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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Flowers
All I must do is deliver the package. I am told he’ll use the code “flowers”.
I flirt with the guard. I compliment his uniform and touch his shoulder and that’s all it takes to get through the checkpoint. The paper is hidden in a secret compartment of my compact mirror, but I didn’t want to take a chance.
The bar is busy, and I see the man the agent described to me sitting alone. I casually walk over and sit next to him.
“The flowers are in full bloom,” he says.
I slip the paper in his jacket pocket.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
A Frank Conversation Following An Epistolary Courtship
How will you tell people we met? she asks.
I’ll say I’m a quantum anthropologist from a parallel reality who built a machine to peer beyond dimensional walls. That I spent years studying myriad earths twitching across infinite frequencies until, one day, I saw you through my viewfinder. Yes, I knew crossing the trans-dimensional bridge would buckle my reality’s foundations. I didn’t care. I’ll warn everyone, my love for you doomed a universe.
And you? he asks.
She shifts. Her shackles jingle. The guard clears his throat. The truth. I took first at the International Sasquatch Rodeo. You were runner-up.
From Guest Contributor Keith J. Powell
Keith is co-founder of Your Impossible Voice. Find more of his writing at www.keithjpowell.com.
Dying Hearts
A nest formed at some point over thousands of years as eggs drift into the sea, carried by currents and tides. Birds with broken feet but wings spread wide, fleeing in flight from dying hearts filled with the blackness of obsidian inhabitants and their unforgiven. They mutate and break down within the lethal darkness from which it grows, blinded by ignorance.
Mothers must be on their guard in the warm calm of dawn, similar to the nights when they sense the fragile awakening of what is. And sometimes they forget the one thing they should never forget: everything is hungry.
From Guest Contributor J. Iner Souster
Bad Escape
Alcatraz, 1938.
Prisoners Nick and Daryl were aboard a boat to Alcatraz. The boat collided with a rock and turned over. Nick and Daryl swam to shore followed by a guard. He knocked them out. Outside of the prison Daryl grabbed the guard's gun and shot him.
With Nick, Daryl ran from the loosened dogs and guards. They found a boat. The warden followed as the men stole the boat.
'This is the life' cried Nick.
'Hungry for bullets?' called the warden as he shot Daryl. Nick, an identity thief, shot back.
Nick lived another fifty years as a warden.
From Guest Contributor Bayley Kelly
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