House of hiss,
spooled void.
Pulls, erases.
Repeated.
October 16, 2024
October 15, 2024
On a cassette tape, we recorded a house, within itself. Space folded and still, boundaries repeating. Shadows marking time.
October 14, 2024
There was an Asian market by the bus stop in downtown Eugene. We’d slip in for snacks—gum, drinks, whatever had the best picture since we couldn’t read the labels. Unregulated Red Bull, in those dense, bronze cans before it was carbonated, was our go-to. Sometimes we’d try a Lipovitan or a Bacchus D.
One afternoon, we noticed a bottle with markings that looked medical. The shopkeeper, who never spoke, stared blankly as we asked, “Is this medicine?”
He snapped, eyes wide, voice raw: “NO! NO MEDICINE!”
We never went back. But now, I can’t help but wonder—was it medicine? Or just another drink, the same as all the rest? Different labels, same poison. It all equals out.
October 12, 2024
We drove east, past crumbling barns and empty fields, into the part of Oregon people avoid. The road stretched ahead, but the air felt wrong – too quiet, like something was off. No one talks about the black pumpkins unless you push them. They say they grow where the ground’s bad, where things happened that people don’t like to remember. We didn’t know if we believed it, but the way everyone got tight-lipped told us enough. The wind barely stirred, but we couldn’t shake the feeling we were being watched. Some say the pumpkins mark places where the dead don’t stay down, or worse, where something’s waiting to crawl up. We didn’t come out here for ghost stories, but the further we went, the harder it was to ignore the chill creeping up our spines. By sundown, it wasn’t just the road that was empty – it was us.