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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Back From The Correctional Facility
“I took the letters you sent, Ralph, and made them into a book.”
“A book? Or a manuscript, Claudette?”
After six months at the correctional facility, Ralph was finally home.
“Did you like them, Claudette?”
“I guess it's the thought that counts. I couldn't always get your spelling. Sometimes you were in a bad mood.”
“It was food…I kept writing for food.”
He was allowed only a pencil and paper.
“That's great, Claudette. You made a manuscript, and you were faithful to me the whole time.”
“Well, I wouldn't go that far.”
“You mean...You didn't make a manuscript?”
From Guest Contributor David Sydney
For the prompt Manuscript and Letter
Eating at Fromkin's
The larvae of beetles and moths – often described as bookworms – enjoy eating manuscripts and printed material. Lem, a Drugstore Beetle larva, Clem, a Cigarette Beetle larva, and Mel, a developing moth, burrowed away at Fromkin's Bookshop, after Al Fromkin locked up the place and drove to his small condo in Northeast Philadelphia.
Lem held his abdomen with four of his legs. “That manuscript was awful.”
“Tell me about it.” Clem had burrowed through several letters Al Fromkin left on his imitation oak desk.
Both were sick as dogs.
Mel smiled. “I finished a 100-word story. I feel pretty good, actually.”
From Guest Contributor David Sydney
For the prompts Manuscript and Letter.
In Love I Do Write
“Sorry, Ma’am. Nothing.”
Isabel nodded, dismissing the housekeeper. Tears accompanied her sullen soul.
In earlier times she and Alfred exchanged letters frequently. Physical distance between them, when he left for war, mattered not. Had the passion vanished?
Not for her. How could she forget their tireless walks in the countryside, their invigorating conversations, or his warm smiling eyes? He, the son of her parents’ friends.
The expected letter eventually arrived, as did others following.
Only after Isabel and Alfred had died was their love revealed to the world, in a manuscript—a collection of hundreds of letters penned between them.
From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
For the prompts Manuscript and Letter.
Sightseeing In The Subway
There are names scratched onto the walls of New York City subway cars. Monday it was Mark. Tuesday, Dylan. Wednesday, Fatima. Thursday, Kat, and Friday, Lucy. The poorly carved letters, engraved with care, resemble the jagged handwriting of a preschooler; It's something inexplicably human. Though the scratches will fade, and the steel of the cars will corrode, I like to think otherwise; the remnants of these people will linger long after time forgets who they are. Every name I spot, a wave of tranquility washes over me as I stand in a mess of busy people in a busy city.
From Guest Contributor Eshal Yazdani
Soldier’s Return
It’s been years since I could feel my wife’s hands on my body, and I can’t wait to lay next to her in bed caressing her soft skin.
I didn’t know what to give my kids for Christmas, so I made a collage of all the letters and pictures my son and daughter sent me. I made the same gift for my wife, but with a personal touch, for her eyes only. Their pictures and letters helped keep me strong through the long war.
The bus has come to a stop.
The three of them are here, smiling, anxiously waiting.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
His Girl
He returned to their place, behind a shrub. Where they as teenagerswatched practitioners exit a church. Where he kissed away her tearsafter her father walked out, showering affection on a stranger.
She, the girl he played tag with in childhood. The one he datedthrough high school. The one he wrote to after he moved out of thecity, and her letters stopped abruptly.
He watched between raindrops clinging to leafless branches. She exitedthe church on the arm of another man. Wedding procession followed.
Rainstorm may have passed, but the storm in his mind had only intensified.
From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
Krystyna is a writer of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction. Sheresides in Edmonton, Canada with her husband and stuffed animals andmany friends.
Reduction
He sat alone.
He watched her scrape the painted letters from the window; watched FINE ARTS CAFE become FINE ART, then FINE and finally FIN.
She took a break.
He couldn’t bear to watch anymore anyway, imagined Painting becoming mere Paint, then Pain; Lessons, Less.
Having finished his coffee, he talked to the café owner about her plans now that she’d finally served up her last cup.
He knew he’d go soon too.
He mentally counted out the other empty storefronts, some of the buildings invisible from where he sat, their windows staring out at a rapidly fading Main Street.
From Guest Contributor Ron. Lavalette
Reasons To Write
Miguel was seated in front of the word processor, tears running from his eyes. The keys were making their poetic sound. Rhythmically putting letters into words, words into thoughts and ideas that moved things deep within his heart.
“You’re crying again,” Jenny said. “Why do you keep writing?”
“I don’t know,” Miguel replied. “I thought about not writing...”
“You really should.”
“I just think about how dark and painful my life was. Not having any way to get healthier with schizophrenia.” Sitting in the dark Miguel stared into the light. “I can’t leave anyone to fight this on their own.”
From Guest Contributor Steve Colori
The Golden Thread Part Two
“What is that? I can’t see. Some sweet jungle flower. Are we getting close?"
"No, it is poetry, a copycat fragrance to lure butterflies. It is carnivorous. Stay back—"
"Those are my words on the vines! God, those electric blue letters! Let’s read—"
"Don’t—"
“Why? 'Once upon a time I died. I crucified myself on a ladder made from the bones of birds, hollow, not yet cleaned by cannibals or the sun, yet flightworthy by nature.' I wrote that."
“The vines will strangle you, make you blind, make you forget why you are here. And then you drop the thread."
From Guest Contributor Brook Bhagat
Brook’s poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and humor have appeared in Empty Mirror Magazine, Little India, Dămfīno, Nowhere Poetry, Rat's Ass Review, Peacock Journal, A Story in 100 Words, Anthem: A Tribute to Leonard Cohen, and other journals and anthologies, and are forthcoming in MoonPark Review and Almagre. She has completed a full-length poetry manuscript, is writing a novel, and is editor-in-chief of Blue Planet Journal. She holds an MFA from Lindenwood University and teaches creative writing at a community college. More at brook-bhagat.com
The Final Conversation
They walked the long way to her house, so they had extra time before they reached her porch. She had a previous engagement and he wasn't invited inside.
The conversation had been lovely. They'd shared their most embarrassing moments. They made each other laugh. They held hands. They kissed around the corner, and didn't care who might see them. He would remember it fondly forever.
It was their final conversation. He stopped returning her phone calls or answering her letters. He feared things ending on a bad note, so he had waited for the perfect moment to break things off.
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