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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Sunday Dinner At My House
I carry the steaming pot of paprikash to the table. It’s spicy and garlicky, and my mouth waters in anticipation.
“That looks amazing,” my sister says.
“You printed this?” My mother’s nose wrinkles, and she leans back in her chair.
“Of course,” I say as my sister shifts a bowl of buttered noodles. I set the pot down.
“You kids have it so easy. In my day, we had to chop our own vegetables and simmer the chicken for hours.”
My sister and I grin at each other, but my mother doesn’t notice. She’s already spooning food onto her plate.
From Guest Contributor Julia Rajagopalan
Thinking Outside the Coop
In a quaint village beyond the hills, lived a scatterbrained chicken named Cluckers. Every morning, Cluckers would lay eggs and forget where she put them. The villagers chuckled, but Farmer Ben grumbled, "No eggs for breakfast!"
One day, Cluckers stumbled upon a stash of eggs hidden under a bush. "Eureka!" she screamed. Cluckers went to share her discovery with the other chickens, encouraging them to "think outside the coop."
Word spread. Soon, every chicken laid eggs in unexpected places. Farmer Ben's breakfasts improved, and the village learned: even mishaps teach valuable lessons.
And Cluckers? She never forgot that lesson again.
From Guest Contributor Chinmayi Goyal
Stirring Up The Pots
“Everything under control?”
“Absolutely,” I responded, stirring the contents of the left pot, checking on the right.
Gravy bubbled up delicious aroma. Steamy chocolate swirled to the ceiling, taking me back to the time I watched mother make the same recipe.
“Darn!” my inner voice screamed. “Cornstarch lumps!”
I reached for the blender. Meantime I detected a slight burning cocoa smell and set the dessert sauce aside.
“Fifteen minutes left!” the announcer yelled.
A panel of judges awaited each contestant’s creations.
“Interesting combination with chicken,” one stated, sampling mine. “There’s brandy. Definitely chocolate. Cherries are divine. What’s your dessert sauce?”From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
Krystyna writes poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction regardless of the season or location she finds herself in.
Hybrid Children Lunchables
Bio Lab meat? Are you eating your Uncle Fester’s cancer DNA? Bio lab fish genes are spliced with cancer to create a quick-growing mermaid that is evil. Hybrid children being eaten by everyone in this realm. Shame on evil. Bio Lab meat with chicken? Did you eat chicken man? Or a cow and human? Did you eat a Minotaur?? Who is speaking for the Hybrid children of this realm? Did Orc originate from a hybrid pig human escaping a bio lab meat factory? Did you eat your own flesh today in this weird reality where the law says it's okay?
From Guest Contributor Clinton Siegle
Family Matters
“Hola! Anyone inside?”
There were no smells of frying chicken or beans being reheated.
“It’s your Tito,” the elderly man continued.
Someone arrived to sit at one of the picnic tables nearby.
“Ran into your madre. Said you bought a food truck. Set up in my end of town. Sorry your restaurant closed down. Covid’s a beast.”
He shuffled around the vehicle, returning to the truck’s open window.
“Still angry? Not my fault your parents split up.”
The truck’s door opened and a lean young man stepped out.
“Na, not angry, gramps. Now what would you like for lunch today?”
From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
Krystyna writes poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction regardless of the season, although she prefers spring.
Chicken
"Don't call me that," I, blue-in-the-face, scream at my grade school friend. The hallway is long and narrow, lit by one naked bulb, a beaded pull-chain hanging. I stand trembling at the edge of the basement stairs.
"Turn the light on, chicken."
The wall switch is to my left. Weeks ago, on a dare, I placed my hand on the switch plate to lift the lever. A jolt threw me down the flight of stairs. I landed feet first, hands crunched against the concrete wall.
Now I hover on the top step. Terror tight in my throat.
Ready or not.
From Guest Contributor Flo Gelo
Dinner Time
Sam sat, crossed his hands over his chest, and sighed.
“Baked chicken, boiled potatoes, and string beans. Really, Mom?”
“You know the doctor wants you to eat healthy,” she answered, filling his dish.
Sam swallowed a piece of chicken and it was like a rock had hit his stomach. He missed the crispy taste of fried, juicy white meat.
“String bean pie for dessert,” he chuckled and noticed a hair on his dish.
Sam removed his hat and a clump of his hair fell on the table.
“Does this mean the radiation is working?”
His mother gasped at the sight.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
What Is Written
At age two, baby Suresh miraculously wrote the words yes and no on to foggy glass. His family gathered in awe around him wondering if he would write again, maybe?
With pencils, chalk, twigs in sand he wrote the words over and over.
What divinity was this, what genius? No one had taught him. Being pious people, his parents immediately told the household servants that all future decisions, big or small, would be made by baby Suresh.
“Please,” said Chef, “tonight shall I cook chicken or lamb?”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” baby’s mother snapped. “He can only answer yes or no.”
From Guest Contributor Faiza Bokhari
The Family
PB came from a peculiar family. His siblings included an elephant, an owl, an orca, a duck, two monkeys, a chicken, a snake, a dinosaur, and a snowman. They sometimes went on strange adventures, though mostly they lazed around telling funny stories to each other. He often suspected they were figments of his imagination, but he heard their voices even as he pretended to ignore them.
He decided he wanted to understand how he came to be part of such a family so PB hired a private detective.
He was unsurprised when the detective informed him that he was adopted.
The Transformation
As Gregory Samson awoke one morning from uneasy dreams, he found himself transformed in his bed into a giant chicken. There was no doubt but that he was monstrous.
Gregory feared the ridicule of his peers. He dwelt on past incidents, when others had been shunned for smaller variations. Differences were not well tolerated in his society.
He rose from bed and stumbled into the yard. What before had seemed an entire world was now barely able to contain him. He had grown so large he could easily hop the fence.
How Gregory yearned to be a normal-sized chicken again.
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