Wednesday, April 15, 2015

When the plane landed, there was no one on board.


“But the weirdest thing was,” Joe continued, sitting on the couch, “when the plane landed, there was no one on board.”

“Okay, stop,” Louis said, shoveling dinner onto their respective plates.  “This already sounds like the plot from The Langoleirs and you know how I feel about Stephen King.  If this is leading up to one big Stephen King troll, you’re going to wake up with boiling ravioli in your sheets.”

“Hey, come on, bro, I’m serious!  I watched that entire thing from the window.  Cops went into the plane, they came out, no one came with them.”

“And the pilot?”

“I could see that clearest of all.  No one was sitting in that cockpit.  You think it had something to do with… you know, all that stuff earlier today?”

Louis looked at his calendar.  December 21st, 2012.

silver cups, crystal vases, and candelabra


“Oh, baby darling…” Geralt crooned as he looked into the dark chamber.  “So many goodies for me to take.  Silver cups, crystal vases and…”  He gasped in mock adoration.  “A candelabra for me?  You shouldn’t have.”  Slinking around the room, he started grabbing more and more valuables until his bag couldn’t fit any more.  That was it.  He was made for life after this.

He started moving towards the door when he felt a shock running through his entire body.  His body seized up and he dropped the bag with a thunderous clang.  Finally, the jolt stopped and he had a split second of painful reprieve before he felt his bag hit him across the head.  Everything went dark.

It was drizzling...


It was drizzling outside, the rain tapping against the window.  Mrs. Langtree leaned back into her armchair as the old record spun on its turntable.  The sound that com from it was a warm sound from the twenties, a kindly old voice warbling with a rustic tin horn accompanying it.  Outside, it was cold, though it might get colder if the storm picked up.  In here, though, the warmth was everpresent.

Mrs. Langtree pulled her blanket tighter around her as she sipped her tea.  She looked at the clock and realized that it was half-past nine.

Monday, April 13, 2015

Respect? Respect this...

"Respect?" the one called Mr. G. said to the two armed guards before pulling back his sleeve.  "Respect this, Jack and Jill.  You think I got these numbers etched into my arms at my kids birthday party?  No!  This is a token of surviving for three years while I watched friends and family get sent to their deaths.  Throughout the day, I would always wonder if I was inhaling them when I choked on the crap coming out of the smoke stacks.  I played it smart for all those years to make sure I wasn't sent to the gas chambers and made damn sure to pull everyone I could out of there.  Now you tell that to your precious Don in there and see if that's worthy of his 'respect.'"

Both guards stared at him for a long moment, their expressions blank.  Then one of them turned and walked a fair distance to talk into his earpiece.  Finally, he came back and faced Mr. G.  "The Don will see you now."

braise, glutton, fourteenth


Once he had gotten through his fourteenth plate of succulent short ribs, Hal had officially been declared a glutton by the staff.  They didn’t even have time to braise another order of the ribs before he was calling for more.  He had already worked his way through a mountain of corn, once dripping with butter but redoced to nothing but cobb now.  The mashed potatoes, rife with garlic and rib dripping, had been polished off as well, along with the many artichokes bathed in the oily sauce that gave them just the right amount of salty flavor.

All of a sudden, as he was making his next order, Hal’s eyes bulged out and, after a moment of turning a vivid green, keeled over onto the floor, still as a scarecrow.  Everyone was in an uproar as the local doctor came over to him and looked him over, doing every test he could without a lab.  “I’m sorry,” he said, “but it looks like the poor man has died.”

“Of a heart attack?” a scared customer asked.

“No,” the doctor replied.  “Of hunger.”

Monday, March 23, 2015

Cutting Loose and Falling (Write about something that was difficult)


I’ve had many trials, from taking my first flight alone to getting on a roller coaster for the first time.  The most difficult, by far, was breaking up with a long term girlfriend.  At the time, I felt it wasn’t right for me and little notions of this kept getting into cracks of my psyche.  When I sat down to dinner one night, the dam broke and realization flooded over me in a cold wave.  So I stepped away from my relatives into another room and made the call.

Tears rolled down my face.  Sobs erupted from my throat.  My heart seemed to tear itself to pieces.  I didn’t want to admit it was over, but confronting this was the right thing to do, I knew.  Even then, I still tried to rationalize it and try to make it work, but we both knew that it was done.  I felt ragged and worn, like a washcloth that had been wrung out and had crusted over, the tears refusing to stop for the entire night.

The days that followed were in a horrible limbo.  I rarely smiled, I retreated into the guest room for solitude, and even when surrounded by my family, I had never felt more alone in my life.  Everyone reached out to me, even her, but nothing could pierce the strange otherness that had taken over me.  I checked myself into a depression group when I found that I had lost my desire to live, but that only made things worse.  Hearing about everyone else talking about being molested or losing their sons before their time made me feel like a burden with my small problems and I wanted to stop living more than ever.

Worry not, for this story has a happy ending.  For one, I was able to provide some levity to the depression group, hopefully helping them through their problems a bit.  A year and more later, though, both the girl and I realized our mistakes.  We’d grown and changed and realized certain things about ourselves that we strove to fix.  Now we’re together once again and function much better as a couple.  I honestly can’t see myself being with anyone else right now.

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Forward, backward, sideways – none would work.


“For Christ sake!” Lindsey yelled as she threw her Nintendo DS across the room.  Thankfully, it landed in a pile of pillows, so nothing got broken.

There was a rush of footsteps and Ruth entered, looking worried.  “Something wrong?”

“It’s this damn puzzle game!” Lindsey replied.  “I’ve been beating my head against this one challenge all day, but I can’t get past maneuvering this one piece.  Forwards, backwards, sideways, up and down, all of them get me jack shit.”

Ruth looked from her roommate to the DS all the way across the room.  “I can see that,” she said.  “For a moment, I thought you really had banged your head on something.”

“I may as well have,” she said.  “The pain’s about the same.”