Archive for Short fiction

When Mavis Married Aaron

When Mavis Kent married Aaron Latimer, she thought she was marrying up. It made sense in a distorted way. Aaron was drop-dead gorgeous, with dark wavy hair, long lean-muscled limbs, and sun-kissed skin. All the other girls wanted him, but Mavis—plain, bookish schoolmarm that she was—nabbed him.

People whispered, “It will never last”, if Mavis heard she ignored them. To her, marriage was forever.

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Apples and Trees

What kind of bullshit was “Take Your Kid to Work” day? Jerry Fry swore that if he ever met the paper-pusher who’d dreamt up that faggoty excuse for a teacher’s holiday, he’d make the prick lick his balls. Lick ‘em after he’d been driving this piece of shit delivery van all day with no air conditioning.

Jerry flicked his smoke out the window and concentrated on the potholes and roadtrash, the chop-shops and brick factories, a low-flying Cessna in the clear blue sky. Anything to avoid looking at the boy in the passenger seat. The sight of Paul made his stomach hurt, the kind of hurt no antacid could touch.

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Mother Nature

Bethany pulled her car into the gas station parking lot and parked it as far as she could from the growing snow drifts. That had been her mistake the last time she had tried this. The tires of her rusting Corsica had caught in a snow bank and she had spun her wheels for several minutes until the cops came for her. It had been an amateur’s mistake, one that she had dreaded relaying to her fellow inmates at Taycheedah, and she had no intention of doing it again. As it was her mother was probably already angry with her for the years of missed visits, and another conviction for Bethany would only change that anger into righteous wrath.

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Load

“A sperm bank?”

Randy Rhoades looked at his brother-in-law as they pulled into the parking lot of a run down strip mall on the outskirts of Detroit.

“It’s a fertility clinic,” Darrell Abbott said.

“What’s the difference?”

“Well, there’s…I mean…just shut up and come on.”

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Shared Losses

There is a dark world you can only get to through love, when you realize you’ve given all you can, and it’s still not enough to hold on to someone. There’s power when you have nothing left to lose.

You think of these things as you walk briskly down the crowded aisles of the store, high heels clicking a warning to those ahead. You pass men, not looking for long enough to catch their eye. You stop a woman who seems to work there and ask her where the ties are kept.

Dark ones. Ties suitable for a funeral.

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Killing Harry

The punk kid slouched against the broken street light on 102nd Street obviously thought I was in the wrong neighborhood. Six years I’ve been in the City, but people still pick me out for a sucker. I guess it’s true what they say, you can take the girl off the farm, but you can’t take the farm out of the girl. Or something like that. It generally works out to my advantage, except in dark alleys.

The kid sticks a hand in the front pocket of his hooded Black Death sweatshirt and pries himself off the pole. “Fancy lady like you,” he leers, “maybe you need some help crossing the street?”

“Look,” I say, “you sure as hell don’t look like a boy scout and I’m really not in the mood.”

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The Kidnap

Coming awake into the darkness of a blindfold was shocking, and not a little disorientating. Jake Burrows could feel his heart pounding right up into his throat, the vibrations of real terror. He swallowed, trying to quell the pulse of it and with several deep breaths its rate did begin to slow.

He caught a grunt of laughter across the floor, and the creak of a chair followed by the heavy movement of someone rising to their feet. A big man, by the sound of it.

“Looks like our guest has finally decided to put in an appearance.”

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Births, Marriages and Deaths

My mother still sends me the local paper.

Every week it arrives on my doormat, even though I’ve not lived in Devon for ten years and almost all of the names mean nothing to me. But this week it was different. There, in Births, Marriages and Deaths, was a name I recognized: Charlie.

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Blackbird

Kevin Markinson was sitting on an old leather couch in the dark-paneled den of his boss’s house, sipping at a shot of Jack Daniel’s. His leg throbbed, which meant he hadn’t had enough to drink yet. He was struggling to pay attention to the old man on the other side of the room.

“I need you to do a job for me.”

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Worth the Chance

“I’ll do anything for you,” he said over the phone.

“You really don’t want to clean my basement, Bradley,” I said. Our first date he insisted I call him Bradley. ”Bradley Humphries,” he’d said, ”not Brad.”

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