opens the door without really thinking and the man standing before him is himself or rather someone exactly his height (he is shorter than average but not by much) wearing his clothes (lumberjack shirt black jeans no shoes) hair color (hue somewhere between ash and dirty blond) and build (lanky really) but where the face should be there is but a canvas of blank skin stretched taut over the skull so he sees his own face reflected in the other like on the surface of deceptive waters and not until then does he remove his thumb from the bell and
by Alex Nyström
Author bio: Occasional fiction writer. A book of short stories was published in 2009 (in Swedish). Twitters @kilotrop.
Friday, 31 August 2012
Wednesday, 29 August 2012
Homesick
by John Xero
Areius tossed the stripped chicken wing aside and fumbled
for another in the bucket. He was slumped in a threadbare armchair, feet up on
the table, takeaway balanced on his mountainous belly, grease dripping from his
fingers and chin.
He wiped his hands on his filthy vest.
The house’s owners scrabbled on the floor, naked, mewling.
They gnawed at his meagre leftovers.
“Bored!”
He slouched further back. Immortality was such a drag. He’d
explored every facet of foul humanity, every whim, sin, desire and degradation.
Maybe Lucifer would take him back soon, at least it was always warm down there.
Friday, 24 August 2012
Forge
by Sandra Davies
Caged by guilt and shadowed bars of branding irons, breasts and belly besmirched by centuries of soot from the roof-supporting pillar he had lashed me to, I remained defiant.
“My face? Do you want the world to know?”
His eyes were anthracite-implacable.
“I mean to guarantee you’ll not lie down for another man. Fire is cleansing, only the letter negotiable. Before I gag you, do you choose A or W?”
“'Adulteress' more accurate, I do not charge.”
He had ever admired my honesty, my spirit, but I’d failed to think it through.
He smiled, acknowledging. “But 'whore' the shortest word.”
Author bio: Writer, printmaker, east-coast orientated.
http://sandra-linesofcommunication.blogspot.co.uk
Caged by guilt and shadowed bars of branding irons, breasts and belly besmirched by centuries of soot from the roof-supporting pillar he had lashed me to, I remained defiant.
“My face? Do you want the world to know?”
His eyes were anthracite-implacable.
“I mean to guarantee you’ll not lie down for another man. Fire is cleansing, only the letter negotiable. Before I gag you, do you choose A or W?”
“'Adulteress' more accurate, I do not charge.”
He had ever admired my honesty, my spirit, but I’d failed to think it through.
He smiled, acknowledging. “But 'whore' the shortest word.”
Author bio: Writer, printmaker, east-coast orientated.
http://sandra-linesofcommunication.blogspot.co.uk
Wednesday, 22 August 2012
Retaliation
by John Xero
Things have been washing up on the shores of alien seas. Wretched, dying things, with brains of pulp.
Thousands of red crabs, smaller than a fist, scuttle over the almost dead, stripping flesh. The frothing salt water is stained with blood, but not for long. Soon there is nothing but sand and bones.
Our soldiers. Our bio-weapon. Turned on each other and scattered through a hundred star systems.
The humans think us defeated, but they are wrong. We have played this game a thousand times before.
As our ships slip into orbit around Earth, I spread my wings and howl.
Author bio: When the invasion comes John Xero will be safely holed up with a big stack of books. He will live tweet the fall of civilisation.
Things have been washing up on the shores of alien seas. Wretched, dying things, with brains of pulp.
Thousands of red crabs, smaller than a fist, scuttle over the almost dead, stripping flesh. The frothing salt water is stained with blood, but not for long. Soon there is nothing but sand and bones.
Our soldiers. Our bio-weapon. Turned on each other and scattered through a hundred star systems.
The humans think us defeated, but they are wrong. We have played this game a thousand times before.
As our ships slip into orbit around Earth, I spread my wings and howl.
Author bio: When the invasion comes John Xero will be safely holed up with a big stack of books. He will live tweet the fall of civilisation.
Friday, 17 August 2012
Fallen
by Jack Holt
They fall in twos.
Synchronised pairs of descending death. Crimson and winged
creatures, brothers and sisters each.
One pair for every insignificant soul on this planet. Liars,
cheaters, schemers, killers: all afforded the same choice.
They fall and then you decide. They'll trick you, manipulate
you, twist your feeble minds into choosing them. The decision will be hard, but
it will be yours.
And that's why you'll fall.
When you chose, only one can stand. One creature will devour
the other, and then you if it remains hungry.
They're always hungry.
They fall in twos. Then you fall in droves.
Author bio: John Xero's number one fan. For more fiction go to jackkholt.wordpress.com. For mundane tweets go to @jackkholt.
... it seems flattery will get you places... - Xero
Wednesday, 15 August 2012
Gravedigger
by John Xero
Mass immortality had become the bane of Samuel’s life. Science was to blame. No
disease, no old age, no natural death.
What work for a gravedigger when nobody dies?
Sam had a god-given gift. There were so many pretenders who
thought any hole would do, so few who understood the nature of the abyss. There
was a hole left when a person died, and a hole to be made, and the two were not
entirely unrelated.
He took up his shovel; it was a fine tool and it would serve
him twofold now. Not an elegant solution, but needs must.
Author bio: John Xero knows that not any hole will do. And that even the same hole will fit different people in different ways. Twitter hole. Blog hole.
Friday, 10 August 2012
Whispers
by Nick Roberts
We watch the gate. That is our purpose. For a thousand millennia we have been the guardians of the Night Gate. But there is a disease in our ranks, a slow moving malaise that affects an unknown number of my brothers. Questions are asked by the Dark Inquisitors to try and root out these free thinkers, these renegades. But they are clever, my fellow brothers, they hide in the shadows and whisper in the quiet of the All Night. Sometimes I hear their whispers and unbidden thoughts race through my mind and I also start to wonder about the light.
Author bio: After many years being locked away I have finally given into the voice in my head and unleashed my inner geek. Find me at nicks-review-blog.blogspot.com and on Twitter @nickroberts101.
We watch the gate. That is our purpose. For a thousand millennia we have been the guardians of the Night Gate. But there is a disease in our ranks, a slow moving malaise that affects an unknown number of my brothers. Questions are asked by the Dark Inquisitors to try and root out these free thinkers, these renegades. But they are clever, my fellow brothers, they hide in the shadows and whisper in the quiet of the All Night. Sometimes I hear their whispers and unbidden thoughts race through my mind and I also start to wonder about the light.
Author bio: After many years being locked away I have finally given into the voice in my head and unleashed my inner geek. Find me at nicks-review-blog.blogspot.com and on Twitter @nickroberts101.
Wednesday, 8 August 2012
Redemption
by John Xero
Purgatory ain’t a place, it’s a job description, and it don’t pay too good. All wages go to the ledger, and the ledger, by definition, runs deep in the red.
Me, I got more red than most to wipe clean, and now I got a gun belt and a badge, go figure.
Consider us the bounty hunters of the afterlife. You die and do a runner, you get us psychos on your tail.
Lotta folks run when they see where they’re headed, when they realise heaven and hell ain’t so different. Only us Purged get to go free, in time.
Purgatory ain’t a place, it’s a job description, and it don’t pay too good. All wages go to the ledger, and the ledger, by definition, runs deep in the red.
Me, I got more red than most to wipe clean, and now I got a gun belt and a badge, go figure.
Consider us the bounty hunters of the afterlife. You die and do a runner, you get us psychos on your tail.
Lotta folks run when they see where they’re headed, when they realise heaven and hell ain’t so different. Only us Purged get to go free, in time.
Author bio: John Xero is the sheriff in this town. He done put out a collection of words on one o' them newfangled ereading gadgets. He shoots his mouth off here.
Friday, 3 August 2012
Recyclical
by Kymm Coveney
Posed on the left pant leg of your old jeans that I wear gardening at the weekends, you held your wings stiffly at attention, high above the dark fuzz of your Monarch body. I stood, hose in hand, watering the newly blooming cherry tree. Old echoes of a sigh, a whisper, any sound that might resemble your voice, made me close my eyes against the constant blue sky and purse my lips. I heard only the tunneling of worms deep in the ground as you traced your butterfly kiss across my eyelids, and then wrapped me up in your cocoon.
Author Bio: Ex-pat from Boston living in Barcelona, raising polyglot kids and fooling with written languages.
www.betterlies.blogspot.com
@KymmInBarcelona
http://kymminbarcelona.tumblr.com/
Posed on the left pant leg of your old jeans that I wear gardening at the weekends, you held your wings stiffly at attention, high above the dark fuzz of your Monarch body. I stood, hose in hand, watering the newly blooming cherry tree. Old echoes of a sigh, a whisper, any sound that might resemble your voice, made me close my eyes against the constant blue sky and purse my lips. I heard only the tunneling of worms deep in the ground as you traced your butterfly kiss across my eyelids, and then wrapped me up in your cocoon.
Author Bio: Ex-pat from Boston living in Barcelona, raising polyglot kids and fooling with written languages.
www.betterlies.blogspot.com
@KymmInBarcelona
http://kymminbarcelona.tumblr.com/
Wednesday, 1 August 2012
Victim
by John Xero
His footsteps follow me through moonlit backstreets, ever gaining, into the woods.
He shoves me against an old oak, tearing at my pretty dress, exposing the swirling, black tattoos beneath. Then the ink crawls and he halts, confused. He yelps as the black writhes up his arms, flowing from my flesh to his.
Later, when he is nothing but pulp and bone, the twitching tendrils slink back beneath my skin. They burn incessantly, day and night.
I take no pleasure, watching that show of slow laceration. I am grateful only that I am allowed to live, while I remain useful.
His footsteps follow me through moonlit backstreets, ever gaining, into the woods.
He shoves me against an old oak, tearing at my pretty dress, exposing the swirling, black tattoos beneath. Then the ink crawls and he halts, confused. He yelps as the black writhes up his arms, flowing from my flesh to his.
Later, when he is nothing but pulp and bone, the twitching tendrils slink back beneath my skin. They burn incessantly, day and night.
I take no pleasure, watching that show of slow laceration. I am grateful only that I am allowed to live, while I remain useful.
Friday, 27 July 2012
Ink
by Steve Green
The idea for the story came to me in a dream.
Today I would give it life.
Several hours later and the words are still gushing forth, the story is like an irresistible force, compelling.
The computer had frazzled out after only a few hundred words, so I continued with a ballpoint pen and notebook.
When the ballpoint dried out I reached for my trusty old fountain pen.
When the ink ran dry I had to find another writing source. This story simply had to be written.
I only hope I can complete it before I run out of blood.
Author bio: Genre-hopping flash fiction writer who blogs at The Twisted Quill.
The idea for the story came to me in a dream.
Today I would give it life.
Several hours later and the words are still gushing forth, the story is like an irresistible force, compelling.
The computer had frazzled out after only a few hundred words, so I continued with a ballpoint pen and notebook.
When the ballpoint dried out I reached for my trusty old fountain pen.
When the ink ran dry I had to find another writing source. This story simply had to be written.
I only hope I can complete it before I run out of blood.
Author bio: Genre-hopping flash fiction writer who blogs at The Twisted Quill.
Wednesday, 25 July 2012
Contact
by John Xero
Kyle’s fingers had no knuckles.
Sheryl yelped and stumbled backwards, tripping over her
discarded clothes and landing painfully. She hardly felt the splinters from the
rough wooden floor.
“You weren’t supposed to see.”
She stared as his fingers flexed like fat worms, curving
instead of hinging at a joint. He pulled his gloves back on.
“You would have enjoyed it, you know.”
She opened her mouth but no sound came out; her brain was a
dead line, all dial tone and no connection.
“It’s ok.” He reached for her, stopped himself.
He turned his pale eyes away from her fear.
Author bio: John Xero runs this joint. He loves all kinds of stories, whether they be huge or tiny.
Author bio: John Xero runs this joint. He loves all kinds of stories, whether they be huge or tiny.
Friday, 20 July 2012
Traditional
by Sandra Davies
Rise before May dawn, middle of meadow, wash face in dew.
Surrender all common sense: next man met so stunned by my beauty he insists on marriage.
Yeah, right.
And such a gullible, desperate, idiot that I almost fail to see the beautiful dog fox just twenty yards ahead.
Abrupt gasping halt, thinking “Christ – if that’d been a man, my luck really would have been in!”
But no: one arm (mine) wrenched up behind, another holding a sharp knife against my throat.
A rasping voice in my ear commands “Stand still my beauty – he’s stuffed – and it’s your turn next.”
Author bio: Recent writer, printmaker, east-coast orientated: http://sandra-linesofcommunication.blogspot.co.uk/ and links therefrom
Rise before May dawn, middle of meadow, wash face in dew.
Surrender all common sense: next man met so stunned by my beauty he insists on marriage.
Yeah, right.
And such a gullible, desperate, idiot that I almost fail to see the beautiful dog fox just twenty yards ahead.
Abrupt gasping halt, thinking “Christ – if that’d been a man, my luck really would have been in!”
But no: one arm (mine) wrenched up behind, another holding a sharp knife against my throat.
A rasping voice in my ear commands “Stand still my beauty – he’s stuffed – and it’s your turn next.”
Author bio: Recent writer, printmaker, east-coast orientated: http://sandra-linesofcommunication.blogspot.co.uk/ and links therefrom
Wednesday, 18 July 2012
Deliverance
by John Xero
The Mercy of the Gods shook as it rode the raging space-time
distortions. Gravity grasped at the ship from all sides. Alarms shrieked and
metal moaned.
Captain Shilo gripped the arms of his chair and shouted to his
Helmsman, “Krya.”
Krya yelled back over the screaming starship, “We’re committed
now, captain; this trillion dollar ship just became the most expensive barrel
ride in history.”
“Courage, Krya,” Shilo replied.
They spiralled down inside a tornado of angry physics.
Somewhere down there was Earth, and the Apocalypse Device.
Shilo had never before had to disarm a bomb as it was actually exploding.
Author bio: John Xero is the editor at 101 Fiction.
Friday, 13 July 2012
Possessions
by John H. Dromey
The newly-appointed editor of the lifestyle section of the local newspaper finagled an interview with a successful medium.
Looking around the paranormal practitioner’s plush apartment, the journalist asked her, “What’s your favourite possession?”
“I think I’d have to say it’s when I’m channelling Jack the Ripper and I lose all control.”
Not the answer the editor expected – she’d meant material possessions – but she decided to play along. “Can you demonstrate?”
“Sure,” the interviewee said, and she did.
When the medium was finally herself again, she surveyed the scattered body parts and said, “Cleaning up afterwards is my least favourite part.”
Author bio: John H. Dromey was born in northeast Missouri. He’s had flash fiction published online at Liquid Imagination, The Red Asylum, Thrillers, Killers ’n’ Chillers, and elsewhere.
The newly-appointed editor of the lifestyle section of the local newspaper finagled an interview with a successful medium.
Looking around the paranormal practitioner’s plush apartment, the journalist asked her, “What’s your favourite possession?”
“I think I’d have to say it’s when I’m channelling Jack the Ripper and I lose all control.”
Not the answer the editor expected – she’d meant material possessions – but she decided to play along. “Can you demonstrate?”
“Sure,” the interviewee said, and she did.
When the medium was finally herself again, she surveyed the scattered body parts and said, “Cleaning up afterwards is my least favourite part.”
Author bio: John H. Dromey was born in northeast Missouri. He’s had flash fiction published online at Liquid Imagination, The Red Asylum, Thrillers, Killers ’n’ Chillers, and elsewhere.
Wednesday, 11 July 2012
Creator
by John Xero
In my dreams his head is a black cube, rotating slowly. It
shimmers and glints with the galaxies that spin within. He has the whole
universe in there, I think.
He is God. He is my father. His tears are starlight.
Somehow I know he is looking at me.
When I wake I remember the last time I saw him. I remember
the birth of a terrible universe, the end of a world. I remember the crimson
galaxies exploding away from each other, the awful nothing at the centre.
My world was his prison. In my dreams, he has escaped.
Author bio: John Xero is the editor at 101 Fiction.
His recently released collection of short and flash fiction, This is the New Plan, is out now for Kindle.
Friday, 6 July 2012
Refuge
by Helen A. Howell
The wind stung his face and chapped his skin. Its icy fingers lifted the snow into a frenzied dance, to fall as a blinding blanket upon the ground. He bent his head against the weather and willed himself towards the shack and refuge. I’ll be safe there for now, he thought. But how long before they come?
He lifted his head when he reached the door then grasped hold of the latch and the door creaked open. He stepped inside, relieved to be out of the cold.
Shadows clung to the walls. In the darkness in a corner, something smiled.
Author bio: Helen is a fiction writer, who writes in several genres which include fantasy, noir, horror and humour. She has written several short stories, flash fictions, poems and completed her first novel, a children’s fantasy fiction.
Her website is http://helen-scribbles.com
The wind stung his face and chapped his skin. Its icy fingers lifted the snow into a frenzied dance, to fall as a blinding blanket upon the ground. He bent his head against the weather and willed himself towards the shack and refuge. I’ll be safe there for now, he thought. But how long before they come?
He lifted his head when he reached the door then grasped hold of the latch and the door creaked open. He stepped inside, relieved to be out of the cold.
Shadows clung to the walls. In the darkness in a corner, something smiled.
Author bio: Helen is a fiction writer, who writes in several genres which include fantasy, noir, horror and humour. She has written several short stories, flash fictions, poems and completed her first novel, a children’s fantasy fiction.
Her website is http://helen-scribbles.com
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