SmokeLong Quarterly
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Ice
by Joseph Young

art by Dave Clapper
art by Dave Clapper
It was Christmas Eve and at the bottom of a gully, standing on a rock with the dirty water swirling around, was a dog. It shivered terribly, the sleet coating its yellow back, and it looked up at me with hopeless eyes. Fifteen yards, almost straight down through broken concrete, glass and rusted metal, it seemed to know I'd never make it.

Out of the gym and to his car came a guy in shorts and a sweatshirt. "What the fuck? What's it doing down there?"

I shrugged. The icy rain was falling down my neck, in my ears. "Just standing there. I think it's stuck."

The gym guy, beefy faced and hairy, was someone I saw around sometimes, usually shooting baskets with the boys or squatting over weights. He was the kind to scare the shit out of me, all sweat and animal muscle. Though the kids liked him, even the little ones, even the wimpy ones.

He slicked the rain off his face with a palm. "Should we go get it?"

"I don't know. What if it bites? What if it's rabid?"

"Oh yeah," he said. "Fucker just might bite. Freaked out as it is." He threw his hands in the air. "All right then, see you around." He fished his keys out of his gym bag and opened the car door. He got in and started the engine. He turned off the engine and got back out.

"I see you're not leaving?" he said.

"I guess not," I answered. I hadn't meant not to leave, but I hadn't. I was staring down at the dog, watching its legs rattle. I had wondered if I could heave a rock that far, put it out of its misery.

He went to the edge of the gully and leaned forward, arms out for balance in a surprisingly delicate gesture. For a moment I had flashes of gymnastics, he and his wife on a mat in the center of a mirrored room, legs bent, eyes deep on each other. Why his wife was there, I couldn't say.

"We could do it," he said. "It even looks like there's a path."

"Yeah, that could be a path. It looks a little path-like."

He squinted his eyes at me. "You're an odd duck, aren't you?"

"What?"

"Nothing." He smiled. "Path-like. Yeah, it's pretty fucking path-like."

He put his hand on my shoulder. "You wanna go first?"

"No," I said. "Not really." I started down. Gym guy followed behind me. Gym guy with the hairy arms, gymnast wife, the Christmas heart.


All content in SmokeLong Quarterly copyright 2003-2008 by its authors.
"Ice" is the 9th story in a work in progress called "A Flash ABC." Joseph's work has appeared previously in SmokeLong and a number of other journals. Visit at youngjoseph21@hotmail.com or josephyoung.net.

Read the interview.
Issue Eleven (December 15, 2005): Forks in the Road by Eve Abrams «» Retirement Home by Greg Ames «» A Drop of Dew by Edgar Omar Avilés, translated by Toshiya Kamei «» No One Left to Care About the Fat Man by Rusty Barnes «» The Mother's Guide to Flight Patterns by Theresa Boyar «» It's All True by Nadine Darling «» What She Gave to the Sea by Katrina Denza «» It by Patry Francis «» Cemetery Day by Laurie Frankel «» Cityscape by Judd Hampton «» The Black Squirrels of Ottawa by Niranjana Iyer «» Diagnosis by Beverly A. Jackson «» Green Monster by Erica Plouffe Lazure «» Sophie, Now by Mary McCluskey «» A Blind Dog Named Killer and a Colony of Bees by Mary Miller «» The Sky Is a Well by Claudia Smith «» You Only Get One Chance to Be El Latigo by Elizabeth Smith «» Flights by Jim Tomlinson «» Song of Giants by Girija Tropp «» Ice by Joseph Young «» Interviews: Eve Abrams «» Greg Ames «» Rusty Barnes «» Theresa Boyar «» Myfanwy Collins «» Nadine Darling «» Katrina Denza «» Patry Francis «» Laurie Frankel «» Judd Hampton «» Marty D. Ison «» Niranjana Iyer «» Beverly A. Jackson «» Toshiya Kamei «» Erica Plouffe Lazure «» Mary McCluskey «» Mary Miller «» Claudia Smith «» Elizabeth Smith «» Jim Tomlinson «» Girija Tropp «» Joseph Young «» Cover Art "Detail of The Death of Susan" by Marty D. Ison «» Letter From the Editor
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