A Building Burning Down

She had managed for years to avoid marriage. She’d sworn it off at 14, at a cocktail party given by her parents, saying she’d never do something so “bourgeois.” The adults had laughed, unaware she based it on her parents’ stormy union.
November 2005 to January 2006 | Los Angeles | By K.G. HAWTHORNE

Letting Go

She grabbed his arm and threatened to kill herself, then she threatened to kill him. For a second, he considered whether his wife was capable of killing him, whether she might in fact be carrying a knife or gun. He took a chance and decided probably not.
Early 1990s | Washington, DC | By DAN SNODDERLY

Feeling of Home

The girls exited the reality of living in the 1990s. They were Wyoda girls: gay and fresh as daisies. This was their first foray as jungle women. But that year a darkness invaded Camp Wyoda. Their un-chaperoned skinny-dipping had attracted deviousness.
1995 | Fairlee, Vermont | By ANNA KERRIGAN

Checking the Water

Larry was 18. He wasn’t a counselor but he did all kinds of interesting things. Sometimes he was a lifeguard at the pool, sometimes he ran softball games in the field just past it. Larry was the cutest boy at camp, and he wanted Claudia to help him check the water.
1962 | Northern California | By CLAUDIA STERNBACH

Alone At Last

Boys, boys, boys. Boys everywhere being boys. As advertised he got all the swimming, BB gun shooting, canoe paddling, and Capturing the Flag he could stomach, and always with lots of other boys. Boys above him when he slept; boys beside him when he ate.
Summer of 1977 | Rhode Island | By WILLIAM KENOWER

Partisanship

A mosquito buzzed by her ear. If it bit her she knew she would move, stirring up the rotten leaves and pebbles beneath. Slowly, she turned to where she could see a small slice of sky dissected by tree trunks. How long could she remain like this?
Summer of 1961 | Pine Brush, New York | By ROZ LEISER

Simon Was Not Screaming Anymore

They went to the door and cautiously opened it, shining the light of the torch in the direction of the nois. There, illuminated in the beam, a full-grown leopard stood over the huddled body of a small boy, its jaws clenched around his throat.
1969 | Drakenberg Mountains, South Africa | By ALLAN M. LEES

A Rock and a Hard Place

Woch nan dio pa konnen doule woch nan soley. She, the rock in the water, had been cast out of the waves and was catching her first glimpse of the pain of the rock in the sun, a small taste of the struggle of the Haitian people. How could she possibly leave?
Summer 2006 | Haiti | By MONIKA McGREAL VIOLA

When “The Nature” Calls

Once the food was packed the teens set to work pitching tents. Up went a pole, over went a tarp, in went the stakes – poof, tent! A little city sprouted across the tundra. They giggled as the Americans struggled to set up their royal blue Wal-Mart monstrosities.
Summer 2001 | Kyzyl, Russia | By ANGIE TEATER

The True Story of the Mad Logger

As time went on the captain was forced to sell off most of his land to the logging companies to pay for his sick wife. As his realm shrunk the loggers moved ever closer, until they set up camp directly across the river from the Captain’s cliff.
1994 to 2001 | Mendocino County, California | By CONOR IZZETT