

As time crept by each Saturday, there was always a turn in the day. Somewhere along the east side of the market, between the soap store and old Mrs. Hart’s boutique, laid a stretch of tables and tents led by a few charming ladies near Sharon’s age. They sold locally grown jams and offered taste testing with little wooden tabs. People flocked for free tasting. Sharon never knew their names, but she would see them around sometimes. David always saw them at the winter market. Time after time, his gray, slightly stoic face would curl upwards and blink to attention when he wandered into view of their stand. He wasn’t fond for only the jam’s sweetness

His dry rumble of a voice would tighten up, but without becoming strained. Where it was a youth without application before, his voice now matured into a determined man, aspiring to hard work and eventual greatness. Nobody ever noticed this change in David, except for Sharon.

Winter may be a season stressed by cold and family-relations for many, but Sharon didn’t think of anything more than that growing, glowing, and disheartening brightness.