Archive | Short Stories RSS feed for this section

Evening Storytime

2 Mar

Well, lovely readers, I think it’s time for an evening story. I sure could use one. A simple story. You know, the kind that you tell little kids. The kind that don’t sound scary, the kind that’ll make ’em laugh, but also the kind that when they remember that bedtime story again when they’re older, will give them a few moments pause. Will make them sit down and think. About whether there was maybe more to that story than they had caught onto at first.

That whatever they decide, at least it will have made them wonder.

So, a story for you this evening, lovely readers. A story called “Ice Cream Cone.”

ice cream cone

Ice Cream Cone

“Sue! Sue, hurry up!”

“I’m coming! I’m coming!” Sue’s voice ricocheted down the stairs at out the front door to the porch. I shuffled my feet on the wood planks, swung the creaky porch door back and forth. Swung it back and forth again. Still bored.

Grown-ups always take so long to go anywhere.

“Suuue!” I called up the stairs again.

“Hold your livestock, I’m coming!” Sue shouted down the stairs, clanging down each step in her steel-toed boots.

I held the door open for her as she bustled out. “Livestock?” I asked, curious. “Why livestock?”

“Oh, you think I should have said horses?” Sue locked the door after us. She looked down at me with her big, brassy face of loudness. “What if people don’t have horses? Don’t you think that’s a mite insensitive?”

I bit my lip and tried not to laugh. Sue was making her funny face again, the one where her eyebrows went all wiggly and her eyes got big and her voice got all squeaky and indignant. “But Aunt Sue,” I skipped so that I would be fast enough to keep up with her. Mama says that I have long legs for being only eight, but Sue’s legs have always been longest, ever since I can remember. Sue told me it’s her job to keep astride of everyone, she has to, so that’s why her steps are so big.

“But Aunt Sue, what about people who don’t have any animals? What if they don’t have cattle or sheep either?”

“Eh, little miss,” Sue stopped and bent down so that her heels propped up and her knees jutted out and her face was on the same level as mine. She reached out one of her hands, all rough from life’s work, she says, and brushed a stray piece of hair back from my face. She cupped both her hands around my face, the way she does when she’s trying to tell me something real important. “What about the people who don’t have any animals? That’s a good question, innit, little miss?”

I nodded. I didn’t know what Aunt Sue wanted me to say, I don’t a lot of times, so I just nodded and tried to look real serious, like I always do when I don’t know what Aunt Sue wants me to say, and she nodded back like always, ‘cause me nodding is good enough for her. She tells me to think about it. I don’t know why. Maybe one day she’ll ask me again, and then I’ll have an answer for her. Maybe. Mama usually just gets real quiet when I ask her if I should, and she just says I should try.

Aunt Sue was big-striding again. I skipped faster to catch up. Aunt Sue looked down at me, now she’s the one who’s all curious. “Little miss,” Aunt Sue always calls me little miss, not my name like Mama and Pa do, but I don’t mind because it’s special, “how come, little miss, you got so much energy like that? All the time?”

“Um,” I looked down at my feet, “Mama says it’s because I eat so much ice cream. But I like ice cream, so I don’t mind.”

“Well, I sure could use some energy.”

I looked up at Aunt Sue and made a face. Sometimes she didn’t seem to realize the obvious things. “Well,” I said, trying to sound like Aunt Sue did, “then you should eat an ice cream cone, of course.”

Aunt Sue stopped. She looked down at me and smiled, then opened her mouth and threw back her head and made a big belting laugh, like Papa sometimes does.

Me, I don’t know what was so funny.

The Electric Toaster Support Group

18 Nov

In which I completely ignore all the homework I’m behind on, and write a good ol’ fashioned short story dedicated to Miss Katherine Fritz of the fantastic “I Am Begging My Mother Not To Read This Blog,” who came up with this title.

“It just… pops out at me! Every time! I can never expect it!” Sadie dropped her head into her hands, stifling a sob. Around her, the group nodded knowingly. One member reached out and patted Sadie on the back. She looked up, and there were tears streaming down her cheeks. “I never know when it’s going to happen! I look for patterns, try to anticipate the time, but it’s never the same. I can’t handle all this anxiety, every single day!”

“I burned myself yesterday,” another group member mumbled. He’d pulled his hood up over his head and had his hands stuffed deep into his sweatshirt pockets. Now, he pulled them out to let the group oggle his bandages.

From a chair far away in the circle, a small, flighty voice peeped up. “Why’d you do it, Howard?”

Howard shrugged. “Didn’t really mean to. I just… needed to know when it would be over. I had to get that control back.”

“Well,” a woman’s deep, husky voice slid into the conversation, “Mary and I, we’ve started bringing… implements, if you know what I mean, into our daily routine. Makes it easier to, uh, get things out, without having to worry about putting yourself in too much danger. More structure, more distance.”

The group was silent for a while.

“I don’t know,” the flighty voice again, now a little less tepid, “seems like you’re just trying to ignore the problem, by removing yourself from it. Doesn’t require any physical action on your part. Almost like you’re putting up a wall.”

There was whispering and head nodding and murmuring and head shaking at that. The group leader looked up from her clipboard, finally noticing the din that warned her group might break out of control.

“Celia,” she cut in, “that was some very good insight – if it had been about your experience. Let’s all focus on talking about our own feelings, and not telling other people out theirs, okay?”

“Yes, ma’am,” Celia piped timidly. She grasped the edges of her chair with both hands and slid herself as far back as she could go.

The husky-voiced woman stared at her. “You haven’t even been able to do it at all, have you?” she asked. “At least, not recently. Look at you, all pale and trembling. When was the last time you were actually able to go all the way through, satisfy yourself?”

Celia burst out into tears. “All right!” she wailed. “I admit it! It’s been a year! I just… I couldn’t take it, the waiting and the uncertainty. And sometimes it comes out too hot and then I get all grossed out. I tried adding oils and all that stuff, but nothing helped! By the end, I was so nervous, I just fell apart!”

More sounds came out of Celia’s mouth, but they’d devolved into noises that were more animal than human. The group sat silently on their folding chairs, most of them looking at their hands or feet, some of them displaying a nervous tick or two that only got worse with the increasing tension. But the husky-voiced woman, she got out of her chair, completely ignoring the disapproving look the group leader shot her, and crossed the room to kneel by Celia. She wrapped her arms around the smaller woman.

“Hey honey, it’s going to be okay. I know it’s hard. Why, before Mary and I started our new approach, I could barely take all the build up too. It just takes practice, and finding what works for you. Electric toasters, they don’t have to be so scary.”

Celia sniffled and dragged a mealy tissue from her coat pocket. She blew her nose loudly. “But it’s so hard!” she cried. “You never know when your toast is going to be done, not really! And then it just shoots out, sometimes even lands on the floor if you haven’t calibrated the springs right! And Howard’s right, sometimes, it’s too much! I used to burn myself so often, trying to pull the toast out before it was really done. And even if I managed to get through the toasting alright, the toaster was always there, on the counter, staring at me. And I knew the toast came from it. Butter, olive oil – nothing made it friendlier!” She collapsed back over her knees. “I just don’t know what to do!”

The husky-voiced woman was silent.

The group leader checked her watch. “Well, that’s all for now. I think we’ve had a very productive session today.” The room stirred with the sound of feet shuffling and chair legs scraping against the floor as people started preparing to leave, even as Celia still sobbed under the ministrations of the husky-voiced woman. The group leader seemed unconcerned. “Please remember,” she continued, checking something off on her clipboard, “everything we discuss in the electric toaster support group is confidential. This is a safe, private place for people to move beyond their fears and learn to enjoy toast again. Good luck with breakfast, everyone. I’ll see you all next week.”

The Omniscience Chronicles: Dari and Micah

21 Feb

She shuffled uncomfortably. “Sometimes people have a hard time with me.”

Micah looked at her curiously. “Why?”

“I’m blazingly honest.” She hopped down from the side of his bed. “If you ask me a question, I’m not going to skirt around with niceties. You’re going to get the real answer, whether you wanted it or not.”

“Isn’t that what everybody does?”

Dari burst out laughing. “You actually think that? Micah, wake up. People don’t really want to know what you have to say these days. They want some nice gloss of a response that imparts absolutely no information whatsoever so they can feel good about acknowledging you and then move on with their life with as little disruption as possible.”

“Oh.”

“I’m sorry,” Dari’s voice softened. She put a hand on Micah’s shoulder. “It’s that blazingly honest thing again. I don’t know how to how to account for people’s sensitivities. I kind of just bowl you right over.”

Micah shook his head. “My fault for being so naïve,” he said gruffly.

Dari looked away. Her eyes dropped to the ground. “Naïveté isn’t so regrettable,” she said quietly. “Better than knowing everything and just walking around jaded all the time.”

Micah helped her snap her bra back on. “Life’s ruined for you, isn’t it?”

She pulled up her skirt and tugged at the snagged zipper. “Pretty much. Humans aren’t supposed to know all things, Micah. Takes the wonder out of everything. Well, just about everything…” She slipped her t-shirt over her head and tugged it down around her waist.

Micah paused where he was buttoning his jeans back together. “That’s why you do this, isn’t it? It’s the only thing you have left. Raw experience.”

Dari nodded silently. “Even then, knowing exactly how my biology is going to respond to each manipulation… there’s no element of surprise. Expectation reduced down to an algorithm… takes the intimacy out of it. And my body knows it, too. My senses are starting to dull. My dopamine receptors are slowly being pruned away, never being able to register more reward than anticipated, because my anticipations are always correct. I’m slowly being stripped of my ability to register pleasure.” Dari laughed darkly. “And where will that leave me? A cynical old maid who knows too much for her own good.”

Micah looked at her bashfully. “I’d still like you.”

Dari laughed again. “No you wouldn’t. You only think you would. Eventually you’d learn to spurn me. You’re a poet, Micah. The flowery kind. You walk around finding lovely images to compose into attempts at truth. And while you get halfway there, you stop short and end up still firmly within the bounds of falsity. You delude yourself into believing in your own constructions, making you one of the billions living on this planet who never really understand anything. And you know that I’d never stop pointing that out to you, either, because you, with your own strange compulsions, can never stop asking me what I think. No, Micah. You’d come to hate me.”

“Gee, thanks for the compliment. Glad you have such faith in people.”

“Faith,” Dari spat out the word as if it left a bad taste in her mouth. “What use have I for faith?”

Micah stared at her closely. Then, slowly, realization dawned on his face. “They didn’t give you a choice, did they?”

Dari plopped back down onto the bed. “No, they didn’t. I was a class-5 citizen, Micah. Experimental stock, only one step above shark bait. And I’m a girl. Our crop was short on females, which made me a valuable commodity. Not to be wasted on just any scientific venture. No, I was allowed no say in what experiment I went to. I was slotted for a top-priority religio-scientific assay from birth.”

“The Omniscience question.”

Dari nodded. “Scientists have long since accepted that humans are made in the image of God. Ultimate goodness, generosity of Optimized Altruism, the ability to tolerate paradoxes – all that shit has already been proven as Enhanceable Qualities of the Almighty.” Micah looked at her quizzically. Dari rolled her eyes. “Characteristics of God present in humans as a result of the whole “made in His image” deal that we can draw out and maximize as a part of our general personalities, idiot. Honestly, don’t you keep up with current events?” Without waiting for answer – given that she already knew it- Dari went on, “Anyways, in recent centuries, the Priesthood of Logical Ends has been getting rather ambitious. The PLE figured that if we could master some of the Almighty’s qualities, then shouldn’t we be able to master all of them, even the ones formerly thought to be reserved only for the Big Guy himself?”

Micah nodded slowly, understanding. “Hence the Omniscience project.”

“The Omnipresence project actually came first,” Dari bubbled, “but most people don’t know about that one because it ended up being a big flop. Turns out we’re too tied to our matter, in this life at least, for us to be too many places at once. Quarks apparently don’t take too kindly to being cut in half, even if only momentarily. I hear the snap that happens when your matter realizes it’s been Twinned and promptly fuses itself back together is highly unpleasant. Test subjects kept dying of pain.” Dari chewed on her lip and looked thoughtful for a moment. “But if they could figure out how to reconcile a few more digits of the Existence Coefficient with the remainder of the Quotient of Perceived Momentum, they might have it… Anyhoo, doesn’t matter,” Dari said brightly. “The PLE never ends up figuring it out. They pray very hard about it for a couple of dedicated decades and then decide that it’s impossible.”

Micah stared at her for a moment, too stunned to say anything. He considered asking another question and then thought the better of it.

Dari giggled. “Anyways,” she said, snatching her sweater off the ground, “I should be going.”

Micah leaned over and kissed her deeply on the neck. “Dari,” he murmured, wrapping his arms around her so she couldn’t leave, “there is a God then?”

Dari leaned into his shoulder. “Of course, stupid.”

Micah thought very hard. He knew he could only keep her there for so long. “Why does he let bad things happen?”

Dari squirmed. “Because.”

“Because why?”

“No,” Dari shifted so she was facing him. “That’s all there is. Just – because.” Micah raised an eyebrow at her, waiting. “Look,” she said, annoyed, “just because I know everything doesn’t mean I understand it.” She wriggled her way out of his arms. “I really have to go now.”

She turned to leave but Micah caught her by the hand. She whipped around, but there was something in the way that Micah was looking at her that stayed her tongue. He met her eyes and held them in his steady gaze.

“Dari,” Micah’s voice broke as he said the word. “Dari, why you?”

Dari didn’t say anything. Instead, she only shook her head sadly, leaned in close and silently kissed Micah on the cheek. Micah let go of her hand. Dari walked quickly towards the door. She was just reaching for the door handle when Micah called out to her again.

“Dari,” he said her name gently, so gently, “what’s the answer?

Dari turned and stared at him. “Micah… there isn’t one.”

The Dashing Duel

15 Feb
Illustration (and inspiration for the story) by Elliot Christian

Illustration (and inspiration for the story) by Elliot Christian

Somebody was following him. He could smell it.

Mr. Dashing looked up from his pocket watch and readjusted his monocle. The street behind him came back into view, but it was of no consequence. His whiskers were already quivering, a sure confirmation of its presence.

But what was it? That was the question, that was. Mr. Dashing sniffed deeply. Now let’s see, he thought to himself. There was the somber old odor of a dusty study, a faint tang belying last evening’s cigar, and – Mr. Dashing wriggled his nose around to better adjust the smell into the crevices of his nostrils – yes, yes he did distinctly detect the musky, minty signature of a well-bred line of catnip.

Blast it all! He was being followed by a cat.

Involuntarily, Mr. Dashing’s leathery black lips pulled back into a snarl and a low growl rolled out through his bared teeth. Suddenly, Mr. Dashing felt the uncomfortable restraint of his purple pinstripe suit – really quite dapper, if he did say so himself – as his hackles raised. His shoulders hunched, making his suit groan a little at the seams.

A raspy laugh hissed over the cobblestones. “Honestly, Dashing,” the laugh’s owner, still snickering, stepped out from behind a boxwood. “I would have thought that you’d have gotten those instincts of yours under control by now. You’ve been in Parliament for how long? And yet still so primal.”

Mr. Dashing swallowed down a bark and resituated his suit with a quick shake. Mr. Dashing cleared his throat and did an admirable job of making it look like an unexpected cough. “Trapper,” he acknowledged the illustrious feline with a jerk of his head. “The blame is not entirely mine, you know. What’s to be expected of a fellow when he’s been as good as stalked, I ask you?” Mr. Dashing glared down the bridge of his long nose at his opposition. He noted with some satisfaction that Trapper’s coat was beginning to fray around the cuffs, and the tails were not entirely properly starched. Must have downgraded his help; and that bespoke a blow to bloke’s pocket change. Mr. Dashing could not say he wasn’t pleased.

Lord Trapper’s green eyes narrowed on Dashing’s gaze. Lightning indignation flashed behind the cat’s eyes. Quickly, Trapper clasped his hands behind his back, well out of sight of Mr. Dashing’s appraisal.

“Stalked, you say?” Trapper’s voice arched slightly. “Really, Dashing, getting a bit paranoid in your old age, aren’t you?”

“Oh no,” Mr. Dashing rapped his cane lightly on the cobblestones and watched with satisfaction as Trapper flinched. “I have so few worries these days, Lord Trapper. My rear has settled into its Commons seat quite comfortably, thank you. But I do say, old chap, isn’t yours in danger of being thrust with a kick out of doors? I hear that gentleman club of yours up in the House of Lords is getting a bit crowded these days. Weeding out the old fogies, aren’t they? Or how did they put it… ‘Kindly requesting that those who can no longer hold their own please resign or else will be asked to leave,’ wasn’t it?”

Trapper shuffled uncomfortably. “Something like that,” he muttered.

“I dare say,” Mr. Dashing toed his line carefully, “you’ll be next for the vote.” Dashing batted his eyes innocently.

The tips of Lord Trapper’s whiskers twinged. His furry brow plunged deep into a frown. “Soon, yes,” he grudged bluntly.

Mr. Dashing tutted. Boldly, he reached out a paw and patted Lord Trapper on the shoulder. “Poor bloke.”

Thwap! Dashing heard it before he felt it. Trapper’s swipe across Dashing’s face left a trail of stinging gashes where the lord’s claws had dug in. And – Dashing looked around with some surprise – the blow had apparently knocked him off his feet, given the sudden proximity of the cobblestones to his now-bleeding nose. Well, he should have expected it, really. Trapper had always been known as a short fuse.

But then again, so had he.

Mr. Dashing stood up, brushed himself off, and gingerly patted himself about the cheek. Warm, sticky blood rushed over his fingers. Inside himself, he felt the heat rise.

“Come now, Lord Trapper,” Dashing growled, each word a cut of cold, sharp precision, “blows are the common folk’s prerogative. And surely,” he took a step closer towards the feline, “you would not tempt one whose duty it is to be their representative?”

“The common folk be damned,” Trapper hissed, “when it comes to respecting their superiors.”

“Superiors?” Dashing barked. “Getting a little big for your britches there, Trapper.  As I see it, I’m made of stronger stuff than you. The House of Commons is for real men, not for ninnies who must hide behind their daddy’s money because they haven’t done anything to merit an ounce of respect.” Dashing’s gaze narrowed. He began pacing circles around Trapper. “But,” he whispered in Trapper’s ear, “you don’t even have that now, do you? What did you do, Trapper? Lose it all to panties at the whoring house?”

He was ready for it this time. Trapper’s paw lashed out – this time for a very low blow indeed – but Mr. Dashing caught it before it hit its mark and twisted the lord’s arm into a very inconvenient angle. With a single fluid motion, Dashing used his free hand to scruff the cat just at the base of his neck. Trapper went stiff.

“Now, now,” Dashing chuckled darkly, “I’ll have none of that.” He yanked Trapper’s arm a little bit tighter. The lord squirmed deliciously. “You know,” Dashing yanked again and felt Trapper’s shoulder slip a little out of its socket. The cat yowled sharply. “I could turn you into mincemeat in three seconds. I’ve got teeth for a reason, Trapper. And as you said, I am rather primal.” Under Dashing’s grasp, the feline began to shake. The cat’s tongue might have been venomous, but his audacity rested entirely within the bounds of class advantage.

And Dashing never really had cared much for social convention.

Trapper was murmuring something. “What’s that?” Dashing leaned in closer, but the cat’s words only resolved into broken yelps and whines. Dashing sniggered. “Pleas for mercy?” he scoffed. “Really, Trapper I thought you had more of a spine than that.” Trapper’s splutters only became more desperate. Dashing rolled his eyes. Wrinkling his nose in distaste, he tossed Trapper onto the street. The cat landed limply in the road with a dull thud. Dashing prodded him with his foot.

“Go on now,” he sighed. “Get up before some carriage comes and runs you over.”

Lord Trapper scrambled to his feet. His eyes narrowed. “You’re a fool to let me go,” he hissed. “I can ruin you.”

Dashing threw his head back and laughed. “What, with falsehoods and bribery as your only barbs? You may have the purse on your side, Trapper, but I have the people.”

“The people? The people are fickle. They will not stand behind you long when your name bears a scandal.”

“Ay? And what scandal would that be? There is no smear so great that my honor cannot withstand it.”

A sly smile curled Lord Trapper’s mouth upwards. “Oh, that may be so, my dear Dashing, that may be so. But what about that young slip of a thing you’ve sired – Georgina, I believe? Her white purity is not so uneasily stained. It would be no trouble at all to pay one of my stable boys to drop quite a startling slip of the tongue about Georgina’s, shall we say, proclivities on his way through the public square. I of course would punish him accordingly for his own intemperate advances once the rumor came round to my ears, but honestly, for Georgina’s part, so shocking!”

“Don’t,” Dashing growled murderously, “you dare touch my Georgina.”

Trapper raised an eyebrow. “But really, my good sir, I am sure that I shall have no idea what you are talking about… Young people do make such incautious errors these days, there’s no need to go pointing fingers -”

Trapper’s last word choked back down into his throat – which very suddenly found itself held delicately between Dashing’s highly toothed jaws. Trapper held himself very, very still.

“Dashing…”

“I said,” Mr. Dashing mumbled through Trapper’s fur, “to leave Georgina out of this.” He let his bite sink closer towards Trapper’s trachea. In an instant he was salivating. Hungrily, he licked the nape of Trapper’s neck. Trapper gulped.

“I may have been a gutter pup,” Dashing said lowly, “but do not for one second forget that I am also a hound of hell. I am not above revenge, Trapper. If I smell so much as a hair of a threat coming from your direction, I will hunt you down. I will find you. And, my dear Lord Trapper, you most certainly do not want to be found.”

Out of the corner of his eye, Dashing caught sight of a blue-clad figure turning the corner onto their avenue. Quickly, he released Lord Trapper. The cat stumbled back a few steps, rubbing his neck.

“Oy! You there!” The policeman walked up to the pair. “Wot ‘ave we got ‘ere?”

Mr. Dashing leveled gazes with Lord Trapper. “Nothing,” the cat said slowly. “It’s nothing.”

“Nothing at all,” Dashing echoed lightly.

The policeman looked from one to the other suspiciously. “Well… alright then! Don’t be standin’ there so long. Git movin’, the both of ya!”

“With pleasure,” Mr. Dashing said, linking arms with the incredibly ruffled Lord Trapper. “Come along, my good sir.” Trapper was too dazed to resist. Dashing pulled him around the next corner. Once out of sight, Dashing quickly disentangled his limb. He shuddered with repulsion.

“Strolling with a Lord,” he muttered. “How perfectly unnatural.” Beside him, Lord Trapper hadn’t moved. Mr. Dashing looked at him with surprise. “What are you doing still standing there? Go on now! Don’t you have a wig to powder or something?”

“I…”

Mr. Dashing replaced his monocle and stared down the bridge of his nose at the lord. “Yes?”

Lord Trapper gulped. Opened his mouth Shut it. Shook his head.

“What’s the matter?” Mr. Dashing raised an eyebrow at him. “Cat got your tongue?”

Lord Trapper made a face. “Clever,” he muttered. “You’re very clever, Mr. Dashing. It will serve you well in the Commons.” Trapper nodded to Dashing. “Good day.” He walked away.

“Trapper!” Dashing called him back. The lord turned around and looked at his opponent wearily. Dashing locked eyes with Trapper.

“Good luck.”

On Death

7 Jan

Happy Monday! Mondays need more presents. I think it would make them nicer.

So, here’s a present for you all. It’s a short story I’v written about a very flamboyant alien and a very serious question. Hope you enjoy!

 

 

On Death

It was an odd place, this earth. Shuttles going in and out on a daily basis to keep the population at equilibrium. Missions forged weekly to find new frontiers to settle. Science slowed to a near standstill, only the one regulation-mandated study coming out per year. Art had been all but abandoned. With immortality comes time, was the motto here. There would be time for discovery later. If you lost your creativity, you had forever to find it again. The most important thing, they said, had already been found. The thing on which hinged everything.

Eternal life.

But he was here on a sight-seeing trip, a cultural expedition to become acquainted with this new culture that had reached the prime of its life (though with its infinite extent, who could really judge what phase it was in?). It was an anthropological examination for his human studies class. Those odd, four-limbed creatures were just so endearing, he couldn’t have passed up an opportunity to rub one of his many elbows with them. They were just so curious, such small creatures holding such a large key to the universe. And it was still so unwieldy to them, all these millennia later. Humans were a cute species. So funny.

“Excuse me,” he asked a man rushing by, “what have you done today?”

The man looked at him as if – well, in colloquial terms, as if he were an alien – and just kept hurrying by.

“Hmph,” he harrumphed to himself. Rude.

He kept walking through the terminal, passing up all the busy bodies hustling from place to place dragging their infernal roller luggage behind. You’d think that immortal beings would be more aware of where their supplementary appendages were going, instead of letting them fly all over the place, tripping up poor innocent “aliens” like himself who happened to have more than two appendages for locomotion. Honestly. These people’s fountain of youth certainly hadn’t made them any less crass. You’d think, having all the time in the worlds, they’d slow down at some point…

“Oomph!” he spluttered, nearly falling flatly onto his primary nose. Quickly recovering, he whipped around, expecting to see an offending roller bag hurtling off into the crowed after its master, leaving no hope of an apology.

You can imagine his surprise when he was confronted with a very gangly, very scrawny, very bearded old man sitting squarely on the floor in front of him.

“Oh!” he exclaimed. “My apologies!”

The old man looked up at him with glazed eyes. They locked gazes for a moment, but then the old man merely looked back down at the floor and shrugged.

“No bother.”

Finally! He was thrilled. Someone who would talk to him! He plopped down on the floor next to the aged human.

“Hello!” he said brightly. “May I talk to you?”

Some of the haze cleared from the old man’s eyes and he looked at his visitor curiously. “I suppose.”

“Fantastic!” He rummaged in his backpack (a much more sensible invention, really) for his list of questions. “Here we go!” He pulled out the much-crumpled piece of paper and a pen (tragically, already showing signs of leaking). “Let’s see,” he thumbed down the list, searching for the best question question to open with. “Aha! I know. Tell me, have you truly loved?”

The old man chuckled, but there was pain in the rasp. “Oh, I’ve loved, my boy. I’ve loved and loved again.”

He leaned in closer. “But,” he said in a conspiratorial whisper, “have you ever really loved?”

The old man closed his eyes. His voice fell low. “Her name was Ally.”

“I see,” he said, scribbling the name down on his paper. “Where is she now?”

The man didn’t answer for a moment. He was silent so long that his visitor looked up from his crumpled piece of paper and promptly pretended not to notice the tears streaming down the old man’s face.

“She died.”

“Oh,” he gulped. “But I thought…”

“Yes, yes,” the old man waved a hand at him impatiently. Ire creeped into his voice. “But she didn’t want it.”

He fidgeted with his paper nervously. “Okay, then,” he muttered. “Next question, next question… let’s see… oh!” He looked at the old man quizzically. “If you don’t mind me asking,” he tried, politely as possible, “why, ahem, why did you let yourself grow old? Seems everybody else around here just keeps regenerating themselves. You know, the eternal youth thing.”

“Oh, I’ve had my fair share of re-youthing,” the old man nodded slowly. “I’ve been a strapping young boy more times than I can count. Eventually, the repetition of it all just… got old. Just because I could grow young again did not mean that I could remake myself. Each time I was still left with all my limitations, all my faults. Infinite life does not make for infinite abilities, my son.”

“Oh.” He ran over his sheet of questions again and again, but none of them seemed to fit anymore. Suddenly, he and, foregoing his human studies professor’s instructions about how to properly go about questions, asked one not on his list. “Then why are you still here?”

“I do not know whether I have loved enough, laughed enough, learned enough, lived enough,” the man said frantically. “How can I ever end things before I know that I have completed myself? The decision has been left to me, deigning my life finished. But what if I have missed something? I can’t go out yet. I am plagued by the constant suspicion that there is something more, and that I have not found it yet. I have lived my life over and over again. I am bored of this existence. I am tired. And yet despite this emptiness in me, I have searched this life again and again, and have come to the conclusion that what I feel must be wrong, for there is nothing left. That this must be all there is to life, in the end, this hole. How can I die, if this is all that’s left?” The man fell silent.

He looked at the old man. Strange, this human’s thinking pattern. He was feeling very “alien” right now indeed.

He cleared his throat. “But,” he said in as small, unobtrusive a voice as he could manage, “you haven’t found life’s end.” The old man looked up at him, curiosity returning to his old eyes.

“Yes?”

“Well,” he said, trying not to sound too matter-of-fact, “if you never die, how will you know for sure whether there’s ever anything else?”

The old man was silent for a long while. Finally he looked up and met his visitor’s gaze again.

“I don’t know, my boy. I don’t know.”

Love With a Twist

26 Dec

love with a twist

A Proposal of Ink, the short story I contributed to Alicia Airey’s anthology Love With a Twist, is now available through Amazon Kindle!

Get Love With a Twist now!