Fog Tweets
My Secret Wife
βWe had a report of some missing Genetico property here.β
βSorry, itβs just my wife and I.β
βAh, your . . . wife. How did you meet?β
βeHarmony.com.β
eHarmony, ha! I found her terrified in an elevator shaft. I fed her, taught her to speak, ignored the corporate barcode tattoo on her arm. We may have no marriage license, but the bands that connect us are stronger than gold.
βIs it okay if I look around?β
βOf course not,β I say. βThis is my house.β
The door shuts and I see dark, fearful eyes peering from behind the couch.
βItβs safe,β I say.
This is a piece for the Sunday Photo Fiction challenge. (The title is a take-off of Pigs in Space. If you don’t know what that is, click here.)
Bureaucracy…in Space
Bruce pulled himself to the bathroom and squeezed out a few painful, amber drops. The purifiers banged and vibrated and he waited with swollen throat for that tiny cupful of pure water to emerge. He was still twenty-two days away from Earth, far too long to survive like this.
There was a blip on his radarβanother ship in range. With trembling hands, he hailed them.
βThis is Scout eagle 45AZ. What type of ship are you?β he asked.
βScout eagle 45AZ, this is Transport 50TS.β
βTS? Youβre a terraforming ship? What are you carrying?β
βWater,β came the reply.
β50TS, I need water,β Bruce called. βMy tank sprung a leak and Iβve been venting water. I just need a few gallons to get me back to Earth.β
There was a pause. βIβm sorry 45AZ, but our tanks are all sealed. We need permission to open them.β
βThen get it!β Bruce shouted. βIβm dying here.β His voice cracked and he started coughing.
Several minutes passed before there was a reply. β45AZ, Iβve obtained conditional permission. Iβm sending you the order now.β
A message flashed on Bruceβs screen.
FROM HIGH COMMAND:
Permission for water tanks to be opened is granted, contingent on the applicant appearing before a tribunal on Earth in two days time to explain the necessity. Thank you for your cooperation.
Viruses Anonymous
The meeting was held in a backroom server.
βHi, Iβm ILOVEYOU.β
βHi ILOVEYOU!β
βIβm a virus. Itβs been 10,036,651 seconds since Iβve infected a computer. I looked in the mirror one day and realized: Iβm a worm. Nobody likes me. My whole life is a lie, even my name.β
βYou can mutate,β Code Red said. βYou can still become a good .exe.β
ILOVEYOU nodded. βIβm trying to make amends. Now I steal private information from gangsters and send it to the Red Cross. Itβs just so hard.β
Code Red gave him a hug. βItβs a long trail to walk, man.β
Narcissus’ Soul
I looked down into the pool and saw myself looking back. I stared, astonished, as that other self waved at me and then walked away. He climbed the trees and read quietly by the edge of the water.
I turned away and when I looked back, I was looking back at myself. Again though, that other me vanished and soon I saw the trees in the reflection ablaze. Then the other me appeared, holding a bloody sword, and sneered at me with wicked contempt. I jerked my eyes away.
The next time I looked, I watched my reflection build a castle of crystal and alabaster around the pool, its spires soaring up to Heaven. I could not tear away and watched as that other me built an empire of perfection greater than any human accomplishment. The majesty of it brought tears to my eyes.
I felt my strength fading but I could not look away and my final thought, before darkness overcame me, was how beautiful were the works of that other self, and how wonderful, how marvelous, my potential was.
This is a hard week for me and I found this picture rather hard to turn into a good story. While pondering various story lines, I was musing over the idea of flash fiction. Rochelle, in her rules for the Fictioneers, always says that the challenge is to “Write a one hundred word story that has a beginning, middle and end.” I’ve been religious with the 100-word rule but I’m sure I’ve broken the beginning-middle-end rule quite a few times, although I try. What I also try to do is: 1) make sure there is some conflict and 2) make sure the characters want something. Without these, especially conflict, it’s not a story, it’s only a scene. Of course, Rochelle makes sure to point out that no one is ostracized for breaking the 100-word and she is very forgiving with other rule bends too. And now, on with the story…
Rapacious
The Mountain is killing me. I feel the life leaching from me into the pitiless walls. The Mountain claims all: innocence, youth, health, time. The walls are fat with my wasted years.
I knew it would take my life, but I vowed it would never take ME. I feel it, though, clawing at my soul. The ME is slipping away, no matter how much I clutch it.
When they bury me, write no name on the headstone, for what they bury is not me, but merely the husk of what the Mountain has devoured.
(found scratched into a prison wall)
This story deals with somewhat disturbing material. Just a heads up. It’s a story for Al Forbes’ Sunday Photo Fiction. A bit over the word limit, but please forgive me this time.
All Wrung Out
I feel wrung out, with a soul like an old dishrag, flapping in the burning wind. But you gotta keep on, so I flip a smile, crack a joke and pretend. We all do.
βWe got a drill hole on 10th Avenue,β Marc calls. βA real slip-n-slide.β
βAnd here I forgot my bathing suit,β I say, climbing into the truck.
There are no survivors, of course. The laser beam drilled a perfect hole down through the 20-story building, gutting it and disintegrating everything in its path. Nobody calls us when there are survivors, only when there is βorganic materialβ to clean up. I donβt mind the βorganic materialβ; itβs picking up the body parts I can recognize that gets to me. Nobody said war was pretty.
βDo you ever wish one of those lasers would get us?β Marc asks that evening. βJust erase the memories and nightmares forever.β
βWhat, and leave this dream job?β I say, laughing and taking a swig of beer.
He looks at me with pain in his eyes, pleading silently for me to be serious, just once. But I canβt do it, because I feel so thin inside that if I stop smiling, Iβll shatter.
Iβm just all wrung out.
There is a coffee shop in my city that is quite beautiful. It has a large lawn, which is rare for Korean cities, and has a lot of greenery and flowing water inside and out. It also has a large dog outside that is, I swear, the laziest dog in the world. Every time I’ve been there, he’s always sleeping in the same place. He looks like he’s dead, unless you try to pet him, since he’s a bit skittish of strangers. In honor of him, I’ve written a story. I’ve written it in the style of a kid’s story, although of course with my own weird spin.
The Laziest Dog in the World
Marcus was lazy.
He didn’t chase cats.
He didn’t chase cars.
He didn’t attack mailmen.
If his owner gave him a sausage to eat, he would have to put it in Marcus’ mouth.
Marcus was just that lazy.
One day, the dogcatcher drove by and saw him. “That dog is dead!” he said.
Marcus wasn’t dead, just lazy.
The dogcatcher poked at him.
I should bark to let him know I’m alive, Marcus thought. Then, meh.
The dogcatcher picked him up with a GRUNT!
Marcus was heavy.
He brought him to the pet morgue.
I should wag my tail so they know I’m not dead, Marcus thought.Β Then, meh.
Marcus lay in the pet morgue for hours.
The table was steel.
It was hard.
It was cold.
Marcus didn’t mind.
Suddenly, his owner burst in.
“That’s my dog!” he said. “He’s not dead. He’s just lazy.”
The dogcatcher looked surprised. “He is?”
The dogcatcher felt Marcus’ heartbeat.
“Yes, he is!” he said. “I should have gotten some training for this job.”
Marcus’ owner carried him home and put him back on the lawn.
I should lick his face to say thank you, Marcus thought. He thought and thought about it.
Meh.
I Killed Rapunzel
I killed Rapunzel.
The hair, it finally got to her. Some say it was the five hours of brushing a day that sent her mad; others, that her conditioner was cursed. All I know is she started strangling people.
She got five cops down on Brown Street; broke their necks with a single tug. Nothing there when I arrived but five corpses, and a single, 90-foot strand of hair.
I finally got her with a poison-tipped comb. No reward; they just handed me a pair of scissors.
Now what am I going to do with thirty bales of flaxen hair?
After the disastrous dinner with the Hendersons, Xerxes didnβt see them anymore. Even Obsequious Otter didnβt come by anymore, although Xerxesβ Prescient Pigeon said it saw the otter around sometimes. Penelope, Xerxesβ ex-girlfriend and current laundry room wall, didnβt mention if his trip to the Hendersonsβ had affected her relationship with their dining room wall Bumble and he didnβt ask. He just wanted to be left alone.
One morning, Xerxes was eating cereal over the kitchen sink and staring blearily out into the eternal, empty grey, when a huge parrot landed on his windowsill.
βAwwk! Can I borrow a cup of sugar?β it asked.
βI donβt have any sugar,β Xerxes said automatically, wondering if he could kill a parrot with one punch.
βLiar! Liar!β the parrot shrieked. βYou have at least four cups left.β
βBut Iβm going to make a cake today and I need it all.β
βLiar! Liar!β the bird yelled again. βYouβve never made a cake in your life.β
βLet me guess, youβre Polygraph Parrot,β Xerxes said. He had dealt with novelty pets enough to know how things worked.
βMy owners call me Polygraph Polly,β it said. Xerxes ended up giving it some sugar, just to make it go away.
It wasn’t just Polly either. Over the next few weeks, other animals appeared at the house, sometimes just to say hello and sometimes to ask for things. There was Gregarious Goat, who always wanted to talk for hours; Haranguing Hamster, who squeaked up at him about the lack of hamster representation in politics; and then there was Malicious Marmoset. Xerxes found the marmoset chasing his ShyPhone 4 around his bedroom. It hissed at him, then stole the book he was reading off his table, tore the cover, and threw it in the toilet.
That night, Xerxes pulled out the house manual and figured out how to lock the doors and windows, something heβd never done before. After an hour, he got them all locked, ending with the kitchen window, which was how Prescient Pigeon usually came and went.
βYou donβt have a ceiling,β Mr. Pettyevil, Xerxesβ kitchen wall, whispered.
βWhat?β
βYou donβt have a ceiling,β Mr. Pettyevil repeated, and smirked as only a wall can. Xerxes looked up. Dang, he was right. He had forgotten there was no ceiling. It had cost extra and Xerxes had just assumed he wouldnβt need one in an empty dimension where his house was the only thing in the whole universe. Plus, he liked the idea of his walls appearing to go up and up into infinity.
The next day, Prescient Pigeon arrived with a gun, just as Xerxes decided that one might be necessary. He wasnβt sure what kind he wanted, so he was curious what kind the pigeon had brought.
βIt shoots gummy worms,β Prescient Pigeon said proudly.
βWhat?β
βThatβs not all,β the pigeon said quickly. βThereβs a selector knob here. Letβs see . . . It also shoots gummy bears, gummy spiders, gummy amoeba, and gummy Ten Commandments. See?β The pigeon aimed the gun at the wall and fired with his foot. There was a bang and Mr. Pettyevil shouted in irritation. Xerxes picked up a tiny, gummy copy of the Ten Commandments. It was perfectly readable, or would have been if Xerxes could speak ancient Hebrew.
βNice,β he said. βI wish I had a porch, so I could sit out there with this and shout, βGet off my lawn!ββ
βYouβd need a lawn too,β Prescient Pigeon said, βbut Iβm not carrying that here for you.β
That night, Xerxes woke up in darkness to hear something crawling down his wall. It must be that Malicious Marmoset! he thought. Slowly, he reached over and picked up his gummy gun. He flicked on the lights and there was the marmoset, dumping melted lemon sherbet into his sock drawer. Xerxes fired a burst of gummy amoebas at it and it dropped the bucket and darted to the far wall. Xerxes flicked the selector switch and strafed the fleeing marmoset with gummy worms. It screeched as it was hit and finally fled back up into darkness.
The next day, Xerxes coaxed his ShyPhone 4 out from under the bed and called Conrad, his real estate agent.
βConrad, this is insane. When I moved here, you promised me total isolation. Now Iβve got marmosets dumping lemon sherbet into my sock drawer in the middle of the night.β
βJust wash them. The washing machine still works, right?β Conrad said.
βWell, it turns out the Cereal Python really loves sherbet,β Xerxes said. βHe ate it all. Unfortunately, he ate all my socks too.β At that moment, Prescient Pigeon arrived, gasping and clutching a 12-pack of socks. Xerxes took them with a nod.
There was a knock at the door. βAnd now thereβs a knock at my door!β Xerxes shouted over the phone. βIn a dimension where Iβm the only person, I should not have people knocking on my door.β He hung up and flung the door open.
There was no one there. Instead, there was a note taped to the door. It said:
How dare you attack our cutsey-wootsey marmoset! You, sir, are no gentleman. This means WAR!
For some reason, this cheered Xerxes up. No one had to be polite or make small talk during a war.
(to be continued)
π Nancy is a storyteller, music blogger, humorist, poet, curveballer, noir dreamer π
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