A Story In
100 Words
Literature in Tiny Bursts.
You are invited to the wonderful world of microfiction. Whether you’re a reader, a writer, or one of our future robot overlords, welcome! A Story In 100 Words is a community of literature enthusiasts no matter the length, but we have a special predilection for narratives exactly 100 words in length.
Stop doomscrolling and start fiction browsing.
Night Shift
When the wind blew really hard all the derricks had to be towed in off the lake. Usually it chased us off around ten. So my shift began with the promise of a shutdown. I would gather up the rangemen to go out in the skiff anyway, just to make a showing. I was home by one and could listen to the wind howl in my basement apartment till I fell asleep. The next night would be awful with me tired and everything. You should never get out of that night shift rhythm, no matter how good the wind sounds.
From Guest Contributor Paul Smith
Resistance
The Nazis arrived in Poland stomping down the street showing their authority. My mother was in the kitchen cooking dinner, the smell of vegetables wafting in the air, and my father had the radio on listening to the broadcast of the invasion. I sat next to him and stared out the window. For no apparent reason, one of the soldiers kicked a man that stood on the sidewalk with I’m assuming his young daughter. The girl screamed when the man collapsed in a heap. Was this the world now? No one was safe.
The next day I joined the resistance.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
So Lonely
Enlo's shallow breaths barely inhaled enough oxygen to maintain consciousness as he summited. Another goal accomplished. He surveyed the crests of the tallest mountains searching for some meaning to it all.
His assistant had urged he take a selfie, but he decided a photograph would only remind him of the futility. This expedition was meant to refresh him. All he felt was the impotence of the air around him.
Enlo Tuffin was the richest man in the world, and surely the unhappiest.
He started his descent. Nothing left but to punish the world for the misery it had brought him.
Demolition
He passed the tax building, now being slowly demolished.
“Everything’s done online these days,” he thought bitterly.
He’d been a manager there, running his section with the efficiency of a concentration camp commandant.
“Got any spare change?” asked one of a group of teenagers watching the demolition.
Giving them an evil stare, he walked on.
“Goddam!” The beer can struck him on the back of the head.
“Fuck off and die, you old fart!” he heard as they ran off laughing.
He looked at the shell of the building for a while.
Soon – like him – it would be gone forever.
From Guest Contributor Ian Fletcher
The Road To Heaven Is Paved With Broken Glass
George's wait--a few moments or a million years, it's difficult to tell the difference--comes to an end as his number is called. The angel at his window looks over his paperwork perfunctorily before giving his folder the rubber stamp.
"You'll need to wait in Limbo. We'll alert you when a final decision has been made."
"How long's that going to take?"
His angel just shrugged. "You do know this is the most exclusive club in the entire universe. Only the best people get in."
"But I was really good."
"Being good isn't enough. Like I said, we're exclusive."
Transient
Leaving is always hard, especially when you think you’ve finally found a place to settle. Among the things I’ll miss about this world and its nascent civilisation are the secret songs hummed by pylons, and the brooding silences of daytime streetlights. Perhaps its denizens will evolve someday to not need that artificial interconnectedness that’s so important to them, but I won’t be around to find out. My time, like theirs, has expired: the Vsanic are here, camouflaged, probing, scouting the planet, and I, a fugitive from their cold, imperial justice, must leave before they find me. Time to run, again.
From Guest Contributor Alastair Millar
Ghastly Ghosts
When I took the cashier job, it wasn’t explained to me that I’d be working with the supernatural. I didn’t abhor spirits, but those ghastly ghosts were frustrating. When I’d enter an amount in the computer, it deleted, and the customers would get angry at the slow checkout. So, I had another chat with the boss, and he told me he dealt with it, and if I couldn’t, then I should quit.
The next day, a sign on the door read: “STORE CLOSED DUE TO PESTS.” When I looked through the window, boxes of ant traps danced in the aisles.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
Pilgrimage
Sage pushed up her visor and glared into the distance. Through the haze and the light, she could just make out the temple nestled into the gulch at the end of the valley. She registered no sign of life between here and her destination.
After such a long journey, she was too exhausted, both mentally and physically, to truly take in her surroundings or reflect on the implications of her pilgrimage nearing its end.
Sage had traveled one hundred light years to get to this planet. Until this moment, she had not given any thought to what would come next.
Out Of Time
Christopher ran as fast as possible to the station. Typical, leaving it to the last minute.
He kept hoping Brian would say something first. Even if it wasn't I'm sorry, the simple act of reaching out would have encouraged Christopher to admit the accusations had been out of line. He can't help his sensitive heart, and sometimes Brian was the victim.
Now Brian is on the train to Boston. Now Brian is marrying the ex he'd left for Christopher. Now Brian is dead.
The apology will forever go unstated. He will forever be alone. Christopher has fallen out of time.
Sylvia And Mel's Future
Sylvia was at Madame Olga's. The psychic peered into her crystal ball.
“Will Mel make it?”
“There's a chance.”
“His liver's bad. Dr Fruman's taking care of him.”
Mel, Sylvia's ex-husband, was hospitalized. She was at the fortuneteller's for a second opinion.
“Even though it's Fruman, I see Mel pulling through.”
“Really? Do you think a near-death experience will change him?”
“Change?”
“Will I get any support checks Mel owes me?”
“Checks, huh?”
Madame Olga stared intently. Syvia had paid $225 for the ‘Deluxe View’ into the future.
“Madame Olga?”
“I'm looking…”
“Even one lousy check?”
“I'm looking...I'm looking...”
From Guest Contributor David Sydney
Share Your Story
Want to see your story on our website? We’d love to share your work. Click the link below and follow the submission guidelines. Just make sure your story is exactly 100 words.