Sea Legs – by Sophie Overett
Fiction Sophie Overett Fiction Sophie Overett

Sea Legs – by Sophie Overett

‘Okay,’ he says, knocking a sand-covered knee against hers. ‘You have to tell me why.’

And she gives him that look. The one she knows will burrow under his skin, feasting on any wriggling uncertainty, an emerita in the beach of him.

‘I don’t have to tell you anything.’

He laughs like he gets it, which he doesn’t, because if he did, he wouldn’t have asked in the first place …

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Celebrity – by Chris McTrustry
Fiction Chris McTrustry Fiction Chris McTrustry

Celebrity – by Chris McTrustry

… “Well, yeah, acting. What’s that all about? Remember a few lines and don’t walk into the props.” … John Markham is a children's literature veteran with more than fifty titles to his name. He’s recently embarked on a soap opera acting career at the age of fifty-seven. “Yeah, it’s a bit of fun. You rock up, knock off a couple of scenes and hit somewhere trendy for a long lunch. Nothing to it.” …

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Fisher Girls – by Barry Lee Thompson
Fiction Barry Lee Thompson Fiction Barry Lee Thompson

Fisher Girls – by Barry Lee Thompson

Over time we’ve come to call them the fisher girls. There were three of them that day, whip-thin and dressed head to toe in black, with jet-black hair scraped off their faces and secured into tails at their necks. Long, those tails, swinging this way and that as the girls walked in measured steps to the river’s edge.

We watched as they unzipped their narrow bags and deftly assembled short, sturdy rods. I thought they must have come to the river to fish, and how unlike the usual fishermen they were. But when it looked as if they might be about to cast, they turned their backs on the water and stood still and silent in a line, facing us. Expressions impassive, rods held steady …

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Cake Flat - by Marion May Campbell
Fiction Marion May Campbell Fiction Marion May Campbell

Cake Flat - by Marion May Campbell

Cake Flat. The finality of the spondee – stressed syllable plus stressed syllable. Flat-footed, no pretence. With her low salary and her boy to support she heads for Cake Flat, the dormitory suburb on the coastal plain where she, as they say, can get a foot in the door, a state-subsidised mortgage deposit. Then the interest rates shoot up. Real cake is spongey moist succour and chocolate-dark. Not Cake Flat …

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An Encounter - by Katerina Gibson
Fiction Katerina Gibson Fiction Katerina Gibson

An Encounter - by Katerina Gibson

One day in a foreign country in a district you did not know existed until the year previous, you will run into someone you know, or used to know, from your childhood. Seeing you first, they will be so shocked as to stop short, which, when the moment of recognition hits — after the mental arithmetic required to identify a face you know in a place you don’t and age it, applying wrinkles, receding hairlines — you do also …

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Captain Boner - by Alex Cothren
Fiction Alex Cothren Fiction Alex Cothren

Captain Boner - by Alex Cothren

Captain Honor: Brooklyn-based superhero who is capable of flight and superhuman strength. Known as the ‘Guardian of the Bridge’ due to the high number of suicide attempts he has prevented from the Brooklyn Bridge. Captain Honor is currently under review for acceptance into Manhattan’s Hall of Justice supergroup …

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Into the Clear Blue - by Susan McCreery
Fiction Susan McCreery Fiction Susan McCreery

Into the Clear Blue - by Susan McCreery

… Here’s my theory: you can tell a lot about a man and his opinion of women by his lap-lane etiquette. Men who shift to one side at the wall, nod off you go, are allies. Fast women swimmers are no threat to these men. Then there are those who refuse to give way, no matter how obvious it is they’re being out-swum, who, according to my theory, expect you to do everything except take out the bins, who get the shits when your salary outstrips theirs, and who rage whenever you’re curled up in sorrow about your grandmother, who is interstate and dying …

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Surrogate Mother - by Helena Pantsis
Fiction Helena Pantsis Fiction Helena Pantsis

Surrogate Mother - by Helena Pantsis

Her body grew transparent under the weight of the water, her skin shrinking against the porcelain. The spiders spent more time inside these walls than she had. She hadn't been home in years.

Is it okay, ma, if I stay here a while?

Take as long as you need, darling …

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An August for My July Mother - by Karina Ko
Fiction Karina Ko Fiction Karina Ko

An August for My July Mother - by Karina Ko

‘Augustus is an interesting name for a Vietnamese man,’ I’d said to Felix when we first met in a community hall in Parramatta. We were upcycling fences into benches. He’d told me that he lived with an Augustus after I asked whether his own name was inspired by something ancient Roman, or the fat cat …

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The Good Woman - by Anneliz Erese
Fiction Anneliz Erese Fiction Anneliz Erese

The Good Woman - by Anneliz Erese

She wakes up before her husband. Turns on the shower for him. Hot, steamy, just the way he likes it. She waits with a fresh towel. Hands it to him, warm, soft, just the way he likes it. Not long after, she cooks breakfast in the kitchen. No radio, only newspaper. She prepares the tea. Hot, steamy. Cups in perfect order. Quiet …

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A Man Alone - by Mark O’Flynn
Fiction Mark O'Flynn Fiction Mark O'Flynn

A Man Alone - by Mark O’Flynn

Take a house in any land and in it place a man. A man alone: demonstrable, verifiable, did not get there by himself. He must have had progenitors. A carpenter at least. A man like this, who has never lived in any other house. At least not one that he can remember; but then memory is a flippant thing. In any event, there are no other houses nearby, unless you count the lightning-struck ruin next door, whose owner shook his fist at the sky …

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Boxing Day - by Fiona Robertson
Fiction Fiona Robertson Fiction Fiona Robertson

Boxing Day - by Fiona Robertson

Nadine placed a hand on Herc’s chest. Above the bed, the fan stirred tropical air. ‘We should have sex,’ she said, ‘since we didn’t for Christmas.’
Herc raised his eyebrows. ‘Wow, what an offer.’ He began to lift her fingers one by one, flexing them back a little too far, so that she pulled her hand away.
‘Herc, don’t.’

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Severe Weather Warning - by Miriam Webster
Fiction Miriam Webster Fiction Miriam Webster

Severe Weather Warning - by Miriam Webster

I was walking the dog at the beach when I saw rats throwing themselves into the sea, spilling over the shoreline in a great tumble of nose and tail. All the birds left. The dogs’ hair prickled and stood on end; electrified, we thought, by atmospheric changes ominous and invisible. At dusk they let out one, unified bark. The cats stayed indoors, licking themselves. Those who find meaning in constellations blamed it on the moon in Scorpio, that volatile sign. Those of sound mind blamed it on climate change …

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Three Fragments - by Cameron Hindrum
Fiction Cameron Hindrum Fiction Cameron Hindrum

Three Fragments - by Cameron Hindrum

Three delicate, beautiful, devastating vignettes from a versatile Tasmanian writer.
… I start the car and the old man listens and my great-grandmother is sitting next to me, holding flowers in her papery hands …
… Can’t describe the sound. Tyres locked up, a squeal harsh in the darkness, a soft crump, metal hitting metal like a full stop at the end of the squealing and glass breaking …

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King of Sweets - by Atul Joshi
Fiction Atul Joshi Fiction Atul Joshi

King of Sweets - by Atul Joshi

Baba believed in kismet and Yaseen believed in Baba. He had come here, started uni, then went into lockdown …
It’s time to go home, the Prime Minister said on TV. If you can’t support yourself, there’s an alternative. Return to your home country.

A short story set in Western Sydney - as part of our new 5-piece suite from South-Asian Australian writers inspired by the COVID situation in India and the Australian response

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Agency - by Tasnim Hossain
Fiction Tasnim Hossain Fiction Tasnim Hossain

Agency - by Tasnim Hossain

‘Well, they shouldn’t have gone back in the first place, not during a pandemic,’ said Denny … ‘They all live on top of each other, so what do you expect? Diseases just waiting to spread.’

A short story - as part of our new 5-piece suite from South-Asian Australian writers inspired by the COVID situation in India and the Australian response

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Go Get Boy – by Alison Flett
Fiction Alison Flett Fiction Alison Flett

Go Get Boy – by Alison Flett

WINNER, OLGA MASTERS SHORT STORY AWARD 2020

I’m The Fetcher, Go Get Boy, barrelling along in the back of Darren’s ute, riding high on the highest pile of drydry firewood, gunna burn so good. I’m one of three, that’s me, that’s who I am, and the three of us are building one good fire. Others are building their own fires but ours’ll be biggest, ours’ll be best, ours’ll burnburnburn forever. No-one’ll forget us when they see our blaze …

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The Voices of the Magpies - by Laura McPhee-Browne
Fiction Laura McPhee-Browne Fiction Laura McPhee-Browne

The Voices of the Magpies - by Laura McPhee-Browne

For Elizabeth Jolley; in response to ‘A New World’
I am in the sick bed four days before a visitor. There have been trips to the toilet, and watery meals eaten whilst a tiny television sounds in the far corner of the room, dangling as if a puppet. But no one has come to see if I have settled in …

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