Tag: Joe Stanley

A Cloud Passing (an angry man)

by Joe Stanley

WILLIAM WALKER WAS A GENTLE MAN. Always kind and polite, he was thought of, at worst, as meek and timid.

But although he was admired for his patience and his soft-spoken demeanor, William had a secret deep down inside.

He hated his life. His boss belittled him, his wife nagged him and berated him, even his little girl mocked and disrespected him. Nothing he could ever do was good enough, and the truth was he did an excellent job at everything… everything but life.

Fury boiled in the core of his soul, he fought it every moment. He pressed it down and made it as small as he could, while smiling through the pain. Though he would never willingly hurt anyone, he understood why people lost their minds and went on rampages. But he believed, perhaps foolishly, that kindness was the best revenge if not a cure for the trouble.

He had also believed that, when the opportunity came, he could seize it and earn the respect and love he had lived so long without. A new project at the office had given him just such a chance. His presentation had wowed the board members and there was open speculation that a promotion and an increase in salary would soon be his.

But by the middle of the day things had changed. His boss, a typical middle management tyrant, had the ear of the supervisor and had taken credit for William’s hard work. And to make matters worse, the half-pint dictator had insisted they work through lunch to get things rolling with the new idea.

The rage began to smolder, clouding his mind and making it hard to breath. He quivered as he struggled to hold it in,

feeling certain he would pass out. He pictured the anger as a blazing ball of fire and used every scrap of his will to make it smaller and smaller. Eventually, the fury would pass, but this time something strange happened.

The ball simply popped. Instantly, his pulse and breathing returned to normal. He not only felt alright, he felt great.

By the time lunch was over, he had things ready. When his boss didn’t return for the afternoon meeting, he stepped up and took the lead. The supervisor was so impressed William found hope for the promotion after all.

The quiet evening was winding down as William and Bianca slipped into bed. He hadn’t stopped chattering since he got home and his state of happiness was almost alarming to Bianca. She had listened, barely able to conceal a scowl of contempt. His excitement, his joy, were things that terrified her because they came from somewhere beyond herself.

She decided who was happy around here, and he had more than enough.

“Old Smith himself told me I was going places. I tell you, the day almost couldn’t get any better.” he whispered and reached out through the dark to take her hand.

“A promotion? Maybe, you mean. You haven’t actually got it yet. And, really, I’d expect you to get excited about a maybe. You’ve worked there your whole life, even if you get it, so what? Too little, too late is what I’d call it.”

“Wait and see.” came his voice with its ever-steady tone, a tone she was not prepared to tolerate any longer. And his hand had seized hers gently stroking her fingers. She exploded, yanking a fist away.

“Is that what you’re after?” she screeched, “Is that what I am to you? Some domestic whore?!”
“What?! No…”
“You think you can just command me to perform simply because you think you had a great day. Well, what about my day?”
“I just thought we’d celebrate…”
“Let’s wait until something actually happens.”

His blood began to boil. Rising from the bed, he threw on the lamp.
“What are you doing?” she demanded.
“I’m going to go sleep in the guest bedroom.” he said, while gathering his clothes. Pausing at the door, his temper slipped for the first time in many years and he went on, “Bianca, I don’t really know what it is that I did or didn’t do to make you hate me so much. But if it’s really so damned bad, I wonder why you’re still here at all.”

The look on her face, as satisfying as it was, did little to ease him. He tossed and turned, grumbling to himself. The ball had returned, an inferno now churning his stomach.
“Just like before…” he whispered, “Come on, do it just like before…”
Just like before, the ball popped.

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A Cloud Passing (an angry man) part 2

by Joe Stanley

ii

THE DAY HAD BEEN A STRANGE ONE. He woke to an empty house and feared that his angry words might have driven Bianca away. But even the refuge of work presented him with oddness. His boss hadn’t come in, or at least no one had seen him, and yet his car was parked outside.

A suspicion, one impossible to put into words, was gnawing away at him. By lunch, he was concerned enough to call the police. The detectives that came to interview him about his boss could sense his apprehension and promptly started treating him as their main suspect.

He found himself grilled for hours down at the station. Their inability to locate his wife only furthered their idea. At first, his fear and guilt held him in check, but their relentless questions, with the implications which attended them, were finally too much, and his anger began to blaze.

They wound him up, tighter and tighter, and when they stepped from the room he thought of the ball and began to press it down, once more. Somehow, it was even easier this time and the ball popped like a soap-bubble on the grass.

He even overlooked that they had left him waiting for two hours before another officer turned him loose. Still, this was serious business. The little trip downtown might cost him his job. He was sure the promotion could be forgotten. And Bianca might be filing for divorce at that moment.

By the time he parked in front of his dark and quiet house, he was as angry as he had even been. Stomping up the sidewalk, the neighbor’s dog went wild like always, charging the fence in a ridiculous display of aggression.

Every damned day. You see me every damned day. You know who I am. You know I live here and we go through this every damned day… Who the Hell would want such a pathetic, mop-like, turd-gobbling noise factory for a pet…

The ball was back and growing. As he visualized it shrinking away, he muttered.
“I hate that God-damned dog.”

The ball popped and his anger was gone. The dog, however, went away with it. Its dirty white fur went gray, as though a cloud passed between them. Then it faded and the dog was gone… simply gone. There wasn’t even a whimper or a yelp to mark its passing.

The truth now was dawning on him. Somehow, his boss, his wife, the detectives and now the dog… They had all just vanished shortly after making him mad.

Some might have reveled in such a power. It was, in fact, exactly what he had been wishing for the whole time he was wishing his anger away. To make the anger disappear was only treating the symptom, now he was treating the cause.

And with this came the dilemma. For though he was a patient and polite man, the results were as bitter and vile as if he had hacked them to pieces, or torn them apart with his bare hands. It was not that he lacked the desire to be cruel, only that his will had heretofore been too weak.

William Walker realized that it was not the world he hated, but that he hated himself. He might have walked away from a thankless job or a loveless marriage, but he had stayed. He had stayed and his anger, his endless boiling anger, had finally spilled over and escaped the confines of his self-control.

Tears filled his eyes as the guilt overcame him. He spoke the last few words he would speak in this world.

“I hate myse…”

To him, the world blurred for a moment, as with the passing of a cloud. Then everything began to fade away, leaving only a bleak and endless gray all around.

William Walker vanished from this world, going where the others had gone. He was swallowed by his own anger, to hear for all eternity furious voices and the endless barking of a dog.

-end-

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Sweet Stalker – A Valentine’s Day Story

by Joe Stanley

No, you don’t know me, and I don’t know you. Well, not really. I have seen you before, but I doubt you’ve ever noticed me.

I kind of like it when you come around. Obviously, you’re very pretty, but there’s something else. Your face, it seems almost familiar but, then again, I really doubt there could be anyone else quite like you.

So it has to be you…
Something about you…

Your eyes are beautiful. They sparkle like sapphires. It makes my heart skip to feel them on me.

I don’t even know why I would want to tell you this. But when I see you, the world stops making sense. I feel frantic and desperate, like I’ve forgotten something very important. It’s like when you’ve lost something good and the world can never be right again, until you get it back.

Sadly for me, I’ll never get it back.

Yeah, it’s all weird and awkward and creepy, and on top of that it hurts, because I could pour my heart out and you wouldn’t care at all. As bad as it would be for me to try, I’m sure that it would be even worse for you, of course.

I suppose that’s what we get for interacting with the world from such a distance. We lose that empathy and compassion that make things like friendship and love possible. We get stuck in small circles and everyone else is a stranger, an outsider…

And of course we’re all encouraged to over-react. It’s all guilty until proven harmless. Frankly, all this drama is ridiculous. Most of us aren’t even that important. We could drop dead and the world would go right on and not even notice.

And that’s the one thing I have that I can give you. You are important to me. You do matter to me. It’s a shame that you don’t even know who I am.

I could give my life to you. I’d do anything to make you happy, to see you smile, to hear you laugh. If you were at my side, I could face anything in life and be alright. But that’s never going to happen and you’ll never even know how completely that breaks my heart.

It hurts. It really, really hurts. Even more than when you shot me. You didn’t even give me a chance.

But this is all I need. If I can’t live with you, at least we can die together.

Your eyes… they’re so pretty… they sparkle…

even after…

I squeezed all…

the life…

out…

-end-

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Still Life – part two

by Joe Stanley

THE HOUSE WAS STILL in good shape. The plaster was without cracks, the plumbing was still intact, the roof wasn’t leaking. He went from room to room, expecting the worst and being pleasantly surprised. He had imagined that costly repairs might be in order, but dust seemed to be the biggest problem.

Everything was exactly as he had left it. A housekeeping service had covered things with cloths. But each room held so many memories that they seemed like a host of sheet-covered phantoms. They keened from everywhere, a silent wail that clutched the stillness, crying out for what had been lost.

Letting go was the problem, it always had been. It was such a simple thing, to just walk away, to move on. And still, it was impossible, now just as then. But he had made it this far and there was only one room he hadn’t dared.

The studio door stood tall and forbidding. In this, it made a tacit confession of secrets withheld. He had actually wondered what she did when locked away behind the door, as if it wasn’t perfectly clear. She had always either run him away or simply walked out herself. It didn’t even need to be said, he was not welcome there.

But Chuck was free to enter. Chuck. He was a big guy, strong and handsome, and sensitive enough for an opportunity like Miranda. How long it would have gone on, he couldn’t say. But he felt that he deserved a better ending than to have the two of them smiling in his face and laughing behind his back.

Sadly, the truth was probably that they were so absorbed in their affair that he wasn’t even more than a minor consideration. Out of sight, out of mind. Their lives just went on while his was ending. But he fixed all of that.

That night, he came home early, headlights off to hide his approach. When he stepped inside, he could hear them. He had the pistol in moments and crept up to the studio door. He waited until they finished, pulling gloves over his hands. At the sound of a cigarette lighter, he opened the door.

There was pleading, especially after he raised the gun. Such a dashing, heroic bastard, Chuck tried to shield her and took two shots for his trouble. Miranda was so stunned that strangling her was easy.

The cops bought the whole story, hook, line, and sinker.

He didn’t need to fake tears, his despair was real.

He had come home and noticed something was wrong, the lights were out.
He went inside and armed himself.
He found this guy Chuck in his wife’s studio, standing over her body.
He couldn’t remember the rest…

He walked over to the spot where they had fallen, believing he had conquered his guilt at last. But a canvas covered with a tarp commanded his attention. When he yanked the veil away, he stared into Miranda’s eyes and, somehow, she into his.

Her final work had been a self-portrait. In it, she had captured the essence of her own broken heart and shattered dreams.

Her eyes betrayed the eternal sadness that his own heart knew so well. Her lips, in a subtle frown spoke wordlessly of all the things that could never be said. And to his horror, he understood it all.

The portrait was nothing but smudges of paint on a canvas, but in them, she had poured out her soul. At the sight of it, he knew he was, himself, without one. And to see her again, to find her this way, was to lose her again and this time forever.

And to lose her, he had always known, would destroy him.

So he said good-bye and put the gun to his head.

Now with a few extra flecks of red, the painting smiled, as it always had.

-end-

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Still Life – part one

by Joe Stanley

THE ROAD WOUND THROUGH a picturesque countryside. The smooth, round hills rose from serpentine valleys with golden grasses and deep green forests, climbing to meet a serene and pure blue sky. It might have been a relaxing drive, but he clenched the steering wheel so hard his knuckles turned white. It was like a painting, too much like a painting.

And even after years, the scenery was too familiar. Each glance made him sick and afraid as though dreadful specters peeked from behind the trees and rocks. Indeed, there were ghosts along the way, risen from the tomb of the past. The whole idea had been a haunting one, to journey back to a place he would have rather never seen again, to a confrontation he could not imagine.

After the tragedy, he had lived a great life, there was a lot of money to minimize his grief. But some bad investments and some worse habits had whittled it away to nothing, or almost nothing. In the end, the house was all he had left and his return to it seemed strangely inescapable.

His heart began to pound as he turned up the private road. The branches above hung low and reached out from either side, clawing at the car. The world seemed ever smaller, closing in to crush him. He had anticipated this and tried to prepare himself, but a glimpse of the house nearly sent him into panic and fury. It was some time before he could get out of the car and he stood silently as he turned the key over and over in his hand.

As he stood, the feeling that gripped him was so like, and yet so unlike, the feeling that had seized him on that night so long ago. It had taken courage back then and it required it no less now. Desperation played a role, to be sure, in finding the strength to place the key inside the lock and turn it. Things had to be inspected, everything must be in order if he was to be free of the place. He wondered why he hadn’t sold it back then.

It originally belonged to his uncle Joe. It had been the scene of so many happy childhood memories. Countless carefree holidays had been shared with his family beneath its roof. When Joe died, he bought the place, eager to continue the tradition. He had still been a fresh-faced kid, carrying his beautiful bride across the threshold. The same threshold now carried him into a mausoleum, into a crypt, into a slaughterhouse.

He could feel the weight of the pistol in his hand, he could taste the bile driven up and out by fear and rage. His breath came in sharp wheezes, pathetic gasps that humiliated him with their sound. He reached up to wipe tears from his eyes and told himself what the detective had told him on that night.
“It won’t be easy, but everything is going to be alright.”

Miranda was a beautiful girl with a heart and mind to match. He admired her spirit, her fiery passion. She was the kind of girl he would have never even had the courage to speak to, let alone ask out. But she knew what she wanted out of life and, for whatever inconceivable reason, she wanted him.

She was his first romance, his first taste of desire. She taught him how to kiss, how to touch, how to love. Through her, the greatest treasure of life had become his, its greatest mystery was solved. She whispered it into his ear with lips so hot that to kiss her was to taste fire. But it was more than mere lust that bound him to her, it was love.

And why he had loved her so was easy to see. She brought out the best in him, drove him to achieve things he could never even dream of without her. But he had to concede that there was a fatal flaw in their connection, that she was the only girl to ever walk the heart’s path with him. In her was everything. She was happiness, she was the world, she was life.

To lose her would be to lose everything. It would destroy him.

And so it did.

But storm clouds had already formed on the horizon. Business, once booming, had dwindled as the trends in the market changed. His garden of paradise became first an oasis in the desert and slowly its vital waters were drying up. There was nothing he could do to change things. He was forced to see not only his means of living but his very life’s dream become a dull and dreary nightmare.

They had been talking about building a family before things went sour. How could he bring children into the world under such conditions of instability. He could tell it broke Miranda’s heart to find him reluctant, and like a hopeful fool, he failed to realize what it meant when she agreed that they just weren’t ready.

He had encouraged her find something to do with her time. There were classes she could take, hobbies she could adopt. It delighted him immensely when she took up painting. It was more than spousal encouragement he gave at some of the breath-taking pieces she composed. She had talent, her sun was only rising, even as his set.

He struggled every day to minimize his losses and spent exhausted evenings at a local bar. By the time he came staggering in, she had been asleep for hours. The distance between them grew and the space between them became colder.

But there was still hope. His business and marriage were things he was willing to fight for, even if it meant fighting for the rest of his life. He would never give up, how could he? Giving up would be like death, or worse.

There was hope… until she started taking her lessons from a man named Chuck.

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Lake of Tears part 2

by Joe Stanley

2

IT WAS NOT EXCEEDINGLY difficult to do as she asked. The worst of it was tolerating her asinine friends. I was needed only for public events and left to my own most of the time. I spent that time bettering myself as much as possible. I read, learned to appreciate music and art, studied chess… But the long, lonely hours took their toll, and I craved the only comfort  I could never have, the warmth of another loving heart.

The smirks and snickers that attended the whispers surrounding me were not as deeply wounding as one might imagine.

Never being taken seriously is only an insult when you respect the people looking down at you. But beyond these soulless ones, there were others who judged me not so harshly. In the various classes I took in my spare time, I almost even made friends.

I think people liked me, even though they knew something was off. I got no small pleasure out of seeing a face or two light up when I came into a room. I suppose some thought me to be interesting, but what really seemed to connect with them was that I cared. When you view life from a position of pain, you either numb yourself to it or you appreciate what it is and how it affects people.

When I first met Emily, I knew immediately that she was, like myself, a solitary, broken heart. She sat alone, keeping to herself. She was exceedingly difficult to approach, but I knew that she wanted someone to reach out and this kept me persistent. When she finally let her guard down and opened up for me, I knew I understood nothing about suffering.

I resolved to make her happy, if I could, to show her that she did not need to face life by herself. She needed me and I needed her. We more than complimented each other, we completed each other. Our connection deepened with every moment we spent together, our hearts became hopelessly and forever entangled.

We both knew where we were headed. We pretended things weren’t so serious, that we were just good friends. But after sharing a silly laugh, as we gazed into each others eyes, our passions exploded. Our lips met, burning with passion’s fire, our trembling hands grasped at the treasure we had so long done without, our breaths were the screaming thunder of a tempest, and our hearts pounded for the very first time in our lives with the rhythm of love.

We held each other in silence, smiling in the dark, saying nothing and needing no more.
We knew the flaws, the secrets, the hurts, the wordless dreams we shared and that was enough.

I could barely bring myself to part with her, but I knew we belonged to and with each other.

Returning home was a rude and cold awakening. Marion could sense that I was happy and she tried to punish me for it.

I had other plans.

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