This light, is a lie played by this nice, rude dude staring at the ponderous skies of his fate Continue reading
Category Archives: Prose
Blood by Osman Naeem
From Blood to Dust
30,000 men, 300,000 pints of blood, 1,000,000 pints of ale, charging towards each other with the fury of a war orphan, armed with war music, in a valley unnamed
25,000 men, hungry for a promised heaven, thirsty for revenge Continue reading
Superhero by Ahmed AlRasheed
“What happened?” I asked. “You’ve been hit by a camel, Mr. Rauch. But you seem to be fine. I have checked your vitals and it seems like you have recovered extraordinarily fast.” Continue reading
Superhero by Osman Naeem
My dear Destiny,
You and I both thought I would go after losing my body parts to a four footed fire farting falcon from far far away. It happened! But only in the last issue of that comic book spin off about me. But let me let you know, retirement homes are for the dead, they don’t let me listen to Motörhead here, they say it’s not good for my health. Continue reading
Superhero by Noragotcharisma
So what is a superhero?
A man or woman with a secret identity dressed in a way that exudes strength and well-roundedness off to do (what they hope is) good in the world. Continue reading
Superhero by Batool Hasan
Dear New Generation,
I still remember my 6th birthday. Looking at the Polaroid photos, I can almost recall the loud singing and mad clapping. I remember the Pokémon birthday cake -because that’s what all the cool kids got- and neatly-wrapped presents, not stupid gift cards in small envelopes. Continue reading
Superhero by Bader A. Shehab
When you’re neither the last on this damned land, no one to clamber on nor a last stand.
You’ll wish the demon’s soul to possess you again, a reoccurrence of the prowess in a single gun’s chambered vein.
The will of a single man shall overcome armies, for history is written by the victor’s hand.
Superhero by Suha
Dear nephew,
My sister, your mother, your father’s wife has informed me of a terrible affliction that you have asked upon yourself recently. I hear you’ve injured your nose, dislocated a knee and will undergo spinal surgery this Tuesday. Continue reading
The Possession of Fury by Nawar Bashir
I wait…
I wait to be possessed
“My beloved, come take away the pain” Continue reading
The Dishonesty In Distance by Tifa
Dear you,
Instinctually and reflexively I want to ask you to stop treating me so well and being so good to me. It’s hard to feel as though I deserve all the goodness and light you bring to my life, but at the same time I couldn’t bear to be without it having now experienced it. We may be temporarily separated by many, many miles, but when we talk I don’t feel it. Continue reading
School: BHS Class: 12s3 by Batool Hasan
Let me make one thing clear: I’m not a big fan of the human race.
So Picture this: I’m sitting quietly, minding my own business when a paper ball lands on my desk.
The gossip list. Continue reading
Homage to Women by noragotcharisma
This isn’t some thing to celebrate women. This isn’t a thing that tells them that they should love themselves, flaws and all. Because they won’t. They won’t listen to you. The only voice they’ll listen to is the one that does not exist. Continue reading
I Still Do by Farah Al-Sultan
I would get lucky when I saw him more than once a week. Every Saturday at 2:00 PM was is a must. The sad part is that he changed as he got older, not by age, but by action. You see, now he’s totally different. When I was younger I would spend the weekend with him at the beach house. Continue reading
Sciamachy by Ahmed AlRasheed
Sound the alarm! I thought as I jogged outside my room into the hallway. Milo-Cesspool Grendoz is after me, a treacherous man that hacks hearts and tears the living beats out of them. Why am I being followed you ask?
It all started on a pleasant beautiful afternoon, where I was out for dinner with my beloved wife. We sat at the Rome de Tour restaurant, which was her favorite. I noticed that the Tobasco sauce was misplaced. It was set aside next to my wife, making her want a taste. My wife willingly picked up the bottle and started to dab her food. At that moment, I had suspicion that something might go wrong. “SALT!” I screeched as I knocked the spoon out of her hand, and with shock of my doings she got up. “I can’t do this anymore, I really can’t.” Tears came rushing out of her eyes as she left the restaurant. Three months have passed and I have been alone, without a wife, and Milo-Cesspool Grendoz the person responsible for all the tragedy. If it weren’t for that Tabasco sauce I would still be with my beloved wife, my cherub. Well, It’s over, for that I will fight in her honor, and win her heart back!
I ran into the hallway, gashing through people, trying to get to the reception hall where I will find my nemesis, M.S.Grendoz. I picked up a baseball bat from my room and was planning on using it, planning on getting my beloved back, determined to succeed. I walked into the reception, and there she was, standing next to Milo. Milo is that person who answers to no one, a person who could end lives with the lift of a finger. I walked slowly towards him and smiled at my wife in the process and she smiled back. It was nice to see her smile for mere seconds, before it went away with me whacking Milo with my baseball bat and knocking him down. I continued to beat on him until a crowd of people gathered among us as I was held down.
“Oh my god, GREG!” yelled my wife and grabbed his head, as blood was gushing out of his head. His head was busted open and bruised all over, I was still down, and wondered what I did wrong. “Who’s Greg?” I asked with a heavy tone still panting for air. I was dragged inside to my room, where I was locked in.
“Mrs. Peanisbreath, your ex-husband, Mie, is suffering from a term we like to call Sciamachy. He is in his own wor…” the conversation was broken because I struck the doctor’s head with my baseball bat aiming at his conscious. With what I have done to my wife, she is now terrified of me, and ran towards the exit doors as I saw her leave me, Mie Peanisbreath, all the time I have saved her while she ran away with other people. Maybe I am to blame, for hitting everyone she was with, but alas!! I know one thing for certain, SHE’S Milo-Cesspool Grendoz, and my job isn’t over. I hummed the tune of Game of Thrones as I could see her shadow through the glass doors still running, running for her life, my baseball bat still leaking blood. TAN TAN TANANA TAN TANANANA TAN TANA TAN….
Ahmed Al Rasheed
Sciamachy by Batool Hasan
Sci·am·a·chy noun [sahy-am–uh-kee]: an act or instance of fighting a shadow or an imaginary enemy.
I wish I could walk on the veil between sunrise and dawn. I wonder what it would feel like if space was a hollow sphere trapping Earth inside it. If only I could hang myself upside down from the top of the inside, staring at Earth from above with tendrils of my inky hair merging with the clear blue of oceans.
I wonder what it would feel like if I could bungee jump from the top of the nothingness that’s above me, and lose myself between stars, constellations and billions of light years racing through celestial glory.
What if the meteors swimming in and out of sight are firestorms fueled by our empty wishes? What if the blinking stars are silver hearts pumping cosmic energy into our dying mortality?
Maybe the clusters of stardust and comets roaming around galaxies are lost phantoms, the only remnants of our short lives.
And if it’s true, that we’re all made up of stardust, then I can’t help but wonder: How could something so pure and divine turn into a sad, nasty excuse for a life?
Cassiopeia is shooting arrows at my armor.
Shadows scurry toward me, ready to fling me into galactic wheels.
Andromeda is tossing pangs of fury at my quasars.
The shadows wrap themselves around my limbs, stay glued to my muscles and seep into my veins.
I am paralyzed.
Supernovas vacuum the stray crumbs of my willpower.
I steal a glance at the guardians orbiting around Mars, letting the hypnotizing dance of phantoms swirling around their master soothe my nerves.
Cepheus smothers me with colossal clouds.
Light echoes, breaks and shatters in a downpour of starbursts.
Cryptic whispers find their way to my ears.
Maybe I should let them surrender me to a black hole.
The minutes keep rolling and tumbling and tripping over the threads connecting what’s left of me.
Sciamachy by Nawar Bashir
Sci·am·a·chy noun [sahy-am–uh-kee]: an act or instance of fighting a shadow or an imaginary enemy.
I keep my eyes closed because I know if I open them she’ll be there. I don’t want to deal with her. For once I want to enjoy the few minutes of perfect serenity that has washed over me, bathing me with warmth and a rare sense of peace. But she’s approaching. I know because its getting dark and the warmth is leaving my body with a bone-deep chill. The pool of tranquility I was swimming in is rippling with tension. And just like always, the rippling become waves and the waves turn into aggressive rip tides. No matter how much I resist, I end up being pulled down through whirl pools of tumultuous emotions.
Till inevitably, I fall through and end up on the floor of a dark realm. Her presence so strong I can feel it. I succumb and open my eyes. There she is, as always. Looking down at me, smug with triumph. She looks like me, She has my dark hair, brown eyes, and olive skin. What she doesn’t have are my flaws.
She lives her prim and proper existence down here, and expects me to live in the same immaculate way, brutally mocks me when I fail to reach HER standards. She won’t accept anything else.
Now she smiles, patronizing me. She looks like she almost pities me.
“You’re pathetic” she starts with a sneer.
The mind games start like they always do. She’s sitting on her throne, crossing her perfect legs, twirling her perfect hair around her well-manicured fingers, flawless skin glowing as she smirks at me.
“Look at you! You’re not thin enough! You’re not pretty enough! You’re not talented enough or smart enough!”
Each word hits me like a punch in the stomach. Fighting back doesn’t work here, my voice too insignificant to be heard in her glamorous realm.
And it goes on and on… All the while i try to concentrate on tuning out the viciousness of her voice, resisting the hurricane of rage that’s forming within me.
There are times where I’m strong enough to break the invisible binds she has on me. To throw my flaws in her face, making her shrivel as my voice resonates with the power i feel every time i come to terms with one of my flaws. Her vanity can’t handle that. She backs off enough for me to be able to make it back out. I reach the surface, and fill my lungs with air, clear my mind from the turmoil, and feel the sun hitting my face. Happy in my own world of perfect imperfections, for a little bit of time at least. Dreading and waiting till the next time she pulls me in.
But the other times, most times, her voice stays trapped in my head, it branches out through me, like roots sucking water out of the ground, it sucks out my enthusiasm, my optimism, and all my confidence. And I end up passing out from pure mental exhaustion on her realm’s floor, humiliated and depressed.
It is hard to remember that these encounters, the battles that manifest between me and her, are formed within the deepest corner of the dark abyss in my mind. It’s sciamachy between me and an alter ego that my subconscious conjured in its image of perfection.
She is me. I am her. And in my deluded search for perfection… I’ve managed to create a monster.
Sciamachy by Dina Al-Awadhi
Sci·am·a·chy noun [sahy-am–uh-kee]: an act or instance of fighting a shadow or an imaginary enemy.
Children are always afraid of the dark, and as a child I was no exception. In our old flat, I remember that my room was tucked far, far away from my parents’ bedroom at the opposite end of the apartment. Like clockwork, I would always wake up in the middle of the night, and when the dark was too terrible for me to conquer alone, I would scurry through the darkness across the deserted no man’s land, breathing hitched, heart beating fast; I would slip into my parent’s room, climb on to their warm sanctuary of a bed, and cuddle close into my mother’s back pressing my cold bare feet onto her own deliciously warm ones, wherein my mother would promptly let out a shrill shriek and glare at me with her powerful laser Mama Eyes. You know the ones. Every mother is equipped with them. They’re on even when your mother has her back turned to you, and let me tell you, Mama Eyes can scorch you with the heat of a thousand burning suns and freeze you in your tracks with a glare of liquid nitrogen. Sometimes, I think mothers and their respective Mama Eyes might just be the scariest things out there, but that’s not what this story’s about.
When I was young, eight years old to be exact, I wanted to be an archeologist. I wanted to go to Egypt, excavate pyramids and discover mummies and explore tombs. I wanted to expand upon all the meticulously studied Egyptian mythology that I had learnt from my library rented books and absorb more and more and more. But truly, what fascinated me the most were the great Egyptian gods. And I knew all of them. Osiris, God of the Underworld! Mother Isis, Goddess of Marriage, Healing, and Magic. Falcon Horus, God of War. Hapi, Hathor, Bastet, Ra the great Sun God, Thoth, Shu, Ammut…
But my favorite was Anubis, God of the Dead. To be honest, I really don’t know why he was my favorite; perhaps it was a foreshadowing of my penchant for the grotesque and the generally morbid. But regardless, Anubis was my chosen one, my beloved man with the head of a jackal. My parents were originally delighted in my fascination with mythologies, gods, and the like. But they soon saw that my obsession was in fact that, an obsession. Looking back, I think they might have been a bit worried with my choice of favored deity, but then we had our summer vacation to Egypt, and needless to say, I was more than a little ecstatic. I saw the pyramids, went into a couple in fact; and I was shocked to find out that they unfortunately smelled like a combination of dust, thick humidity, and an old man who had, to put it delicately, let one rip, cut the cheese, let out a huge raspberry, but I think you’ve got the picture. I bought tiny pyramid statues, papyrus paper with my name written on it in hieroglyphics, and had henna masterfully drawn onto my hands only to grow impatient and peel it off before it had actually set in. We even snorkeled in the Red Sea, and even better, I wasn’t waking up in the middle of the night anymore! To be honest, those were good days, and I thought the trip couldn’t get any better. And then I found it. A statue of Anubis.
I begged, I cried, I whined, and pleaded with my father for this statue of Anubis standing tall and proud, and he, kind-hearted man that he was, or perhaps he was just sick of my eight year old whining, finally bought it; and I was the happiest child in the world.
We came back home, and I placed that statue of Anubis on my nightstand. Body of a man, black head of jackal, scepter in hand and ankh in the other, just and merciless. My Anubis and I were finally home.
Of course, settling back at home was more difficult than I thought it would be. My fear of the dark and midnight awakenings, that had been banished during our summer vacation as I had been sleeping with my older sister, had returned now that I was back in my single and isolated room that was oh so far away from parents. In the dark hours of the night when I would awake, I would shiver and shudder and think up horrible, frightening creatures that would watch me, crawling around in the darkness, waiting to eat me whole; but now my beloved Anubis protected me and banished away all the creatures and ghouls and horrid monsters of the night.
And so, my love for Anubis grew, and my parents slowly began to realize that this perhaps was not the healthiest thing for a child to be preoccupied with. I would, in the way children often do, repeat the same story about Anubis over and over again to my unamused parents at breakfast, in the car, after school, even while I was supposed to be doing my homework. The Weighing of the Heart, how it delighted me, absorbed me totally. Each time I would explain with painstaking detail to my audience, whether they were truly interested or indifferent of course, how Anubis would carefully weigh the heart of the deceased. And if the heart was lighter than an ostrich feather, the good soul would be free to go; if it was weighed down by the soul’s sins and was therefore heavier than the feather however, it would be devoured by a demon. Pretty heavy stuff for an eight year old. I remember often vaguely wondering if my heart was lighter than an ostrich feather. If it wasn’t, would the heart devouring hurt? My obsession seemed to grow and grow with the repetition of that same story as I chanted it to myself over and over again. Until at last, my father sat me down and told me, in much gentler words mind you, that my obsession with Anubis was not healthy and it, all of it, must come to an end.
Unsurprisingly, my younger self reeled at the very thought. My protector, my beloved. How would I fend off the darkness, the creatures without Anubis at my side? Children are always afraid of the darkness, and I was no exception. So, I became stubborn and refused pointblank. My mother tried to introduce new hobbies to turn my attention away from my mythological readings, but I did not care. I was too far gone.
Then, one night, at a family gathering, I found myself hiding in my grandfather’s library looking for any books on Egyptian mythology I could find. And I couldn’t believe my eyes when I found a copy of the Book of the Dead, an ancient Egyptian text filled with spells, directions for funerals and most importantly the Weighing of the Dead! Of course, I wasn’t allowed to touch the books without my father’s permission, but I pulled out the heavy book and flipped through the pages avidly until I found the story I wanted. But something was off as I read about Anubis and the ostrich feather. Reading the story from the original book didn’t delight me as I always thought it would, in fact it did the exact opposite. And eventually, I put the book back trembling and rushed out of the library pale. For the rest of the gathering, I couldn’t stop dreading the return back home to my dark, dark bedroom, to that unrelenting darkness. And in the car, I was somber, and my sister watched me curiously.
We entered the dark apartment. My parents went into their room and locked the door, the key turning in the lock a resounding “No, you cannot sleep with us tonight.” I turned around to find my sister already closing the door to our shared bathroom, and she had also locked the door. I was alone. Shaking in my shoes, I trembled through the shadowy hallway down to my distant bedroom, opening every single light that I passed by. I entered the room, and there was Anubis standing guard as always by my bed. I let out a sigh of relief and tried to put the strange ordeal behind me. I changed and got into bed with the lights on and quickly fell asleep.
And as always, I awoke in the middle of the night, and it was dark. Too dark. I swallowed loudly and tried to keep my breathing steady. I looked to my nightstand as I always do, but Anubis wasn’t there! Where was my protector? Where was my beloved Anubis? I peered around through the darkness searching, searching, the fear rising in me again. And that is when I saw it. My heart stopped. My mouth went dry and my eyes wide. In front of my bed was a mirror that reflected out into the dark, shadowy hallway, and there was a figure standing there, watching me. A large, black figure, blacker than the blackest night sky, than the deepest hole, than the darkest shadow. It was absurdly tall and had a large head, with pointing ears and a long snout. The terror that filled me was absolute, an endless black hole of fear that my eight-year-old self could not comprehend or control. Anubis, my Anubis, my protector, bringer of peace and sleep was outside, standing at the threshold of my bedroom, and he was not my protector anymore, he was the God of the Dead.
I lay there trembling and experienced one of the lowest moments of my entire life. And more than that, was the shock, the disbelief that my Anubis, my Anubis could become the very object of my terror. He who had protected me and guarded me was now my terrifying monster to defeat. I don’t how I fared that night; but eventually, the terror became too much, and I must have fainted back to sleep.
When I awoke in the morning, I immediately recalled what had transpired the previous night. I quickly turned to my side and there was Anubis at my nightstand, standing as resolute as he ever did, as though the last night had never happened. I watched him carefully, and slowly my disbelief now turned into anger, a rage that was so intense, it burned out any other thought I had in my mind. I wanted to hurl that statue against the wall, throw it out the window, break off every limb and dump them in the trash. He had betrayed me, my protector, my Anubis, and it hurt, it hurt. I gingerly picked him up as though afraid that he would come to life in my very hands, but he did not. And slowly, my fingers gripped the statue tighter and tighter, and quickly, before I could change my mind, I hid him away at the bottom of my drawer out of sight.
That night when I got in bed, my mother tucking me in- and neither my mother nor my father ever said anything about the disappearance of my beloved statue- I was afraid that I would awaken in the middle of the night as always and that my protector would come back to haunt me. But he did not, and for the first time in as long as I could remember, I fell asleep and did not wake up until the morning.
Children are always afraid of the dark. But strangely enough, I was not anymore.
Sciamachy by Toby Al-R
Sci·am·a·chy noun [sahy-am–uh-kee]: an act or instance of fighting a shadow or an imaginary enemy.
A couple of decades ago I was born on earth, a blue sphere floating in space… Where silence shout mystic manners and reasons fade into oblivion.
I always wondered what the hell all of this is all about. Is it all real, or an illusion? Or perhaps nothing but an immemorial memory and our lives are a series of flash backs?
What is the purpose anyway? Is it really a test? I mean I didn’t sign up for any test! And what kind of test takes course over a billion of years?
So… What the hell is going on?
Maybe, just maybe… The whole point is to prevail against the ultimate enemy; he confused every mind and scarred every heart, he is invisible and invincible, manipulative and deceiving, a scarlet scavenger. The master of disguise, the owner of billion masks.
And no… I am not talking about the devil. For me the credibility of the devil’s existence is not more than Gandalf, Sun Wukong, Donkey Kong and many other fictional characters.
I am talking about something far more sinister, he is everywhere and nowhere, a shape-shifter, an entity of mirrors, the shadow of shadows. He approaches with many different faces and you almost always have to question which one is the real one.
People fear him and tremble in his presence… He is the fathomless enigmatic fate, many avoid him and choose to never even try to face him. On the other hand, many people spend their life time searching for him, to face him in the ultimate Sciamachy.
The way he smites is unconventional, he will ambush you anytime anywhere, charm you, trick you and when the time is right he will backstab you, mixing affection with affliction. If his strike is not lethal he will change his face then disappear into the mist, only to revisit you with a different face in a different time.
Always remember; he will never show his real face right away. It is your task to decode his secret. He will either purge your transparent heart or tar it black. I heard if you can defeat his fake clones and find the real one, he will reward you with something rather heavenly.
I once thought I found him, our battle lasted for many agonizing years. Clash of mental swords that cut deeper than the sharpest steel. Back and forth we fought in the sweetest, most excruciating dance… until the final blow, only to realize he was nothing but another fake clone.
I can’t wait to find him… the real one.
He is the purpose of life. He is the meaning of life.
He is what everyone needs. What everyone want.
If you haven’t guessed it yet…
His celestial name is… LOVE.
Sciamachy by Bader A. Shehab
Sci·am·a·chy noun [sahy-am–uh-kee]: an act or instance of fighting a shadow or an imaginary enemy.
It troubles me to think my opponent shed drops of more a sweat, a blood, a tear than I. It troubles me to think, he who bestows to fend me from those walls, as I speak of breath I could use in bettering me, is leathering their arms and spears, the very ones to be wielded at I. It troubles me to think my foe, fore foes, and upon the Four Emperors[1] I swear. That he who eyes the eagle’s afar, fearless and in no doubt, to strike with no mercy nor loss.
And as I eyed in horror, the suicidal Gaul[2] whom we conquered into surrender, take his own life before my eyes, and that of his lady’s. What power of a person does it take to astonish my eyes? The eyes that have seen all, watched all die before my hands, crushed foes beneath gauntlets forged by gods and swords swung at thunder length with roar and emphasis, to kill my enemy. That Gaul was the talk of Legends, the enemy yet the Dirge of my thoughts; brave, proud and fearless he is, taught me not to lay these arms of mine. For I am burdened with a glorious purpose, I am the son of the king of kings, conqueror of Eratosthenes and ruler of the Farlands. I am Heracles[3] of Agrigento and I must crush them all, “under abhorring!”[4]
Pray I train every day, pray I muster every exhumation, the sinister ways of my armaments that shone, below the spotless shades of melancholy of shadows. Under her Nyx[5] she indulges over my rapid and blinking movements at arms, keeping up with my shadow; pray the feel of it possessing these dungeon walls.
Witnessing my pre-warrior-parting-to war rituals, playing at the sporadic flaming torch glows against rows and rows of shadowless shadows. O! Speak to me Erebos[6]; guide my well-taught eye and hand, spear and sword, shield and armor. For I will still beg to differ of why, of all man, a phantom portrays my errors. Yet of which, I cannot repel nor catch. Better me for I, under you, only but a mortal.
Fellow one, here you are, under Helios[7] as he shone upon you and I. You never fail me but knock me down, only to raise me a better man, warrior and brother to thee. Shall we part this journey at once, for I am a shroud of mystique I’d pray to render open. Now old shadow, show me my ways, my enemies from behind, blind them with your shine and protect me from heat. For you and I, shall flourish in this battle and beyond.
[1] The Year of the Four Emperors was a year in the history of the Roman Empire, AD 69, in which four emperors ruled in a remarkable succession.
[2] The Ludovisi Gaul Killing Himself and His Wife (sometimes called “The Galatian Suicide”) is a Roman marble group depicting a man in the act of plunging a sword into his breast, looking backwards defiantly while he supports the dying figure of a woman with his left arm.
[3] Heracles was a divine hero in Greek mythology, the son of Zeus and Alcmene
[4] Lines from a tragedy by William Shakespeare, believed to have been written between 1605 and 1608. The play is based on the life of the legendary Roman leader Caius Marcius Coriolanus.
[5] Nyx is the Greek goddess (or personification) of the night, a shadowy figure.
[6] Erebos meaning “deep darkness, shadow” Greek god representing the personification of darkness.
[7]Helios was the personification of the Sun in Greek mythology.
Sciamachy by Shayma’a Ahmed
Sci·am·a·chy noun [sahy-am–uh-kee]: an act or instance of fighting a shadow or an imaginary enemy.
Go away!
You know I don’t like it when you say that.
Okay? So you don’t care?
[Silence]
Come on! It’s not worth your getting so upset about.
Oh yeah?
Please don’t be like that.
You just don’t get it, do you?
Get what?
Exactly!
She’s gone, I know. But there’s nothing you can do about it and..
Well aren’t you observant!
What I mean is doing this to yourself will not help you; you’ll only feel worse.
Maybe I want to feel worse.
No, you want to feel better but you think it’s easier to surrender because you’ve been fighting for so long and you’re tired.
I am tired – very tired.
Then perhaps you should rest for a while.
Yes. Rest.
Close your eyes, take a deep breath and just let go.