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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Ripped To Bits By Ghosts
I moved into my workshop, with a gas-ring and pair of chickens in a cage. I needed no assistants. I watched the sky from a hilltop laboratory, harnessing the lightning.
In reality I sleep under the stairs in my friends’ flat. He’s a motorcycle courier, she’s a receptionist. I work where I can, wherever the agency sends me, seven days a week. If I’m ill I rely on her noticing and bringing me soup or something. I have a notebook to record my dreams. Huge flights of geese turn furrows through the red November skies. Worlds can barely contain me.
From Guest Contributor Geoff Sawers
The Cemetery Of Buried Feelings
I would pretend to be sleeping when he flipped on the light in my room. He would loom over me until my eyes opened. The walls would seem to lean in. Fear would distort my breathing. If I tried to scoot away, he would grab me by the arm and drag me back and crack me across the face with the flat of his hand. He was buried on a cold Sunday next to my mother. Some thirty people, mostly family, attended. It began to snow as stood at the graveside. He had finally found a solution to his loneliness.
From Guest Contributor Howie Good
Howie co-edits the online journal UnLost, dedicated to found poetry.
Elusive
The change? It took me a bit. But today's change was the slope of reality?
Meaning? I jump realities in the simulator. And? Well, I knew the path. I knew it was flat. And? Yesterday it was sloped. Sloped enough one could see the slope. Nothing outside of that changed. Just that which was flat and none uphill. Was now sloped enough that it took effort to go from point A to point B.
Making reality a question of the mind. For if it was always sloped here. As indicated by a conversation I was having with the individual? Simulator.
From Guest Contributor Clinton Siegle
Her Greatest Love Affair
On her death bed, Jennifer's thoughts don't dwell on her husband, despite several decades of marriage and two children together.
It's Mateo she remembers instead. Jennifer was only meant to spend three days in Barcelona, but she switched out her ticket and let her friends travel on to Italy without her.
She remembers Mateo's laugh, and the way he mispronounced her name in the cutest way. She remembers the passion when they made love in his flat beneath the open window.
It was only two weeks, but that was enough time to know Mateo was the love of her life.
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