Categories
micro fiction micro monday short fiction

Elvidarium by Kay Sexton

Elvidarium | Kay Sexton

I’d never spoken to Ronita before we covered synesthesia in English class. To start with her name was weird, and she was weird. She always had chewed off nail varnish and how is that possible? There has to be a day when it’s perfect, surely?

I knew, from the moment Miss Perkins defined synaesthesia, which one of us was going to claim to have it. Magdalena Pike. Magdalena with the too-long fringe that she constantly brushed out of her eyes, the too-prominent Adam’s apple that was bound to raise questions in later life, the fluttery laugh with a hand pressed to her chest (the hand that wasn’t brushing hair out of her eyes). Magdalena would go on to become a hypnotherapist, to recover memories of past lives and end up suing an employer for discrimination because they wouldn’t let her bring in a six-foot pyramid to heal her clients’ endocrine systems.

Magdalena’s instantaneous acquisition of the ability to hear numbers and smell days of the week caused me to eye-roll inadvertently enough to catch Ronita’s attention, so when we paired up to write a piece, she tapped her pen on my desk. “You and me,” she said. 

We wrote about the colors of emotions. Not the obvious red for anger stuff. Taupe was depression, peach was the hour before school ended on a Friday, and jade was the color of a walk with your pet dog early in the morning before the newspapers were delivered. It was okay. It was adequate. It was more fun than anything I’d ever done in English class before. That was how we began, giggling through our creative writing, asking Magdalena snarky questions about tasting numbers as we ran downstairs to our next class, skipping afternoon school without discussion, without guilt. 

We played on swings like little kids, smoked cigarettes like grown-ups, talked like teenagers who’d never had a best friend before, which neither of us had. We became inseparable. But not for long. Three weeks after we first talked, on the peach hour of Friday, we were sprawled in the long grass behind the playing field, sharing a roll-up, when Ronita said, “You know when you wake up in the morning and turn over in bed and remember it’s Saturday and you don’t have to get up?”

I nodded. 

“You know the color you see behind your closed eyelids at that moment?”

I nodded.

“That color…” she inhaled deeply. “That color is elvidarium.”

I remembered that conversation when I heard the news on Monday morning. Heard that she’d taken pills she’d filched from her grandmother’s house – the house her parents thought she was staying at because they were away for the weekend. Her grandmother thought she was at a friend’s house. 

I knew I was that friend. 

I knew she’d woken that Saturday morning, rolled over in bed, said elvidarium to herself and known it was never going to get any better. 

I understood.

About the Author:

Kay Sexton has been a finalist for several writing awards including the Sunday Times Short Story Award, the Willesden Herald Fiction Contest and winner of both the Fort William Festival Contest and the Wollongong Literary Festival Short Story Contest. In addition she has had two non-fiction books and one novel published. 

Categories
micro monday poetry

Papier-mâché by Rosa Crepax

Papier-mâché | Rosa Crepax

14.45
My meteorite feet sink deeper in the ground
with each conquered breath. It’s 14.45
when plaster starts cracking, vaulting
the premature dusk. Some ancient soothsayer
must have talked about this. A thunder of void
runs atop fields that fear has dried out. No one
leaves in a hurry; time is asleep, yet the city’s
on fire, and a green ice lolly helps only a bit.

16.37
The day chestnuts turn into
papier-mâché; it goes all up in flames
with a pretty flutter of winds, farm animals,
soap bubbles, and refuse. I worry about
the toothpaste I forgot to buy, and the ballerinas
trapped in their musical boxes unable to breathe.
We could stop the car, release them at once, and doze
or daze off in the rye, the melody of their metal teeth
lullabying us to peace.

17.21
We could set up the table or join a cash machine queue
or whatever people do when they’re not scared
under alien attack. You drag me, who perhaps
am papier-mâché too, into your garden
place a sceptre in my hand. Around the pond
six story trees pierce through the ceiling. My mosquito-net cape
touches the water and floats…

19.02
Let’s set up the table for real.

 

About the Author:

Originally from Milan Italy, Rosa Crepax lives, writes and teaches in London UK. She has a PhD from Goldsmiths University and lectures in critical and cultural studies. As well as publishing in academic journals and books, she writes poetry. Her work appears or is forthcoming in Hobart, Spoon River Poetry Review, Ghost City Review and 3:AM Magazine.

Categories
micro monday poetry

Obit by Kait Quinn

Obit | Kait Quinn

after Victoria Chang 

About the Author:

Kait Quinn (she/her) was born with salt in her wounds. She flushes the sting of living by writing poetry. She is the author of four poetry collections, and her work has appeared in Reed Magazine, Watershed Review, Chestnut Review, and elsewhere. She received first place in the League of MN Poets’ 2022 John Calvin Rezmerski Memorial Grand Prize. She enjoys repetition, coffee shops, and vegan breakfast foods. Kait lives in Minneapolis with her partner, their regal cat, and their very polite Aussie mix. Find her at kaitquinn.com.

Categories
micro monday poetry

Grocery Store 3 a.m. by Kit Rohrbach

Grocery Store 3 a.m. | Kit Rohrbach

Worst of all
is the sadness of fruit
tumbled in a cardboard bin
remembering Cézanne’s
important apples
on a sunlit blue table
and Gauguin’s
sun-browned women,
their skin smelling of oranges.

The scent of oranges fades
in overhead fluorescence
like years and blue sailboats
on sun-bright water.

Oranges in my kitchen
sliced in half
fed to a juicer,
medieval punishment
for beauty or witchcraft,
as the lever ratchets down
to press sun-flavored juice
from pulp and skin.

The empty rind
fits exactly in my hand.

About the Author:

Kit Rohrbach lives, writes, and herds cats in Southeastern Minnesota.

Categories
micro fiction micro monday short fiction

Madonna and Child with Butter Cow by Zachary Kocanda

Madonna and Child with Butter Cow | Zachary Kocanda

with a line from Wikipedia

When I say “Hillshire,” you say, “Farms,” then pull me in closer with your hooves. Spoon me like forgotten low-fat yogurt in the back of the refrigerator and kiss me goodbye before you leave for work. The most sensitive part of a cow is its udders, and the most sensitive part of you is me. But don’t worry. I’m fine. Take your time in the fields. I fear for the tipped cow, but you reassure me—: A healthy cow lying on her side is not immobilized; she can rise whenever she chooses. I follow the goings-on of the state fair, forlorn I can’t join you. The sculpted butter cow is the belle of the ball, like every year. I preferred last year’s design, but I’ll still protect her with my life. I take a twelve-hour shift and monitor the webcam to make sure she’s safe. The exhibit closes soon. I wait for you. A mother and child, alone, behold the spinning cow behind its bulletproof glass. It must be baby’s first state fair—so tiny, a pink bow in her hair, black and white polka dot onesie, little calf. The mother whispers to the infant: “You too are more than toast fodder, baby.” The child fusses. I see them stir before the sculpture has completed its rotation, and I white-knuckle my computer mouse. Hold it, I will to them, You must see this beauty from all sides.

About the Author:

Zachary Kocanda’s writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Joyland, Grist, Hobart, and Vol. 1 Brooklyn, among other publications. He lives in Chicago, Illinois. Find more at zacharykocanda.com.

Categories
micro fiction micro monday short fiction

Girls Over The Edge by Susan M. Breall

Girls Over The Edge | Susan M. Breall

The thrill of blue, the smell of cold water hitting warm concrete, the chatter of girls by the edge of the pool. It was a white-hot day, a day without current or motion. She sat, awkward and apart from the other girls.  She wanted to be like them, so she dangled her feet on their side of the pool. She rubbed at her sunburned legs as she listened to their laughter and pretended to understand it. She knew she was not like them, with their bronzed bodies and colorful swimwear.  She was a sun-bleached outdated magazine cover, a pair of discarded eyeglasses cast aside on a shelf. 

As she looked up at the wide expanse of sky a boy her same age approached. He had her coloring, her same beyond-white skin tone, her same pale blue eyes, red hair, and freckled cheeks. He gave her a warm familiar smile, then walked over to the beautiful chattering girls and pushed them, one by one, over the edge of the pool. She continued to look up at the wide wonderful sky during the screaming and flailing of limbs. One girl could not swim.

He was more than a brother. He fought every nasty boy who threw banana slugs at her legs. He knocked a boy unconscious who forced her to eat garden snails. But the beautiful drowning girl meant no harm, so when she stopped looking up at the sky and looked down at the pool’s edge where her brother stood, she screamed for a lifeguard who then came running from the back alley behind the changing rooms where he was making out with his girlfriend. The lifeguard pulled the beautiful drowning girl out of the deep water that was about to devour her. She thought how fortunate for the beautiful girl that she happened to be right there at the edge of the pool. 

About the Author:

By day Susan M. Breall handles cases involving abused, abandoned, and neglected children. By night she writes short stories. She is the 2022 winner of the Gateway Review flash fiction contest. Her stories appear in numerous anthologies including The Raw Art Review, Kairos Literary Magazine, Running Wild Press, The Write Launch, Impermanent Facts, Paragon Press’ Martian Chronicles, and Dreamers Writing.

Categories
micro monday poetry

Cli-Fi by Caitlin Cacciatore

Cli-Fi by Caitlin Cacciatore

after Tracy K. Smith

there will be thunder
without lightning.

there will be frost but 
nowhere for it to fall;

there will be windows 
without panes,

statues without faces,
and by then,

no one will know 
the names of man. 

even the graves,
given the task of remembering, 

will be scratching at their stony
heads, wondering

what it was they promised 
never to forget. 

About the Author:

Caitlin Cacciatore is a queer poet, writer, and essayist based on the outskirts of New York City. She believes that literature has the power to change minds and start movements. Caitlin is currently pursuing an MA in Digital Humanities with the goal of amplifying marginalized voices. Her work has appeared in Bacopa Literary Review, Sylvia Magazine, and many other literary magazines and journals. She loves animals, single-origin coffee, ethical fashion, and thrift stores. You can find her at caitlincacciatore.wordpress.com.

Categories
micro fiction micro monday short fiction

The Ripening Process by J. D. Hellen

The Ripening Process | J. D. Hellen

It starts with your girlfriend buying a new kind of cheese she had to request at the deli counter. She believed you last weekend when you expressed the need to “elevate” your omelet, a diversion from discussing your unemployment.

You try a slice around noon and decide the cheese is too good to taint with eggs and oil. It’s perfect as it is, right from the twin stacks in waxy paper.

It’s easy, too, a creamy, satisfying mouthfeel to hold you over until you figure out what to make yourself because your girlfriend is working late again. She said she’d help you update your resumé this weekend and that, maybe, her coworker has an in for you. “He likes music, too,” she said. 

But you told her liking music isn’t enough. You can’t work just anywhere after you’ve been in The Industry.

On Saturday, your girlfriend is tired but offers to proofread your resumé. “It’s in good shape because you’ve been home all week?” Her assumption is insulting, distracting. So while she naps, you snack on some slices and rearrange your record collection. Music lovers can’t be reduced to bullet points and power verbs. 

The next day, you assure your girlfriend you’d get the groceries if you could, but your ankle’s acting up. You ask for more of that cheese. “You’ll have to make me one of those omelets,” she says as she leaves the apartment. You can’t tell if she’s serious.

The next week is more of the same, but you keep the cheese closer, cradled between a couple of ice packs in your old work lunch bag. Your ankle’s acting up, after all, and calcium is good for bones. 

You call Todd, your college buddy who lives in Texas, because he has connections in The Industry. He texts hours later, after you’ve almost finished a cheese stack, and all you reply is, not much same shit different day.

Later in the week, when your girlfriend comes home with dinner—subs, but she forgot cheese—you talk about moving to Texas. Your girlfriend cries and doesn’t finish her sub. “You’ve never talked about moving to Texas. Do I even know Todd?”

You finally get to your doctor about your ankle, but she’s more concerned about your cholesterol. “What have you been eating?” You don’t mention the cheese and insist on an x-ray. “I’m sorry about your job,” she says, writing the x-ray script. “My cousin teaches music. Maybe you’d like that?”

You tell her about Todd and Texas, and she gives you another script for Lexapro.

Your x-ray came back fine, but you think it’s best to do home delivery for groceries. You have to now, since your girlfriend moved out. You’re not sure which cheese she was buying, so you keep trying new ones. Burnt. Nutty. Almost soapy. 

Your (ex-)girlfriend emailed you apartments in Texas before she left and said the move would be good for you, that you’d “freshen up.”

Todd keeps texting, but you usually don’t answer.

About the Author:

J. D. Hellen writes character-driven stories. Her short fiction has been featured in the Timberline Review, The Horror Is Us anthology by Mason Jar Press, and Door Is a Jar Magazine. She is currently working on a novel. Before professionally working with words as a copywriter and copy editor, she was a science teacher for almost a decade. She lives in a suburb of Philadelphia, PA with her fiancé and cat, and you can get to know her more at jdhellen.com or @jdhellenwrites on Instagram.

Categories
micro monday micro nonfiction short creative nonfiction

Clothes Rack by Niles Reddick

Clothes Rack | Niles Reddick

The Sears store was cold compared to the hundred degrees temperature and humidity outside in inland Florida where the coastal breezes cease, and Mom was lured there after receiving the sales circular in the mail. I had eaten my gummy bears and fidgeted with the clothes on the rack.

“Leave the clothes alone,” she said. “Play with your cars.”

 “Are you almost finished?”

“No,” she said, pulling a hanger with a dress from the metal retail rack, holding the dress on the hanger just below her chin, looking at it in the floor-length mirror on the wall, putting it back on the rack, and scraping groups of hangers with dresses to the next one she liked.

“I’m ready for the Happy Meal,” I tugged on her clam diggers.

“If you don’t stop your ants in the pants, you’ll eat fried liver for lunch.” She shooed me away like the gnats we fanned when outside. 

I crawled on all fours to the center of the rack, imagined it a teepee, sat with my legs crossed, my spine lined with the stainless-steel totem pole, and watched my mom move clockwise around the rack, her clogs stepping like the slow dances on Lawrence Welk. I rolled my cars, parked them in a lot, whispered invitations to imaginary drivers about a race, and then sped the cars and drivers until they crashed.

What I didn’t know was that my mom didn’t know where I had gone, called my name, and ran to the cashier’s counter.  Salesclerks fanned out, and the manager made an announcement over the intercom.  Something brought me back from the race, and I saw clogs, reached through the dresses, and pulled on Mom’s pants. The lady screamed, and one of the clerks came, pushed the clothes on the rack, and saw me.

“Come out of there, boy.”

Mom ran over when she heard the commotion. “You about gave me a heart attack.” She yanked me by the arm, and I dropped my Porsche.

She turned to the lady shopping. “I’m sorry he scared you.”

“It’s alright,” she said, fanning herself.

“I can’t take you nowhere.”

“What about my Happy Meal?”

“Ain’t nothing happy about the meal you’ll get when I get you home.” 

About the Author:

Niles Reddick is author of a novel, two collections, and a novella. His work has been featured in over 450 publications including The Saturday Evening Post, PIF, New Reader Magazine, Forth Magazine, Citron Review, and The Boston Literary Magazine. He is a three time Pushcart and two time Best Micro nominee and works for the University of Memphis. His newest flash collection If Not for You has just been published by Big Table Publishing.

Website: http://nilesreddick.com/

Twitter: @niles_reddick

Categories
micro monday poetry

Sickbed Pantoum by Heidi Hermanson

Sickbed Pantoum | Heidi Hermanson


My brain is a furnace on high.
Now where did I put my tissues?
Things arrange and rearrange themselves
at will. Don’t ask me any complex questions.

Now where did I put my tissues?
My bed is a magic carpet taking me across the world
at will, don’t ask me any complex questions.
Also, the magic carpet has no brakes.

My bed is a magic carpet taking me across the world.
Oh, if I could only lift my head and write!
Also, the magic carpet has no brakes.
I tumble, tumble, tumble.

Oh, if I could only lift my head and write!
Things arrange and rearrange themselves at will.
I hold on tightly, wait for the spinning to stop.
My brain is a furnace on high.

About the Author:

Heidi Hermanson is a first-generation Nebraskan who has been published in Midwest Quarterly, Hiram Poetry Review, the Omaha World Herald (“Nebraska On A Dollar a Day”) and elsewhere. The recipient of two Pushcart nominations, a Nebraska book award, and various grants from both Amplify Arts and The Nebraska Arts Council, Heidi has organized and directed five ekphrastic shows which she describes as a marriage between visual art and poetry.

In her spare time, she hopes to open a library of maps to towns that do not exist and learn the dialects of the seven-year cicada. Heidi enjoys exploring every square foot of her state and documenting cemeteries and rivers.