Author: Harlan Covington
The door slammed behind her with a heavy, final echo. Alice stood on the threshold of the living room
Mary Johnson put the kettle on. Just habit. Six in the morning, the kettle, a mug, the doorstep.
Emily first heard the howling on a Saturday, driving home from the night shift. Long, mournful—it sent
George came back from the shoot in a right mood, like a wasp in a jar. He kicked his wellies off by the
In the dream, the neighbour’s voice came drifting from the kitchen like a wisp of steam. “Thomas, will
So, mate, you won’t believe this, but here’s the mess I got myself into. I’m Mark, forty‑three, and if
“Right then,” said the mother-in-law from the doorstep, without a greeting, without taking off her shoes
Sometimes life throws up the kind of story that makes you think afterwards – it can’t have happened like that.
When Tom brought a mangy dog to the cottage, his mother-in-law, Margaret, nearly fainted in dismay.
Linda snaps the lock shut on her small grocery store in a Kyiv neighbourhood and breathes out in relief.









