Posts Tagged ‘People’
Jul
Contrast
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
A painting pulled me from across the room. Past spectators scrutinizing other exhibits. Past a man commenting on contemporary art.
I wanted to meet the artist and ask what had inspired him.
Hut alone in a field. The dark evening sky contrasted with flaxen wheat. No people or animals.
“Do you like it,” a man asked me.
“Too depressing,” I answered. “Looks familiar.”
“It’s the toolshed on my parents’ farm. As a boy, I took shelter there during a sudden storm.”
“So, you’re the artist,” I exclaimed eyeing him.
I left the gallery realizing we were once classmates at school.
From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
Krystyna writes poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction. Her work has been published at: Nailpolish Stories, 50-Word Stories, 100 word story, 101 Words, Boston Literary Magazine, From the Depths (Haunted Waters Press), ShortbreadStories, SixWordMemoirs, and Espresso Stories.
Jun
I’m Alive
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
People come and go, they fuss and say they love me while doing everything that I cannot. They touch my arm, but I don’t feel it. They talk to me, but I cannot reply. Their mobile lives allow them freedom to gaze upon beauty or hide from the disgusting whenever they please, but I will forever remain seated in my chair, staring at the projections that appear on my television screen. My fault or not, a single moment brought me to this place; a car accident I barely remember. This is my life now, but at least I’m alive, right?
From Guest Contributor Michael Atherton
Jun
Unfortunately
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
The nausea didn’t truly begin until about 20 minutes after. I sat there in the bathroom staring at a singular particle of black mold on the hinge that connects the seat to the toilet, editing my breathing so I could overhear the conversation they were having on the porch. I loved listening to their voices— hearing other people living. It was unusually bright in that bathroom. “Am I the only one who’s seen this mold?” I thought to myself. I got up and walked over towards the frosted glass window to close it, hearing the voices pause shortly after. Unfortunately.
From Guest Contributor Michael T. Schulte
Dec
Mall Christmas
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
Christmas shoppers crush the mall their noisy chatter drowning out tinny holiday music. Fairy lights glimmer from boughs bedecked with fusty smelling red bows. At the epicenter of the mayhem is Santa Claus, surrounded by dingy fluffy snow. Corralling people into a staggering line, the elves keep order as Santa’s beard is yanked — it’s real! — and wishes whispered in his ear. A ruffled and flustered child heads for the over-sized presents next to Santa’s worn throne. Ripping shiny paper away, the child’s eyes fill with tears — it’s empty! A quick-thinking elf offers a fat orange. Tears gone. Christmas is saved!
From Guest Contributor D. K. White-Atkinson
Sep
My 100-Word Secret
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
I am often asked by people, “How are you able to write a complete story in 100 words?”
Well, sometimes I tell them something like, “I just condense one of my unpublished novels.”
Or I say, “I write my story, not paying any attention to the word count, and my smartphone has an app that revises it into 100 words.”
They seldom believe either of my explanations.
But it usually ends the questioning, and that’s really what I want to do.
I certainly don’t want other people to know my secret of writing a story in exactly 100 words.
I-would-prefer-that-the-trick-I-use-to-always-make-the-story-exactly-100-words-remains-my-secret.
From Guest Contributor Kent V Anderson
When Kent isn’t writing stories, he is building robots.
Sep
The Stand In
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
I’ve discovered a niche taking the place of other people, in particular performing those tasks they themselves prefer to avoid. This kind of specialty service requires seamlessly blending into any situation, as well as incredible forbearance. You are often the target of vitriolic abuse.
This was how I found myself last Saturday night at the city’s most exclusive fine-dining establishment in the company of Veronica Roth. The meal was delightful. The trip to the emergency room after I told Ms. Roth that Mr. Deveraux had sent me to break up with her was just another of my career’s many pitfalls.
Aug
Winner
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
I enjoy winning. I am competitive by nature.
The trouble starts when winning becomes the focus.
To be honest, for me the trouble starts when winning becomes everything. Winning for the sake of winning, I describe as the ultimate step.
Especially when I am in a room full of other people who are winners, or think they are winners.
Damage happens. I know the masochistic irony of what it is like to win, and lose, simultaneously. In private, as I tally the losses, my self-loathing grows.
Yes, in my case it is a sickness. My doctor has diagnosed ‘Auction Fever.’
From Guest Contributor Barry O’Farrell
Barry is an actor living in Brisbane, Australia. Barry’s other stories may be found at Cyclamens & Swords, 50 Word Stories, 101 Words, and of course here at A Story In 100 Words.
Feb
Stressful Day
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
There were more than twenty people in the crowd a little distance away from where I was standing. I shouted, but none could hear. A huge rolling tide swept me, I was choking. I could not feel anything.
I was holding on to the branch of a tree. Feeling so lucky to be alive, I walked a little distance.
There were snakes of all kinds along the path that led to a house. I was terrified.
Next morning, I went to an analyst and asked him the meaning of this dream. He said, “You indeed had a very stressful day.”
From Guest Contributor Thriveni C. Mysore.
Jul
Emergency Rations
by thegooddoctor in 100 Words
After the shuttle crashed, the landing crew was forced to bivouac on the planet’s surface. Their first task was to search the hostile environment of this lifeless planet for any sort of organic material. Otherwise, they would be living off of emergency rations until they were rescued.
Emergency rations were the worst. None of the marines had ever tasted them, but they knew the stories. They all knew a guy who knew a guy who had eaten them once in academy.
Everyone understood that the emergency rations were made of people, their fellow crew members to be exact.