Truth
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Friday, July 18, 2025
Penny for your thoughts.
Penny for your
thoughts
“Got another smoke?”
Mickey pulled a pack from his jeans pocket, and after
pulling one out for himself, handed it to Derek.
“Too bad your old man is home, I could go for something to
drink,” Mickey said.
“Something like his new girlfriend?” Derek asked, around the
cigarette in his lips as he flicked at his lighter.
When Mickey didn’t say anything, he added “You know, Tall,
cold, and alcoholic.”
Mickey laughed.
They stopped at the light on the corner.
“Which way?”
Derek looked around. “What intersection is this?”
“13TH and….”
Mickey looked up for a sign, but there was nothing but the stoplight. He looked up and down the intersecting road. It wasn’t as well lit, with only every third streetlamp seeming to be working.
“I..uh..Dunno.”
“Weird,” Derek muttered. “I don’t remember seeing this one
before…”
Mickey hissed at him. “Let’s go left. Someone is walking towards
us.”
Derek took a drag and hesitantly nodded. They liked walking
around at night, but some folks gave them the heebie-jeebies, and at night it
was worse because you just never knew.
They stepped off the corner and started to walk briskly down
the new road. About a block down, Mickey looked over his shoulder. The
silhouette of a man had turned from 13th and was now following them.
They kept walking at a pace that reminded him of those mall walkers. He was
getting ready to suggest that they just book it, when passing under one of the
working lights, Derek stopped in his tracks and looked up.
“Is that fire?”
Mickey squinted up at the light. Sure enough, there was the tell-tale
flicker. He looked around. “Holy shit! Look at the road!”
For a moment, they both stared at bricks that made up the
road.
“This is weird, man,” Derek said. “Does the air smell…clean?”
“Is it…Is it darker out?”
They looked up at the sky to see the open sky filled with
stars usually hidden by the glow of the city. They backed up to get back into
the light of the flickering light of the lamp post. They turned to begin to
head back towards the intersection, being of the same mind to get out of where
every this was, and came face to face with the man who had moments ago made
them worried. That worry gone, they tried to go around him.
“Gimme your wallets, jewelry, and phones.” The man demanded,
stepping right back in front of them. “Now.”
“Shit,” Derek muttered.
“We’re kids, man. We ain’t got anything in our wallets, and
my parents don’t let me have a cell phone!”
“Bull shit! You have to have something!” The man demanded
stepping towards Mickey.
“Penny for your thoughts!”
Mickey and Derek looked at each other before looking at the
man in front of them. His own face was a mask of confusion as he stared back at
them.
“What?”
“Penny for your thoughts?” The voice repeated. It sounded
like a little old grandma.
The man with the knife turned his head to look behind him and
jumped back in surprise. He stood beside Mickey and Derek as the stooped figure
of a little old lady stepped from the shadows. She had a walking stick, horned rimmed
glasses, and a puffed up, fluffy, and flowery sun dress on, as if she were the
stereotype that all little old ladies were crafted from.
“Don’t be startled dearies!” She said with a smile, revealing
her yellow and crooked teeth. “I am just out for a stroll and saw you stopping
in front of my home here and thought I would say hello!”
The man and the two boys looked around the old woman to the
shadows that she stepped from. None of them could see any house behind her.
Mickey sure the hell wasn’t going to say anything about it, so he just stood
there, waiting.
“Beat it…” the man with the knife started, before seeing the
shimmer of her necklace in the flickering light of the lamp post.
“Give me the Jewel, lady!” He stepped aggressively forward
and pulled it right off her neck.
“Mercy me!” She said in a shocked voice that didn’t quite
reach her face.
She still stood there as relaxed as when she first walked
up.
Mickey thought about running when the old woman reached into
a pocket of her dress and pulled out a penny.
“Penny for your thoughts?”
The man laughed, but then squinted at the coin, the woman
held.
“No way...” he said. He stepped forward and snatched it from
her. “This is a 1943-D Lincoln Bronze Wheat Penny! You crazy old broad! Do you
know how valuable this is?!”
He laughed and gave a whoop.
“Yeah, I’ll take your penny for my thoughts. My thought is
that you just made me a very rich…”
His words were cut short as she flung her arm out way faster
than Mickey and Derek would have assumed to be humanly possible and sunk her
hand right into his face. She then yanked it back with a sickening squelch and
the man fell at their feet.
Mickey looked down at the man, and back up at the old woman
who was just staring at them, holding the dripping brains of the dead man in
her hand. Maintaining eye contact, the woman sniffed the brains and took a
large bite from it.
They watched her, seemingly paralyzed, before Mickey could
will his feet to move. He grabbed Derek and pulled his arm as he took off from
where they had turned onto the road. He looked over his shoulder as they ran.
The old woman just stared at them as they ran away, finishing her oozing meal,
before wiping her hand, and bending down to pick up the penny from the man’s
hand.
As they hit the intersection, just before Mickey could
decide to go left or right, a man on a bicycle nearly hit them.
“Watch where you’re going damn it!” He yelled.
Mickey stopped and spun around. The intersection was no
longer an intersection, but a brick wall that faced a T intersection. He
reached out and shakily touched the bricks. Solid, and cold.
“What the..” Derek asked, wheezing and coughing.
As the man on the bike got further away, and his cursing
faded out, Mickey could just barely hear the little old woman’s voice.
“Penny for your thoughts?”
They took off running again, their foot falls echoing off of the cold brick walls.
© Jeremy L. Heath, 2025. All rights reserved
Thursday, July 17, 2025
Dear Anonymous Commenter
Dear Anonymous Commenter,
I was pretty excited when I saw the comment notification. I've had my writing website since 2012, and this would be my very first comment.
You know, I have to be honest, I've had a rough couple few months, and to see someone taking the time to say something gave me a momentary elated feeling.
And, in the sake of honesty, I must admit that I took it pretty rough.
If I had just started with my website, and this was the first comment, I doubt it would have landed as quite the blow to the gut that it did.
It took me a moment to gather my wits about me to remember that you are not someone who actually reads poetry, or short stories, or has probably invested yourself in any of my work further than maybe one or two of the Haikus on my page.
As most of my longer stuff was removed for the publishing process, so I doubt you've had the chance to look at those, or would be interested in buying my collection to get a feel for them or my style.
Ultimately, dear commenter, are just a nameless, faceless, and ultimately feckless voice vomiting your nonsense to spread the vile darkness in your own soul to as many other people as possible.
In the end, while it is disappointing that you would be my first comment after all this time, I must thank you for setting the bar so low on the comment section. Perhaps the next comment I get will be a bit higher than yours and won't feel quite as sharp.
So, I'm sorry that my work (that you have access to) is not up to your liking.
However, as a gift for being first commenter, I wrote you a Haiku that you will probably not like either.
A Haiku: "Dear Anonymous Commenter"
I can't take advice
from nameless online shadows.
Hope you understand.
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Clarity
Clarity
Ramsey pulled his cruiser into the parking lot and killed his lights. The last few hours were eating away at the back of his mind. His stale chips, and cold coffee was doing nothing against the knots in his stomach.
The Ibuprofen he popped did nothing to take the sting out of his legs from having had to chase a kid 3 blocks, and jumping a small fence before another officer ultimately beat him to it and was able to tackle the kid, who then kicked and punched everyone close enough.
The soft music playing just under the intermittent chatter on the radio did nothing to silence the screaming sobs of a mom at the scene of the Seventh and Main.
The vape he hit did nothing to ease the cravings for just one cigarette to try to ease his mind from the old man who looked so defeated and ashamed as he reported being mugged. “I’ve never felt so helpless,” he had said point blankly as he stared down at the ground.
Now, in the dark sanctuary of the parking lot, away from the chaos, Officer Ramsey could empathize with that statement. Day after day, week after week, for months and years…and while it was never easy, it was manageable in the beginning.
Now?
Now he just really needed that cigarette. He got out of his car and pulled a solitary cigarette from a crumpled pack from his pocket. As he drew that first drag, Ramsey stepped away from the car. He stared into the darkness wondering what he was even doing when the parking lot seemed to explode with light.
Ramsey jumped, hand dropping to his waist, eyes blinking back at the sudden light before realizing he had tripped a flood light on a motion sensor. As he tried to get his heart back down from where it had jumped into his throat, he saw the statue illumined by the light. St. Michael, staring down his sword at the snake beneath his feet, the stones on the arch above him reading simply: “Be our protection against the wickedness and snares of the devil…”
He jumped again as his radio crackled to life with dispatch wanting him to answer a call. Still staring at St. Michael, Ramsey affirmed he was only a couple blocks away, and would be on his way.
He took one last drag before dropping the cigarette to the ground and grinding it under his heel, and nodding.
Duty calls.
© Jeremy L. Heath, 2025. All rights reserved
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
Purity
Purity
have been placed upon my car,
made by my own hands.
Friday, July 11, 2025
Thinking
to a different platform,
So, Wordpress or Wix?
Wednesday, July 9, 2025
Sunday Night
Sunday Night.
The car is filled to the brim-
Toys. Food.
Drink. Clothes.
Some things that we showed up with,
others that were gifted,
and some that we bought along the way.
We are exhausted.
We are saddened.
We hate to be leaving family, and the freedom of the country.
Though happy to be home,
in our own beds,
in our own home…
a hole remains…
The trip to the country a blatant reminder:
the city is nothing more than a cage.
We are its captives,
with no way to get through the wires,
but hoping for a lucky break
to afford parole.
© Jeremy L. Heath, 2025. All rights reserved