Friday Flash Fiction
  • Home
    • About Friday Flash Fiction
    • Terms & Conditions
  • 100-Word Stories
  • Other Archived Material
    • Longer Stories
    • Poetry
  • Authors
    • A
    • B
    • C
    • D
    • E-F
    • G-I
    • J-L
    • M-O
    • P-R
    • S-V
    • W-Z

Heaven and Hell, by Sivan Pillai

11/9/2020

 
Four days in the ‘icebox’ in the mortuary. Two weeks in the hospital before that. Bedsores on the back, uncontrolled peeing and shitting in the bed. That was real hell, not the one somewhere deep below the earth, as I had been told since my childhood. I am happy the ordeal is finally over, and I am free from my body.
The beautician is busy getting it ready for the funeral later today, befitting a rich and powerful man’s father. Beauty creams are being applied, and the room reeks of perfumes. Hair, whatever is left on the head, is oiled and combed. There is a new pair of shoes on the feet, white gloves on the hands. While alive, I had never worn shoes or gloves. I was happy feeling the earth with my bare feet and hands while tending to the plants. A ring of flowers is there on the head, like a crown. Soon the body would be taken to the cemetery, and speaker after speaker would eulogize me before the coffin is lowered into the pit and handfuls of dirt thrown over it.
A regular church-goer, I had believed that the soul would go either to heaven far above the sky, or hell, to be eternally fried there, depending on one’s deeds while alive. I had felt heavenly happiness when my friend Jose sat by me, cracking jokes in between sips of liquor. Or when I heard the mooing of my cows and the clucking of hens. I had experienced unbound joy when the first bunch of flowers appeared on the mango trees and green bulbs burst out on cardamom plants.
Then came the bolt from the blue. A phone call just before nine at night, my usual time for bed, from my only son settled in a faraway city. Hurried pleasantries over, he had dropped the bomb. He had decided to relieve me of the burden of looking after the estate at my advanced age. The estate that I had bought piece by piece over the years with the sweat of my brow. And sell the house that my wife and I had built brick by brick. He had booked a room for me in a modern old age home with all comforts and enjoyable company of people like me.
The next thing I remember was waking up in a hospital bed with Jose’s anxious face over me. Unaware of my regaining consciousness, my son was discussing my condition with the doctor. Urgent business awaited him in the city and could hardly afford to spend more time here.
“There’s no hope of his recovery. The moment the life-supporting gadgets are removed, he would stop breathing,” the doctor was telling him.
There was a hush-hush talk between the two after that, and not much later, a couple of nurses entered and asked Jose to leave the room.
The ventilator and other gadgets were removed. My body was shifted to the mortuary.

The Foam, The Reef, by Jovan Ramzi

11/9/2020

 
Given that my mother committed suicide, under the most adverse circumstances I might add, safely can I say: "As my God was suicide, earlier in my life my mother killed herself, unto yourself, were you a world.". Now, as a pensioner, I want to welcome you to my remembrances. With forty years gone by, I now ask: "Why?". Once upon a time, we enjoyed our mother's company; she would read us fairytales. Allowing my mother to exist again, and unbidden as it was, coming from the depths of darkness of the forest of memory, other memories were stirred up by this memory. My mind was allowed to go back. Quietly did I uncover the memories. The memories I now beheld, made up of the most disparate things, tenanted walls, a fire's ceaseless roaring, began to constitute a new whole. Sleeping pills killed her. She waited till everybody else was asleep. This memory brought other memories to the fore.

Once life consisted of a rocking horse; as our possession, "our" would signify that it belonged to my brother. My mother would read to us at night; the Arabian Nights were the tales that most regaled us; in the process of being read to, the rocking horse had gone missing. Her colour was gold and blue. She was our silent ferryman. My mum had thrown it out..

Franklin O'Hare, by Heather Robinson

11/9/2020

 
Franklin O’Hare is a horrible interviewee, yet people seem to salivate over the YouTube videos where he’s queried and cuddled by noteworthy journalists. I don’t get it. He sits there in his ragged khakis and retrieves a hummus and carrot sandwich from his denim jacket, then nibbles and munches while the interviewer waits patiently. Instead of finishing the sandwich, O’Hare starts talking, mouth open – ugh – while he’s chewing. For no reason at all, and without any accompanying witticisms, he’ll just start winking at the camera. Then his nose begins to twitch and he appears to sniff the air. His blurry, beady eyes don’t focus on anything, but instead, hop across the room, then stare at the ceiling as if wisdom will drop down upon him like hail from a storm. He’s noted for his obscure quotes, like when he was asked what advice he’d give to a young writer today, and replied, with a slow, supposedly meaningful nod, “Even rabbits have habits.” Yeesh.

Spaghetti Soup, by Phyllis Souza

4/9/2020

 
Mable scooped up a tablespoon of shortening and dropped it into the frying pan. She turned on the burner and adjusted the fire. She added onion and garlic and swirled until browned. Next, tomato sauce and Italian seasoning. While pouring in red wine, she sang to the food. Mable felt happy—she poured in some more.

The sound of bubbling gravy and the aroma of the mixture coming together was comforting.

Mable brought a wooden spoon filled with the gravy to her mouth. She inhaled, she blew, she tasted.

"Delicious," she said and put down the spoon.

For a couple of hours, the spaghetti sauce simmered over a low blue flame.

***

No Parmesan Cheese.

Mable left the house to go to the grocery store.

One hour later she walked into the kitchen. Surprise— her husband was home early from work. Fritz was sitting at the table, an empty bowl in front of him.

He smacked his lips. "That was great soup!"

Haunt Bound, by Bianca Crenshaw

4/9/2020

 
Ava entered the graveyard and crept over the forms buried beneath her feet, wondering if those she used to see still remembered her as how she used to be. Time passed in a loop, not once missing a beat, and she moved along with it, unafraid but empty. The temptation to reach out, to seek, to connect grew steadily along with her desire and instinct to retreat.

Flight gave way to agonizing comfort and the need for the unfamiliar made her weep in her sleep. Dark unformed shadows followed her, chased her, barked at her from a distance that spanned years in a blink. Fear held her in life, in death, and in all the moments in between. One lone connection would be enough to douse the fire, satiate the hunger that consumed her when she had been alive and free, just as it did now in her captivity.

Opposite her feet were people that still had their spark, their heartbeats, but no one visited her site, not since long ago, a century ago, an eternity.

Any form of remembrance, fond or fleeting, seemed a slim possibility. In life, she’d kept would-be friends at arm’s length, would-be lovers isolated and questioning.
After life, cemeteries formed bridges, allowed for ties and generated temporary links.

Headstones were like gates, meant to hide, obstruct and keep unwanted things at bay if one so pleased. Gates, however, could be climbed, peered over, and knocked down if need be. Her longing for a connection existed in her skeletal remains just as it did her ghostly body. But reaching into the land of the living was a deed done only on All Hallows’ Eve, as to leave the ashen world of decay and frigidity at that moment would be to cheat, even if she only meant to grieve.

Ava was bitterly cold, icy even, and the warmth lured her forward, towards the barrier of mortality. Her grey presence in the colorful realm was at once unwelcome, for she could feel the shift in the universal homeostasis and the sharp pull of her dismal reality.

Yet, she would walk the vivid world eternally, passing by unnoticed and unseen until a single touch fed her soul and satisfied her craving.
​

Mr. Smith's Class, by Pamela Kennedy

4/9/2020

 
From day one, Mr. Smith informed his students, "Writer's block does not exist in this classroom.  It is a feeble excuse for a lack of creativity.
 

Some students wore that familiar baffled look on their faces.  Others showed resentment as some effort would be required to pass this course.  One student in a snarly fashion asked if he,
Mr. Smith, could be the subject of a composition.

With a steely stare Mr. Smith responded, "Certainly.  Remember creative writing can be truthful or pure fiction."  In a very ominous tone, he continued,  "Just a suggestion...use lots of compliments."   
                                                                    
"That idiot expects me to call him nice?  Well, if I'm 'creative', then I'm not a liar,"  Sydney rationalized as he exited Mr.  Smith's  classroom. After much thought, he composed the following:     

                                         Humanity

Humanity is like the terds in a toilet bowl, all the same but different. Mr. Snitty is a real loser.  Who wants to be that tird?  Flush him down! 

Mr. Smitee is not a compleet turd.  He tries to help his students.  Keep him for organic fertalizer.

Sadly, every day we are surrounded by bullsh-t.

                                           Amen

Assignment completed, Sydney proudy handed it to a sceptical Mr. Smith. 

*

Mr. Smith saved reading his "best" students' assignments for last.  Upon reading Sydney's paper, he was flabbergasted.  Who knew that snarly Sydney had such a creative mind.  He just was very technically challenged.

"Class,  I have graded each of you on two levels:  one for creativity and the other for technical skills, e.g., spelling, punctuation, etc."

Sheer joy washed over Sydney's face as he saw the "A" for creativity but it was quickly wiped off when he noticed the "F" for technical skills.

At the end of the class, Sydney plopped his paper on Mr. Smith's desk after having written a huge "U" to the right of the "F".

The next day, Mr. Smith sent a very disapproving stare in Sydney's direction as Sydney stared back with daggers in his eyes.  When the dismissal bell rang, Mr. Smith called Sydney to his desk.

"Sydney, your concept is very different. Keep it. However,  your spelling is atrocious..'t-e-r-d', 't-i-r-d', or 't-u-r-d'?  Use spell check on everything.  Develop your characters.  Why is Mr. Snitty a loser and how does Mr. Smitee help his students.  Wrap it up nicely.  It's most important that you resubmit."
 
Sydney huffed out of the room slamming the door behind him.
​

*

"Class, the school board had a competition based upon the students' every day work.   No one knew that a competition was being held."

"I am pleased to announce that a member of our class won the third prize worth $25 for his composition titled, Humanity.  Sydney Snarles, please come up and claim your prize.  We also want to hear you read your entry."

"..........May the goodness of humanity feed the earth and its evil be flushed away."

Those words had convinced Mr. Smith not to flush away an opportunity for Sydney.   Graciously, they shook hands.

Death Of The Pornographer, by Harman Burgess

4/9/2020

 
Autumn Steele was the femme fatale of a pornographer who hated women. She had none of the charm or beauty of a real femme fatale—the pornographer was capable of neither—but she was popular with people who also hated women. In her lewd crime novel the reader follows her as she seduces men, tracks clues, and solves cases for no particular reason except that the ‘writer’ wants her too. She even died cold and alone because an editor thought it would appeal to the religious market. (it didn’t).

But Autumn did not stay dead. No. She was made of steele, after all. Because this serious auteur brought her back for the sequel. Then killed her off again. And made her alive again. And on and on and on and on for fourteen fucking books! You see, Autumn’s lewd crime series was not so lewd anymore. The pornographer cum author had found a home for it at the romantic imprint of a major publishing company.

These were the halcyon days for the author. Every new Autumn Steele book was a bestseller. He could do no wrong with her; everything of hers was gold. He was happy. Until the author tried his hand at a historical novel and couldn’t get it published. And as he was now a FULL-TIME PROFESSIONAL AUTHOR, he had to write something new. An Autumn Steele story. And that novel was more successful than history could ever dream of.

And as Autumn’s popularity grew - she grew. Nurtured by the imagination of her adoring fans, Autumn’s voice grew louder. Became a permanent fixture in the mind of her author. The next book was in her voice. Her style. Her life. And readers loved it. They called it real. Compelling. Honest. The rights for the Autumn Steele Movie Franchise were sold to a large studio for a sizeable amount of money, that Autumn used to take a vacation in the Bahamas.

And the voice of the pornauthographer grew smaller and smaller and smaller. Until he was the one being tortured by Autumn in her bestselling novels. By now, he’s no longer sure if he’s alive or not. If he had always been just a character is somebody else’s story. Slipping away from life into the illusory netherworld of art, until he can no longer think at all. All his thoughts, all his desires, all of him controlled by the whims of Autumn’s pen. The birth of Autumn occurring as a result of the death of the pornographer.

Maybe Tomorrow, by Doug Bartlett

4/9/2020

 
He sits at the table for quite some time sipping a cup of coffee while waiting patiently for Tamara. He thinks about how much he could do for her, even the feast he would provide for them both to share.

The waiter comes over. “Sir, is there anything else I can get you? We will be closing in fifteen minutes.”

“ No, I’m fine, thank you.”

The waiter feels sorry for him. Every night he comes in and waits for her but she never shows up. This has been going on for quite some time.

“Excuse me sir, but why do you continue to come here after all this time when she never shows up?”

“ Someday she may come to realize that she needs me and I’ll be here for her.”

Meanwhile, Tamara gets ready for bed. She picks up her journal on her nightstand and as she opens it she is reminded of her commitment to pray every evening before falling asleep.

“ Yes,” she thought.” I need to do that…….but not tonight, I’m too tired.”
​

When Two’s a Crowd, by Krystyna Fedosejevs

4/9/2020

 
“You can’t say ‘NO’ to Grandma.”

“Why? Grandpa does.”

Jeremy stared with shark-like eyes at Rubber Duckie as it twirled in the water.

Coaxing the five-year-old to take his evening bath was a bigger problem than Grandma had anticipated. She tried a new approach.

“You played in the sandbox. Do you want to bring sand into your clean bed?”

“You have a washing machine?”

“Who works the washing machine, young man?”

“Electricity.”

“Grandma made pickles today. They had a water bath, didn’t they?”

Jeremy reflected. “They were inside jars you put in water.”

Grandma’s face lit up, flamed by the get-nowhere conversation. She sought help.

“Hey, you over there. How about minding your grandson while I take a bath?”

“What? I thought he was having one,” grunted Grandpa.

Once alone, Grandma poured in her favourite bath oil and entered the tub. She belted out lyrics to ‘Tiny Bubbles’ barely noticing knocking on the bathroom door.

“Yes?” she queried.

“Why are you happy taking a bath, Grandma?”

“I’m having fun splashing about in the bubbles.”

“Grandma?”

“Yes.”

“Can I take a bubble bath with you?”
​

Fighting a Pandemic Scientifically, by Sankar Chatterjee

4/9/2020

 
Dr. Vikash Verma, an Oxford-educated medicinal scientist as well as the entrepreneurial CEO of a start-up pharmaceutical company in Bengaluru, India came out of his office to visit the science labs. Inside those labs, several young scientists, educated at the country’s prestigious IIT-s were working around the clock on an emergency project. Outside the building, it was another hot summer day; the dancing heat-waves were melting away in the atmosphere. The summer season was brutal this year, bringing misery to millions of poor people of this nation of more than one billion citizens. But, this year, the country was facing a new enemy: a pandemic spread by a novel respiratory virus originating in a neighboring country.

Surprisingly this new nemesis devastated faraway western countries in the early phase of its showmanship. Recently it gained its foothold in this densely populated country, spreading initially in a slum in Mumbai, country’s financial hub, now fanning out fast and furious throughout the rest of the country. Following the WHO’s guidelines, citizens had been advised to wear masks, maintain a minimum “social distance” while venturing outdoor, and wash their hands frequently with soap detergents.

Unfortunately, currently available masks were not preventing new infections, allowing aerosolized virus to penetrate, infecting the victims. In addition, no novel medicine for an effective treatment appeared anywhere in the world. Thus the henchmen of the current nationalistic leader began to peddle unproven and unsafe “miracle” treatments of all kinds, deliberately citing holy religious epics inaccurately. Dr. Verma couldn’t believe the development. A member of the so-called “Nuclear Power” club, the nation recently came close to landing an unmanned space station on lunar surface. But now his country was going backwards during a pandemic.

A few weeks ago, Dr. Verma was thinking about the principle behind the “hand washing” protocol. His own background in both biology and chemistry reminded him that the “quat” class of molecules in a detergent does severe structural damages to the outer membrane of a virus particle, thus hastening its disintegration. Indeed, this fact was the basis for the health authority’s advice of repeated hand-washing after spending reasonable amount of time outdoor and touching infected items. And a light-bulb suddenly turned on inside his brain.

Dr. Verma contacted one of his childhood friends, an industrialist in fabrics industry. At his request, his friend was able to supply him with a reservoir of finely porous fabric pouches. Each one was now getting filled with a layer of similar quat molecules followed by sealing and then attaching as an outer layer to a regular mask. The idea was to trap the aerosolized virus particles by chemicals, thus disrupting their journey into a human body.

This morning, he received national health authority’s permission to start a human trial with this unique contraption. Now he wanted to thank all those young scientists for bringing back science to the forefront to fight a pandemic.
Forward>>

    Longer
    Stories

    For the foreseeable future, the Longer Flash section is closed to submissions.

    Archives

    July 2025
    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014

Picture
Website by Platform 36