Issue 7 April 2014 Flash Fiction Online April 2014

Extraordinary Possibilities

March 2014

Actress Kandyse McClure, best known for her portrayal of Anastasia Dualla in the Sci-Fi Channel’s Battlestar Galactica series, once said:

“I’ve always loved the power of stories to transport me to another world, to imagine extraordinary possibilities, to experience things I may not have access to in my regular life…”

With this month’s issue we hope to transport you to all kinds of extraordinary possibilities.

Like this one:  What if life’s unpleasantnesses could slip from your mind?  Author Stewart Baker addresses that question in his science fiction offering, “Oubliette.”

Or this:  Imagine the planets as people–elegant Lady Earth, Moon trailing at her heals, gallant King Jupiter, impish little Mercury.  In “One Last Night at the Carnival Before the Stars Go Out” returning Flash Fiction Online author Carolyn Yoachim brings these and many other celestial bodies to life for a few moments of sheer beauty.

And finally, author Brynn MacNab takes us to another world in a strikingly relevant fantasy offering, “I Imagine Myself as Rath Ducha,” in which the people wait for their queen to appear and save them in their time of need.

Happy Travels!

 

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One Last Night at the Carnival Before the Stars Go Out

carnivalLady Earth went to the Galactic Carnival in a gown of watery blue and earthy green, with a shawl of swirling gray clouds. The back of her gown was black, but decorated with the lights of thousands of cities. Her pet, Moon, trailed behind her.

“Guess your mass, Madam?” Mars asked, teasing.

She twirled for him, showing off her gown.

“You look lovely,” Mars said. “Even the Great Ringmaster could not conjure anything so beautiful.”

Lady Earth wanted to hear more about the magician, but Moon tugged at the ocean of her gown, eager to see the attractions. Venus hurried by, dressed in thick clouds and looking uncomfortably warm. Mercury followed. He asked, as he always did, “Can Moon come and play? Please please can I play with Moon?”

He was gone before Lady Earth could answer. She turned her attention to the bright lights of the Constellation Animal Show — bears and lions, dogs and fishes, all sparkling brilliantly as they leapt through hoops and balanced on tightropes. Lady Earth munched on meteorites as she watched the animals, tossing an occasional treat to Moon. The back of her gown brightened as her city lights spread and merged, covering her land and even her oceans.

The constellation show was popular with children. Lady Earth spotted Halley and Apophis running around and gawking at the animals, surrounded by scores of other comets and asteroids. Apophis paid no attention to where he was going, and almost collided with Lady Earth.

“Be more careful,” she warned, for even at the carnival there were sometimes tragedies. “Remember what happened to Shoemaker-Levy Nine!”

Poor Nine had been watching His Majesty’s Many Mighty Moons — a spectacular juggling act — and had run into His Majesty himself, the great King Jupiter. Nine had broken up into pieces and burned away, and there was nothing anyone could do. So sad. But Apophis paid no attention to Lady Earth’s warning and continued at top speed, careening away into the blackness. From the exit of the constellation show, Lady Earth saw the magician Mars had mentioned. The Great Ringmaster pulled planetary nebulae seemingly out of nowhere. Excited by the show, Moon ran circles around her, eager to see where the rings would appear next. Her darling pet would have loved to chase the brightly colored rings, but she kept Moon’s leash short, as she always did.

Mercury whizzed by, so enthralled by the show that he forgot to ask if Moon could come and play.

Another nebula appeared, and another. A bluish one here, a rainbow ring there, and a delicate band of pink and gold that appeared like a halo directly above her. Some were so distant they looked like points, others were close enough to see every detail. Lady Earth searched the blackness, trying to see where the rings came from, but she never managed to look in the right place at the right time. She was so engrossed in the show that she didn’t notice Mars until he was almost upon her.

“The Great Ringmaster will perform his trick on Sun in a moment — you’d best step back a bit,” he said. “And, I must say, your natural black is gorgeous. I always thought the lights were a bit much.”

Lady Earth’s beautiful lights had all gone out while she was watching the magic show. She wondered what had happened to the sparkling cities, and decided that perhaps the Great Ringmaster had dimmed the lights in preparation for his trick. She hoped it was only that, and not a more permanent change.

“Hurry,” Mars said, disrupting her thoughts, “and come away with me. It isn’t wise to linger when the magician makes his nebulae.”

Mars was forever asking her out, but never with such urgency. He was a nice enough neighbor, but Lady Earth wasn’t sure he was worth leaving orbit for. Besides, who would watch Moon if she went out?

Lady Earth was about to say no when a section of her gown caught fire. Half a continent of fabric lit up with tiny jets of flame. Startled, Lady Earth jumped out toward Mars. A good thing too, for Sun transformed into a giant ball of red flames. If she had stayed on her normal path, Lady Earth would certainly have perished. As it was, her gown boiled away, leaving her with no oceans and no atmosphere, only molten rock laid bare for all to see.

But that was not the worst of it.

Poor Moon was lost to the flames. Even at the carnival there were tragedies, and Lady Earth had not pulled her beloved pet out fast enough. She felt more naked for losing Moon than for losing all her oceans, clouds, and lights put together.

Eventually Sun shrank away, small and dim, drained by the magic trick. All around Lady Earth the blackness of space had changed to reds and blues and yellows and greens, but she hardly noticed the nebula that surrounded her. Instead she searched the inner orbits for her lost pet, but she searched in vain. There was no sign of Venus, or little Mercury. He and Moon were together now, burned away and gone.

Mars and Halley and even King Jupiter came and gave her their condolences. Mars offered her Deimos, for he had two pets and liked Phobos better anyway — but Deimos could not replace Moon. Lady Earth was stripped of everything she held dear, and nothing could cheer her.

Or so she thought.

But when Mars swept past again, Phobos and Deimos cast their shadows on him, and in those shadows Lady Earth saw the tiny glowing lights of cities.

Moon was lost, and her gown was ruined, but perhaps one day her cities would return to her. Their tiny lights gave her hope enough to keep moving. After all, tonight was the last night of the carnival, and she had much to see before the stars went out.


KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

Caroline M. Yoachim is a writer and photographer living in Seattle, Washington. She is a graduate of the Clarion West Writers Workshop and was nominated for a Nebula Award for her novelette “Stone Wall Truth.” Her fiction has appeared in Asimov’s, Lightspeed, Interzone, and Daily Science Fiction, among other places. For more about Caroline, check out her website at http://carolineyoachim.com

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Comments

  1. dennis says:
    the apocalypse from an anthropomorphic pov. how interesting. thank you for sharing your talents.
  2. Spamhater says:
    At first the title turned me off, but after reading the opening paragraphs, I was hooked.  Very good story.  Clever analogies and good pacing.  Thanks for writing it, and thanks to flashfiction online for publishing it.
  3. Leximize says:
    What a fun twist and pleasant play of worlds, I mean words. Thanks.
  4. Gregg Chamberlain says:
    interesting… almost a child’s fairy story.

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Oubliette

oubliette“Change your life,” the poster says. “With one simple surgery, you can live fully in the moment. No stress, no worries, no lies.”

The text is accompanied by the usual images. Smiling adults, laughing children, a couple on a sunset beach walking and holding hands. That’s all, but I pick up a brochure anyway–if nothing else, I want to know what kind of charlatan’s trick they’re passing off as science.

“It’s just as easy as it sounds,” the booth girl tells me. “We install a chip in the hippocampus which triggers whenever stress generates neuropsin in the amygdala. The chip tracks the neural connections used to store the event, and simply blocks the brain when it tries to retrieve the memories.”

“So it doesn’t actually make you happier,” I say.

Her smile is startlingly white against the red of her lipstick. “It absolutely does. You’ll live each moment in the moment, without the past dragging you down. And you’ll build happy memories naturally as a result. As you’ll see in that brochure, trial participants showed a marked increase in seratonin after installation of the chip. Many reported that after a few small blackouts in the first week they didn’t even need the chip, because of how great they felt.”

I shake my head and leave without replying.

Still, I keep the brochure.

#

My taxi’s late to the airport, so I miss my scheduled flight. One red-eye later, I stumble in through the door to find Marjorie just slouched there on the sofa watching T.V. like she was when I left four days ago.

I don’t need to check to see the sink of dirty dishes, the microwave dinner boxes littering the counter. These are all familiar friends. Next to the door there’s a wilted rose and a box of chocolates–my usual pre-conference gift, untouched.

Usually I’d ignore it, go do the dishes, take out the trash. Check up on Kate. But I’m stressed from the flight, I guess, or maybe I’ve just finally had enough. I step in front of the T.V., and the blue-white-blue-black-green-red-blue stops its flickering over Marjorie’s face.

Her pupils dilate a little, she blinks a few times. “Oh,” she says.

“Just ‘Oh’? What happened, Marjorie? Tell me what I’m doing wrong, so we can fix this.”

But she just grunts and waits for me to move, so I do, setting in on the dishes, the trash, the dust, the windows–everything that doesn’t need doing and nothing that does, as usual.

By the time I’m finished it’s late afternoon. I stop outside Kate’s room and knock on the door, but she doesn’t answer even when I say I’m home. Just turns up her music. I jiggle the handle, which is locked, and give up. I sit on the bed in mine and Marjorie’s room until night comes in, holding the brochure on my lap and flicking one corner of it with my thumb. What if I could make us both happy?

The next morning I call to set up an appointment. No charlatan’s trick can be worse than this.

#

Summer at the beach, and the sun warm on the back of my neck. There’s a young woman sitting next to me I’ve never seen before, leaned back in a recliner with a drink in one hand. She laughs at something I’ve just said, but I can’t recall what it is, or where I am, or why.

The woman looks at me expectantly, like she’s waiting for me to continue some story, but I just sit there, mouth open. Where’s Marjorie? Where’s Kate?

“Robert,” she says. “Robert, what’s wrong?”

There’s a sudden pressure where my spine meets the base of my skull, and–

#

Rain out a motel window, and I’m watching the redwoods through it. My face is reflected in the dimness of the glass, older and grayer than I remember. Nobody else’s. When did…

I stop myself, focus on the gentle sounds of rain. Feel the peace, I tell myself. Feel the solitude, and learn to enjoy it.

But Marjorie, and–

#

This time, I have a book in my hands. Without looking at the title, I set it down on the table I find next to me, stand, and focus my mind on the past.

Kate’s birth. My wedding with Marjorie, our first date, way back when. Kate on a set of swings, gap-toothed with laughter. Endless summer vacation days of my own as a child, when the afternoon blended seamlessly into evening, and evening into night into day again, with nothing to do but lie there in the grass and breathe its heady greenness, or go swimming at the lake with friends and girls.

The whole time I’m remembering–reliving my past, re-affirming who I am–my body is acting. I’ve picked up the phone and dialed the number from the brochure. I get hold music for fifteen minutes, and almost panic, but then someone answers and the flood of seratonin is enough to get me through the whole conversation, and by the time the familiar pressure starts in at the base of my skull, I’ve arranged for an expert to come to me and remove the chip.

#

After the second surgery, everything changes. I’m still who I was, I think, all those years ago, but at the same time I’m not. I’m the old me, made new.

I call Marjorie, but a stranger answers the phone. Nobody by that name lives there, she says. Eventually I track down Kate. She’s married now, to a woman she introduces as Sarah when we meet by Marjorie’s grave. There are lines along her eyes deeper than any I remember on her mother’s.

“So you’re back,” she says.

“Yeah.” I say. “I’m sorry, Kate. God, I’m so–“

“It’s okay, dad,” she says, placing a hand on my arm. “We can make it okay.”

I nod, unable to speak, and we turn and walk from the grave, from the past, together.

 

 

Comments

  1. dennis says:
    a very nice spin on the often stale admonition to savor the mundane. it makes me wish we still had rod serling with us to put this on film.
  2. Leximize says:
    “Click” with Adam Sandler, or nearly so. Still, written in a way that gets across that whole movie in just a few minutes of reading.
  3. Leximize Interesting!  I’ve never even heard of that particular Sandler movie, let alone seen it.  This isn’t really that unusual of an idea though, I suspect, so I’m not too surprised to see overlap with existing works. 🙂  Thanks for the read!
  4. Thanks @dennis, glad you enjoyed.
  5. MereMorckel says:
    Intense
  6. MereMorckel Thanks!  I think that’s how it should make the reader feel. 🙂
  7. Pete Wood says:
    Nice Job.
    Looking forward to seeing more of your work.
  8. Bogdan D says:
    Gave me a feeling of lost chance, fragmented past and a sort of nostalgic fragrance.
  9. Jauffrey The Scribe says:
    DANG! That, may I say, whole heartedly and without reserve, is some masterful prose! 😀
    I thought we were gonna go dystopian (My favorite) for a minute, but I like where this went, where this took me to 🙂
  10. Jauffrey The Scribe Thanks!
  11. Bogdan D Thanks for the read and comment. 🙂
  12. ElinaPatriciaDiLeo says:
    Resonances of “Eternal Sunshine of a Spotless Mind”
    http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/174158
  13. crustyjuggler says:
    I enjoyed that. Makes you think what living in the moment really means. You can sit there and watch TV, listen to music and ignore things. Or you could experience what life has to offer. Although from this story, a bleaker message comes than what you’d expect. It says to me at least that life is quick, over in a flash and you can spend it doing the same things over and over or experience new things but either way it’s over very quickly.

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I Imagine Myself as Rath Ducha

RathDuchaThe rain fell everywhere, ruining our crops, flooding our homes, making rivers of the streets. We gathered, hundreds of us, thousands, half in hope and half because nothing else was left for us to do. I like to imagine how we looked from the tower: the crowd stretching like a turbulent and dark sea toward the horizon. I imagine myself as Rath Ducha, gazing from warmth onto desperation far below. I would have pulled the luxurious furs close against my neck and chin, and moved my shoulders under them like a cat settling. “Bring me their prayers,” I imagine her/me saying, and our voice rings like a silver bell.

Instead I was one of the supplicants, and I shifted my waxed canvas coat not from contentment but in an attempt to protect myself a little from the downpour.

Beside me, a gaunt woman with two small children and a babe in arms tried to interest her older two in drawing in the mud. She had brought along three sticks, one for each of them. “Draw the Lady a picture,” she coaxed. “Draw the sun, Ethan. Beatrice, what can you draw? Why don’t you draw us some nice supper?”

Ethan poked skeptically at the muck. I felt for him: the sludge would hardly hold shape at this stage, especially with such a feeble implement. Beatrice ignored the proffered tool and clung to her mother’s skirt, whining indistinctly. The intent we all comprehended easily enough: hunger, and perhaps some sense of the great injustice of drawing a supper that the rain had washed away.

Sympathetic or not, I shifted away from the little cluster. Before long the baby would start to bleat as well.

My fantasies of Rath Ducha’s life usually veer, here, off to what I’d eat while listening to the people’s pleas. Melted butter would slide from crisp toast down my wobbling chins, cake crumbs would nest in the corners of my lips, peach fibers would lodge between my teeth. I think of the pleasant gray of clouds and water beyond the window, the sweet sound of rain on a roof without leaks. I feast, and clean my face and mouth, and close my painted eyes as the herald sings to me the needs of my neglected people.

Sated, I feel I’d like a nap.

In reality, I slipped away from the family, forward through the listless crowd. The doorman murmured excuses. “My lady is tired,” he told us. “Rath Ducha rests from her labors.”

The men nearby scowled and muttered. One or two spat. But on we waited. It is difficult to foment hot rebellion in a downpour.

The doorman was replaced, as the world darkened further under the clouds. The new guardian carried a lantern, ornate iron curled around a single candle. “Get back, you lot,” he sneered at us. “Do you want Rath Ducha to see your insolence?”

I like thinking of her bed almost as much as her meal. Layers and layers of thick blankets; pillows piled everywhere around her. Occasionally, on nights when my own belly is less than a growling void and I have found a shelter I consider safe, I invite a nubile slave-man into our imaginary bed. He is well-trained to please fat Rath Ducha, beautiful Rath Ducha, and it is as much his pleasure as his duty, a fact that he makes obvious.

But most times, my Rath Ducha sleeps alone, in a perfect marriage of complete unconsciousness and absolute comfort.

My favorite part of the fantasy is morning, when I rise from my wondrous bed and walk out onto my canopied balcony. I observe the sea of my loyal subjects beneath me, and they are sorry indeed for the wrongs they have done and all the irreverences they have ever voiced. So I open my arms to the sky and part the clouds, and the sun shines down on us. The rain flees at my good pleasure, and the seasons resume as they should, and prosperity returns to Ducha’s realm.

In fact I woke in a mud-puddle, with pain in my neck and back. The guard had changed in the night, and the new man said nothing at all. He only grunted when anyone drew too close, and tapped the axe at his side. And we held back, and waited for our queen, our goddess, to be merciful.

Eventually, of course, even the seas will rise.

It must have drawn on toward noon by the time we moved. A splash at first, as it always happens with mobs if not with water. A young man, a relative hothead even in the damp, got too close, got pushed, pushed back. He swung at the guard, awkwardly, ineffectively, landed no blow. The guard swung in return, and cleaved him in two. His head fell near my feet. The eyes were wide as a fish’s, and as cold.

They tore the guard from his feet. I stood too long looking at the dead man, and I didn’t see them avenge him.

We surged up, through the door, into the tower. I prefer to think of the servants of the house not as murdered but as drowned.

We were a wealthy people once, learned and blessed. Our Rath Ducha had taken such good care of us, when I was young.

But that day, we could not find her.

Before night fell we had emptied her larder, looted her rooms. I took some servants’ food, mutton and hard bread. I never saw her bedroom or her throne room until the gold, the pillows, all the best had been taken and what little remained was defiled with mud.

Clouds stay nowhere forever. Rain cannot continue unabated, or it would overflow our borders and drown the world.

We have had dry days. But we are a wet and cursed land.

I have a fantasy, in which I find Rath Ducha’s grave. It is heaped with riches, and inside it something stirs…

Comments

  1. dennis says:
    so much more subtle and yet keener than an occupy movement. an excellent story.
  2. Leximize says:
    The way all dystopic fantasies should start… Thanks.

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