Showing posts with label Flash fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flash fiction. Show all posts

Monday, August 17, 2015

In the dark, dust

Everything is pitch black, completely dark.
I am nothing but the dark.

I am scared that this is going to mean nothing more than laying here for endless years, no control over anything, lonely, and in the dark.


I suppose this situation would be suffocating, except I don't need to breathe. I would be cold, except the cold doesn't bother me.
I suppose there's really nothing to be afraid of; I'm completely isolated from the world in a box deep under ground.

No harm can befall me; I'm already dead.

***
Dark yellow afternoon light fell heavily through thick curtains, softly illuminating a square room filled with people. Some walked slowly past a casket while others stood around in small groups, speaking softly. Other people wept; a girl in her early teens sat in a straight backed chair, slumped over. Her mother's hand smoothed rhythmic circles on the back of her dress. Her mother looked like she too had been crying some time earlier, her eyes were bloodshot and puffy, and sadness seemed to weigh on her like a lead cloak over her wide shoulders. The girl's own thin, bony shoulders shook as she sobbed into her hands.
The father, a burly and powerful looking man, stood by the entrance, shaking hands or hugging the people who entered. He stood straight and tall, but his face looked as though something in his chest was causing him great pain.

As the light softened and faded, the casket was solemnly carried outside to a waiting car. A procession of cars wound through narrow streets to a small cemetery presided over by great, lush trees in the full colors of Autumn. The cars began to line the narrow roads running like a grid across the lawn dotted with trees, headstones, and concrete benches. Next to a deep, long hole in the ground stood a temporary canvas gazebo shading a thicket of folding chairs. People got out of their cars and gathered together in clumps and pairs. Children raced across the thick grass, laughing and playing, enjoying themselves despite their surroundings and circumstances.
A few of the children plucked brightly colored plastic flowers and toys from the bases and sides of headstones, delighted with their findings until their parents ordered them to return their newfound treasures to where they belonged.
The family of three, heavy shouldered mother, straight backed father, and weeping daughter made their way to the chairs and sat down.

***


Everything is dark and I am bored.

The funeral service was nice, but my inability to respond to anything was stifling.
My heart ached for my mother and father. I heard my sister crying once, and then again all through my mother's talk at the service. There was nothing I could do to comfort any of them.



I was scared right after the casket had been buried. I haven't been able to see anything since my eyelids were closed, but all sound ceased when my casket was lowered into the vault. I almost felt like I was suffocating until I remembered that I don't breathe anymore.

Now it is dark and quiet and there isn't much to feel.
I can feel the velvet against my bare arms, and the clothing on the rest of my body, but the air in here is still and unmoving. I suppose it's cold down here, but I am not uncomfortable, thank god. Or not. As far as I know, there's no afterlife, so why would there be a god? I haven't met a god, and I don't expect to. I never really did. In life, I didn't believe in a god.

The moment of death meant nothing more than the cessation of pain, and control over my body and senses. I wish I had been cremated, instead of enduring this unending consciousness.



It's dark. I don't know why I keep repeating that.

It's dark.

It's still dark.

It's going to be dark forever. I'm going to be here forever.
I never really thought myself outgoing in life, but my current state of undeath and loneliness is making me reconsider.
I had friends. I had family. I wasn't isolated or shy, but I didn't particularly seek out company.
What I wouldn't do for a conversation with anyone but myself right now...

Dark.

...think I'm losing the use of my mind.... never thought of thinking as a sense, like seeing, smelling, and hearing... nothing to do down here... thought is the only interaction I have with the world. There's nothing to hear, smell, or taste... but there's a little of something to touch. Touch doesn't count when you can't move.

Time has no meaning, nothing to measure it by. No clock hands, no sunsets no sunrises, no light contrasted with dark. No change in my emotional state... Not scared, not bored, not happy or angry or depressed.


...getting used to the dark, different shades of black in black... Used to see patterns under my eyelids when I lived... These are nothing like those patterns... maybe light is required... There is no light here. No light. No light. No light. Only-
Dark

*

Body breaking apart, breaking down- my abdomen collapsing, my joints loosening, my muscles unwinding and pooling, my skin tearing. My body crawling and oozing, my bones exposed through my flesh like the stone skeletons of the mountains, -flash of memory and lucidity, -I used to drive by them every day, windows down, trees, green or orange or bare-branched and gray, whirling, streaking past my own fragile little car.

*

Thought is no longer my only sense of my small world. I can smell the effects of my body decomposing. This is the most unpleasant thing I've experienced since the actual moment of my death.

*

My consciousness fragmenting, spreading out and breaking up.

Breaking down and breaking up... like a tv screen full of black and white fuzz, a cell phone connection going into a tunnel, radio static. At least forever isn't anymore-

Anymore isn't forever.

The dark. The dark isn't forever.

The dark is just now... Now is forever.

The dark... only not dark, not dark, not dark. Static, fuzz; lighter dark and darker dark.

I am...
I, am.
I am... slipping. Sliding, thoughts like walking with a bowl of water, liquid sloshing and spilling over the edge, droplets. Droplets scattering. St-st-stuttering, bre ak ing u p.

I.
I,
I-I-I.
One...
One word, but not one mind. One letter. One me? Me, two letters, still one.


W....
e

We?

We.


We, no I anymore.
Many, so many.
We are many. Live in the dark, of the dark. Still, dark is not forever.

Someday, emerge into the light once again; New Life.
Thinking they can stop time, but they eat the bodies of their ancestors every day, and ancient stardust lives on in them as us, and as Them. We are what they say is primitive, but they are the ones who don't realize; Everything Lives Forever.

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Them and Her

    "Sorry what was that?... Actually, I gotta go, it's getting really loud in here and I can't hear a thing."
    "Do you have to? There's this creepy girl staring at me from across the cafeteria."  She glanced again toward a girl sitting at a high stool in front of a table right smack in the middle of the cafe. Students walked past the open entrance to the hallway connecting the cafe with the rest of the building, a college library. Chatting with friends or walking quickly forward, eyes to the ground, they made their way to their next class. Windows along the hallway framed the outside world; a circular courtyard and a grey, cloudy day.
    "...What? Sorry, I didn't catch that, I've really got to go, but we can text until I have to go to class, at 2:30. Bye Laura."
    " 'Kay, bye Chelsea."
    Laura took a bite of chocolate cupcake and slid her phone open to the tiny keyboard. Across the room The Girl on the high stool smiled at a boy sitting down at a booth against the wall. She turned her attention back to her sandwich for a minute, trying her hardest not to let all of the lettuce and meat slide from between the two pieces of pita bread. After reflectively chewing for a minute, her gaze rested once again on Laura sitting at a table against the far wall.
    "Chels, theres this creepy girl staring at me from across the cafeteria." Laura rapidly texted.
     "Eww, hav you seen her around befor?"
  "No"
  "Not a stalker then, eh Laura?"
  "LOL, no, just that I keep catching her staring at me
  ..."& she chose this realy high chair almost right in the midddle of the room." Laura added.
    The Girl took another bite out of her sandwich and the chicken in the middle oozed out onto her plate. She chewed a mouthful of lettuce and dry, garlicky pita bread. Unsure what to do about the chicken, She seemed to briefly consider getting a fork. A quick glance at the counter behind her confirmed that all of the forks were gone, so She gave an almost imperceptible shrug, opened up her sandwich on her plate, and placed the chicken back inside with the tips of her fingers. 
   "Ew, she's totally playing with her food now" 
 "Sounds lik a headcase..." Chelsea replied after a couple of minutes.
    Students came, ordered, ate, and went. The Girl watched them all, occasionally glancing at her phone, set on the table to the side of her plate. Soon nothing was left of her sandwich save for a few scraps of lettuce and bits of chicken. She contemplated them for a few seconds before just using her fingers to scrape them together and pop them into her mouth. 
  "has she ever heard of a fork?!" The absence of forks in the cafe was lost on Laura. 
  "hUH?" Chelsea replied.
    "SHE PRACTICALlY LICKED HER PLATE cLEAN!" 
  "Ew" Chelsea simply texted back, 
    "Listen, I gotta go to class now, ttyl laurs"
  "oh. Ok, cya chels"
  Laura looked up from her phone, at a loss for what to do now. She didn't have her next class until 3:00 and she'd finished her lunch, and her dessert. She watched as The Girl across the room finished her cranberry juice, and glanced Laura's way one more time before gathering up her plate, phone, and juice bottle. The Girl threw her plate away, stuffed the empty bottle into her bag, and walked out of the cafeteria.
    At least Laura wouldn't have to worry about any more creepy staring for her remaining half hour of time to kill.
   

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Older: A Slightly Different Version of Missing Pieces


It was a clear, bright day at the height of Summer. In the middle of a large, sprawling park, where tall, lush green trees grew among expanses of well-tended grass and along winding, lazy sidewalks, people sat on picnic blankets conversing, or chased dogs and children through the grass and around trees, laughter floating upon a slight breeze.
            I walked, hands in pockets, sometimes along a pathway, sometimes on the grass; mostly alone with my thoughts, but sometimes watching the people talking, playing or running as I passed them by.
           
            Ahead of me, I noticed another pedestrian walking along the sidewalk, an older man, wearing suspenders and neatly pressed trousers. He wasn’t remarkable in any way save one; above his shoulders, where you would expect his head to be, there was nothing but air.
            Startled, I stopped walking.
            “Ahem, Miss?,” The word was obviously coming from the emptiness where his head was, in a middling depth, slightly gravelly voice, “Excuse me miss, but I seem to have misplaced my body, have you seen it hereabouts?” He said it in a sort of singsong lilt, the words going higher and lower like water above a rocky streambed.
            Yes, he was speaking to me; that was apparent. Though he had no head; therefore no face or eyes (the usual indicators of address), he had undeniably stopped directly in front of me, and his body was arranged in my direction, shoulders straight, feet pointed towards me.
            “Um,” I sputtered, unsure how to handle this strange situation, “You have a body, it looks to me like it’s your head that’s missing.” Well, that sounded a bit rude, I thought, and internally winced.
            “Oh. Hmm. That’s getting somewhere, at least.” Apparently that hadn’t sounded rude to him, good. “Do you have any idea what dimension you’re in, or rather, which dimension my body seems to be in?”
            I laughed nervously.
            “Welll, we call the world we move about in, with shadows and light and depth of perception the ‘Third Dimension’…”
            “Aha! But of course, that isn’t quite the name I know it by; you call it the third dimension, and this is still the planet called Gaia, or Monos, or maybe you know it by the name of Earth, is that right?”
            “Mhm, Earth. That’s it.”
            “Okay, so that would make it, by my reckoning… the 59th dimension!”
            With that exclamation, a fizzing noise grew louder, and with a violent pop, the man suddenly sprouted a head above his shoulders. Wild pepper-and-salt hair waved in all directions save one; the top of his head was shiny-bald. His hair didn’t match his orderly clothing or neat manners, much to my surprise. He also wore thick glasses with heavy frames. The formerly headless man’s glasses made his watery gray eyes appear significantly larger than they actually were. He peered earnestly into my face, his gaze a little unnerving.
            “There we go,” He said, a mouth finally accompanying his words.
            He looked down at his feet. I followed his gaze, a little stunned by the sudden appearance of what should have been at the top of his body all along, and noticed that he was wearing sandals over white, baggy socks. Hm, I thought, maybe his hair isn’t so incongruous after all… Still, there was nothing terribly peculiar about that, however; his socks lay flat and empty just where his toes should have been.
            “Well, I’m off to find the ends of my feet,” He grinned at me, eyes sparkling, all good humor and no bewilderment at his missing toes. I suppose that made sense though, considering how his head had made an appearance. He took his glasses off and polished them with a handkerchief from his pocket; his eyes actually were that big, making him look like some sort of a very large insect. “Thanks for you help!” he exclaimed after he’d replaced his glasses.
            With a quick wave and a short leap into the air, he was gone. Disappeared, though he left behind one thing that shortly vanished with him as well; a delighted and exhilarated laugh that lingered upon the Summer breeze for half a minute, before breaking up and skipping about, like the laugh that was said to have created fairies.
            “Well.” I said out loud. “You’re welcome.” A little late, but I had a feeling that he had heard me anyway. And I had the strangest notion that I had met him once before, in another time, long ago… 

(That was fun :) I think I definitely like him better as an old guy, more personality. I still want to try a young boy, though. It's funny how this is almost becoming a character study project...)

Monday, July 22, 2013

Missing Pieces (3rd draft)


It was a clear, bright day at the height of Summer. In the middle of a large, sprawling park, where tall, lush green trees grew among expanses of well-tended grass and along winding, lazy sidewalks, people sat on picnic blankets conversing, or chased dogs and children through the grass and around trees, laughter floating in a slight breeze.
            I walked, hands in pockets, sometimes along a pathway, sometimes on the grass; mostly alone with my thoughts, but sometimes watching the people talking, playing or running as I passed them by.
           
            Ahead of me, I noticed another pedestrian walking along the sidewalk, a man looking to be somewhere around twenty-five years old, turning as he walked as though he was searching for something; a dog, or a friend he was meeting in the park perhaps? He strode confidently, and wasn’t remarkable in any way save one; above his shoulders, where you would expect his head to be, there was nothing but air.
            Startled, I stopped walking.
            “Miss,” The word was obviously coming from the emptiness where his head was, in a middling depth, clear voice, “Excuse me miss, but I seem to have misplaced my body, have you seen it hereabouts?”
            Yes, he was speaking to me; that was apparent. Though he had no head; therefore no face or eyes (the usual indicators of address), he had undeniably stopped directly in front of me, and his body was arranged in my direction, shoulders straight, feet pointed towards me.
            “Um,” I sputtered, unsure how to handle this strange situation, “You have a body, it looks to me like it’s your head that’s missing.” Well, that sounded a bit rude, I thought, and internally winced.
            “Oh. Hmm. That’s getting somewhere, at least.” Apparently that hadn’t sounded rude to him, good. “Do you have any idea what dimension you’re in, or rather, which dimension my body seems to be in?”
            I laughed nervously.
            “Welll, we call the world we move about in, with shadows and light and depth of perception the ‘Third Dimension’…”
            “Aha! But of course, that isn’t quite the name I know it by; you call it the third dimension, and this is still the planet called Gaia, or Monos, or maybe you know it by the name of Earth, right?”
            “Yeah, Earth, that’s it.”
            “Okay, so that would make it, by my reckoning… the 59th dimension!”
            With that exclamation, a fizzing noise grew louder, and with a violent pop, the man suddenly sprouted a head above his shoulders.
            “There we go,” He said, a mouth finally accompanying his words.
            He looked down at his feet. I followed his gaze, a little stunned by the sudden appearance of what should have been at the top of his body all along, and noticed that he was wearing sandals. Once again, there was nothing terribly peculiar about that, however; nothing occupied his shoes just where his toes should have been.
            “Well, I’m off to find the ends of my feet,” He grinned at me, his eyes sparkling, all good humor and no bewilderment at his missing toes, “Thanks for you help!”
            With a quick wave and a short leap into the air, he was gone. Disappeared, though he left behind one thing that shortly disappeared with him as well; a delighted and exhilarated laugh that lingered upon the Summer breeze for half a minute, before breaking up and skipping about, like the laugh that was said to have created fairies.
            I let out a short laugh that almost, but not quite matched his and shrugged, “He seems to be having a good time.” I said to myself, and continued along the sidewalk once again, wrapped up in thinking of my strange encounter with what seemed to be an inter-dimensional traveler. 

(So I'm thinking that maybe this might be a tad more interesting with an old guy, or perhaps a young boy? If he was a boy, then maybe his inter-dimensional traveling might seem like a game played with himself or among friends?)

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Missing Pieces (Second Draft)


It was a clear, bright day at the height of Summer. In the middle of a large, sprawling park, where tall, lush green trees grew among expanses of well-tended grass and along winding, lazy sidewalks, people sat on picnic blankets conversing, or chased dogs and children through the grass and around trees, laughter floating in a slight breeze.
            I walked, hands in pockets, sometimes along a pathway, sometimes on the grass; mostly alone with my thoughts, but sometimes watching the people talking, playing or running as I passed them by.
           
            Ahead of me, I noticed another pedestrian walking along the sidewalk, a man looking to be somewhere around twenty-five years old, strong, square shoulders swiveling this way and that as if he was searching for something. A dog, or a friend he was meeting in the park perhaps? He took long, confident strides, and wasn’t remarkable in any way save one; above his shoulders, where you would expect his head to be, there was nothing but air.
            Startled, I stopped walking.
            “Miss,” The word was obviously coming from the emptiness where his head was, in  middling depth, clear voice, “Excuse me miss, but I seem to have misplaced my body, have you seen it hereabouts?”
            Yes, he was speaking to me; that was apparent. Though he had no head, therefore no face or eyes, the usual indicators of address, he had undeniably stopped directly in front of me, and his body was arranged in my direction, shoulders straight, feet pointed towards me.
            “Um,” I spluttered. Unsure how to handle this strange situation, “You have a body, it looks to me like it’s your head that’s missing.” Well, that sounded a bit rude, I thought, and internally winced.
            “Oh. Hmm. That’s getting somewhere, at least.” Apparently that hadn’t sounded rude to him, good. “Do you have any idea what dimension you’re in, or rather, which dimension my body seems to be in?”
            I laughed nervously.
            “Welll, we call the world we move about in, with shadows and light and depth of perception the ‘Third Dimension’…”
            “Aha! But of course, that isn’t quite the name I know it by; you call it the third dimension, and this is still the planet called Gaia, or Monos, or maybe you know it by the name of Earth, right?”
            “Yeah, Earth, that’s it.”
            “Okay, so that would make it, by my reckoning… the 59th dimension!”
            With the explanation, a fizzing noise grew louder, and with a violent pop, the man suddenly sprouted a head above his shoulders.
            “There we go,” He said, a mouth finally accompanying his words.
            He looked down at his feet, I followed his gaze, a little stunned by the sudden appearance of what should have been at the top of his body all along, and noticed that we was wearing sandals. Once again, nothing terribly peculiar about that, however, his feet ended just before where his toes should have been.
            “Well, I’m off to find the ends of my feet,” He grinned at me, his eyes sparkling, all good humor and no bewilderment at his missing toes, “Thanks for you help!”
            With a quick wave and a short leap into the air, he was gone. Disappeared, though he left behind one thing that shortly disappeared with him as well; a delighted and exhilarated laugh that lingered upon the Summer breeze for half a minute, before breaking up and skipping about, like the laugh that was said to have created fairies.
            I let out a short laugh and shrugged, “He seems to be having a good time.” And continued along the sidewalk once again, wrapped up in thinking of my strange encounter with what seemed to be an inter-dimensional traveler.