Short stories consume you faster.

Month: June 2017

Restoring the Threads

“It was grandmother’s. We could still reconstruct it, with a bit of work.”

“That’s work that we don’t need to do. We should give up. Things have changed since then. The world is different. Why fix the quilt?”

“Is it really that different? We made an oath.”

“I don’t remember making any oaths, do you?”

“Our duty goes beyond just us. This is for everyone.”

“And if I want a normal life? Something where I can participate instead of just observe forever?”

“Then that’s your choice, not mine.”

“What if nothing comes to me?”

“I know you’ll be inspired.”

Prompt: In 99 words (no more, no less) write a story about something frayed. It could be fabric, like a flag or garment. It could also be nerves or temper. What is it to be frayed?

Visual Effects

“Do you think they’re confused about the lights?”

“What?”

“When they’re migrating, do you think the lights trip them up?”

“It’s based on the weather. They use the change in the temperature to decide when to take flight.”

“We should turn them off.”

“We’re not turning off the lights for some birds, Levi.”

“Can we do it for us? Lighting messes up human sleep patterns, even if it doesn’t affect birds.”

“Lots of things mess with human sleep patterns. Should we throw out all our coffee while we’re at it?”

“Don’t you think it’s better to be in tune with nature?”

“Nope.”

“What?”

“If humans were living naturally, we’d die of tooth infections by thirty.”

“Don’t you ever just want to unplug?

Tina?”

“Who was it?”

“I’m sorry. Daisy mentioned it, and I thought it couldn’t hurt to just suggest it.”

“Tell her not to come around here again.”

“I can’t do that! Don’t you think that’s a little harsh? You could try it once.”

“I’m not a toy, Levi. If you need to know what it’s like that much, just use my memory banks.”

“It’s not the same that way and you know it.”

“I’m sorry I’m depriving you of an essential human experience. If you want it that badly, you can just rip your eyes out.”

“I wanted us to try something together. If you’re going to be this much of a bitch about it, we won’t.”

“Let’s just watch the sun set.”

“Okay. Love you.”

Floor Seats

Smile. Smile. Smile.

The high priestess raises the cup to his lips and he smiles. He drinks from the cup as if it brims with life-giving water, though he has to fight to choke down the bitter juices. This is an honor. He has been raised above his station. Today is- he listens to her voice. She says it with such conviction he can almost believe it.

“Today is your crowning achievement. You have been selected from a throng of indistinguishable warriors to serve. You alone have the tenacity, the courage, and the vigor to act rightly. You have been given the rarest of gifts: a purpose. Drink, and ready yourself.”

He drinks. He drinks enough of the foul drink that he wishes he would become sick and ruin her gown. It must have taken years to dye, sew, and cut every piece of fabric that went into this one day. He looks to his peers, stepping down from the dais slowly, with a final bow. They huddle together, quaking fearfully. There is nothing to fear, brothers, not for you, he thinks, but does not say. Their fear will serve them well.  He touches the horn around his neck; a remnant of one of the fallen. There is a cheer from the crowd. It begins.

(Photo by Alex Blăjan @ Unsplash)

He circles the arena. Two guards bring in their arms a scrawny man, barely a day over sixteen, and toss him down. The man lands with a thump, and begins to rise slowly. He growls at this display. What cowardice. He ducks his head, tossing his horns. He wonders why the change. The previous duels were all among their kind, not with men. That was what the men of wealth wanted to see.

He turned around, flapping his wings. The crowd screamed, in equal parts fearful shock and ecstatic pleasure. He ignored them. The man cowered in one corner, clutching his hair. It was longer than most men, reaching down to his waist. The man also had an unusual distribution of fat. Instead of mostly in his abdomen, it was stored exclusively in the upper chest. He lacked confidence in the basic design (how did such men stay upright?), but it was hardly his place. And it was hardly the time. He clutches his own belly, shaking it and roaring. The audience, as usual, found this amusing. They were quite easily amused.

“Please,” said the young man, his eyes welling with tears.

“Mother said they wouldn’t, she said they only take boys. Please don’t kill me.”

He ignored the man’s pleas. He had always known what he would do. This was his one chance at fame. This was his one chance to make the men pay attention.

In one swift motion, he pressed his necklace into the center of his chest with all his might. 

Weekly Writing Prompt #95: Sick, bitter, fight, smile, fame

Plenty of Fish in the Stars

You remember how it is in Georgia, we do things different. Now you’re used to boys with no facial hair, body mods, and piercings everywhere you can pierce, but we don’t do that here. Maybe you go to the station for school and an asteroid for the culture, but no Georgia peach wants to live out in the cold, black void. You want a little bit of homegrown Southern comfort.

Oh, uh, sorry, not interested. I thought you were organic.

Prompt: Peach

Dawn, Noon, Dusk

When he wakes up, the red light of morning streaming through his window, his heart skips a beat. The sun? Natural sunlight! He rushes out of bed greet it.

When she logs in, she responds to emails in order of panic. No, she assures the recepients of her comforting lies. No, there is nothing to fear. It will hold. Their arcology is the best on Io.

When they crouch down, underneath the sparking and burning wreckage of their glass and plastic castle, they look at each other with undeniable hatred. His dream lives, hers died. Simple. She kills him.

Prompt: In 99 words (no more, no less) write a story that involves a dream.

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