Stolen Hour
Where have they gone,
this sunny day?
His chair empty,
her bonnet stays
lace tablecloth
precious array
abundant fruits
roses to say
he still loves her...
Ah, now I see
a stolen hour
some time alone
in her boudoir.
Stolen Hour
Where have they gone,
this sunny day?
His chair empty,
her bonnet stays
lace tablecloth
precious array
abundant fruits
roses to say
he still loves her...
Ah, now I see
a stolen hour
some time alone
in her boudoir.
Soft hums
Wrapped in blue folds
Of celestial bliss
Vibrant skies racing with white clouds
Homeward.
Copyright 2008 JO Janoski
Her grin, a slit empty of grace
happiness never to paint her face.
Forest critters giggle and chat.
Did anyone know they did all that?
Horses racing across great plains
like tycoons vying to make great gains.
Copyright 2008 JO Janoski
"Well, let's see what we got" he yelled. "I'm curious to see who got on Frank's shit list this time. Poor schmuck!"
"It's not all that heavy," one of the strong men said. "Must be a skinny guy."
"Who ever heard of a skinny gangster?" Bud joked ... Read more...
"Look at me! You've got to be kidding!" They stood outside Macy's window, gazing at their reflections. Jessa clenched her fists and stood rigid, glaring, ready to explode. Her hair, flattened and combed down straight went perfectly with the "sunday-go-to-meetin'" pants suit which boasted a silk blouse with a matching scarf tied in the front and, of course, 'practical' shoes. Tiny eyeglasses perched on her nose in a blatant aura of intellectuality.
"You'd better rip that jewelry off your fingers...and those fake nails, too."
"No freakin' way!"
Do you want them to find us and kill us? That get-up is a dead giveaway that something's up." He tilted his Fedora and buttoned his top button, next straightening his plain blue tie.
"We look like Lois Lane and Clark Kent from those old TV shows." Read more
"Darling, we really should gather up our coats and woolies and head back east for the holiday." Mitzi made the remark as she took another sip of wine and watched her horse, Black Lightning, speed by. The track was hot and sunny, a warm day for December in California, a day riddled with excitement as the horses pounded their way to the finish.
"GO! Black Lightning, go!" her companion, Trudy, bellowed as both women clutched the rail with white knuckles showing, wine glasses tossed aside, and their wide-brimmed hats knocked crooked on their heads.
"GO-O-O-O, BLACKIE, GO-O-O-O!" they screamed, only to fall back in dismay as Black Lightning stumbled and fell off to the side while his nemesis, Brenda's Baby, took the lead. That horse passed the finish line to cheers of adoring fans. Amidst the rumble of applause, Mitzi and Trudy sat back in a pool of grief.
"Well, now we're out of money. I guess we have no choice but to head back east for Christmas," Mitzi murmured.
"Yeah, but we'd have to apologize to a lot of people back there."
"Oh yeah!" Mitzi blushed. "My little incident with your cousin, Tony... I wonder if he ever got over it."
Trudy glared back. "I doubt it, Mitzi, he was only twelve years old at the time!"
"Yeah, I shouldn't have. But what about the time you posed for those nude pictures?"
"The firemen told me I was posing for a charity calendar!"
Mitzi chuckled. "You enjoyed it."
"YEAH," Trudy gushed. "You know, if we go back east, they're going to make us stay there 'for our own good,' and we're going to have to bow down to a lot of people and behave ourselves."
"No more fun. No more going to the track."
"Yeah, we'll have to get day jobs and open savings accounts and save our money for the future...like other people." The last few words left Trudy gasping for breath.
"You know...I've got a couple bucks left. We could bet on the next race, and maybe we'll get lucky."
"It's either that or write to mother for plane tickets."
"If we win today, they're having extra races Christmas week. We could come back and win some more."
"Right." Trudy sighed. An inspired smile brightened her face, as she bolted off at a gallop toward the betting windows, blaring out a Christmas carol, "Gawd rest ye merry ponies, run!"
"Let get out there and play!" Mitzi caroled back chasing Trudy in hot pursuit. They never did go back east, ever again.
Copyright 2007 JO Janoski
She glared back. "Did it ever occur to you I'm a person, not just some whore you can force to go down on you whenever you like. I got a family and stuff just like you. I'm a person!"
"Okay. Okay!" Other people were staring. He could feel their eyes cutting into his skin. Their conversation, louder than it should be, didn't help either. He started his stack of pancakes. In his annoyed state, they slid down his throat like cotton balls, sticking along the way.
His eyes rested on her skinny fingers, clutching the fork in a fist like a farmer's wife. Except unlike a farmer's wife, her fingers and thumbs were riddled with cheap rings and her long fake nails boasted a ghastly shade of black. Her bare arms were so skinny, it was hard to believe a living person possessed them. The last time he'd seen arms that thin was his Aunt Frieda days before she succumbed to cancer.
"What are you looking at?" Read more:
For a Workshop Challenge to write a Christmas story for this painting.
A Proper Christmas
"My dear, there's been talk." Mrs. Willows looked like a heavenly apparition in her dazzling white outfit, complete with fake flowers on her bonnet and lacy frills, right down to her spotless parasol which she tapped on the floor to emphasize each syllable.
"There's been talk of this rooming house, your unsavory clientele, the filth." At the word filth, she turned her nose up at the dusty table tops and grimy pillows scattered across the floor. "And the blood stains," she added. "There are blood stains on your floor, and you offer no explanation for it."
The other woman said nothing.
Mrs. Willows again. "There have been people missing around town. People who used to board here, people who walked through your doors and never came out again."
Still nothing.
"Really, Miss Peoples, you must have some explanation." With that, Mrs. Willows sat back, waiting to listen.
The other woman shook her head as though to wake herself. She looked to Mrs. Willows, surprised to see her as though it were the first time. "Christmas is coming," she murmured. "I must get ready for Christmas."
"Christmas!" Mrs. Willows said. "Really, Miss Peoples, do you honestly consider yourself a good Christian?"
"A Christian? Yes, I consider myself a good Christian. Do you consider yourself one?"
"Well, really! Of course. I'm a pillar of the community."
"Well, as a 'pillar' of the community, I feel it is my duty to inform you the blood stains on my floor are from a wounded Negro I helped. He arrived here beaten by some of your other 'pillars,' and I nursed him back to health. The other 'unsavory' characters who disappear after coming through my doors are the unwanted poor and homeless you people cast aside. You kick them out of the alleys, chase them out of the taverns, and push them from the churches, because they wear ragged clothes or they smell bad. They come to me and I nurture them, feed them, and find them homes away from here. Far away from here..."
"Well, perhaps you are no better than the renegades with whom you commiserate."
Miss Peoples glared back. "Mrs. Willows, the one thing I'm certain of is that those 'renegades' are Christians. As for yourself, I'm not so sure."
"How dare you?"
"Get out of my house. I have to get ready for Christmas. There is food to cook for them, and tiny gifts to assemble, anything to brighten their wretched lives. Go home to your perfect house and your perfect family, clean and white, yet empty and clueless. Go home and wash your hands of the poor and homeless. But by all means, enjoy your holiday.
Mrs. Willows left in a huff. She had a house full of guests to tend to, and she needed to check with cook and make sure dinner preparations were in order. She'd be showing her family a proper Christmas. Yes, a proper Christmas, indeed!
Copyright 2007 JO Janoski
A snippet:
The silence suffocated Jane. The crazy man hadn't spoken for the last hour. She had thought they were bonding when he admitted they were both victims in the same calamitous soup. But now he sat in the corner, curled up, aloof, as though she didn't exist. When he did at last speak, his voice sliced in acerbic cuts through the dark, digging deep.
"Yep. We're both victims, victims of your hubby."
"What?"
"Your hubby. I mean, he's chasing me down til I'm stuck in a hole, and he's abandoned you in this hellish cell, as well."
Jane shuddered. The very idea! "Bud did not abandon me." Read more