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.
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I Alone
Jim, Clark, Alex, and myself lined up before the principal like toy soldiers. We'd grumbled the whole way here, lamenting Grace Johnson's unforgivable sin of tattling. I could tell for the others the complaints masked an underlying horror of what punishments might await. They'd never been in real trouble and us regulars liked to tell stories to bolster our bonafides.
Dr. Wilson lectured us for a few minutes before demanding a confession and apology. I don't know what bravado took hold of me, but I stepped forward.
"I alone threw mud at those girls."
The others nearly cried in relief.
The Park
Since the death of my father, I made it a habit to walk in his favorite park every Saturday, something we always did together. Sometimes we had a catch, until one day his hand slipped, and the ball landed in the lake with a splash, and people chortled and pointed. That’s when I knew his Parkinson’s was getting worse. Soon after, he was unable to do the things he loved, gardening being one of his fondest.
I stood by the lake and listened to the children playing when I saw something float by.
It was the ball from our catch.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
Sand In My Shoes
Time is an abstract concept. Yet the seconds, minutes, and hours are woven into the very fabric of existence just as surely as the matter around us. The matter inside us, for that matter.
Forgive me the pun. It may be the last one I have time for.
Understanding time is an integral part of the universe doesn't make it any more concrete. Time depends on where the observer is located.
My days as a young man passed by so quickly. Now, I look down and there's nothing but sand in my shoes. One breath of wind, and I'm gone.
July 25th
What a disgusting way to look at someone. Like you can not, so you do not. So what are you DOING looking at me if you can not? I can see it not happening for you.
Your reality will not let it happen, so you don’t acknowledgewhat is reflecting in your eyesgo back to what is yoursgo back to what is in front of youlet me slide into the backgroundI am nothingto you nowI am nothingI am the crowdthis strange nothing breathing nothingI am nothingnothingdon’t smiledon’tno
From Guest Contributor Nick LaSorella
Squabble
Up from clamor of Thanksgiving dinner, two voices drowned out the rest. Uncle Frank (Mom's brother) and Uncle Norm (Dad's brother), were at first pointedly not talking towards each other as they contradicted everything the other said. Then it was raised voices, direct, insistent, until they were shouting over everyone, ignoring their wives' pleas.
Then the fighting really began, first with silverware, then a carving knife versus a brass candlestick, then gunfire and light artillery. By this time, the two halves of the family had divided.
There would be no more Thanksgiving dinners until after the war was long over.
Teases
Sam is lying languid on yellow sheets. James will be home tomorrow which leaves little time for new lovers.
Sam reaches up and receives the glass and sips, as I drink from the bottle and look at scars on a wrist, tattoo marked and bled, bracelet often mislaid.
Bob Marley doesn't give a shit, while Sam Cooke looks dispirited at what yet will come. Joplin cries wild abandon from vinyl well-worn and well earned.
And James will return and for now Sam is here and I am here and the bottle is half full and Sam teases with a fingertip...
From Guest Contributor Michael Tyler
Michael writes from a shack overlooking the ocean just south of the edge of the world. He has been published in several literary magazines and plans a short story collection sometime before the Andromeda Galaxy collides with ours and...
On The Plane
Passengers on a flight from Dallas to Los Angeles reportedly freaked out when they spotted a rat on board. No one airborne wants to see a rat running around. And yet...
Mel, one of the passengers, turned to the man sitting beside him.
“Mel's the name. I'm going to a dry-cleaning convention.”
“Dry cleaning, huh?”.
Otto Franzblau had forgotten to pick up his dry cleaning before the flight. As he explained to Mel, he was giving a paper on medical laboratory experimentation in Los Angeles.
Dry-cleaning? Laboratory experiments? Could anyone blame the rat for trying to get off the plane?
From Guest Contributor David Sydney
Dream?
The doctor looked at me through his eyeglasses that sat perfectly on the rim of his nose.
“In your dream, you said a spirit you didn’t recognize handed you a feather.”
“Yes, but the figure was only a cloudy shape of a person.”
“What do you suppose the feather represents, Charlie?”
“My father used to train pigeons before he died in the car accident. Maybe that?”
“Possibly. Time to stop. We’ll continue this next week.”
When I arrived home, I felt something in my pants pocket. I reached in and my eyes widened. It was the feather from my dream.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
Shadow Of A Doubt
Matthew had always been steadfast in his faith. What appealed to him most about God was the need to believe, as opposed to some sort of certainty born of evidence or innate awareness. The fact that we were blessed with the choice and allowed to entertain doubt was the beauty of existence.
Now, as he felt his life slipping away, Matthew found that his conviction in God was stronger than ever. He had no fear of what was to come, because he was completely at peace and ready to meet his maker.
Except what if he was wrong? Oh shit...
Prose Vs Poetry
I watched a sentence emerge the other day at the end of a series of ambivalent decisions. The pressure of decision-making, the tense inner conversation writers conduct when writing, may be more felt than conscious, but it is nonetheless real. Even as I am writing these very words I am debating with myself whether these are the very words I should be writing. Decisions don’t make themselves. Do I use a dash here – or nothing? And what about an adjective for color or to add nuance? One misplaced brick can bring the whole thing down. Poetry flourishes on the ruins.
From Guest Contributor Howie Good
Howie is a professor emeritus at SUNY New Paltz whose newest poetry book, The Dark, is available from Sacred Parasite, a Berlin-based publisher.
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