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Showing posts from August, 2017

Where We Leave Our Flowers

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Murder was never part of the plan, but sometimes, things just happen. “Oh, come on, Becca,” Chris whined. “We’re two minutes late. We didn’t have time to copy answers. You haven’t even finished going over it!” Becca shrugged. “Policy is policy. No late work, period. Sorry.” She turned her back on Chris and started scribbling on the white board. Chris and his friends slumped into seats on the last row. Karli put her head down on her desk in defeat, Sam stared blankly down at his perfect homework, and Chris sat back, glaring at Becca. They stayed like that for the rest of class, the trio barely taking in a word Becca said during her review. As the last minute ticked down, Becca muttered a curse. “I forgot to pass out homework again. I’ll hand it out as you leave.” She took up a post by the door as papers ruffled and bags zipped. Chris, Karli, and Sam were the last out. Chris bumped into Becca, hitting her with his shoulder, and ignored her as she yelped, “Hey!” ...

A Date with the Dead

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When I get home, there’s a box waiting for me on the front porch. A note’s been taped in place on the bottom. Great Oak Park, our usual place. 8 PM. At 8, I sit in the park. Someone walks up, his hood on. When he pulls it off, I gasp. “You’re supposed to be dead.”

The Hike

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“This is my life now. I’ve climbed this hill and now I will die upon it.” “Shut up. We’ve only been hiking for twenty minutes.” I plop down in the grass. My brother crosses his arms. “We haven’t even done the hard part yet.” “All the more reason to stop.” He grabs the back of my pack and yanks me to my feet. “Come on.” I eye the path in front of us. Steep, craggy, far too long. I turn on my heel and head back the way we came. My brother reaches out, grabs the handle on my pack. “Where do you think you’re going?” “Back to the car to wait for you.” “You said you’d come up to the top with me. You can’t back out now. It’s only a couple miles.” I sighed. “’And miles to go before I sleep.’” “Exactly. Now come on.” He marches down the path, carefully placing his feet so he doesn’t fall. Reluctantly, I follow him. Another thirty minutes passes, and we’ve crept closer to the top of the glorified hill. As I take my next step, the ground beneath me s...

Up in Flames

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“Help! Can anybody hear me? HELP ME!” A weak thumping sounded from inside the apartment. I pushed the door in, standing back in case the inferno exploded with the oxygen influx. When the crackling stayed steady, I stepped into the apartment. Flames licked up the sides of the wall, and a cross beam had fallen in front of a door, jamming it closed. Over the crackling and popping, I heard the thumping. It was coming from behind the blocked door. “Hey!” I yelled. “Are you in here?” I tapped the door, keeping my hand as far from the fire as I could. “Yes . . . there’s another . . . door,” the voice said, growing weaker. I stepped back, took a deep breath, and zipped up my sweatshirt. Then I raced forward and took a flying leap over the burning cross beam. I landed safely on the other side. The rest of the apartment was up in flames, and there was smoke everywhere. I could barely make out the bedroom doors, one right in front of me and one to my left. The one to my...

The Girl with the Sapphire Necklace

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The sapphire sparkles on her necklace. I take of a sip of my drink and watch the girl make her rounds, showing off the necklace. She’s the fifth woman to do just that this month. The other four are dead. Some people say the necklace is cursed, the necklace version of the Hope Diamond. But, they say the curse only affects those who wear the necklace, which is good news for me because I’m not going to wear it. I’m here to steal it. I leave my full glass on the bar and head after the girl with the sapphire necklace. She’s talking to a man who thinks he’s more important than he is, a duke or an earl. I saunter up behind her, getting into position. As soon as I’m ready, the lights go out. Women shriek, and I pretend to bump into the girl with the necklace. “Oomph!” I knock her to the ground. “I’m so sorry, miss. Here, let me help you.” I offer her my hand. She takes it, and I pull her to her feet, more forcefully than necessary. She collides with my chest. “Oh,” she say...

Thanks, Dad

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I dropped another box on the table sitting in the driveway. It was the last box of Dad’s old stuff. I didn’t want to get rid of it, but I couldn’t stand to keep the house and there was no way all of this would fit in my apartment. I was keeping two boxes. The rest had to go. I started unpacking the box I’d just brought down. I pulled out several jars of nails, an assortment of tchotchkes, and an old baseball. My fingers felt along the seam, searching for where I’d tried to cut it open when I was six. Dad had caught me going at it with scissors, and he’d just about had a conniption. “Jared! What are you doing?” he’d yelled. “Stop!” When I kept trying to cut into it, he’d snatched the baseball out of my hands. I’d started to cry. “Hey, buddy,” he’d said, his voice softer. He’d sat down next to me and pried the scissors from my tiny fingers. “You can have it back.” It was my turn to snatch the baseball from him. I went for the scissors next. “Ah, ah, ah,” Da...

Up in Smoke

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Someone handed me a lei. I slipped it over my head, and the flower’s perfume floated up to my nose. I inhaled deeply, winding my way to the front of the yard. People were already lining up there, wearing grass skirts and leis and smiling and laughing. Torches lined the back of the stage they stood on, and there were two neat rows on either side of the stage. “Allison!” I turned at the sound of my name, but my feet didn’t stop. They kept their course. When I couldn’t find who’d shouted my name, I turned back to the stage just in time to run into a bus boy. He reeled backwards. I grabbed his arms, but instead of holding him upright, I was dragged down with him. He crashed into one of the corners of the stage. The torch there wobbled. “No, no, no!” I reached for the torch, but it slipped through my fingers. It fell into the one behind it, and that one fell into the torch behind it, and so on until half the stage’s torches had been downed. The grass behind the st...

It Was a Dark and Stormy Night

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My tires squeal on the wet asphalt as I take a turn too fast. Rain pelts the windshield, and I ease on the brakes. I can’t see a thing, and I don’t need an accident making me any later than I already am. I check the speedometer. When I look back, something’s in the road. I brake, but the road’s too wet for me to stop. I cringe as the car bumps over something. I pull over, grab an umbrella and a flashlight, and hop out. I approach whatever it is that I ran over. It doesn’t move. As I get closer, I see that it’s wearing a jacket. It has hair. I ran over a person. My stomach twists as I turn the person over. He’s dead, but I didn’t kill him. He was shot. Somebody murdered him.

The Wall Between Us

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I flung the lamp at my ex-fiancé as he ducked. The lamp shattered against the wall. “We can talk this out, babe.” I chucked a statue at him. “No, we can’t!” The statue went through the wall and into the next room. My fiancé glanced in the hole. He paled. “There’s a body in here.”

Sickly-Sweet

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They pulled off the highway, turning onto a dirt road. She stared out the window, her eyes searching for signs of life. He watched just as intently to keep from running anything over. He didn’t want to kill anything. The same couldn’t be said of his companion. When the dirt road ran out, he put the car in park, and they hopped out. He stood in front of the car, looking down the overgrown footpath leading into the woods. She slipped around the back. “What are you doing, babe?” “Just getting a warmer jacket.” She opened the trunk. “It’s cold out here.” But instead of digging through her bag, she set it to the side and grabbed the tire iron. Holding it behind her leg, she joined him in front of the car. “Wanna see where it goes?” She gave him a sickly-sweet smile. “Of course.” He picked his way down the footpath, but she paused, looking over her shoulder. No other cars were coming. They were alone. That same sickly-sweet smile found its way to her lips, and ...

This is Not Goodnight, This is Goodbye

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He hadn’t seen her since the day they left high school. It’d been six years. He’d meant to keep in touch, call her from time to time, but he never did. Now he never would. He stepped forward, looking down at her peaceful face, and tucked a single rose under one of her lifeless hands.

My Wife

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I fumbled with my key. My fingers were so cold I couldn’t get the damn thing in the lock. When I did manage to get the door unlocked, my jaw dropped. “What the hell?” The furniture in my foyer was all wrong. A leafy, fake plant sat in the corner where my coat rack used to be. My coat rack was up and gone. A round table took up the center of the small space with another fake plant resting on it. I’d never seen either before in my life. My glass trophy case was nowhere to be found. I backed out the door and off the front porch. The number on my house was right, and I could see the street sign. That was right, too. This was my address. It had been for years. I marched back inside. Leaving the door ajar, I crept further into the apartment. The baseball bat I’d kept behind the door was gone, but the new coat rack was just as good. My grip on the coat rack faltered as I got a load of the living room. A loveseat, couch, and matching armchair had replaced my sectional. An oc...

Save Point

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Clutching my gun, I take a deep breath. I know they’re waiting around the corner. I have one chance, and I’m going to make it count. I lean around the corner, firing into my enemies. They shoot back, and bullets tear through my body. I curse, but it’s okay. I’ll respawn in a few minutes.

Marmalade

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The smell of citrus invaded my nose. It wrinkled in disgust under my blindfold. I hated citrus. “What is this place? What do you want from me?” In response, a pair of hands shoved me forward. I stumbled, the smell of citrus becoming overwhelming. My head swam, and I swayed. I opened my mouth to demand answers from my captor. Before I got a word out, the tart flavor of citrus infiltrated my taste buds, and I gagged. The hands grabbed my upper arms, guiding me farther forward. The citrus smell grew stronger, almost overpowering, but there was something underneath it, too. A pungent, rank smell, and something sweet. My brow furrowed as I tried to place the smell. I’d smelled it before, I was sure of it. As I worked it out, the hands reached up and tugged my blindfold off. I swallowed as I took in the room in front of me. A dozen massive vats filled with orange goop lined the wall. No, not goop. Marmalade. Twelve clear, floor-to-ceiling containers filled to the brim with...