Archive for the 'Friday Flash' Category

Flash Fiction: The good dog by Niamh McGrath

Okay, so it’s been a while since I contributed anything to the Friday Flash Fiction round - to be honest, I ran out of ideas and time. But I don’t see why that should mean that this blog can’t still run occassional bits and pieces - especially when they’re of really high quality and they’re not written by me.

Today I’m pleased that Welcome to my world is able to present an exciting new piece of work by an author who, I’m positive, has a long future ahead of her - and may the gods preserve all those who get in her way.

So, I am forced proud to present the first ever published fiction by my daughter, Niamh McGrath (aged 5).

THE GOOD DOG

One day a dog went to the shop.

And what to you think she saw?

She saw sosijis. [In the words of that sage Roy Walker, “say what you see”]

She ran out of the shop with the sosijis.

But she didn’t steal them. They were free.

She was a good dog.

Of course other critics may be tougher but I particularly admire the strong moral code running through the piece. She gets that from her mother.

Friday FLash Fiction: King Rook

At least one part of this story is even true!

King Rook

I was born in a housing estate at the foot of a steep hill. The top of the hill is ringed with trees, ancient sessile oaks, wych elm and horse chestnut. The rooks owned the woods. These were big birds with heavy black beaks and bodies matt as coal dust but their hoods shone like satin and framed beaded eyes that saw everything.

Every evening the rooks welcomed nightfall with a great dance. The clamour, at first just one or two birds but soon dozens and then hundreds and eventually as many as a thousand rooks, swooped around and around in a black cloud as, in small groups, the birds returned from their day’s scavenging. In the valley below the housemartins and swifts zipped and flitted between the rows of houses but they flew in the shadow of the rooks.

Finally, at some unknowable signal, the rooks would drop from the sky to their roosts in the trees. For a few minutes the trees swayed and rattled as the birds noisily settled down and when all went quiet, night had come.

Nothing in the estate was safe from these birds. Cats, small dogs, rabbits - any kind of unwary pet or careless wild thing was a potential target. A ruffling of feathers, a chorus of rough croaks and something vulnerable would squeal. Afterwards the birds would stride casually across the road or on the little scrub of grass that was our playground and dare us to challenge them.

My mother was terrified of the birds.

I was the first baby born in our estate. It was newly built, a frantic response to the civil rights campaign for Catholic that was rapidly turning into the bloody Troubles - a door shut after that horse had bolted. My parents moved in while the houses around them were still being built and before people learned what it was like to live with the rooks. It was a bright spring morning and my mother left my pram in the garden - for all the shootings and the bombs erupting around them, that still felt a safe thing to do. She left me there and went back into the house to clean or cook or do whatever one of the thousand other things she did to make our lives that little bit better.

When she came back, just a few minutes later, a huge rook was sitting on the handle of my pram, staring in at me.

She screamed and rushed forward, waving frantic arms, trying to scare the bird away.

The rook just stared at her.

My mother stopped.

The crow looked at her, then back down at me, and then spread its wings and launched itself into the air.

My mother described the rook as a monster - vast as an eagle, darker than the night.

“The King Rook,” she’d called it and my dad had laughed at her.

But I know the King Rook is real.

He came back.

He came back and sometimes he took my things.

He took my Action Man from the garden, my toy car from the playground and my favourite tee-shirt from the washing line.

And I knew it was the King Rook because when he took something, he always left a gift.

A pyramid of snail shells, each one punched open and empty, the delicate skull of a rat, a pebble smoothed and polished by flowing water so that it shone like a jewel. And, one morning, planted in the centre of our tiny front garden like a banner, or a sign of ownership, a single perfect feather - so black that it hurt to look at.

They were magical signs. Signs that no matter how bad things got around me - and there were times when things got very bad - that I was protected. The King Rook was watching over me.

I have the collection of gifts spread in front of me now. If I concentrate hard, I can still feel the magic and the security. But it’s getting harder. My dad calls it rubbish, and sometimes I can see it with his eyes.

This is my last day in this house. Tomorrow I will leave for university. Tomorrow night I will be sleeping in a different country. I’ll come back, of course, but some part of me already knows this will never really be my home again. Part of me can’t wait to fly.

And part of me does not want to go.

It’s the end of September. The summer has been long and hot and even though you can already feel the days shortening, today has been warm and clear and the evening sky is bright and cloudless.

I wrap each piece of my collection carefully in paper and padding and place them in a plastic tub, then I put the tub carefully in the centre of my rucksack so it will be safe on the journey.

I go down stairs, give my mum a hug and go outside.

The rooks are coming home to roost, the first few already circling high above the woods, and tonight I want to watch them for the last time.

Tonight I am going to climb the hill and talk with the King Rook.

Friday Flash Fiction: The Spitfire

A new Friday Flash at last. This was written at the Friday Flash Fiction workshop at Eastercon and thus it is purely by coincidence (or perhaps the perversely complex machinations of my subconscious are more perversely complex than I had previously assumed) that this story is being published today - my birthday and the 26th anniversary of the events herein recalled:

THE SPITFIRE

The Spitfire was a sleek metal thing with a space for a battery underneath that made the propeller spin.I had coveted it for months as it had sat in the window of Morrow’s toy shop – the tiny moulded plastic pilot alert, day and night, for Messherschmidts and Focke Wolfs that would never pounce.

Now, possessing it at last, I admired the plane from every angle, holding it gently with the tips of my fingers. It was a Mark V, with beautiful curved wings and a shark like nose tipped with three propeller blades. Pressing a tiny, almost invisible, button on the bottom released the undercarriage, which descended slowly and locked into place with a satisfying click.

The letters EBZ were stencilled on the side of the plane with the RAF roundel on the side and wings, yellow, blue, white and red.

I brought it down to land gently on the kitchen table.

“Happy birthday,” my da said.

“Thanks – ” it was all I had time to say before my brother burst in.

“What d’ye want with this British bollocks,” he laughed, sweeping his hand across the table.

The Spitfire skittered away from me, rose briefly, its propeller turning free and for a moment it seemed set to take to the skies and fly. Then gravity gripped it, it turned over and plunged nose-down onto the hard-tiled floor.

The propeller shattered, plastic shards flashing across the floor. The canopy split like an egg-shell exposing the pilot to the elements. The tail was bent and twisted.

My brother stood hand over his mouth, shocked at what he’d done, his silly grin turning sick. I turned to my da, who bent to pick up the pieces of my toy.

The Spitfire never flew again.

FRIDAY FLASH: Leaving The World


Friday Flash Fiction: Leaving The World

Sept sat cross-legged in the centre of an ordinary living room and pulled The World from his head one wire at a time. Blood ran down the pale skin on his back, staining the blue shorts that were the only clothes he wore, and spread across the wheat coloured carpet in a growing pool. The furniture, stylish, modern, tasteful, had been pushed into the corners. The screens were off. Pictures and paintings were turned to the wall. A small scattering of provisions and necessary tools surrounded Sept, everything else had been cast aside. He had prepared for this. He was ready.

He ignored the blood around him but every few minutes he had to stop to push back the flow of thick crimson that threatened to blind him. He didn’t need his eyes, he could finish this without them, but the stinging pain was distracting. Read more »

FRIDAY FLASH: Sixty-seven parrots

There was a Green Woodpecker in our back garden this morning, a beautiful big green bird with a big red flash on his head. I’ve been thinking about birds all day. Did you know that the native British parakeet population now stretches as far north as Leeds? Anyway, on with the story. Read more »

FRIDAY FLASH: Scritch-scritch

Oh dear. Well, at least it’s on time.


Scritch-Scritch

The monsters first came at night, which seemed natural. First there were stories – urban legends and the ramblings of madmen – then we heard the screams rebounding from the high walls of emptying cities, then blurred pictures and then we all saw them. They stalked the streets at night and we surrendered the world to them until the sun rose, praying not to hear the scritch-scritch of their approach.It was not such a hard thing to do. Many of us had always suspected that our mastery of the night was tenuous, had sensed that our attempts to tame the darkness with flickering gas or harsh neon had always been futile. The night belonged to monsters, what difference did it make if they were imaginary or real, human or other? These creatures were only taking back what we never felt we owned.There was fear and anger and resistance. We demanded that someone do something. We called on the government to save us. First the police, then the army, were set the task of winning back the night. Scritch-scritch.The monsters tore them to shreds. So we locked our doors, sealed our windows and huddled around our fires and listened. And we learned to live with it.Follow the rules. Stay inside after sunset. Keep doors and windows closed, locked, barricaded and blocked. Don’t cook. Keep a blackout. Keep quiet.

We became burrowers and troglodytes and we survived.We reached an accommodation with the things that were preying on us.

Scritch-scritch.But then they started to come in the daytime.First we heard them moving in tunnels and sewers.

Scritch-scritch.Then they began to move in the shadows. It was the poorest who suffered most. Those who lived crammed together where the daylight never really reached the streets and where packed tenement corridors never saw the sun.

But that was only the beginning. The monsters adapted and moved out.

Scritch-scritch.Soon they were slipping through the daylight, their oily, slickly-sleek coats tearing rainbows from the sunshine, globular eyes squinting against the light, ragged yellow rows of teeth or horns lolling down, tearing grooves in the roadway to mark their passing and always the scritch-scritch of their claws.Scritch-scritch. Move on. Scritch-scritch. Please don’t stop. Silence. And they pounce, wailing, drowning out the brief screams and the wet sound of tearing flesh.There was no longer an accommodation.

There was only the hunted and the prey.

Scritch-scritch.

FRIDAY FLASH: Rum and Slaves

First, an apology. I’ve been unwell. My computer is distinctly unwell. The site’s been down thanks to the hosting. So no posts for a while. I’m going to try and do some movie reviews soon as I’ve seen some interesting stuff recently but for now, here’s another Friday Flash. Except what turned into a little character study seems to have twisted itself into a fragment of something much bigger - and frankly I’ve no idea quite where this is going (an alternate history re-writing of post-Falklands British politics is what seems on the cards but…)

 Anyhow, here’s what it is:

Rum and Slaves

The colour of the money passing through the accounts of DeGris and Languedoc may be as green as in any other bank, but the colour of its customer’s blood is invariably blue. The company began life as a goldsmith’s and issued its first cheque in 1668. Today it serves a liberal scattering of the world’s royal families and literally dozens of dukes, archdukes, counts and earls. A fortune alone is not enough to persuade DeGris and Languedoc to open its doors to a customer. Breeding, here at least, still counts.

Read more »

FRIDAY FLASH: The decision that changed the life of Fabrice Colliseo

Almost on time - hey what’s five minutes?

The Decision that changed the life Fabrice Colliseo

A life does not flow evenly from spring to the ocean, its passage is broken by rapids and falls, twists and turns. The choices we make define a life’s course. Some decisions take us over a threshold where the effort required to backtrack, to paddle against the turbulence and cross to another stream, requires more strength and dedication than most can muster.

Which decisions will plunge us over a precipice? We may not consciously take a decision at all, but drift into the maw of the momentous. But, even when conscious of the act of choosing, sometimes the greatest consequences spring from the apparently inconsequential. Some lives change by turning right instead of left, leaving when they could have stayed, or saying “I love you” but meaning “I want you.”

But a few people know, the very moment they make their choice, that their life has changed forever.

Read more »

FRIDAY FLASH: Stone must roll

Two cheats here, I confess. First, this is a Saturday Flash, because I didn’t get it finished yesterday. And second, at 1700 words, it isn’t even really a flash. But it is what it is.

Stone must roll

The rusting husks of Soviet-era industry litter the Balkans. Shuttered chemical plants smear rainbows across ground water in Serbia, cold and rusting furnaces rot in Bulgaria, in Montenegro the wind howls through the girdered skeletons of dead factories and in Macedonia, in Bosnia and in

Croatia vast plants with lost purposes are turning gradually into dust. Read more »

Friday Flash: The Unexpectedly Existential Life of Margaret Tome

I have no idea where this came from…

THE UNEXPECTEDLY EXISTENTIAL LIFE OF MARGARET TOME

The existentialist philosophers Heidegger and Satre argue that we have been thrown into this universe unprepared and abandoned in a universe that imposes fundamental limitations on what we might become.

They call this notion facticity. 

Read more »

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