Professional Documents
Culture Documents
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THESPECTRUM
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SCRIBE
Volume 12, March 2008
Jamie F. Bentinganan
Literary Editor
Jumpee P. Tipon
Layout Editor
Timothy A. Escopete
Mark Romulo C. Tumbagahan
Layout Artists
Foreword 9
POETRY
Dalawang Dekadang Pamasyal 12
Patrick Pangilinan
Jailbird 17
Vincent Paul Pido
Two Poems 19
Jhon Mikhail Leong
A Collection Of Wells 21
Jhon Mikhail Leong
Epithet 22
Jhon Mikhail Leong
The Skull 29
Jonathan Davila
The Crab 33
Jeprox Lingamen
Soul Talk 36
Judy Garrucha
A Realist’s Admonition 38
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Uwian Na 40
Patrick Jay Pangilinan
second coming 41
H.P Atilano
The Moth 42
R. Torres Pandan
Periwinkle Nook 45
Ellen May Carmona
Progression Regression 47
Ellen May Carmona
Ang Bagyo 49
Lois Stephanie Cruz
Good Morning 51
Jamie Bentinganan
In the Silence 52
Chuvic Monserate
Stolen 55
Manuel Jeffrey Sistoso
Monotony 57
Arthur Jason Javellana
Chill Spider 60
Jamie Bentinganan
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Metamorphosis 61
Andrea Paz Derecho
GONE... 63
Diana Grace Consolado
Miss Shell 64
Anton Dominic Magbanua
W16 66
Rene Sedonio
laughter 68
Nadjie Danielle Magsumbol
Short Stories
Bittersweet 72
Erika Aiza Gotel
The Boy 76
Rolen Espera
July 11 98
Ralph Pancho
Sly 108
Arthur Jason Javellana
Damien 116
Sheila May Guerrero
This issue of the scribe has been long overdue. It’s been so long overdue that the contents
have almost given up and conceded to rot while the file lay dormant in the archives of the
It was not until earlier this year that everything was unearthed, dusted off and pieced together
into the book that you are holding now. The contents have matured and after a long time, they
The cover reflects the ageing that this issue has gone through. It was purposely made to look
like something you might dig out of your lola’s baul. Kumbaga vintage. We’d like to think that
it’s that bit of ageing that makes it extra special. Not to be totally stale, we have inserted some
fresh new compositions to liven things up. It’s a good mix of the more mature contributions and
We are all familiar with the concept of waiting. Some of us are better at it than others but
we’ve all been there before and the experience is usually one that tests the mettle of our sweet
patience. We know you’ve been waiting, some of you more patiently than others. Maybe if we’d
released this a little sooner, our characters would not have expired the way that they did.
Intrigued?
You’ve waited long enough. We can’t possibly let you wait any longer.
Start reading.
Jamie B.
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Dalawang Dekadang Pamamasyal
Patrick Jay P. Pangilinan
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Dalawang dekada na po akong namamasyal.
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Three little pigs
Vincent Paul S. Pido
running,
and jumping
suckling,
and huddling
farewell
to the mother
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Three little pigs
filthy,
and scary
electrocuted,
stabbed,
bleeding,
and screaming,
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Three little pigs
disoriented
and in pain
happiness,
happiness,
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Jailbird
Vincent Paul S. Pido
within her old heart that has seen much too many wars.
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Wrongfully sentenced to a cruel imprisonment
her days crawl on, but she never forgets she is innocent
although those before her, she knew, found death in this unjust condemnation.
until she found her way back into the safety of the throng
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Two Poems
Jhon Mikhail Leong
the nim, the cumu and the strat over the us. I hadn’t an idea.
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II. Disfiguring Changes
Heart, not a muscle nor a mass of reddened shreds but a puzzle of silver screws!
Veins turn into blue and red wires and my head is the bell; mechanic as a clock
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A Collection Of Wells
Jhon Mikhail Leong
Die well,
Of The tragedy
Yell well,
And of course…
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Epithet
Jhon Mikhail Leong
And the hills fold themselves on your temple like a black turban.
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The mind is a plane of suppression: tyranny of memories
And they empty infinitely thus like ants in a single black procession.
Pounding, pounding
And your mother, with white gloves and mouth shelled by something white,
A din of irony lies within her mouth; don’t you hear it?
Let them take your organs—you are the cavity full of nonentity now.
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Silent as the moon and her salts scattered like pollen
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A withering hemlock,
And the burden comes with such mass that you must slouch, head on heels.
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Come, Man-child, Come!
H.P. Atilano
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Tough. Strong. Virile.
Ejaculation!
Be just.
Be considerate.
Be a Man.
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Ang Kabiguan ni Jose N.
Jonathan Davila
Nadulas siya
Sa bahaghari
Nang minsang
Umulan sa tanghali.
Tuloy-tuloy
Siya sa lupa.
Karpet na bigay
Ni Aladdin
Ay hindi lumipad.
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The Skull
Jonathan Davila
The gravediggers
it seemed to laugh
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The Clan of Somnambulists
Anton Dominic Magbanua
Of your name?
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These wings you fly with, Somnambulists Clan,
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On Leaving Chateau D’IF
Anton Dominic Magbanua
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The Crab
Jeprox G. Lingamen
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Are strewn on Earth’s fairest
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Would never again form the sun,
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Soul Talk
Judy L. Garrucha
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Of you and me together
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A Realist’s Admonition
Evangeline Meg Soledad
The wolves are many more than the eye can see.
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Dream Day
Patrick Jay P. Pangilinan
Daydream.
Morning breeze.
Maple leaves.
Cookies.
Chocolates.
Dream day.
for Polly
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Uwian Na
Patrick Jay P. Pangilinan
Magkakamot na si Boy.
Hihikab na si Jeje.
Gugulung-gulong sa kanto.
Uwian na.
Uuwi na sila.
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second coming
H.P Atilano
i Came
Again
to see
Fireworks
go off inside
your pupils,
dilating
into a cosmic
Orb,
Expanding
nebula
on the verge of a
cataclysmic
Big Bang.
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The Moth
R. Torres Pandan
By the light
It is flattered by terror
Of blazing wings
Of floating in nothingness,
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Of being lost
In the darkness
Without possibility
Whole in what
It can never
Hope to be.
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A Way to Save Books
R. Torres A. Pandan
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Periwinkle Nook
Ellen May Carmona
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soft and supple is the white linen covered couch,
follow your heart and let not your hopes die in vain.
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Progression Regression
Ellen May Carmona
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how multi-faceted are the creatures in this world contained,
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Ang Bagyo
Lois Stephanie Cruz
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Samantalang ang mahihirap, mga walang tahanan—
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Good Morning
Jamie F. Bentinganan
But not us
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In the Silence
Chuvic Monserate
In the silence,
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Goodnight Hugs and Kisses
Marcelina Victoria Yandall
i can lie in my own bed and thank God for such a person in my life
and each night when our family prays together before bedtime
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strong enough to keep the bad dreams and bad things away
i blow you a kiss through that screen with the light shining through
and i smile, basking in the fact that i have someone like you who loves me.
Goodnight Daddy
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Stolen
Manuel Jeffrey Sistoso
A cloaked diamond
Soaked to last
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Came the low tide which
You wanted
Freedom
A treasure
You lived
Forever
Stolen.
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Monotony
Arthur Jason Javellana
Mandatory
Life is a wheel
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Again and again life goes
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All is not well
Jeprox Lingamen
i am
a well
of Night
you don’t
want to come
near me
the stars,
things had
left me
wailing
soundlessly
even my tears
won’t come
to fill me up
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Chill Spider
Jamie Bentinganan
down my spine
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Metamorphosis
Andrea Paz Derecho
“This is enough”
So i took my things
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So i took my makeup
So I told myself.
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GONE...
Diana Grace L. Consolado
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Miss Shell
Anton Dominic Magbanua
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You can be nothing more- just the ship
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W16
Rene Sedonio
So powerful enough
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Whose marks relay the message
Conducive to learning
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laughter
Nadjie Danielle M. Magsumbol
moisture
raindrops cease
a little footprint
of beauty. of beauty.
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‘Til the morning comes
John Patrick F. Cabuguason
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Bittersweet
Erika Aiza Gotel
I don’t want him to get married. Or at least I don’t want him to get married just yet. I want to
Upon learning the news that he wanted to get married, my heart crashed. I was planning to
spend some time with him when I get back, just him and me. But now I heard he wants to marry
I wish I had never left. Maybe I could have done something to prevent him from falling for
someone else. I might have done something so he won’t be thinking about settling down with
someone I barely even know. I could have done something about this, but I didn’t.
I have always been afraid that this day would come, the day when he would finally declare he
fell in love with someone so great and that he wants her to be his wife. But the inevitable always
happens. He fell in love. In fact, he fell real hard. I was used to being the special girl for him. I
was so used to having his time and attention. But now, it vanished in just one blink of an eye. I
figured if I tell him these, he might change his mind about the wedding.
When we were kids, I considered him my knight, even though he didn’t have shining armor. He
would defend me from those bullies who would make me cry. He was my cornerstone, my shield,
that one great superhero that manages to appear when I am in trouble. He has taught me to
be strong, to stand up for myself because no one else will, to always believe I can do whatever I
want if I put my heart to it. He has always been there for me. He was always saving me. Since the
day I realized that, I’ve always told myself I wanted to walk down the aisle with a guy like him.
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If anyone would ask me who influenced me the most, I wouldn’t think twice about saying it was
him. I tried my best to be good in writing because he was good at it. I tried to be familiar with
every basketball team because I know how much he loves this game. I learned to love the game
because he does. When I learned he was once in a band, I dreamt of being in one too. I liked
eating the food he loves eating, and loved the food he cooks. I listened to every song he listens
to, liked every band he likes. He introduced me to music. I would take time to watch his favorite
movies. I wear clothes he picks for me; tie my shoelace the way he taught me how. Better yet, I
became his little shadow, a copycat. I wanted so much to please him. I wanted to be the kind of
girl he taught me to be. He influenced me this much but he doesn’t have any idea he did. He’s
totally clueless.
But then, everything changed just because. We used to cuddle. He used to tickle me until I cried
and ran out of breath. He used to buy albums for me, used to like surprising me with gifts on my
wish list. We used to sleep beside each other, used to talk about my crushes and how to handle
those boys he calls “jerks”. He used to share his dreams with me, the latest music he’s in to, the
bands he currently listens to, the latest basketball chikas. We used to eat fish balls together on
afternoons; we used to watch cartoons together, used to go to the mall. We always used to have
those just-you-and-me moments. At least he used to. At least we used to. Everything changed.
I would like to think everything was because of his work, the stress and pressure it gives him. I
would like to think it was my fault because I had to go away and thus we had to spend not as
much of time together. But somehow, if we really dig a little deeper, there’s a SHE involved in
the picture. She came and everything changed. Yes, I don’t like her. I know he knows that. But
it isn’t because she’s not good enough for him. I don’t like her because she’s taking him away
from me. I would always look for reasons not to like her because I know how much he loves her
and I get jealous. I get jealous by the fact that the time he spends with her was the time he used
to spend with me, that we used to be together every Saturday, but now we don’t even get to see
each other for months. Those things we do are now things we used to do. And it sucks. He does
not have time for me anymore because he’s always with her.
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Everyone is trying to tell me that I should try and learn to accept that fact. But I can’t. I just
can’t. I’m afraid that when he gets married, the chances of him spending time with me would be
It has been 1 month and 8 days since I first heard the news. One month and eight days and I
*****
Is it so selfish of me that I can’t totally let go of my big brother? Would it be so terrible to say I
My big brother.
I used to call him this because he practically screams I’m his baby sister. And I used to hate it. I
used to hate my brother calling me different names, names that only he and I understand. But
when we parted, because I had to go to college and he has to work (not to mention that where
he works and where I study are miles apart), I never heard him call me such again.
How can I tell him I don’t want him to get married just yet because I miss spending time with
him? How can I tell him I miss him calling me with those annoying pet names? And if ever he’d
call me with those again, he would never ever hear me complain about that I promise.
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The Boy
By Rolen J. Espera
Philip never had headaches. It was a trait from a scrupulous father whose sole obsession was
penalizing his only son for a limped wrist; whose homophobic tendencies due to Baptist beliefs
had driven Philip to become the loser that he is now: a gay Physics teacher in his mid-40s with
no sexual exploits whatsoever, whose existence became the example of a perfectly wasted life
space.
That he never had headaches however wasn’t what even made him a bit special or extraordinary.
As a kid, he stared at the sun till his eyes hurt (always hoping he would develop some special
powers to strike down his father every time he sacks and beats him up); but his head never hurt.
Bah! He read books in poor lighting till his eyes hurt (he read Nancy Drew); but his head never
did. Baaaaahh! He dared coursing through Applied Physics in the Academy and studied the
most mind-boggling of math problems. But it was always to no avail. It was as if his headaches
were somewhat connected to his sexual preference, a strange and unusual occurrence.
He lived a life of boredom, in utter mediocrity, until one day, he gave up his ventures with
headaches (and his gay-hood) and had completely forgotten about them—until that day he
showed up.
His name was Jonas. Quite a shy boy at nineteen, Philip thought. Messy hair, tearful eyes, pale
skin, poor posture, cute nonetheless. He knew the boy wasn’t from around.
Jonas unfolded a crumpled paper from his backpack and gave it to Philip. “Still have the room?”
he asked him. Philip gave it a thought. He was supposed to ask him if he had work to pay the
rent, if he was schooling; but he didn’t. The boy seemed harmless. “Five hundred just for this
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month. I don’t accept payments in advance.”
Philip was anxious of letting anyone enter his house (probably because he did not have friends
or refused to have some or that to him bringing someone, especially a boy, to his home felt like
going inside a motel with a callboy—probably because the gay community denied him for being
an ultra-fag in the closet. Everyone including his students knew he was gay, but they never dared
The house was a small one with two bedrooms, a sala and a dining area; barely enough for a
decent home. He was not particular with furniture and other fixtures, so much that the house
looked as bland and boring as Goldilock’s porridge. If he was unsure of his desires, he was pretty
His study table was pushed to the wall near the sofa. On top of it were books and exam papers,
cream-colored Post-Its that labeled every stack of paper, a white mug with a red cartoon hero
known as “Super Dad!” printed on the side. The boy was amazed on how organized he was, to
He showed Jonas the room where he should stay. The boy thought the room was just enough
for him: a bed just about his size, a lamp, and a side table. (Philip was saving the room to be his
love nest. But he abandoned the thought ages ago.) He lent him an electric fan for fifty pesos a
month. Everything was a bargain for Philip’s first boarder. He wasn’t quite sure though why he
sent out flyers for “Available bed space” a week ago. Anyway, he thought, someone had come
(come, hmmm…), so he never again gave it a thought.
The first week was particularly awkward for Philip. He sometimes forgot he had a boarder and
would freak out to find a stranger sitting on the sofa, staring at him. The boy did not talk much,
Philip did not ask much himself despite the urges to know everything about the boy. But that
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On one night, while he was entranced in taking notes for his class the next day, he heard
something grumbling behind him. A slobbering breath. He thought it came from a large animal
with padded feet, running around behind him. When he turned his back, he saw nothing but
the main door slowly closing and what seemed to be a bushy grey tail disappearing in a blip. He
The next day after class, he went to the library to check on some titles and read the periodicals.
A book with a wolf for a cover illustration grabbed his attention. It lay alone on the table beside
him. “My Roommate, the Werewolf ” was written by some unpopular Italian author. The blurbs
on the back cover did not say much of the book. He checked it out anyway.
When he got home, the boy was standing at the dining area boiling water. He was shirtless.
Philip was completely dumbfounded to have seen the body of a god—that one he only saw
in underwear models and construction workers; that his IQ dropped to abysmal feats; that
he threw his things to the floor, rushed for the boy, drove him on top of the dining table, and
kissed—more like licked—his well-contoured body until—“Phil?” The boy was staring across him
from the dining area, with a confused look. “Anything wrong? You look flushed.” He told him he
was sick and then quickly went inside his room, locked the door, and continued his newly-found
Weeks passed. Philip had mustered the strength to actually start a conversation with the boy.
He learned he was not as dim-witted as he used to think. The boy was an old soul, a deep,
mysterious presence in front of him; a Dalai Lama trapped in Victor Basa’s body. At times he
would wear short shorts and would “accidentally” drop something in front of the boy while
showing off his pear-shaped (hideous) ass, all in the name of seduction. The boy though did not
One night, he planned a dinner-for-two, disguised as his birthday party with heart-shaped
balloons and candles all over. It was past midnight and the boy had not yet come home.
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Giving up on his attempts, he retired to bed and found the newspaper for that day. He read
the headlines: “Boy dies unusual death.” It was a news item detailing the bizarre incidence of
a four-year-old’s death. His head was found a few meters away from his body, chest ravaged,
internal organs missing, thigh muscles scraped to the bone. The report said the kid was attacked
by a large animal the size of an adult carabao. Err… Philip dropped the newspaper. Eww…
Disgusting. He found a book on the bedside table. It was the wolf book he borrowed weeks
ago. He did not remember placing it there, however, he browsed through it. He was looking
for the “good parts” as he was not that interested to finishing the novel anyway. One particular
“Jose lay in bed reading a book Amarula lent him. She bet him it
was the ‘scariest shit’ she’s ever read. But Jose was someone who
the empty bed across his—Ryan must have roamed the streets to find
“Time passed by so slow. Jose paused for awhile to look at the night
sky. It was a full moon, orange and odd, with rings of light—”
Philip opened the curtains, surprised to see the moon had waxed to its fullness.
“—He turned to the side table adjacent to his bed to check what
time it was—”
Two o’clock in the morning, Philip had checked. Funny book, he mused.
bushes—”
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He peered outside. Nothing. Relieved, he continued reading and actually told himself that he
was beginning to enjoy the book. On the next page, there was an illustration of Jose reading a
book in his bed. Beside him was a window, the moon could be seen in it. However, one part
of the illustration had struck Philip dead in terror. Outside the window near Jose, among the
bushes, was a familiar pair of horrors one could only discern as monstrous. They were a pair of
Philip threw the book and fumbled to close the curtains when the same hungry eyes met his.
He didn’t move, not a muscle, for fear the beast might lunge towards him. And the thing came
out of the shadowy bushes, coming at him face to face with only the thin sheet of glass between
them. The devil. It opened its huge mouth with its yellow, sharp teeth; stuck out its tongue, and
licked the glass. But Philip knew it was he the beast wanted to lick. The devil has come to eat
me.
That morning, Philip woke up from the glaring sun’s rays that entered his room. He did not
remember what happened last night. Every time he tried, all he could gather were dark, blurry
images of him reading a book and looking outside the window. He felt tight and wanting to pee.
It was a Saturday.
Moving listlessly towards the bathroom door, he noticed Jonas’ door was open. He slowly
opened it to take a peek if he was inside sleeping—wishing he was in his boxers, that sort that
covered almost nothing. He stuck his face inside and was appalled by the reeking smell. A dead
rat lay on the floor. Immediately he closed the door. When he turned around, Jonas was there
looking at him intently as if he wanted to eat Philip with his sinister eyes. He was paler than
He gathered every bit of himself and told Jonas about the stinking rat. But the boy seemed as if
he was not listening. Slowly Jonas took small steps towards Philip who in shock of Jonas’ sudden
change in attitude walked backwards, to find himself cornered near the door. The boy stood
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inches from him, his face far enough from his. Then, without him suspecting Jonas kissed him,
torridly—sucking the air from lungs, pushing his tongue inside his. Philip pushed him away only
But Jonas did not seem to mind. Rather, like what Philip saw in his face, he seemed to be glad
about it. Jonas’s hand snaked down Philip’s trembling body, down to his waist, and went for the
door to open. Philip had completely forgotten about the stinking rat. He quickly rolled down
his underpants and kneeled beside the bed. “Not too fast. It might hurt.” Jonas remained silent
behind him.
Philip was too proud of what he was going to do. Rather, what was going to be done to him. He
pictured the face of his father in his mind, cursing him, calling him an envious faggot—that he
envied him because he could not accept his son was more beautiful than him. He was laughing
And as Jonas towered over his body, Philip felt his head hurt as if a power drill was driving
through his temple. It was for the first time his head hurt. Does it mean I have finally embraced
my true nature? I’m gay! I’m out! Bah!
He turned his head to look at Jonas, congratulating himself for getting such a prized trophy. But
what he saw struck him down with fear. He shouted. Father was right all along. He screamed like
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Over A Cup of Coffee
Andrea Derecho
I cannot believe that here I am, sitting in a coffee shop armed with a bouquet of fresh roses. I
know I look silly, and that I conclude not from merely my own intuition, but from the countless
number of stares that random passerby’s have been throwing my way. The smell of freshly
brewed coffee beans wafted in the air, but it proved no comfort to me as I felt cold beads of
sweat forming on my forehead. This was it. I told myself. This was the day I had prepared myself
for. I took a sip from my already tepid cup of coffee. It had been sitting there for quite a while
now but I had just stared at it, as if oblivious to the fact that coffee was intended to be hot in
the first place. It tasted strong, but it was just the way I liked it, though I must admit it would’ve
tasted better if I had drank it earlier on. One sip was all it took to bring back all the memories
I had created in the four walls of this quaint little coffee shop across my pad. I remember that
this was the same kind of coffee (tall Espresso Americano), and this was the same table (a two-
seater with a small round table at the far right of the room) on that day that I had first laid my
eyes on her. It was raining hard that day, roughly three months ago. I was walking home from
the office when the weather took a turn for the worse. I had tuned in to the weather report the
night before and the quirky newscaster had forecasted a tropical depression in the area, but I
neglected the warning, firmly believing that weather reports were wrong seventy-percent of the
time, anyway. Yeah, maybe on other days, and that day was definitely not part of that seventy-
percent. Smart move, Alex. You just had an extremely fucked-up day at work, and now here you
are, soaking wet to your underwear! I had no choice but to run for cover at this coffee shop
since it was the nearest place I could run to at the moment, lest I brave the rain that poured
like crazy. The warmed interior of the coffee shop and the familiar smell of brewing coffee was
a welcoming invitation.
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Yeah, as if me and my soaked underpants couldn’t attest to that.
“Yeah sucks.” I nonchalantly replied,” Just give me a tall cup of Espresso Americano, Marco.”
I gave him a hundred peso bill and took my seat, here, in this same table. I looked around to see
if there were any familiar faces that I could possibly talk to and lament about the day’s mishaps;
maybe even bum a cigarette because mine were obviously soaked. There weren’t a lot of people
there, and none of them were the least bit familiar to me. Crammed in the center of the room;
occupying the longest table, were a bunch of five students, obviously cramming for their exams.
I could see that they had only ordered one soda, maybe only to have the right to sit in the coffee
shop and stuff whatever knowledge they could in their brains at that time. They were a rowdy
bunch and their antics filled the entire room, even competing with the sound of rain pouring on
the roof. I started to feel annoyed, I had the shortest temper that day, and I could have went
home if it wasn’t for this stupid rain. But it was then that I saw her. Sitting just two tables from
the group of students sat the woman who practically changed my life. I must have stared at her
for the longest time, but in that moment I didn’t hear the rain, I didn’t hear the frantic noise
of exam-crazed students; I only noticed her. She was beautiful. She had the eyes of hazel, a bit
petite, and had short, dark pixie cut hair. She crossed her legs and occasionally tapped on the
floor with her left foot as she flipped through the pages of the novel she was so engrossed in. I
squinted to see the title of the book she held in her hand, Veronika Decides to Die was written
on the cover of the blue paperback novel. I had read that book myself, I had read almost every
book by Paulo Coelho to be exact and thought that it would make an interesting conversation
starter. We could talk about anything from The Alchemist to The Valkyries.
Suddenly I was pulled out from my momentary trance as Marco put down my steaming cup of
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“What are you talking about, dude?” I abruptly replied, putting together my best I-don-know-
what-you’re-talking-about look.
“Oh come on Alex!” Marco nudged “you were ogling the girl for crying out loud. She’s pretty, I’d
I thought for a while and looked at her. How I wished that I could just muster up the guts to sit
beside her, act casual and start up a conversation. Maybe, even buy her a cup of coffee.
“Well, I’ll talk to her… maybe tomorrow then.” I replied a bit embarrassed.
“Chicken!” Marco scoffed in the loudest voice, laughed and turned away.
My clothes were still soaked and now clung to my bare skin. But none of that mattered
anymore, even the constant cajoling of the extremely loud group of students didn’t bother me at
all. Cheska. I repeated to myself as I took a sip from my cup and felt the coffee warm me.
I found myself returning to the coffee shop the day after that. I had thought that maybe she
was not there anymore, but my heart leapt when I found her there still. She was still in the same
corner, clad in a green dress and holding up another book. I was beside myself with unexplainable
joy. I had countless times tried to think up of conversation starters; from “Hey, I am such a fan
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of Paulo Coelho.” to the simpler “Hey is this seat taken?” cliché. But none of them seemed to
fit, and none of them felt quite right at that moment. I will never know why I passed up the
chance to talk to her that day, but what I do know is that I found myself returning to the coffee
shop each and every day after that, promising to myself over and over that I’d talk to her and
conjuring up excuses not to afterwards. I think I basically ordered everything there was on the
menu, from cheap brews to the pricier paninis just so I could stay there, look at her, and maybe
finally muster up enough courage to even just say a simple, “Hi!” This kept up for two months
and Marco was always there to see me in my failed trials and pick at my self-esteem. I also
started to think that Cheska was getting freaked that I was there staring at her and pretending
to be busy with whatever, when the truth is that I wasted all my time picturing out how we would
go about with our conversation. But then one day, it happened. She didn’t return.
Did I scare her? Did she finally notice that I was there every freakin’
day, staring at her? Did she think that I was some raging stalker who
would jump at any chance to corner her in a dark alley? Or maybe it
was because she had known that I secretly kept track of all the books
she read in the coffee shop, from the uber thin ones to the ones that
resembled almanacs? Oh my god, was she going to sue me for all
those things?!
At first I convinced myself that maybe she was busy now, that one day she will return. But I
waited for her still, and I saw not even a shadow of her. Although she stopped coming to the
coffee shop, I still waited for her every single day. I started to hate myself for not talking to her
when I had all the chances to. Maybe things would have been different. I promised myself that
the moment she returns, I wouldn’t put off ‘till tomorrow that chance to talk to her. I may
freak her out if I told her that I knew all the novels she read by heart now. Or maybe she’s make
a beeline for the exit id I told her that I watched her here everyday and had studied her facial
expressions and I found it cute how she sometimes crinkles her nose when she reads something
she doesn’t like. Maybe she’d even laugh at my face of I told her that I loved her; when the only
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things I knew about her were her novels and her first name. but I didn’t care anymore if she
would freak out, run or even laugh at me. I just needed to talk to her because everyday I pass up
Those happened nearly three months ago. And now, here I am again in this coffee shop. Yes I
waited until today, but now I’ll wait no more. I know that this is the day, I had prepared myself
immensely for it. I paid my bill, bade Marco goodbye and he smiled at me. I made my way
into my car, with my bouquet of roses in hand, dodging all the curious stares. For a moment I
hesitated to turn the key of my car, I knew that there was no turning back now. Cold beads of
sweat were again dripping from my forehead as I finally reached for the key and revved the car.
I glanced at the passenger seat where a pile of books were scattered. Books that Cheska had
once read, and I had reads myself, in a futile effort to impress her. The drive seemed to take
forever, and I felt that the closer I got to her, the more I felt my heart pound against my chest.
I had never felt this nervous in my entire life! But then I came to a stop. I was finally there. This
is really it. I got out of the car and still clutched the flowers. I heard the sound of dry leaves
crackle underneath my feet as I took every step. My heart was racing wildly and I didn’t know
exactly what to do. i didn’t know if I was ecstatic or just plain nervous, but I was just glad that
I could finally say a few words to her after agonizing months of silence. I stopped in my tracks
after realizing that I was at the foot of the gate. I opened it and it made a creaking sound. I
immediately saw a small table and lay the flowers there for a while. It was then I felt like my heart
was about to pop out. It was immensely silent and it felt as if the only noise I could hear was the
beating of my heart resonating in my ears. I took one deep breath and gathered my thoughts, I
And again there was silence. But it was an unusual silence, because now I could hear the birds
sing and the rustling of the trees. The only thing silent now was my heart that felt like it just
dropped.
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“Hi. I’m Alex.” I repeated, louder this time.
It was then I realized how much time I had wasted by not talking to her in the past. Everything
now was silent. No more rustling, no more chirping, and most especially no more beating of my
heart. For all I know, it must have already stopped. There, at the foot of her grave, I laid down
the roses I had carefully picked out for her. Maybe if I had given her those flowers a bit earlier,
she would have felt like one of the heroines in her romance novels. Yeah, maybe. I felt warm tears
streaming down my cheeks, as I talked to her about Paulo Coelho, the coffee shop, and how
much I adored her. I wanted to tell her anything and everything that I could think about. This
was my chance of a lifeteime, because now, tomorrow would be far too late.
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Mr. and Mrs. God’s Domestic Dilemma
Vincent Paul S. Pido
The city was dark, cold and soaking wet. Rain was furiously pouring down from the pitch black
heavens, as if the clouds were gravely offended by the unceasingly growing sky scrapers that have
become so tall they had pierced the very firmament humans were never meant to reach, only
look up to in awe. The waters fell unrelentingly, as if ready to purge and cleanse the streets of
the many sins and diseases they have incurred in the last few weeks, ready to rid the dirty earth
of its unfortunate miseries, draining the filth down the condemned sewers.
The streets were flooded by an unmoving pilgrimage of vehicles stuck in the late-afternoon
traffic, all struggling to reach their destinations in anxious haste. While most people were now
indoors, waiting for the storm to calm, sipping warm soup, watching the weather report on
TV and drying themselves comfortably in blankets of fleece and wool (which they had stripped
casually from the now bare animal owners), a man was left sitting on the pavement, his back
against the hard wall of a concrete building. With his thin dog shivering by his side, whimpering
in painful hunger, seeking comfort and warmth from his master’s equally frail body, his hand
was still patiently outstretched, his palm open and facing the sky, as if begging for whatever
mercy he could be spared. The tin can, ravaged by rust and resting in retirement at his feet, was
empty. Even the rain water simply flowed through its many holes.
A fat woman who had just come out of the nearby opera house, clad in a fur coat (which must
have kept her guarded from the rampaging elements) and wearing a pearl necklace, hurriedly
passed by, ignoring the man and his dog. She clumsily unfolded and held out her umbrella
against the angry wind that set a bright orange, withered leaf and a torn piece of paper flying
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to her face. She uttered a curse, wiped the mess off her face with her gloved hand, and crossed
the street.
When she reached the other side, she felt the unmistakable poke of a metal object, a gun, on her
back (she had felt this so many times before), and her plump purse was brusquely taken from
her by a man in a leather jacket. Trembling in fear, she gave the man all she had, even her pearl
necklace, and begged for her dear life to be spared. Even that, he took away. After a sound that
sent the drenched pigeons on the rooftops flying off in panic, the woman laid limp and lifeless
on the street, a bullet through her head, her blood, diluted by the rain, flowing like a fiery red
The man sitting on the other side paid no attention to the harrowing murder. He didn’t even pray
for he didn’t know how to. The cold air and the downpour that wasn’t waning were becoming
much too gripping, crushing the very air from his aged and disease-perforated lungs that the
man finally decided to move elsewhere. He could see his own breath transforming into mist
before his very eyes. Gathering his prized possessions (his old tin can and his mangy dog), he set
off to look for refuge deeper into the heart of the city. Perhaps, he thought, he could also find a
few wet crumbs of bread from a nearby dumpster as he could already feel his stomach revolting
for being empty and deprived of food in the last few days. He walked on.
Meanwhile, on another side of the world, a woman, her skin baked to a golden brown by the sun,
was sitting underneath a thin, colorful cloth set up like a tent on the barren, sandy earth with her
three-month old child. With tears rolling down her cheeks, she was forcing her weakened child,
dying of an inheritable venereal disease that had killed all her family and threatened to disperse
not only her clan but her entire tribe, to suck her succulent breast for they had not had anything
to eat since the day before. He would not. She cried to her pagan gods to save her son from the
sweeping epidemic (a punishment, she believed, for sins she was not aware she had done) for
they had already taken her grandparents, the elders of their family, her mother, father, sisters,
brothers, husband, daughter, aunts, uncles, cousins, nephews, nieces and countless other
relatives and friends from her. He was all she had left. The bitter concoctions they had given her
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son at the health center, several miles and a day’s walk away by foot, were supposed to keep him
alive and drive the evil spirits away. If only, she thought, the community’s witch doctor didn’t
die from the sickness, overcome by the same spirits he was trying to appease and vanquish with
his voodoo magic, he would surely have known what to do. She was desperate. The murky water
she had fetched from an almost dried up oasis down the valley (where the ferocious lions, the
demons that stole and ate her first born before her eyes, came to drink) was running out, with
only a few drops left to grace her dry, cracking lips. Even the ripe berries she had picked the day
before from the shrubs had now shriveled up, desiccated and puckered by the vicious sun.
Lost in her thoughts, she did not notice her son breathing his last, labored breath. He was quiet,
too weak to even mutter a cry, much less bid his mother goodbye. When she had realized her
son had left her, she let out a cry that could only come from the deepest recesses of a mother’s
heart, a mother blessed and then cursed, a mother in anguish that she was now to return to
the gods the son she had so recently been lent. She removed the yellow, black, and indigo cloth
wrapped like a turban around her head and covered her son’s small body with it. She then stood
up and walked on the hot trail towards the burial grounds where she had reluctantly ushered so
many of her kin to their eternal rest. She herself was sick, suffering from the devastating effects
of malnutrition and disease, not to mention living in such a hostile environment. But her soul
was in so much greater agony compared to her aching body. She was now grieving quietly, her
silence punctuated only by her sporadic sobs and gasps for air that kept her from suffocating in
her all-too-often mourning. On the way she picked up a stick with which she was to dig her now
Still, elsewhere, a young man was sitting half-naked in his room, with broken tubes of lipstick (in
a variety of hues) all over his bed, shards of broken glass all over the floor. His face was smeared
with bright, pastel colors, signature make-up he had bought from the department store with a
month’s savings. The same department store where he earlier saw his lover, the boy he sat next
to in otherwise boring Geometry class, strolling with his hands holding those of a girl. He was
deep in thought, asking himself what he lacked, what he could not give to that boy for him to
cheat on him. He gave him his allowance all the time. Perhaps it was not enough. And so he
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thought maybe he could give his life to this deceitful boy as well. He thought that a love letter
written in the guise of a suicide note would allow him to express his feelings more freely and
without shame after he was gone. But that would be for later. He took out a pink and black
shirt, put it on even if it were a size meant for a child, turned off the radio playing chaotic noise
he claimed was music, made his way out of the mess strewn across the floor, and went out.
He was going back to the department store, where they sold insecticides, corrosive acids and
other toxic chemicals so cheaply he could afford it with his lunch money. He didn’t want to cut
his wrists with a sharp blade or hang himself by a piece of string (both of which, he thought,
were rather unglamorous ways of dying) so he had decided this would be the best thing to do.
He saw it carried out so effortlessly and efficiently in the movies. He was sure he could pull it off,
too. He deliberately ignored the tempting smell coming from a hotdog cart he passed in front
of, even if he had not had breakfast or lunch. He had put himself on this special diet since he
entered the turbulent phase of puberty. At eighty-seven pounds, he believed he was fat. And his
new tongue ring wouldn’t have made it easy for him to eat, anyway. He walked on.
“The fruits of our divine labor are truly rotten. Do you think we should wipe them out now?”
He asked, His voice thundering all throughout the purely white palace. His hands folded across
His chest, He was watching, from a distance, everything that was happening, all at once. A ship,
a luxury liner promising rest and relaxation to the elitist thousands on board, was burning in
the middle of the ocean and sinking quickly. A man was wondering if his early baldness would
make it difficult for him to find a mate. A woman was trying on a feisty brassiere she could
not afford in a lingerie shop’s fitting room. A man was mauled by an elephant that ran amok
because she was starved and forced to do stunts. A boy was cheating on his exams because he
spent the whole night playing video games. A wealthy family was plummeting to their deaths as
the chartered plane they were on lost control in mid-air. A man was eating (quite amorously)
a hamburger with molds and bacterial colonies thriving in it. A woman was harboring a secret
admiration for her sister’s husband. A monkey was in arboreal play atop the lush canopies of a
tropical jungle. He saw it all, and many other things both exposed and hidden, as He watched.
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He stroked His white beard, contemplating.
“Oh, come on, give them another chance. A few more generations, a few more centuries,
perhaps. We may still see some good come out of this wretched lot yet,” She replied, removing
Her apron and taking His mighty arms into Hers. He pulled them back, agitated.
They were an old, lonely couple. And not very much in love anymore. She was infertile. He was
disappointed. They could not divorce, of course, because there was only the two of Them and
no one else left to marry. Even Their powers could not give Them a child. Perhaps the endless
feasting on ambrosia and nectar had stripped Them of this privilege. And so this was how
They entertained Themselves since time immemorial (though They were older than time itself,
in fact), by building an entire universe (and a few other smaller ones as well) and watching, like
the eternal voyeurs and eavesdrops that They were, the thing come to life all on its own. This
particular universe, however, the one inside a big glass tank (sort of like an ant farm) draped
with a dark cloth in the center of their palace, was the one that always captured Their interest. It
had a small galaxy on it, the one with the bright star its minute inhabitants called, with such all-
knowing self confidence, the sun. It was always noisy and disordered, entertaining Them both
“Hmmm. Don’t you think we’ve given them enough time? Perhaps we’ve given them too much
time. Perhaps we have made a mistake in allowing them to dominate the rest of the world. The
dinosaurs did so much better a job in maintaining the way things were, as beautiful as we had
made them, stupid and cumbersome as they may have been, those poor, thick-skinned giants,”
He replied, thinking aloud. He was aware that a child was uttering his first words while a day old
“Nonsense! You and I both know we are beyond such pitiful misjudgments even the cleverest of
humans so ordinarily make every second of their wretched lives,” She said, one eyebrow raised.
She saw an alarm clock fail to ring because it had old batteries while a sandstorm from an arid
desert was brewing just outside a city with its people unaware.
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“Stop saying wretched. We made them,”
“From black, dirty mud. Truly wretched, that’s what they are,”
“So, should I obliterate them now? Remove the sun and let them freeze to their cold deaths?
Or maybe move the sun close enough to burn them off the face of the planet? Or maybe I
should just drown them all in the deep waters of the oceans and seas they’ve so unrelentingly
and nonchalantly corrupted with their so called industrial wastes? Or send a huge rock from
the abyss hurling down upon them so that they will all be crushed, like their dumb reptilian
ancestors, buried beneath their proudly built cities? So many options, so little time,” He said.
Just then a philanthropist died in a car crash while a girl was wondering why her parents were
“No, no, no! Leave them be for now. What would you rather toy with after they’re gone? Those
hideous green monstrosities we’ve exiled in Mars? It would be such a waste. They’re the closest
we’ve come towards replicating our image and likeness,” She said, looking down the tank and
seeing the ensuing pandemonium. With the blink of Her eye, She sent a politician falling down
from a stage and broke his neck after he proclaimed he was his country’s redeemer and that the
“No they’re not. In fact I think we made them too wise. Too smart for their own good. Do you
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“Yes, in our time. But for them, it was a few million years ago when it all began. We made them
a bit prettier and less hairy, so unlike those ugly, primitive hominids that they used to be, and
tolerated their early intuitive dabblings in tool-making,” She said, almost realizing and implying
“I remember that. In fact, I remember it so well, so clearly, that I remember you telling me to
leave them be, just as you are now, for it was just their ever-growing interest in the things we’ve
“Yes, I did tell you that. But who would have thought they’d end up so perverted, unlike those
innocent creatures, their brothers and sisters, which they’ve decided to call animals and enslave
simply because they could not understand them the way we had intended them to?” She said,
“Sigh. Don’t you think maybe it is time to end this folly? They’ve messed up our creation in ways
we can never remedy. Everything is so damaged it would be easier for us to just destroy it than
to fix it,” He said. He watched as a toilet was used horribly and left unflushed while a rare exotic
“Come to think of it, they’re intelligent creatures. Intelligent enough to know we exist, although
they sometimes forget to greet you in the same humble and venerating way as they do me.
Intelligent enough to realize we are their true parents, that we made them. If they had made use
of that intelligence, think about how beautiful our little tank would have been. Instead, they’ve
ruined it all. Then they pray to me, to us, I mean, insincerely asking for forgiveness, when we
terrify them a little with a small typhoon or a volcanic eruption or an earthquake to remind them
of their grave abuse. I don’t think I can forgive their sins anymore,”
“Yes you can, you’re Mr. God. A bit more patience, my husband. The worst that can happen is
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they drive themselves towards their own disastrous demise, as have the rest of the now extinct
freaks we’ve erroneously made,” She said. She saw an old woman with nothing but an equally
old cat and a pair of slippers win the lottery while a child who would grow up to be a world-
“As long as it takes. Let’s wait until tomorrow. As for now, let’s just give them another lesson,
another wake-up call. Hmmm. What you say we rattle their big simian brains by making a solar
“Good idea. I don’t think their most scholarly astronomers could calculate or predict that.
That seems scary enough. But I’m afraid they still won’t get the message. What if we just talk
to them?”
“Are you kidding me? Since when did you get a sense of humor? Celestial beings such as you and
“You really love the word wretched, don’t you? All I’m saying is, we’ve been trying to talk to them
through signs and symbols, omens and every natural catastrophe and phenomenal calamity our
hands could create. And they still are not listening. They hear, but they do not listen,” He said.
He looked down the down again and saw a tumor growing inside a woman’s womb without her
knowing it while a young pig suffered the terror of being forcibly separated from his soon to be
slaughtered mother.
“You know what, I give up. Let’s just toss a big, cosmic coin, and let’s let that make the decision
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“Well then make a decision yourself, oh great and omnipotent, all-knowing one,” She snapped,
finally revealing Her long-standing insecurity over Her husband’s stature. Her husband was
always the one the humans called to, always the one they thought of as powerful. They even
offered Him bloody sacrifices and composed monotonous prayers for Him. As for Her, she was
merely called “Mother Nature” and regarded as a lesser being in charge of such menial tasks as
watering the plants with early morning dew, controlling the tides, and making the birds chirp
“Maybe you’re right. Let’s give them more time. They’re a young, naïve bunch. A few more
millennia would be sufficient for any change. Tomorrow will be judgment day. Today, however,
He then reached into the tank, pushed a few comets and stars away, and put the moon in
front of the fiery ball they called the sun. A shadow was cast and the earth was consumed by
a darkness so pure, an ebon so ancient, the inhabitants clamored in terror. And prayed for
redemption. The learned scientists scampered off into their laboratories and libraries to discuss
destabilization attempts, coup d’états, or terrorism. They couldn’t care less about the clueless
and tax-paying citizens. Churches warned the believers to repent for the apocalypse had come.
He shook his head, smiled and moved to the next tank, His latest project and hobby, the perfect
world He called utopia. It was a small garden, fresh and devoid of the smoke that perpetually
lingered over and clouded the human settlements. Its inhabitants understood each other, loved
one another, and never grew sick or died. It was much more peaceful. And rather boring. He
walked on.
As for Her, She walked to the kitchen in suppressed worry, the ambrosia She had left cooking
in the holy oven starting to smell like burnt rubber. She was still to water the blessed plants and
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July 11
Ralph Pancho
I sit here in this corner of a four-walled classroom. I look out the window, and I can absorb the
cold of the gloomy July sky. The gray light outside could not enter the darkened room as if it were
meant to be that way. How melancholic…the death of this place. I thought to myself.
The hard pouring rain was undefeatable. A storm…it was becoming more likely. How sadistic…
The writings on the blackboard were all scattered – numbers and equations in a mess. There! I
spotted the Pythagorean Theorem! I never hated Math. I gave an inward sigh. This classroom
seems so haunting. If one could experience going back to one of his past classrooms, he would
see past those walls, the blackboard, and the empty chairs. One could go back to the joys,
student blues, the cheats, and the different pains and stories unfolded thereon. You could
always leave the structure, but memories you got from there are lasting. Nostalgic. I miss this
classroom. Room A36.
From that start, I felt like I didn’t want to leave that room though the hurt I felt there still lingered
inside me. I was built a sturdy guy. I was an athlete – star of the basketball team. I was president
of the Architecture student government. I had lots of A’s and only 2 A-minuses. I didn’t have to
brag about looks, though. I had many admirers (and stalkers too.) My family was well known in
the city. My father owned tracks of land in the rural areas, and my mother ran restaurants and
food chains. I had many friends, but I can only count those who were loyal to me.
All these, I have. But I couldn’t have something I always wanted – that one true love. Cheesy,
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corny, and creepy. For a guy who is capable of playing with lots of girls, I wouldn’t need that one
true love. For a guy this sturdy…this strong…this superior to other’s eyes…love wouldn’t matter.
With the reputation you carry, that wouldn’t matter at all, I told myself.
But it is true. One could not stand alone. Everyone needs someone to love, though love is my
breaking point. Give me Math. Give me sports. Give me leadership. Hand me all that. I could
take it all, but not love. Just like Achilles had his heel as a weakness, my waterloo is my heart. I
was afraid to take risks. The pressure of having it all and not having the love of my life is driving
me nonchalant. I had that view of losing myself and giving it all for someone. From this point,
I have revealed the loser in me. Be shocked because I never had a real girlfriend. Maybe flings,
but nothing serious. My kabarkadas would tease me that I’m torpe, but I had to stick with my
principles.
Love is not a game because it could not be played with. When love comes, that’s
the time you take it, but you can never search for love. In life, when we search for
something intentionally, you get tired of looking. But when something is given to you
as a gift, at that moment when you never expected it, you would feel that you could
never let that gift go…just like love.
Call me torpe, but I was the kind who waited for that “gift.” I knew how to wait.
I’m just human. There were points in my life that I was at my lowest. Those were the moments
when I felt so weak… so vulnerable and alone. My relationships did not work. My family was
falling apart. And it was sad to realize that I had no friends to run to when I encounter problems.
At those times, I wanted to know what it felt like to die. I imagined what it was like to lie in a
coffin and wondered whose tears would fall on the glass. Who would care? Whose life did I
touch? Who was I?
Last last year, my father had lung cancer. It was hard to accept. I had to quit the basketball team,
the student government, and I had no time for barkada. My father needed me. But how ironic
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life could be…when you’ve given up your all to achieve something and still you gain nothing. I
In those spots of my life, I had my heroine. She was the one I cried to. My life was an open book
to her. She planted my seed and brought me back to life. She taught me how to feel happiness
again. That happiness wherein you feel complete and content in times where you never thought
Jill was a smart and bubbly lady. She was an artist who had a deeper perspective of life. Jill would
help you with problems; give you advice just like a ten-year old but with point and sense. She was
One time, she told me she needed to talk to me. “Room A36. Very important,” she said. I
skipped class because I knew it was maybe urgent or she just needed me. But it was the first time
“Hey, Nic!” She said while she sat on the arm of the chair.
“Umm,” she started obviously with no direction what to say. “I just wanted to know if you’re
okay.”
“What!?” I questioned, “You called me here just to know if I’m OKAY? As if we had not talked
in years!”
She didn’t answer, but she started to tremble as beads of tears, one by one, dripped down her
eyes.
“Jill,” I said gently though surprised why she cried. “Why are you crying? Tell me.”
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“Do you really want to know?” She asked unclearly and leaving me with no choice.
“But promise me you’d never run away from me after you hear this. Tell me everything would
be okay.”
I did not say anything. I had no words to match her statements. I just nodded. Why do
confrontations happen like this? So awkward. It seems like she’s making me blind – making me
ready for something I’ve never even faced yet.
“All this time that we were bestfriends, I never felt more complete. I felt like I was part of
something. I was safe with you. You were a good friend, Nic. You put sense in that word ‘friend,’
Having listened to her, I did not know where that talk was heading. I swallowed hard and
continued listening. She talked still crying – a flow of tears that made me guilty.
“You had no clue what your impact on me was. Being the guy that you are…I was in awe of what
you have become. You were a man that was never afraid to cry. You can feel. You have emotions;
you know how to express. You know how to care. Most of all, you know how to love. You showed
me love that I never knew. You were stereotyped as this all-masculine playboy jock, but you let
me see through you. I judged you wrong. I know who you really are, Nic.”
I closed my eyes because I can feel the tingling pain reaching my eyes. That bitter sensation of
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tears rushing through. Her words of affection made me cry. For the nth time, I cried to her – not
because of my own pains but because of hers this time. Jill was the only person I cried to. And
she was right. I let her see who I really was after so many years of friendship.
“Nic, I don’t know how to say this. But all this time, I was carrying this weight in my heart. You
shared with me all your problems. You shout your rage and anger to me! Your life was hell and
I comforted you. But was there ever a time that you thought of what your effect on me was!?”
She kept talking to me with anguish while turning her back on me, “That every time we shared
each other’s pains, I’m starting to think that my life would be perfect with you. Your life was hell
and I saved you. I did not predict my life would be much more than hell because of you! You did
At that moment, I did not know what to react. My mouth swallowed my tongue. I cried. My
body felt numb stuck on that chair. I’ve fallen for you. I’ve fallen for you. Those words of hers
were striking and kept swirling around in my head. Those words were a stab to the heart. A stab
to the soul. She wiped her tears, and walked away. And as the view of her started to fade away,
Jill was my brother’s ex-girlfriend. My brother was her type. He was a bad boy-slash-artist.
My parents did not want me to pattern my life after his. He was stubborn and dry. He was a
problematic and would express his laments through paintings. Jill was the one more in love with
him. She would give more to him – a love not given back. My brother was a spoiled selfish guy.
He crashed cars, stole money, and was addicted to cocaine. For all we knew, my brother was
jealous of me. He turned into a monster out of competition. The worst he did was to cheat on
Jill. My brother did not love her – not even once. My brother impregnated a girl behind Jill’s back.
Jill was too late. The girl was already two months pregnant when she found out.
And in all this turmoil was a roller coaster ride. For she pre-judged me as an airhead and a
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know-it-all. She pointed me out as the reason why my brother became a rebellious spirit. Jill,
who hated me, turned to me at her lowest points. I became her listener. I became her friend- her
hero.
That afternoon was crushing. It was a beautiful afternoon with a five o’clock blessing from the
sky – a purple-orange sky was as if it rained because of my sadness. I was shaking afraid of what
will happen next. Perplexed by anger and guilt. Confused by friendship and love. After all, loving
someone out of many reasons is not love. Loving someone out of pity…out of how he accepted
you or out of friendship would just complicate things. If you love someone because of a reason,
what if that reason would be gone? The most important thing when it comes to loving is that
you love that person. Plain as that, and not by any cause. My worry that day was the friend–to–
lover dilemma. The problem of not expecting someone to fall for you and the doubt if you also
feel the same way…In this case, I was wrong about my principle. There are gifts that you never
have foreseen to be given to you. When that gift comes along, you question if you deserved to
take it. Just like love…I waited for it, but right when it came, I don’t know if I’d take it.
I felt guilty. All that time, she was carrying a burden – a dark secret. She was hurting while I was
innocent to see that. She hid her feelings just to be safe from risking our friendship. And when
did love become so awful when love is defined as blissful? In the first place, that’s what I thought
I wanted. Now, it just led to disappointment…to pain. I was unsure if this was all I ever wished
Weeks passed. That afternoon remained as it was – untouched. I never talked to her after that.
Deep under our pride is a scar waiting to be mended. All we needed was clarity.
“Hey, bro!”
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“Sure, I missed you. Let’s sit.” He invited me to a café to have a cup of espresso.
“Do you remember when we were kids?” He asked, “Do you recall how we used to believe that
when there are white doves flying in the sky, someone celebrates his birthday?”
I could not believe he still remembered that! Even I forgot about that already. “Yes! Yes!” I
exclaimed seemingly happy to have a glimpse of our childhood. Age erases youth and builds in
complexity to everything.
“And how silly were we to believe that! Anyone in the world could celebrate his birthday when
Just so suddenly, when we looked out the glass window, a group of birds hovered the sky. It was
“And so?”
That conversation with my brother made me forget our conflict. We were too old for that. I
congratulated him for having drunk coffee while carrying beside him his daughter.
I did not tell my brother what I felt about what happened between Jill and me, but I knew he
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Twenty-first Street. Jill is going to have a celebration in a seafood restaurant. I knew I was not
invited. Will I crash to the party or just let this unfinished business pass?
7:55 PM. I drank one beer after another. Alcohol was therapeutic at that point. All that was
keeping me safe was the thought that her party starts at eight.
I drove my Civic drunk. I swerved to 21st Street. I lost control of the breaks. The circling thoughts
around my head were distracting. I was out of the zone. My body was disconnected. I was out
of mind and did not know what I was doing. I lost hold of my car.
I did not know how to face Jill – to tell her that I love her too. To realize that I may be too late
was hard. That I was a coward. I was a wimp to not take risks. I loved her. Past tense.
Twenty-first street. July 11. Drinking while driving. Bright white light. Crash!
Here I am in A36. And if only I had my journal, I’d write my thoughts right here.
July 11: The pitch-black room was never this quiet. Is this room haunted or am I the one haunting
it? It could go both ways. I lost everything. My friends could not take my condition and kept
ignoring me. My mother did not know what to do. I could not continue basketball. I lost Jill.
Now, I knew what it felt like to be under the coffin glass and be cried on. I knew who really cared.
I knew whose life I touched. I knew who I was – a guy who loved but never fought for that love.
I died.
Now, this room is the one I am haunting. After exactly one year, I have become a lost soul.
Jill entered A36…maybe to reminisce or to haunt this room with me. She had that same look as
I did when I looked out the window like all the happiness was sucked out of her. She was still the
girl I loved, but it was hard to see her while she can’t see me. I can’t even touch her. The sight of
her reminded me of the remorse I felt. She looked so alone and yet still so beautiful.
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She cried. She cried because the room was the last time we talked in. The room was the symbol
of our love that died so tragically. I miss her. There’s no turning back now. I am a ghost of regret
Jill was called for greatness. She will be a great woman. She will be a brilliant architect. She will
find the right man to fight for her and love her.
“Today is July 11, Jill.” I whispered to her ear, “You can’t hear me, but I’ll watch over you. Let me
She picked from her pocket a thick leather wallet, and inside it, she took a picture. She looked
at that picture and kissed it. The picture looked familiar. I gave her that picture years before. It
July 11
Jill,
Love,
Nic.
This is my story.
Love is not just a feeling. Love is something that we do. In my case, I loved her. I was just too
scared of the future. We all have a fear of what’s next. And if we face it brave, we win. But if we
don’t, we lose. Moments are fleeting. To risk is to take a chance. Love is a choice armed with
courage. Regret is a consequence.
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Sly
Arthur Jason Javellana
“People are either your asset or your liability; sorry bastards are that expendable,”
snorted Harry after his shot of tequila. I just sat there mouth agape at the confession that ran
through the horse’s mouth. I suppose after you have had a few rounds of strong beer, half a
dozen margaritas and Mexican sunrise to finish off your spree you feel like your soul is jumping
out.
“Lemme tell you, death ish nothing but an end reward to the stupidity that ish life….”
Harry said, “We do whatever meansh necessary to get by and enjoy …Tis what I learned in this
jungle.”
“When you step into the real world,” Harry paused as he gulped another one, “don’t
ekshpect dat bitch to be all sunshine and butterflies.”
Harry added in a slurred tone, “Point of all this is to get an ED-U-KA-SHOON, which I alwaysh
“We all want our cut at happiness in our college days which to say at a real sense involves,”
drunken, hazed Harry pulled out the digits of his fingers
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“Getting a good rep…. getting a superior GPA…getting a life…..”
Such small fingers and hands for a twenty something; it was evident the guy seldom used
Always about the three G’s wasn’t it, Goons, Gold, and Go screw somebody up.
My mind reminisced towards everything the man had ever done: Taking me farther back to his
succession of scams.
For starters, Harry sold examination answers every end term (at extraordinary fees), he always
He’d then tell them to the dean and the unfortunate souls that bargained with the devil could
not pin the blame on Harry since he always left the confrontation unscathed, smoothly denying
the allegations pinned on him and directing the blame towards somebody else.
The dean knew of Harry’s operations yet was left with no choice but to side with him and deliver
sanctions. Rumor has it that Harry blackmailed the dean. Harry promised the dean media
mileage for an affair that his ruffian son had with the daughter of a business tycoon enrolled in
that same school. It was an affair that led to the woman being impregnated.
What would prompt Harry to do such a noble act of denouncing cheating on campus? He
needed a good rep to get into his father’s insurance company. So daddy would not just think of
him as a rotten seed. It was a ploy to get the community to kiss up to his backside as a morally
upright citizen.
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Harry was also the suave negotiator. Who would forget that during college holidays, Harry
would buy out the nearby competing kiosks. Sure, he’d lure them in with cash for full control
of their booth and all its operations. Failure to do so would mean a visit from Ramon and who
was Ramon?
Ramon is Harry’s muscle as well as his cousin. The 5’7 stocky man walks with glare and gait
telling all lower life forms to get out of the way. Harry helped his cuz and his goons gain control
of some ground outside campus enabling them to sell their stock of crack. Ramon’s loyalties
“All hail the don”. I remember Harry saying, “where would we be without Puzo?”
Yet what made Despicable Harry the epitome of what he was occurred when Harry became
Harry at one time had a friend in Oliver, and Oliver once had a lover in Lucia and who were they
both?
Oliver never met his father and lost his mother at a young age. He was brought up by his
deadbeat uncle who had a stay at home job but lost it eventually. The sloth then fell hard on
the pills. The absence of affection from both parents left Oliver to grow up incomplete. Ollie
had no social life but made up for it by being the bookworm type. This led him to be top of the
class since elementary. Harry scouted him well since first year. Oliver was easy to befriend and
the man was Harry’s ticket to making the grade every time. All he had to do was throw his arm
around the insecure Oliver, invite him over for a drink with Ramon and his booze jockey friends
While Oliver had a knack for being an academic wizard, Lucia was an exuberant artist. Her
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artistic grandeur in poetry, and painting complemented her beauty well. The lady fell for Ollie
being the outcast with a lot of potential within. Like most relationships it started as a friendship
that later blossomed into romance. The more intimate the two became the more Harry lurked
It was after the end term examinations prior to summer that Harry revealed his true colors. He
and Oliver were just finishing up the week and it was at that point Harry no longer was in need
of Oliver’s services. Harry was done with all of his science and math minors.
He invited Ollie for that shoting spree at the end of a grueling week. When Harry’s victim passed
his limit which was the fifth round of whiskey, it was Lucia all night long and Oliver couldn’t let
go of the subject. The more he mentioned the name, the more it vented Harry’s ire. It was Lucy
this and Lucy that and how they would stay happily ever after. Harry would make sure it would
not be for long. As Oliver was busy seeing all sorts of swirling colors, Harry placed a tablet in
Oliver’s shot glass, the poured liquor dissolving it with ease. Oliver took a swig from the spiked
“Har,” said Oliver, “I’m glad I met you as a friend. You made everything worth my while.”
“Just another lamb for the sacrifice, another brick in the wall.” said Harry in the back of his
mind. “I’ve heard it all before… …. thank you for the score… I made you my little whore….. I
don’t need you anymore.”
“Anytime mon ami,” Harry replied as he patted Ollie on the shoulder which was more of a
farewell gesture.
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In a matter of moments Oliver fell hard on the ground clutching his midsection. It was a pain so
excruciating that he felt that his stomach was set ablaze. Gurgling noises emanated from deep
within his bowels. The feeling was like a 10 point diarrhea on the scale. The sensation worked
itself in spasms until it reached the buttocks. Oliver lay there squirming and wincing in pain and
“Har..rry….” he said in a frail tone that dictated bewilderment. Yet Harry was long gone.
Oliver was hospitalized for months. Lucia never heard from him ever since and it allowed Harry
He first sent Lucia a barrage of poetry from Emerson, Milton, all in the form of text messages.
He’d forward to her paintings of Cezanne, Van Gogh and Monet via multiply.
To make her see that he was as real as possible, he’d send her flowers with more poetry attached
to it and signed it off with an H. The same charade was done for weeks; Lucia on her behalf did
her own artwork as she threw the bouquets into the trash bin.
A man with an ego such as his would not hesitate to flaunt his stature. Lucia felt a chill running
down the side of her shoulder while she was still with Oliver. She had that sense Harry was
always nearby. Every time she was introduced by Oliver to him there was that uneasy aura. The
man just kept gawking at her up close and glaring at her from afar with shifty eyes. The more she
threw away Harry’s flowers the more he kept sending her almost in a relentless state.
Months later a friend of Lucia opened an art exhibit that featured local artists. Lucia being the
afficianado that she is took charge of the evening’s guests. When the exhibit ended, Lucia took
liberty to lock the place up while every one else had left. She was on her way out………. when
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“You locking up for the night thought I’d just stop by and help you out with it.”
“It’s one hell of a place, you might need help……keeping the place peaceful and people out.”
“I insist that I’m fine on my own thank you,” Lucia said in a demanding tone nearly closing the
door on Harry. But Harry flung it back wide open with such a force that it resulted to a bang.
“What the hell do you want!” She said almost reaching a scream.
“They serve you the best French wine in this exhibit, I could not help but take an entire bottle
well let’s make it two.
“You see all I’ve ever wanted was some affection from you; I’m not the kind to take No for an
answer especially if the fruit of your labor winds up getting recycled in a heap.”
“You regard me too much of a lowlife who scams his way to every guilty pleasure. Please
understand that what I do is an art form in its own right. I study the symmetric carefully, I mold
every detail, and I get creative applying a style that is mine alone.”
“Truth be told I sometimes tire of these games that I play just to screw other people around
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and I don’t want to play any of them with someone like you. For Christ sake I’m madly in love
with you……..Now please say you love me back, please show that at least you care…Love me….
dammit bitch…… LOVE MEEEEEEEE.”
“You know this place has so much of a magical atmosphere to it,” said Harry as he cornered her
to a wall with a safari painting a few meters above them. “They say that art is but an expression
of life. All these exhibits appear before us sullen, untalkative, and stale. I say we breathe a little
life into it.”
In one swift grasp, Harry circled his arms around her body, pinned her to the wall and pressed
A tiger in the safari painting was glancing ferociously upon them with fangs open.
Harry caressed her long flowing hair and soon worked his way to her nape. His hands then
Harry kept kissing then dug his hands underneath her shirt but before he could get any further,
Harry fell to the ground as he got kicked hard in the kneecaps. This enabled Lucia to break free
and escape.
Harry ducked out at the back door as two security guards entered the premises just several
seconds late. The guards caught Lucia slumped and sobbing from the ordeal.
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I just sat there trying to shake off the cobwebs from what I’ve heard. With a glass of scotch in
“Hey you,” slurred Harry said. “You asked me bout what I’ve done in college so far an I gave it to
yoush. I ‘m lucky to have lain low for thees pasht months. I know you’re bout to enter that shaym
world. Just don’t forget about what I’ve said cosh I’m a guy who looksh out for his lil brother.”
Harry then got up from the counter, gave me an embrace and walked out of the tavern. I don’t
know if I feel any genuine affection from that man any longer
I was about to go back to drinking when I heard the loud whir of a car engine speeding by and
And then it happened unexpectedly. From the corner of my eye, I saw in amazement and
horror what appeared to be Harry’s limp body being shot ten feet into the air. I immediately
snapped out of it as I rushed out into the door. The people in that tavern gasped in terror as
Harry bounced off the pavement neck first. Screams and panic soon followed as other clients
broke out of their haze. Harry’s remains just lay in a bright red pool of blood, WITH HIS NECK
TWISTED LIKE A PRETZEL AND HIS BODY BENT IN SO MANY PLACES. I caught glimpse of the
vehicle that rammed Harry; it was a Mercedes fashioned into a funeral car.
“Those joyriding idiots at the memorial home are fucking drunk again,” somebody cried from
It appeared on that night Sly Harry was not the only one who got away with his intoxicated
deeds.
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Damien
Sheila May B. Guerrero
27/09/07. Thursday. 11.19pm. Almost full moon. Almost making it, lost it anyways.
Damien, you made me promise not to tell. So I’m writing it anyways. This has been haunting
me, yes. Feed the hungry eyes of those that refused to listen, but I won’t speak anyways. I won’t
For all the memories, Damien, you presented yourself to be my memories for time lapses. My
heart never understood; it had someone else. I don’t think you knew this before but I’m glad if
you didn’t and glad that you still befriended me if you knew the details. And I still vaguely recall
the “incidence”…
Damien, you sat beside me, beside that beer bottle. Drank it all for me, you knew I couldn’t
count the stars anymore. You knew. You counted them after that one last gulp. You told me
things that he never did. Things that made me happy, temporarily, like he did, but you stayed. In
silence, we sat. But, I told you things I never told him, so I can leave you.
Damien, remember when I told you that you will never hold my hand because they belonged
to someone else, and I have to cut them off first if you forced me to? Well, you hid the beer I
reserved under my seat, creepily, stealthily, sincerely, and drank it as your own. I would’ve hated
you if I’ve known, beers have been way too special to me, way too sacred, way too memorable
that I have to endure its harshness, its soothing invite for dependence. I have to learn to fight
it, the memories that come with it, at least. I need to learn. I hate you Damien, for stealing my
thoughts, piloting it away from the brilliance of being alive to die, for fleeing myself away from
thoughts of mortality, for telling me the stars are there. They’re watching me, eagerly. In silence,
we sat. I still told you things I never told him, except “ok” for a change.
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Damien, if you only knew…
I need that beer, yes, that one beside you, half-full. You corrected half-empty, sync with a stare at
me. Whatever, I needed that. Please. Thank you. I know you hated me too, for this, but I don’t
really care, all I need is just a good night’s sleep. And maybe that’s what I need you here for; you
need to take me home when I had too much. Damien, you stayed close. You listened. In silence,
we sat. “Thank you” I told him before, and now it belongs to you.
Damien? You know, I would have wanted you here, instead of anybody else. You asked me what
I want; you’re the only one at that. I would have fallen for that but I didn’t. I’ve learned lessons
enough for me to understand that not everything’s value is proportional to its meaning. You
meant everything, I perceived, Damien. If things would have been better, I wouldn’t have been
found sitting here. I wouldn’t have been found by you sitting here. I wouldn’t have been found
by you sitting here, binging. I wouldn’t have been found by you sitting here binging here all
alone. I don’t really believe in destiny. And this was never destiny. I believe that you found me
here because I was sitting here because of what happened, logical sequence of events. I believe in
randomizations. So here, in silence, we sat. “Thank you, Damien.” So you’d be convinced those
Damien, it’s getting a little late now. You sure you don’t have to rush back home to rest? I’ve
been aware; I’m not the most comforting companion you can ever have now… I’m less the
satisfaction on your table tonight, nor the best in beating boredom against your computer
machine, much more the best chat person one can exchange flaws and flattery with. You sure,
Damien?
Damien, you remember how you saved me before? Told me you’d never leave me, when things
are awfully difficult around? I would have fallen for that Damien, I could’ve fallen for you.
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Everything had been me. I was vulnerable, but my heart pieces remained on the floor sprawled,
sprinkled everywhere. Meant. You still stayed. I still have never felt so alone, maybe I’ll always be.
In silence, unchanged settings, we still sat. “You don’t have to prove anything.” I said.
Damien, I’m crashing again. Remember when you’ve been rejecting people’s hearts?
Someone’s rejected mine too. Soon I’ll send yours crashing just as conformists to heartbreak
would want everyone else’s heart to break. If he only said what I needed to be… I wouldn’t have
belonged to you. If I listened to my heart and changed his mind… curse heavens, I won’t even
talk to you. Damien, if he ever looked back, only if he had and watched me cross the street to see
me perfectly safe, I wouldn’t have heard your sweetest voice. I hate you, Damien. I would have
fallen into sweet slumber if you hadn’t sat here. I wouldn’t have woken up the next morning as
if nothing happened. Now, I have to stay awake and guard you too. Damien, you’re downing
One by one…
This conversation’s just maybe too much for two full persons. You were singing, and keeping it
up for hours now, you and your bottle. I stayed silent, berating every one of your mouth’s words.
It does describe you, it does well enough… but I still won’t fall for that, still won’t fall for that.
For one thing’s been, I’ve always been his and I couldn’t care if you brought me roses he never
showed, or quoted phrases of this fucking life that belonged to me as if it were me. If only he
Damien, I know this had been hard for you. Saving this heroine who can’t even save you this.
Ohayo.
[uncontinued.]
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The Clean-up
(A Wife’s Tale)
H.P. Atilano
For the first time in her life, she feels proud of herself.
“Why, I did something good today!” she thinks, smiling to herself, as she leans over
Her face.
“My face…”
She looks in the mirror above the sink and sees a bitter truth in it. It’s the reflec-
tion of a broken woman staring back at her; a face she can never feel proud about; a face she
Her reflection looks a lot like one of those paintings by Picasso: her right eye shifts
slightly above the left one; half of her mouth moves down a bit so that it becomes part of her
For a while she can’t remember who the owner of that battered face is. But she
remembers so well who put all those cracks on the mirror with his rock-hard fist. Then, she
remembers it was the same rock-hard fist that shattered her face into a cubist’s masterpiece
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“Your face…” she recalls some guy telling her in her teens, “…is something I’d gladly
Isn’t he the guy she married a couple of years ago? And now, looking at her face (if
you can still call that swollen, black-and-blue mess a face), she thought, “You married the
She remembers lying in a stretcher the other night. That was to be her eighth trip to
the ER in two years, half of which she can dimly recall having been totally knocked out. The
lady doctor who examines her grasps in utter horror at the sight of the bloody mess that is her
face.
She calls her Miss. Suddenly she feels a burning desire to be single again. Unbound.
Unmarried. Unmarred.
“I fell off the roof while hanging the laundry. Sheer carelessness, that’s all.”
“Let me see… a lacerated lip… contusions on the forehead… bleeding nose… swollen eyes.
Boy, what a fall! What about those belt marks? Did you also get these out of the great fall?”
“Could you just please do your thing? You’re a doctor, not a coroner.”
“I believe you’re so close to being examined by one, post-mortem, Miss. And I can
give you statistics. Six out of ten female patients we treat here are happily married and badly
battered. Every now and then, one of them is wheeled into the ICU and at least two of them
usually end up at the mortuary. Now this may be none of my damn business, but it really pains
me to see women taking regular trips to the ER, courtesy of their legal bedmates!”
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Tears come racing down her cheeks. Crying, to her, is a rare phenomenon. She may
pass out during severe beatings, but she never cries. Crying is a no-no in a wonderful marriage,
her mother once said. Crying and complaining may ruin the marriage.
“My mistakes. I forgot to wash his favorite slacks. I misplaced his socks. I overcooked
the bacon. But my worst mistake, I guess, is marrying that sadistic swine.”
“The marriage contract doesn’t include tolerance of sadistic acts, Miss. Here. Worse
comes to worst, call this number. It’s a help line for abused women. That’s the least I can do
“Abused women…”
She takes the number and puts it in one of her pockets. Later, she wouldn’t remem-
She remembers crying in the washroom. Realization hurts. Now, what she sees in the
mirror is a weeping battered woman. But these are to be her last drops of tears.
In a few moments, her loving husband will be off to work, after sticking a note on the
fridge with his favorite magnetic note holder – a gaping bulldog – while she works on some-
thing at the garage. Of course, her husband would think she’s in the bathroom replacing the
mirror he broke the other night after missing his actual target, or cleaning up the john as she
always does when he’s done with his morning habit. And before he’s done writing his Will –
food stuffs to be brought for dinner, clothes to be washed and hung to dry before tomorrow,
parts of the house to be cleaned, part of the lawn to be mowed, etc. – she will have cleaned up
“Will you check the freakin’ brakes of that damn car? I wanna die a good-looking
guy, for god’s sakes!” her husband told his mechanic once, after narrowly missing a car crash.
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She heard that, all right.
“Hey! Did you die in there? Get your ass over here and check out the note on the
fridge. It’s gonna be a busy day and you don’t wanna spend eternity in the garage!”
“I’ll be there in a minute! Don’t leave yet, homey! You forgot something!” she hol-
“Honey…”
He turns toward the door and sees his wife smiling sweetly at him; careful enough
not to tear open the healing laceration in her lower lip. In her hand she holds a glittering ob-
ject and – Oh good Lord – she looks so sexy to him that morning he feels like dragging her to
“I’m late for work. Give me that and clean up the table. And don’t put leftovers in
the fridge. You know darn well that I hate it when you do that when you do that. Got it?”
She gives him the key, kisses him goodbye, and looks out of the kitchen window to
watch him pull out of the garage. Then, she puts away her husband’s coffee mug and pours
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THE SCRIBES
Jamie F. Bentinganan is an aspiring writer. She has been known to talk to her food and
occasionally makes conversation with household appliances... sober.
Patrick Jay P. Pangilinan is a frustrated IYAS Creative Writing Workshop fellow. He dreams
of replacing Time’s Richard Corliss – in his dreams. For now he plays Peter Parker sans the
Jonathan Davila was a fellow in the National Writers Workshop, the IYAS National Writers
Workshop, the Panagsugat Writers Workshop, and the University of San Agustin Regional
Writers Workshop. He is also a member of the Santermo Writers’ Circle in Bacolod City.
R. Torres Pandan is the dean of the USLS College of Law. His poem entitled “An Explanation”
recently gained honorable mention at the 2007 Meritage Press Holiday Poetry contest. On a
Ellen May Carmona teaches Humanities at the University of St. LaSalle. She lives by the rule
that “Everybody is a walking artwork.”
Jhon Mikhail Leong dedicates nearly most of his free time reading and writing poetry and
prose. He gets inspiration from Sylvia Plath, Emily Dickinson, and Virginia Woolf.
Vincent Paul S. Pido is a licensed nurse who hasn’t worked in a hospital just yet and prefers
to stay away from all those needles and scalpels for now. As the former Newspaper Editor for
The Spectrum, he used his position to run animal rights awareness ads in the paper. Presently,
while waiting to take other exams, he works as a call center agent, something he never thought
he would do. He spends his spare time reading, doodling, daydreaming, writing and fighting for
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On “Three Little Pigs”: “I finished writing the poem within minutes after watching a highly graphic
and disturbing documentary film about how some slaughterhouses in the country (especially in
the city) actually operate under such horrendous, primitive and murderous conditions despite
modern technology and animal welfare legislations that are supposed to dictate and facilitate
humane treatment and a painless, quick death for these unfortunate animals. I felt like watching
a massacre before my very eyes. The poem sounds more like a nursery rhyme and uses simple
words, showing how most of us take such abuse lightly, as if it were nothing serious, something
to laugh about. Again, as in many of my other works, I hope the poem opens new doors, offers
new insights and persuades people to act on things that must be changed. And make them pray
before meals.”
H.P. Atilano was a fellow in the 2002 IYAS National Writers Workshop, where she “unsettled”
(meaning scandalized) one conservative critic with her erotic poetry. She draws inspiration from
Jeffrey Gil G. Lingamen is a full time research assistant and student of peace. He still visits
his Alma Mater and imparts his vast knowledge of the world to the people who are almost
Judy L. Garrucha was former Assistant Magazine Editor of the Spectrum. She is now a first
year Law Student. The statuesque “Judicracious” loves soccer and dancing. She has been trying
Evangeline Meg Soledad was a naïve girl when she entered college; she didn’t even know
how to ride a jeepney. Now a third year Nursing student, she has a flourishing love life and has
greatly improved her public commuting skills. She is inspired by her parents.
Rolen J. Espera was the former Editor-in-Chief of the Spectrum. His hobbies include
photography/graphics, print design management and sound. He sets his occupation as Social
Theorist.
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Anton Dominic Arrazola Magbanua is a graduating nursing student who was on a
path of self- destruction but has now found a measure of peace of mind. Love has smiled on
him today for he has gone fishing for true love that lasts and has caught the most beautiful
mermaid.
charm and easy attitude are helping him corner the market in sinamak and charcoal.
Manuel Jeffrey Ordaniel Sistoso or Jepoi is the laserboy, whatever that means. He is
probably the 51st Editor-in-Chief of The Spectrum. He wants to travel and tell the world’s
untold stories through his crafts. He hates it when people alter the natural environment. He
shouts but he’s only a little kid. On “Stolen”: I still don’t know if it is a literary piece, but if it
is, then it’s my first. It’s so abstract for some and so vague. But it only describes how we are all
ruled by a world of compliance and conformity. Sometimes, we do things simply because it’s
Ralph Pancho is inspired by his life experiences. He doesn’t go to Lasalle anymore but he
used to… a long , long time ago.
Arthur Jason Javellana reads too much Stephen King and has seen too much of the darker
side of life. Weathering it out in 20 years of snow, his writings lean toward the macabre and the
real. Not to be totally pessimistic, he believes in the silver lining (for killing werewolves?) and
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hopes to get out of the blizzard that is his current life experience soon.
close friend and he is inspired by a lot of things. Like being in love and being broken hearted.
Marcelina Victoria Yandall is a Jesus freak. She is also a volleybelle as well as a magazine
writer. Uber organized, she keeps a study schedule and sticks to it. She is a tall American girl
with an even taller American father. With a father who stands at 6’4”, Marcy is not a girl to be
messed with.
Andrea Paz Derecho is a second year Nursing student. She is a magazine writer for the
Spectrum and is an active participant in the Spectrum’s Bodega Forums on Life and Love. She
hasn’t lived too long of a life just yet, but she sure has a lot of love.
Nadjie Danielle Magsumbol fell in love with writing at age eleven. She used to write
only when she felt like it or when she needed to vent, but eventually the dragon-addiction sank
tooth, claw and spiked tail and now she writes whenever she can hold a pen (which is a great
part of each day). She can leave the house without cologne and all that, but not without
pen and notebook. Her inspiration comes through 'ordinary', everyday things seen in different
perspectives- the jeepney ride to school, the sun melting and turning into rain, teardrops of a
rainbow dying. It's how we see things that transform them into poetry, still or in motion.”
John Patrick F. Cabuguason no longer has a class schedule registered in the University of
St. Lasalle. We assume that he is male and that he no longer attends school here.
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THE SPECTRUM
FOUNDED 1956
www.thespectrum.ph
Moderator
Ms. Hannah Papasin-Mariveles
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Mr. Roger Marapo for approving our overnight stays and being our great
guardian and defender
Ms. H.P. Atilano for looking over the Scribe articles and giving her
approval
Jepoi Sistoso and Arjay Solitario for their creative input and good
advice.
And to all the contributors, whether they made it or not, for their
contributions. Writing is a way of baring your self for people to see and it is
never an easy thing to stand naked in front of others.
Thank you for the time and the effort. This is for all of you.
CREDITS:
Burma (on page 75)
Spinning (on page 107)
by Gringo Benedicto
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