Issue 94 July 2021 Flash Fiction Online July 2021

Listen and You’ll Hear Us Speak

by A.T. Greenblatt

September 2017

Science Fiction story by AT GreenblattThere’s this story we like to tell on Deck 3—we, the quiet ones. The voiceless dishwashers and short order cooks and house musicians who scrub and busk in grimy bars on a space station full of grimy bars. It’s about a girl who was quiet too.

One night, this girl met a trader, just like you, wearing cuts that were too expensive for his pay grade. That all but said, “I’m a stealing bastard.”

And I’m sure, darling, once that trader realized she couldn’t talk, he gave her the exact smile you’re giving me now. A smile that doesn’t need translation. A smile that says, “Prey. And prey again.”

“I have what you’ve lost,” you whisper in my ear when I serve you your drink, all sugar, all lies. “We’re going to be good friends.”

I nod. Pretend to agree. We quiet ones call traders like you something else. Voice Stealers.

“Maybe we can work something out,” you say.

I don’t say anything.

* * *

In the story we tell, the girl plays music at the bar when the glasses are full and cleans up after they’ve all been emptied or spilt. So no one wonders why she’s there long past closing. No one else is there to see this go down.

When she and the Voice Stealer meet, it’s in the ungodly hours of the morning, when the Deck’s so quiet you can hear the space station humming tunelessly to itself.

“I’ve got what you want,” says the Voice Stealer. But the way he slip-slides into the chair says, “Like hell you’re getting it back.”

The girl sits across from him anyway and taps her throat.

He smiles like a predator. “Do you remember how you got here?” he asks.

* * *

Of course we remember how we got here. It’s a story so familiar and smooth that it slides right off of the cops’ shrugs and the bar owners’ grunts. Gestures that mean: “Great, more stranded stowaways. More cheap labor. Shame, they can’t tell us what happened.”

It always starts with a Voice Stealer. Except us quiet ones, like the girl, like me, never realize the story has begun until after we wake up in a cargo box on a space station far away from home. The last thing we remember is an iffy decision to take a strange trader up on that drink. Well, they’re wearing a nice suit, we reassured ourselves. What’s the worst that can happen?

So we ended up drugged, dumped on a godforsaken station, voiceless and too broke to get back home.

But I’ll give it to you, darling, you Voice Stealers are careful. Only choosing victims from planets too insignificant or crowded for anyone to care. Taking voices from people whose voices wouldn’t be missed.

My aunties always said there’s a market for everything in the universe. They said, watch out, everyone has a price.

I didn’t believe them. But I was an idiot back when I had a voice.

* * *

When we meet, the bar’s been closed for hours. I’m cleaning my battered violin and you’re finishing your last drink when you slide into a chair beside me. All smiles, all teeth.

“Can you remember how you got here?” you ask. But what you’re really asking is: “Do you know who to blame?”

I shake my head. I don’t remember who took my voice. There’s lots of Voice Stealers in the universe. There’re even more quiet ones.

* * *

In the story we like to tell, the Voice Stealer presents our girl with an irresistible offer. A new voice for a price. He pulls out a box no bigger than a thumbnail and holds it up to his throat. When he speaks, he sounds like an old man.

“Yours. For ten thousand,” he says. But the posture of his shoulders says: “More than you have. More than you’re worth.”

The girl’s face falls, but not for the reason he thinks. That’s not her voice. She was half hoping he had her old one, but it’s probably for the best. She’s learned how to talk to other quiet ones through expressions, hands, and gestures. The language everyone speaks without words. The vocabulary isn’t great, but it’s always honest.

Music helps too. The girl has a knack for the bass. Even in grimy bars, people stop slurping their drinks to listen to her riffs.

“Too much?” the Voice Stealer asks in his creaky voice. “How about a trade, then?”

* * *

The thing is, this story repeats itself like a bad melody.

You’re holding a box the size of your thumbnail up to your throat. You sound like a bratty four-year old.

“I have a client that’ll pay real good money for this. But I heard you on that violin tonight,” you say, sweetly. “A trade, maybe? This voice for your musical ear. You need to talk, yes?”

This would be a more tempting offer if I didn’t know you were a lying bastard. If I hadn’t heard the girl’s story before or the dozens of others like hers.

You’re mistaken, darling. We’re voiceless. Not mute.

You start to slump in your chair.

We quiet ones have learned from you Voice Stealers. Little tricks, like how to seem non-threatening. How to lace your drinks, like you first did to us. How to wait. The girl in our story wasn’t a Voice Stealers’ victim again. She was first to perfect this method. The first of us to transform from your prey to your predator.

So let me tell you how this story will end. In the morning, you’ll find yourself slumped in the cops’ doorway with that stolen voice taped to your throat and I’ll use your cash to get back home to my very large and very vocal family. It’s a fair trade, don’t you think?

Your eyes widen in realization. “But… you need… a voice.”

Really? I flash you my hungriest smile. ­Haven’t you been listening, darling?

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Editorial: Escape!

Last month, my family went on our first real vacation since COVID, and from the record-breaking number of visitors pouring into the U.S. National Parks, we obviously weren’t the only ones ready for some sort of escape from the stresses and struggles of modern life. And what a relief it was to stand upon the cool, green forest floor and stare in awe at redwoods for whom the past year is only one thin growth ring among thousands! (If you have a chance to make it out west to Redwood National Park, I’d highly recommend it!)

This month’s flash stories feature much more dire struggles for escape, where the stakes are higher, the danger more immediate, and the yearning for that sense of relief even more acute.

Escape with us into a magical world in Anjali Patel’s “Ember” (Jul 2), where what you find at your journey’s end may be just as dangerous as that which you’re running from. Cheer on a clever and mischievous pet as she seeks her freedom in Jennifer Hudak’s latest FFO story, “The Wizard’s Book Tastes of Flight” (Jul 9). Take a one-way trip out to the Deep Black in Adam Fout’s “Breathe” (Jul 16). And face down the inescapable in Marissa Lingen’s “This Will Not Happen to You” (Jul 23). With five Fridays in July, we’re also sharing with you a dive into our archives and an exclusive interview in another Flash Fiction Flashback on the theme of escape, featuring “Listen and You’ll Hear Us Speak” by A.T. Greenblatt (Jul 30).

At fewer than 1000 words each, it won’t take you long to immerse yourself in these brief, but awe-inspiring escapes!


NEWS

  • Special shout-out to our latest AURORA-level Patreon supporter, Terry P! Flash Fiction Online is funded entirely through the generosity and support of our readers! Check out our special Patreon benefits HERE!
  • Congratulations to FFO alum John Wiswell on winning the Nebula award for Best Short Story for his story, “Open House on Haunted Hill,” which was published at Diabolical Plots.
  • We’re still seeking stories of 500-1000 words for our special “ONE HUNDRED”-themed issue! Guidelines HERE.
  • Love the stories we publish? Help us boost our Amazon presence by leaving a review! Check out all our 2021 issues HERE.

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The Wizard’s Book Tastes of Flight

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This Will Not Happen To You

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Flash Fiction Flashback: “Listen and You’ll Hear Us Speak” by A.T. Greenblatt

September 2017. A fatburg the size of 11 buses was dragged out of London’s sewers, and scientists discovered a jellyfish that sleeps! In the U.S., hurricane Irma left 7 million homes without power, while in Bangladesh, over 500,000 Rohingya were living in dire conditions. In Africa, a tree-planting initiative was actually reversing desertification. Guillermo del Toro won an award for The Shape of Waterwhile The Handmaid’s Tale won eight awards! including Outstanding Drama Series.

It was also the month that Flash Fiction Online published “Listen and You’ll Hear Us Speak” by A.T. Greenblatt. The far-future setting might be unfamiliar, but the desire to escape exploitation is all too familiar. Whether it’s the “sharing economy” or “wage-slavery,” we’ll always need stories about those who refuse to be underestimated. This story makes me shout hooray! 

We hope you’ll be cheering as you read all our July stories of escape.

Science Fiction story by AT Greenblatt

Listen and You’ll Hear Us Speak” by A.T. Greenblatt

There’s this story we like to tell on Deck 3—we, the quiet ones. The voiceless dishwashers and short order cooks and house musicians who scrub and busk in grimy bars on a space station full of grimy bars. It’s about a girl who was quiet too.

One night, this girl met a trader, just like you, wearing cuts that were too expensive for his pay grade. That all but said, “I’m a stealing bastard.”

Continue reading…

CATCHING UP WITH AUTHOR A.T. GREENBLATT

FFO: In the years since your story was published in Flash Fiction Online, what other writing goals have you accomplished? Which publications, awards, or successes are you most proud of?

ATG: “Listen and You’ll Hear Us Speak” came out in Fall 2017, right when I started getting published consistently as a short story writer. My writing career has taken off in the years since, with about a dozen publications in magazines like Uncanny, Clarkesworld, Tor.com, and Asimov’s. I’ve been a finalist for the Nebula, Hugo, Locus, and Sturgeon Award and won the Nebula Award in 2019 for best short story. My work has been reprinted in a bunch of Year’s Best anthologies and translated into a dozen languages. Honestly, as I look back at all that’s happened, I’m still stunned.

FFO: Looking back on your story, is there anything about it that surprises you? Anything that you would have changed or done differently if you’d written the same story now?

ATG: I’m surprised I was able to weave together two different points of view and two different stories in under a thousand words. Rereading it for the first time in years, I noticed there were sentences that I could have made sharper or places where I could have added small details. But I try not to overanalyze my previously published work – no good will come of it. I’m still not a great flash fiction writer, as in, all my attempted flash pieces usually grow into full length stories. So I’m pleased that this one managed to stay at flash length.

FFO: What do you think are the most valuable lessons you’ve learned about writing in the years since this story was published?

ATG: The lesson that’s been drilled into me over the last few years is patience. A writing career is a long game with many ups and downs and all you can control is what you write, what you learn, and how to push yourself creatively. I’m constantly reminding myself to wait, to keep finishing stories, to keep revising them and sending them out. Because writing is slow and strange and when success comes, sometimes it shows up unexpectedly.

FFO: How have you changed in the years since this story was published—as a writer and as an individual?

ATG: As a writer, I have a better feeling for when a story is done, and which markets will like it. I’m also writing more ambitious stories and finishing some of the stories I didn’t have the skill to write when I attempted them years ago.

As an individual, I think I’m a little more confident and a little braver. I got better at time management and at not being a hermit all the time.  

FFO: Are there any writers, poets, artists, or other creators whom you’d like to recommend to those who enjoy your work?

ATG: Most of these writers’ styles and stories are nothing like mine, but I really enjoy the work of Dominica Phetteplace, Nghi Vo, Akwaeke Emezi, Samantha Irby, Kathleen Jennings, Lavie Tidhar, and Meg Elison. I’m also on a Phoebe Bridgers music kick and have been enjoying the podcast Musical Splaining.

FFO: How can readers support you in your current endeavors?

ATG: The best way to support me as a writer is to support SFF magazines like Flash Fiction Online, Uncanny, Clarkesworld, Locus, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Asimov’s, Nightmare, etc. Short story markets cultivate the next generation of writers and they can’t do that without reader support. You can also follow me on Twitter at @AtGreenblatt or on my blog at http://atgreenblatt.com for new publication announcements. Thank you!

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