Posts Tagged ‘flash fiction’
Flash Fiction #4
This is the story of how the great Night Mare created the world.
The Night Mare and her sister the Day Mare were galloping across the universe. Each spot their hooves touched, a star was born. You can see their path written in the stars if you look above, a great swirl shaped like the bottom of a horses hoof. They ran and played and bucked and farted, flipping their tails with joy. Night Mare raised her tail and dropped nine perfectly round balls of shit – plop, plop, plop, plop, plop, plop, plop, plop, plop. Day Mare turned and stopped to lower her nose and sniff those balls of shit. Two balls of shit had rolled a little ways from the cluster. Day Mare’s nostrils flared wide as she snorted her hot breath over her sisters shit balls. She startled and stomped and the cluster rolled away in different directions. The shit balls became planets – those lights in the sky that do not sparkle. Day Mare’s hot breath inspired life to form on two of the planets. Ours, and the great red ball in the sky that sometimes is green with life and sometimes white with snow. Someday the people who live there will come and visit us – or maybe we will fly our sky horses so high that we can visit them.
Day Mares hot breath started life on our shit ball, like the worms that sometimes burst from the shit of horses here. The life that crawled out was formless, like the worms. Her sister, Night Mare bent over the shit balls to watch the worms emerge. The sisters thought they were sort of ugly, so they took turns using their magic powers to turn the worms into more attractive forms. Night Mare made alligators and tigers, eagles and whales. Day Mare made humans and unicorns, deer and salmon. So you must remember that no matter how fine you think you are, inside you are just a worm, like every other life form on our shit ball. No life is better than any other.
Together the sisters decided to bless us with our sky horses, created in their likeness. Day Mare plucked a hair from the tail of Night Mare and created the big horses that thunder through the forests. Night Mare plucked a hair from the mane of Day Mare and created the fleet and fiery steeds of the plains and desert. They stood back and watched their creations run and play on the shit ball and were pleased.
Snorting and bucking they galloped away across the dark sky. Now and then they remember and visit us, just to see how their creations are doing. So we must always treat our sky horses well – for the Night Mare and Day Mare would surely be displeased if we mistreated the most beloved of their creations – the most magical and blessed horses.
Okay, only 483 words, rough editing, inspired by a question at Live Your Creative Vision which I found through A Goldmine of Journaling Prompts which is to say not that I was uninspired today, but that I had so many ideas I couldn’t pick one and all of them sounded like 10K word stories anyway. Does a day of 500 words count as cheating when you consider I’ve done over 1K a day the last two days? And the story! What can I say – it’s what came out of my head today….
Flash Fiction #3

3 day novel warm up - flash fiction
Sapphire, Ruby, and Emerald were on their way to a party. Well, to them almost every day was a party – they were Serendipity Pixies and their job was to bring the right people to the right place at the right time. But like pixies everywhere, they were full of live, love and happiness so everything was a source of joy to them – dewdrops, flowers, shiny stink bugs – they could find delight and wonder in anything. The hard part was getting humans to see it.
If they were in a role-playing game, they would be labeled “neutral”. That is, neither good nor evil. Like animals, they just have a whole different way of looking at the world. If getting a human to lighten up required a shower of flowers, they’d do that. If getting a human to lighten up and look the right way took a few well placed pixie arrows disguised as mosquito bites, they’d do that equally as joyfully. And they just don’t get the “laws of property” thing at all, which is why sometimes they will borrow your stuff and leave it somewhere else and never think a thing of it. If you get mad, well, they think you ought to lighten up.
Anyway, this day they were making their way to a party. They might or might not get there, of course, since they have to flit to every flower, stop and say hello to every living thing, and now and then involve themselves in something that is none of their business – or maybe exactly their business, needing just a little pixie serendipity to solve the problems humans make.
They saw a beautiful, dainty palimino pony the color of sunshine with a snowy white mane and tail, a big white blaze down her face, and a pretty pink nose standing in the middle of a lush green pasture with a little girl. The little girl was wearing a faded dress and worn tennis shoes, and they couldn’t see her face because it was buried in the snowy white mane. The ponies pretty pink nose was nuzzling the little girl and his deep brown eyes looked sad.
Sapphire, Emerald and Ruby looked at each other and knew. This clearly needed their mischief – I mean, help.
They landed in the snowy mane and snuggled down. The pony felt them and really wanted to shake them out – they tickled! But he didn’t want to disturb his girl, who was crying into his neck.
“Ooooooo Sunshine. You’re my only friend in the world. What are we going to do? Daddy died and I’m so lonely and now Mommy says we will have to sell you. She says she doesn’t know how to take care of you like Daddy did, and anyway, she can’t afford it. We don’t have as much money now that Daddy is gone. Ooooo Sunshine, if I could only have one thing in the whole world it would be you. I’d give up my TV, and school – oh yes, I’d never miss school and those mean girls there – I’d give up everything just to have you.” And she boo hooed and boo hooed while the pony just sighed and nuzzled her for comfort.
The pony, Sunshine was his name, was no fool. He wasn’t a young pony – nor a very old pony – but this girl (April was her name) wasn’t his first little girl, and he didn’t think she would be his last. It was the way of the world that eventually little girls outgrow pretty golden ponies and either decide other things are more fun, or start begging their parents for “a real horse”. And then Sunshine would be sold to a new home. He was always sad at leaving his girls, but he always had new girls to look forward to meeting. April wasn’t near outgrowing him yet and he had thought they would be together for a long time – but such was the ways of humans. He didn’t really understand it all, but he accepted it with the graceful patience that all ponies have in such abundance.
The pixies snuggling in his soft mane looked at each other.
Sapphire said, “Isn’t there an old farmer who owns those next fields over?”
Emerald said, “Didn’t we just hear his wife talking about the children moving away and taking their grandchildren?”
Ruby said, “Isn’t this thick mane just wonderful as a bed? I think I’m going to pluck a few hairs and braid myself a necklace.”
And she did. Ow, ow ow thought Sunshine – but he didn’t flinch because that might disturb April, who was also burrowed into his thick mane, as deep as any little girl could be.
The pixies flitted out of Sunshines mane and flew in the direction of the next fields over. They didn’t stop to sniff every flower and chat up every field mouse – now they were on a mission!
Sitting on the windowsill of the farm house they watched through the window. The old farmer was watching TV. The farm wife was making bread and sighing. She was worried about her husband. He was so sad since the grandchildren moved away. He didn’t seem to care about anything any more. He sold their cows and this year he didn’t even bother to sow the fields, or even plant her little kitchen garden. She loved him, this good man, but his heart was just broken and it was beyond her to repair it. She missed the grandchildren, too – the sounds of quick laughter and light feet running through their house. She sighed.
The pixies looked at each other and nodded.
Ruby, Emerald, and Sapphire flitted out to the old barn. Stored up in the loft were some old, rotten bales of hay. Their little noses crinkled at the smell. Summoning up a little pixie magic they pushed them off. The bales fell crashing through the barn, bouncing off the old tractor and over a tool bench creating a great bashing and clattering noise as tools flew through the air everywhere. The pixies thought that was so much fun that they spent a few minutes tossing tools at each other. Their favorites were anything that would make a great loud noise and of course, anything shiny.
The farmers wife heard the commotion, and ran to get her husband. He had heard it, but was still staring at the TV. She wouldn’t rest until he got up and went outside to investigate.
When he arrived in the barn it to a scene of chaos. Tools and hay everywhere. Sparkling dust motes filled the air (some of them were pixies). He looked up at the loft and thought he saw movement. Expecting to find a raccoon or possum, or even a skunk exploring his loft and making a mess, he grabbed up a sharp hoe and then carefully climbed the ladder.
The pixies giggled and started chasing each other under the thick layer of hay, just enough motion to keep the old farmer hearing it and catching a glimpse now and then (humans can’t really see pixies – except some of them do) so that he followed and followed, until they got him to the high door right near the top of the barn – and facing Sunshines pasture.
The farmer sighed and leaned on the door, looking out across his fallow fields. He saw a bright spark of gold – Sunshine! Sadly, he smiled at the pony and the little girl he could just barely see. He could tell her face was buried in the ponies mane. The farmer remembered how his sister told her pony all her secrets when she was young. His wife had told him all about her pony, too. He wanted to buy a pony for his grandchildren, but his children had moved away. Yes, a pretty gold pony like Sunshine would have been welcome.
He couldn’t have told you why, but he decided to walk down and say hello to Sunshine and his girl. The pixies danced around his head, creating a cool breeze and spreading pixie dust so that everything became brighter to his eyes. The fields greener, the pony golder, the little girl winsome despite her tears. Sobbing, April told the farmer she was going to lose her pony, and why. His heart touched, he made a quick decision, a promise, and then walked home to tell his wife that soon they would have a new guest at the farm.
A beautiful golden pony named Sunshine. And his girl April would be visiting as often as she was able. He knew his wife would be happy to hear her quick laughter and light feet dashing around their house, and he knew just how to take care of a pretty pony.
Emerald, Sapphire and Ruby looked at each other and smiled. There, another task done! Weren’t they going to a party?
Written in – no kidding – 30 minutes. 1480 words, no editing as I’m in a bit of a rush today. Payday and working later.
Flash Fiction #2
Neva shuddered as the cold water of the shower hit her skin like a dance of minute needles vibrating across her shoulders then running down her back in steadily warming streams until the pool around her feet was actually hot. Leaning her head back into the shower so the water hit her face and tangled in her long, blond wavy hair helped, but only a little. With a sigh, she turned the cold water off and reached for one of her big, fluffy bath sheets.
The soft, warm terry was a comfort for only a moment before it began again. An insistent worrying beneath her skin, as if a million microscopic bugs were rushing up and down in her skin, beneath the surface yet quite individually distinct to the touch as if running along avenues and hallways made up from a second surface beneath the skin. It was an unbearable sensation, yet she had been bearing it for months now.
Neva had gone to her doctor at first. He was a kind, gentle man who had been treating her general ills, aches and pains for most of her adult life. She loved his benevolent brown eyes and the compassionate way his soft hands soothed her as he explored her body so very politely in an exam. The doctor listened to her list of odd woes and willies and asked about her periods.
Never regular, her menses now showed up twice in one month, and then disappeared for six months. She was too hot, then too cold. At night she would wake up in bedclothes soaked with her own sweat. Her breasts ached until she was sure it had to be cancer or some other terrible nameless thing. Worst of all, sometimes she couldn’t remember something for more than a minute. She would arrive in the kitchen with no idea of what she had been seeking there. Look up a phone number, and then have to look it up again before she could dial it on the phone. And then there was this horrible skin sensation. At first it was intermittent, lasting only a few minutes. Gradually it became a constant low-level irritation, occasionally peaking to such a point she would desperately seek relief of any kind.
The doctor smiled and nodded, and nodded some more. Then explained to Neva that this was all perfectly natural and normal for a woman of her age. “It is called menopause, or the change of life”, he told her in his calm voice. A prescription for estrogen and a counseling for patience until this passes was all he had to offer.
Neva filled the prescription and went home vaguely dissatisfied. When she shared the news with her Wednesday night quilting club she was deluged with all sorts of folk remedies, natural cures, and more suggestions and, inevitably, a wise nodding of heads and assurance that this would all pass in time.
The first time she took the estrogen, she was taken with a terrible fit of vomiting that lasted for hours. When she called the doctors office they promised her it couldn’t be the hormone – she must have gotten something bad to eat. The next day it was the same, only the vomiting was followed by diarrhea. Again she called, and was advised to go to the emergency room and be checked for food poisoning, but definitely to continue to take the estrogen – especially since her complaints about hot and cold flashes, and this endless itching sensation under her skin remained the same.
A day wasted in emergency, squirming in discomfort, alternately shivering and sweating and always, always the itching – and now, of course, rushing to the bathroom every few minutes – gave Neva no satisfaction. The doctor on call shrugged, and the nurses seemed almost angry with her for wasting their time when they had real emergencies to deal with, such as the child who had somehow gotten a glass sliver in his eye doing some sort of hobby, or the man who fell off his boat while getting it on the trailer and sprained his ankle. Neva slung home feeling as if she had somehow done something wrong.
Just as an experiment, she stopped taking the estrogen. All the vomiting and nasty stomach things stopped, although the hot and cold flashes, the soreness, and most of all the awful prick prick pricking of her skin came back even worse than before. Neva tried all the folk remedies, the natural cures, the homeopathic tinctures, vitamins, and long soaks with the finest bath oils made. A few things helped a little, or at least, she thought they did.
Then she began to swell. Her entire body seemed to grow rounder and rounder. Her skin seemed taut, and had a whitish glow. Her face became puffy and blotchy pink and white until she called the girls and excused herself from quilting club meetings because she couldn’t bear for anyone to see her. Everything seemed scratchy to her increasingly sensitive skin and she wound up living in a big silk muumuu because she couldn’t fit into anything else, and anyway she couldn’t bear anything other than the lightest whisper of silken fabric on her skin. And then her hair, her long beautiful hair, began falling out by the handful.
She called the doctors office. But when she told the nurse that she had stopped taking the estrogen, the nurse got huffy and told her that if she did not follow the doctor’s instructions, then of course she must expect the sensations to get worse. When Neva mentioned the home remedies to her, the nurse got angry and told Neva that perhaps she should go back to her witch doctor before hanging up.
And still that sensation continued, worse all the time. She would pace and pace for hours, unable to concentrate on anything – music, TV, a book. A drink, a bit of rum or whisky, would seem to turn it down for a few minutes, as if the little bugs got drunk and sleepy. Neva began going days without sleep, then sleeping twelve or fourteen hours or more at a time – waking soaked in sweat. She went out once – only because she had concluded that silk sheets might help her sleep and she had to buy some. The young cashier at the store looked at her in her big silk muumuu, her blotchy face and ragged hair and smiled.
“My mother got just like that. Don’t you worry – it all goes away eventually.” The bright young thing said, and then turned her head away and giggled.
Neva was ashamed, and furious.
She went home and spread the silk sheets on her bed. They shone at her invitingly – white and silver like ice. Neva undressed and had her shower before slipping thankfully between the beautiful sheets. For a moment, even that buzzing sensation, that feeling that she didn’t belong in her skin, ceased completely. She sighed and rolled up in the top sheet like a cocoon before sliding into blissful sleep. For only a second before she slipped away she could have sworn that suddenly the awful prickling itch started again before sleep sucked her down into nothingness.
She woke up only once, feeling as if she were wet all over. Neva sighed, night sweats again, she thought. But it didn’t quite feel like that. More like a soothing lotion had been somehow poured over her, between her and the slick, cool sheets. She couldn’t escape the soft sensation of sleep and dozed off again.
Neva woke. Without opening her eyes, she knew something amazing must have happened. The air smelled sweeter. She felt like herself again – but even better. As if she had somehow been born again – a younger Neva, with a strong, beautiful body and perfect skin. She smiled, and opened her eyes. Sunlight bathed the room. The silk sheets were puddled around her feet.
Her feet! No longer swollen, they seemed longer, lighter boned, the skin perfectly smooth and pure white with the faintest glow about them. As Neva sat up in shock, she felt the strangest sensation. As if she had…
WINGS! Twisting and turning her head she could only see glimpses of smooth whiteness with an iridescent rainbow gleam. Neva leapt up from the bed and felt like she might just fly up to the ceiling, her body was as light as a bundle of sticks and perfect – oh, how perfect! She ran to the mirror on her toes and was astounded by what she saw.
She was slender, more slender than she had ever been, and her skin was a glowing flawless milky white. Her hair was as glorious as it had been in her little girl days, flowing to her waist. Instead of being blond, it was snowy white. Neva took a deep breath and turned sideways. She let the air out in a sigh. Beautiful, iridescent white butterfly wings emerged from between her shoulder blades. She experimented for a few moments, learning how to flex and flutter them.
Turning from the mirror, Neva regarded the room she had retreated to hide herself in who knows how long ago. The sad silk muumuu hung from the edge of a door. Big enough to hold an elephant it looked now. The silk sheets were tangled and musty. The TV droned on the shopping channel. The window beckoned her.
She drew the heavy curtains open on a perfect spring day. The dewdrops shone brighter, the flowers smelled sweeter, the sky – the sky called to her. Neva flexed her new wings. Smiled. And flew out into the day.
Written in just over an hour (forgot to check the time) 1600 words, rough edited




