Posts Tagged ‘Home’
Oct
Arborists Cultivate Trees That Look Like Cell Towers
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
They are pollinated by wind, insects, and calls from former porn stars to their fathers. They disperse packets of data via winged and plumed seeds. They host mosses, mistletoe, birds, and full-duplex digital transceivers. Ultra High Frequency bands of bark, cork, geolocation, quinine, tannin, code division, salicin, syrup, microwaves, and tearful confessions. Across their collinear arrays of dipoles, clustered characters of fury, lust, and suicide notes are passed among their branches. And, late at night, handed over from tree to tree, lined along the Interstate, in streams of ones and zeros, the fathers forgive their daughters and invite them home.
Dale Wisely co-edits Right Hand Pointing, One Sentence Poems, Unlost Journal, and Unbroken Journal. www.dalewisely.com/literary
Sep
Bee Grudged
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
The creature basked in the sensory experience that was home, almost oblivious to the otherwise hypnotic aroma of clover which wafted in from beyond the hive’s entrance each summer.
To most fauna beyond the narrow and disguised access, this was an old tree clinging to its few remaining vital branches.
Rejuvenated, the worker set to follow the next wave out to forage for more nectar and the inadvertent spreading of pollen on which the rest of the planet depended.
Its world ended when a great hairy paw collapsed walls, mashing bee with wax and bark as the bear claimed honey.
From Guest Contributor Perry McDaid
Jul
Library Literate
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
I was the kid who sparkled when they walked in the door. The bookish brat who would make her father chuckle while balancing a mountain of literature above her head.
There, I discovered the internet’s secrets. Every minute on their computer spent in obsession.
My friends and I chattered like hens between the book shelves. We scavenged through comics like vultures through the teenage fiction.
I read novellas under the summer sun. I ate my lunches before memorial statues.
Every trip was coming home and every inch towards the door was a step back in time.
Until it was gone.
From Guest Contributor Alexandra Sullivan
May
Tomorrow I Won’t
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
I walk by your bar. Not that I care if you are there, but because it’s on my way home. At least, that’s what I tell myself.
I could ask you. Ask if you found someone else, ask if you are just too busy for me, ask if you ever really cared. But asking means you would tell me. Maybe I don’t really want to know. Tomorrow I’ll go a different way home. Tomorrow I won’t walk by your bar. Tomorrow I won’t look at my phone, longing for a message from you. At least, that’s what I tell myself.
From Guest Contributor Tyler Ashton
May
Drought’s End
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
It was almost dark and he pulled into his driveway a happy man.
He had planned to be home in time for lunch, or at least to be at home at lunchtime, home in time for his favorite talking heads to read him the news he’d missed in the morning while he showered so as to make himself presentable at his favorite café, his best black journal open, crying out for him not to allow yet another eight-day lapse without so much as a single penstroke.
It was almost dark and he was happy to have generated three whole sentences.
From Guest Contributor Ron. Lavalette
Apr
Birthright
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Brandon surveyed the sea of grass standing before him. The wind, which shook the trees and rained leaves down from above, was swallowed up in the green swathe so that the air at ground level was nearly silent.
When he left home, this had been an empty plain of course dirt and stone. Summer storms eroded the land, winter froze what remained, and travel across was rough but manageable.
Now the surface was alive and Brandon was scared. But he was also determined to return to his birthright.
He took only a few steps before he drowned in the vegetation.
Feb
Last Days Of Summer
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Charles Delany stepped off the horse and buggy. In front of him a white
shingled wood house with a porch, surrounded by an abundance of trees,
overlooked the ocean. He removed his hat and walked slowly up the
pathway to the porch. He sat on the wooden bench and took it all in,
listening to the waves slapping against the fishing dock.
“Okay, son, this’ll be your home for the summer. The doctor said the
fresh air and trees are good for your condition.”
Charles nodded and when his father walked away, he coughed clumps of red
into his handkerchief.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
Feb
Patience Is The Hardest Virtue In Life
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Blessed be the Gods that bring forth the life I’ve longed for in this grove I thought I’d decay in. Even Warriors have weakness—an Achilles’ heel. Mine: the matching Fates tread to be woven with my golden strand.
The battle, memorable, left me stripped of my armor and shield. Broken and defeated. Among bare trees. Their roots burrowing down constricting me, but I learned to live with the pain.
Over a decade, I’ve waited for destiny to come home. Embrace me with open arms and a genital kiss. Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, you knew he’d come back for me.
From Guest Contributor McKenzie A. Frey
Feb
The Swans On The Seine
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
“O ugly ducklings grown into beauty, are ye homesick too?”
Thus I, standing in the shadows of the House of Quasimodo, watching you glide upon these placid waters, O snow-winged sisters of my soul!
“Swans fly south for the winter” You, of whom I first read in the sun-baked plains of my homeland, a world soaked in the scents of masala and mangoes – in this city of eternal Autumn, you have made yourselves a second Spring.
You know not my home, O Daughters of Winter. I know not yours. Yet here the twain shall meet, Once Upon a September.
From Guest Contributor Hibah Shabkhez
Hibah is a writer of the half-yo literary tradition, an erratic language-learning enthusiast, a teacher of French as a foreign language and a happily eccentric blogger from Lahore, Pakistan. Studying life, languages and literature from a comparative perspective across linguistic and cultural boundaries holds a particular fascination for her.
Feb
Sabre Tiger
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Abandoned… Alone!
Sabre Tiger the children named him. The apartment manager said, No!”
Dad said, “Ask Grandma,” Grandma said, “Ask Grandpa.” Grandpa was reluctant. The children loved him, the boy said, “Take him home,” the girl said, “Please!” Grandpa relented.
The vet said, “He’s healthy, but overweight at 13 pounds,” Sabre swished his tail severely, “Might not get along with your cat.”
At home, Sabre was content; on his back, trusting, paws in the air, asleep.
Now, at 19 pounds plus, he’s Sabre Tiger; struts, ruler of the household. Grandpa reminds him daily. “You’re a cat, remember, you’re a CAT!
From Guest Contributor Ted Duke