Posts Tagged ‘Life’
Feb
The Gift
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Today the mailman came with a special delivery package. It was wrapped in plain brown paper and bore no return address. I was required to sign for it, which I did, and watched the mailman jump in an unmarked black van and speed away. I took the box inside and set it on the kitchen island. I wondered who might have sent it. I have no friends or family. It’s a peaceful life. Then I heard the screaming—a man’s screaming. Hard to make out at first, but once you keyed into it, you couldn’t stop hearing it for anything.
From Guest Contributor Meeah Williams
Dec
Graveyard Shift
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
There was an emptiness to everything. Even the space between the minutes lacked connective tissue, so that time no longer flowed with any regularity. Josey was left with nothing but her thoughts to fill the void that descended upon the convenience store after midnight.
She’d divide each 15-minute chunk into 91 cents. That’s how much she made, after taxes and withholdings. It hardly seemed worth it, and she’d stare out at the empty highway and live an entire lifetime during every span, dreaming of a life where she’d never married, had never given birth.
Until even her imagination was empty.
Dec
The Subway
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Standing three feet tall Travis was wearing a Celtics hat, jersey, and green shoes on the subway with his Dad.
“Dad, why is that guy sleeping??”
“Shhh… you don’t want to wake him.”
“I’m awake, don’t mind me none.” Dressed in tattered clothing, he sipped a bottle from a paper bag.
“What are you drinking?” Travis asked.
“That’s not our business, Travis.”
“This is just what you drink when you’re lonely and life isn’t working out.”
“You can hang out with us if you want.”
With watery eyes he stared outside. “If only more people were like you.”
From Guest Contributor Steve Colori
Nov
Flower Girl
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Springtime breeds passion. It is the riotous pheromones.
A vision wanders down the garden path in a sundress that waves in the breeze like the surrounding petals. Swaying, they dance together. Her radiant smile and obvious love for the flirting blossoms is what originally caught my attention. She gently sprinkles water.
One of her solar smiles would make my life soar. She doesn’t notice me among all this teeming beauty. Nonetheless, in love-struck desire, I sit taller as she approaches. Surely, if she can adore flowers so fully, I can cherish her as much. If only I wasn’t a cactus.
From Guest Contributor Bill Diamond
Nov
A Wandering Soap Opera
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
I feel like a gull getting sucked into a jet engine. Furniture salesmen, spies, serial killers, etc., take turns following me through town. I recognize them by their nondescript appearance. Private lives are now being lived in public. We’re a wandering soap opera. That’s the problem with putting Velveeta on enchiladas. And nobody has to ask what the Kremlin thinks about all of this. Traces are visible from the air. I just want some semblance of normality back in my life, some sort of quiet, and my heart to stop furiously pedaling as if there were actually somewhere to go.
From Guest Contributor Howie Good
Howie co-edits the journals UnLost and Unbroken with Dale Wisely.
Oct
Kelp
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Life as a kelp farmer meant eating a lot of kelp. They said it was the most efficient source of nutrition known to humankind, but that did nothing to offset its blandness. If anything, knowing how healthy it was for you made it worse.
An entire industry had opened up around making kelp palatable to consumers. There were kelp salads, kelp chips, kelp sandwiches on kelp bread, even kelp burgers.
If it were up to Monica, she’d be doing just about anything else. But these days, there was only job, and that was harvesting kelp. So that’s what she did.
Sep
Girl In Nature
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
I read a story once about a girl in nature. A man was watching her ride her bike through a field of flowers. She was beautiful, so he stopped her. He frightened her, her fear frightened him, he panicked. He raped and killed her, strangling her in perfectly-rendered fragments, snippets of sun-burnished green, pale skin under cobalt sky, a tale of flushed mania and hazy recollections of doomed resistance. A beautiful life snuffed out in beautiful prose.
I don’t ride alone through fields. I’ll never taste the freedom that killed the girl. Another beautiful life snuffed out in beautiful prose.
From Guest Contributor Tara Campbell
Tara is a fiction editor at Barrelhouse and an MFA candidate at American University. Prior publication credits include SmokeLong Quarterly, Masters Review, Jellyfish Review, Booth, and Strange Horizons. Her novel, TreeVolution, was published in 2016, followed in 2018 by Circe’s Bicycle. Her third book, a short story collection called Midnight at the Organporium, will be released by Aqueduct Press in 2019.
Sep
The Grave
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
When the old man stopped and wiped his brow, the echo of his shovel continued for a beat. The grave wasn’t deep enough yet, but it was getting light. Every year for the past ten years, he was at the same beach, digging a grave. The digging took longer each year, but he never missed the day. Every year he buried a part of her. It became easier each year; piece by piece, he was healing. The ocean took the love of his life and each year he buried a piece of her favorite jewelry he knows she would want.
From Guest Contributor NT Franklin
Sep
Adventure Of A Lifetime
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
The black clouds rolled in at a frightening pace, so close now that the lightening and thunder arrived simultaneously. His boat pitched up and down with such force, the hull strained at the seams and might break apart at any moment.
Gordon used the anchor line to lash himself to the railing. Sailing around the world had been his lifelong dream. He expected to spend his retirement visiting exotic ports and using the solitude to work on his memoir. But here he was fighting for survival in open ocean.
His remarkable life deserved something more than such a futile end.
Sep
Gone
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Twenty years of marriage, twenty years of building a life together. Buying houses and cars. Now she is gone.
For twenty years, she was my everything. The smile in my morning, the sunshine in my day. But now it is dark and quiet.
One argument led to cruel words. Cruel words led to hurt feelings. Hurt feelings took time to heal, but heal they did. Things returned to normal for us. Life continued for us as a couple. Then it happened.
One episode of indiscretion, it wasn’t such a big deal. Deal breaker, she said. She is never coming back.
From Guest Contributor NT Franklin