The Dark Sire Issue 3 (Spring 2020) | Page 30

Sharps by Ian Richardson As she often did at this point in the morning Sarah gave a small mental nod of thanks to Errol Flynn. She unloaded the fridge and placed on the kitchen counter the essentials for her snacks. Sarah held tight to the organisation of her morning. She always prepared enough supplies to get her through until five when the final musical farewell of Windows released her to go to the wine bar. In the order she would need them, the essential components were set out in two rows. On the top, a Ziploc bag and a lunch box and below that whole-wheat bread, faux butter, ham (cheese on alternate days), a Mars bar, four oranges and the syringe. The butter went on the bread, the ham on the butter, the sandwich in the bag. The bag went into half of the lunch box and the chocolate in the other. All secure in their place. All reassuringly right with the world. Then Sarah slid open the kitchen drawer and took out a flat bottle, unscrewed the top and drew up a full measure of liquid into the syringe. It had been a stroke of pure luck that she'd read a bio- graphy of Errol Flynn just as she needed it. She 28