Black Fairies

“Black Fairies” by Holly Sheidenberger

It’s Mother’s first night home since the acquittal.

The silence is rigid and oppressive. I shudder, repulsed by her mutilated, sightless eyes.

One questions still burns. With all their probing interrogation, the attorneys never demanded an answer.

“Why?” I ask. “Why did you do it?”

“I didn’t,” is her sharp reply. “They were accidents. Both of them.”

“I mean your eyes.” I swallow. “Why did you blind your eyes?”

The thick blankness in the air echoes the emptiness of her stare.

I push away from the table.

“Black fairies,” she says, unmoving.

Thinking thoughts I dare not voice, I’m mute.

“I saw black fairies. Behind Jamie, just before he fell down the stairs. And in the bathtub with Annie before she drowned. I didn’t want to see them anymore.”

“You’re safe now, Mother,” I soothe. “Safe.”

“But you’re not,” she whispers. A glint flickers in her visionless eyes.

“The black fairies. They’re at your throat.”

Alarmed

“Alarmed” by Holly Sheidenberger

It was June. Dale was sleeping soundly when his alarm jolted him awake.

The clock said 7:10.

Odd. He’d never set the alarm for 7:10.

That evening, during Jeopardy!, a startling sound made Dale jump. He spilled his Miller Lite.

The faulty alarm clock was blaring again.

It was 7:10.

Dale tried to reprogram the alarm. But it screamed promptly at 7:10 every morning. And evening.

Desperate, he yanked the plug from the wall.

Mercifully, the clock faded, as dark and silent as death.

Until 7:10.

It blazed to life, incessantly flashing its warning: 7:10 – 7:10 – 7:10.

Dale couldn’t take it any longer, so he smashed the clock with a hammer.

Then came July. Dale was exhausted. Every time he laid down, he saw those dreaded numbers, haunting him, keeping him awake.

He took some pills to help. Too many pills.

He never opened his eyes again.

The date on his tombstone read July 10, 2019.

Seven Ten.