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.
Stop doomscrolling and start fiction browsing.
Mercury’s Lunchbox
The courier waits outside the O.R. A moment after a surgeon calls the time of death, a nurse emerges, hands her a container. He says, “Go!”
She hits a flat-out run. Courier and container speed in her van to the other hospital. Her supervisor radios warning: the patient’s chest is open. Four or five minutes are the bought time, but here’s a red light. Ninety seconds leeway when she’s met by fresh legs at the E.R.’s drop-off lane.
Before she hears if the patient survived, she’s picked up a container with a kidney in it.
Always urgent, never finished. Hurrying.From Guest Contributor Todd Mercer
Todd writes Fiction and Poetry in Grand Rapids, Michigan. His collection Ingenue was published in 2020 by Celery City Press. Recent work appears in Blink Ink, Literary Yard and Pangolin Review.
On My Way?
Speeding through town, the traffic light signals me to stop. I sit. Idle. Stone faced. I’ve been stuck here many times. On my way to the wedding. On my way to the police station. On my way to the hospital. To the hospital again. Even in the ambulance, I assume. On my way to court. Now, here, I’m stopped again. Alone. My right foot yearning to push the gas. I always obey the traffic light. Red light. Red blood. My blood he committed to spilling one soul-crushing punch at a time. Stupid traffic light. Suddenly, I get the green light.
From Guest Contributor Nancy Geibe Wasson
Listening To Punchdrunk Lovesick Singalong On Repeat
David waited at the red light. He scratched at his scalp as the skin peeled away.
Diane wrapped the glassware in last Sunday's edition of the Times. She remembered having to nag David for months before he wrote those thank you notes.
David cursed so that the driver next to him turned and offered a look. He stared straight ahead and debated offering an apology.
Diane loaded the last of the boxes into the trailer. Her father offered a hug that she refused.
David pulled into the driveway, turned off the ignition, and cried.
Diane watched the landscape blur by.
This is post number 1,111. Thank you to every one who has read one of these stories or contributed one of their own.
Secretly Thankful
The story I’m told, is my cousin ran a red light, hit an oncoming car and died on impact. This happened the day before Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving Day, my aunt and uncle are preparing for his funeral.
I told my cousin Mike, time and again, he needed to stop fiddling with the radio when driving, because he could cause an accident or kill someone. I never thought that someone would be him.
The turkey sits in the refrigerator, no one wanting to celebrate thanks when a young man died.
Secretly, I’m thankful it isn’t my wife or one of my kids.
From Guest Contributor Lisa M. Scuderi-Burkimsher
The Curse
To this day, I don't know what I did to anger her. I was waiting at the stoplight at Pinehurst and Rock Creek. An old woman was crossing, decrepit really, and if I was guilty of anything, it was allowing my gaze to linger a fraction too long, perhaps just a tincture of disgust in my expression. When she looked in my direction, I immediately turned away.
That's when she began screaming, condemning me and all my future progeny. She even spit on my windshield.
From that day, I've never approached an intersection without being stopped at a red light.
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