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Carve Magazine

Impossible Tess by Kimm Brockett Stammen

Impossible Tess by Kimm Brockett Stammen

My wife’s sister plays all kinds of flutes. Metal and wood, tarnished and bright, silver, gold, a little painted thing made of tin, a slim jet-black cylinder made of stuff she calls grenadilla, and an antique glass one in a soft leather sachet that through all her traipsings stays miraculously unbroken.

The Alchemy of His Own Mirror by Vincent Anioke

The Alchemy of His Own Mirror by Vincent Anioke

It took our second encounter for me to guess, and the third to be sure, but his hair was alive. It breathed its own breath, as sentient beings do, and revealed its fearlessness in the wild swings it took, the delicately combed dreadlocks, the coiffed and oily Afro, the knotted braids that cascaded past his neck like a waterfall, stopping just short of the tip of his spine, from which wings would sprout if man could fly.

Further Maths by Toby Lloyd

Further Maths by Toby Lloyd

There were ten of us in Further Maths and I was third best. Or, in Mr. Damien’s words, eighth worst. Number two was Hideo. He sat to my right and had the ridiculous habit of groaning as he wrote successive lines of an equation, like you could actually hear his mind whir. Hideo was quickest at mental arithmetic and had the best record in spot tests, even beating Mildon. But we weren’t taking our A Levels seriously.

The Paper Tiger by Lindsay Kennedy

The Paper Tiger by Lindsay Kennedy

Nina did not want to pose with the tiger, but as the animal was the circus’s greatest attraction and people had come for miles around to see it, she felt she could not refuse when her turn came.

The Fourth by C. Adán Cabrera

The Fourth by C. Adán Cabrera

It all went down just before the Fourth of July the year I turned ten. All week long my siblings and I had been too scared to ask Mamá and Papá whether we would have as many fireworks as we did the year before.

Sandhill Cranes by Anna Prawdzik Hull

Sandhill Cranes by Anna Prawdzik Hull

Tía Consuelo, with her big mouth and big earrings and eighties perm, sits me down at the kitchen table and says, “I don’t want you to work for that puto.” By puto, she means Johnny González, owner of Speedy G Car Wash on San Mateo.

Out on the High Ledge by Ronald Kovach

Out on the High Ledge by Ronald Kovach

Will could have remained a mere spectator in the water, looking on with a dozen other swimmers at Olson Falls with traces of worry etched in their upper brows as they waited silently for the muscleman to return from the deep and break the polished-glass surface on this perfect sun-kissed day.