Showing posts with label Short Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short Stories. Show all posts

Friday, November 26, 2021

Pete the Kracken and the Angry Storm Cloud

 Hello, Readers!

Happy Black Friday if you're partaking in the chaos that is "the biggest gift shopping day of the year". I hope you enjoyed your Thanksgiving (I'll save my rant about how much I dislike the American History [cough, lies] about the first Thanksgiving for another post when I have time to link all of my sources... and stop swearing about it.)

I have another, short writing prompt story for you. The image prompt was of a waterspout above the ocean. It looks to me like a very mystical tentacle is reaching up from the depths of the ocean and punching a cloud. And viola: You get Pete the Kracken and the Angry Storm Cloud. Feel free to share what the image looks like to you in the comments section! (Err... please keep it clean xD).


Pete the Kracken and the Angry Storm Cloud


Tired of a cold and choppy ocean setting, Pete the Kracken decided it was high time he told that no good, sun-blocking, soggy rain cloud to move on! Or he’d move him along for him. Yeah!


At first, Pete, despite being infuriated with a week straight of no sunshine, was polite when interacting with the mopy, low-hanging piece of sky fluff. “Hello! You there, in the sky! Yes, you! The fluffy one blocking the sun! Do you mind shifting to the left by a country or two? It’s getting a little too chilly in my waves for September weather, buddy.”


When the large cloud simply blew Pete a raspberry in response, he surprisingly didn’t lose his cool. Instead, he tried again. 


“Look, Mister. Don’t make me count to three!”


This time the cloud spoke slowly in a voice of low rumbling thunder. “Didn’t know you could count so high down there. Ha! Ha! Sorry Octo-Buddy. This here’s a prime sunbathing spot. I’m not moving.”


“Are you sure?” Pete asked, still trying to remain polite. “If you’re stuck or something, I could give you a nice push.”


More thunder rumbled as the cloud continued to laugh. “You? Push me? I’d like to see you try!”


“Only if you say please,” Pete responded, coiling his strongest tentacle for his best one-armed attack yet. He didn’t practice moon-jelly ball with the girl’s Kracken moon jelly team for no reason!


“Please?” The cloud continued to laugh. “As i-Ahhh!”


Pete let loose his best moon jelly pitch, punching straight through the cloud’s underbelly. Rain poured into the ocean and the little moon jelly reflected the sun’s light for a brief second before the cloud closed itself back up.


“I know you didn’t just punch me with a moon jelly,  Pete Kracken!” The cloud boomed, his anger so loud and tangible that sparks of lightning flew from his fluffy fists.


“Pete Kracken you get back here this instant!” The cloud continued to roar with a fury that shook the moon jelly and several drops of rain from his underside. His hot, angry shout was so strong that it began to churn the water far below. 


As soon as the cloud released its own wound up arm in search of him, Pete realized he had made a grave mistake in punching the giant, violent storm cloud. In terror, he dove in the deepest depths of the ocean to hide… and practice his moon jelly pitch. The next time that cloud was in his waves, he was going to send him clear to the moon! Just you wait and see!


Monday, November 22, 2021

It's All Chicken to Me

 Hello, Readers!


As promised, I have a second short story for you based on my local public library’s writer’s forum. I wish I could share the photo with you for this prompt, but I cannot find where the photo originated from, and I don’t want to steal another artist’s work.


Just know that the image was of two VERY judgemental chickens looking the photographer straight on. A red rooster stood on the left, a white hen on the right, and in the background, slightly blurred, between the two, was a second white hen who looked angier than a cat offended by a human sneeze. 


The image selected above is a placeholder image, if you will, found on Unsplash by Hanna Oliver @hanako87.



It’s All Chicken to Me


I cleared my throat, face growing hot, and tried again, “Bock? Bock bock bock bock, bock-bock.”


The two chickens just kept staring at me like I was offending their most ancient ancestors. Did I have my inflections wrong? No, no. I was fairly certain I sounded just like Peep when we had practiced together earlier today. 


“Uh,” why was my brain suddenly so empty? I knew more than just “Hello my name is Good Boy”. 


“Uh, Bock!” No. No. That wasn’t hello, it was bathroom. “Uhh…”


“Oh! Bock bock, bock bock bock.” I sat back on my haunches and raised my front legs, tucking my paws under my armpits to mimic wings. I flapped my legs and the feathers Peep and I had gathered and glued to my fur with pigsty mud began to molt off of me, drifting to the ground like light, powdery snow. 


The two chickens continued to look at me like I was using every chicken swear in the book… 


Peep wouldn’t have lied to me, right? No, no. Maybe I just had the wing movements wrong? I was pretty nervous. 


“Um, bock, bock, bock, bockbockbockbock-bock?” I tried again, flapping my forelegs quicker than before. More feathers swirled around me and the very judgmental chickens. 


What on earth was I doing wrong? This conversation shouldn’t be so difficult! Peep spoke fluent dog and chicken perfectly. 


When the Rooster cocked his head to the side, large beady eyes still focused on me and my incoherent chicken attempts, I panicked and turned tail. “PEEP!” I barked in despair.


As I ran away, I heard one of the chickens hiss in perfect dog, “What on earth was he wearing?”


“Wearing?” The Rooster demanded. “I hardly noticed. I was too busy worrying over how obsessed he was with eating our poop. He knows that can’t possibly be good for him, right?”



*Author’s Note: Yes, for those of you that heard the original version of this story, I did change the ending. After doing some quick Googleing, dogs aren’t as affected by grain in their diet. As long as the chicken feed isn’t medicated and a doggo isn’t eating ALL the chicken feed, it really isn’t that bad for them--so I decided to have Good Boy talking (bocking??) about something the chickens might be more concerned about.


Thursday, November 18, 2021

The Mirror Bush

 Hello, Readers! 


Boy, it sure has been a while since I’ve posted again, hasn’t it. Sorry! I hope you are all doing well and enjoying life. I wish I could tell you that I’ve been keeping up with writing (you know as this is NaNoWriMo)--but aside from a monthly prompt through a program I help facilitate at work… I’m really behind.


I can share with you a couple of the super short stories I’ve created thanks to some of those prompts! Below is a story that was created with an intriguing image that I found on McKenna’s author’s blog here. The image can be found to the left. 


To me, it looks like a pale, human hand reaching out of a hedge or bushes--but it can be hard to tell if the owner of the hand is standing and reaching through the bushes, or has fallen and is requesting help. Readers, what do you see? Feel free to share your short story responses to this image in the comments below!







The Mirror Bush


“Help! Arthur! Stop laughing at me and give me a hand!”


I couldn’t help my laughter. I knew it was rude, but it was just so… predictable. My twin was always stumbling about. Why would a last minute trip to Gran’s be any different? Especially given that the trip was on foot through the dense forest between our house and hers?


“Arthur!” She called again. But this time her tone was different. It was no longer annoyed but awed. “Give me your hand. You must see this!”


“If it’s another of your spider tricks I won’t do it!”


“No spiders,” she promised, reaching her hand back toward me once more. “But really. You must see this.”


“Can’t you stand up first, silly?” I demanded, reaching down for her hand.


 It struck me as odd that she had fallen into a bush and suddenly vanished, only her hand and wrist visible to me. But I didn’t have much time to ponder the oddity. As soon as our fingers brushed the weightless sensation of falling from a cliff sent my stomach rocketing into my throat.


“Ah!” I cried out, much like my twin had only moments before. I slammed my eyes shut and tried to shield my face with my hands. 


What was going on? I hadn’t even stumbled! Jillian was the one who tripped! And yet…


“I am standing,” Jillian whispered, and with her words, the falling sensation faded and my stomach returned to my abdomen. I opened my eyes, taking in the wonder in her eyes and the flushed color in her round cheeks. “That’s the thing of it. It’s like I never fell at all… except…”


“That falling sensation,” I finished for her. “It was like I was skydiving out of a rocketship or something-but! I didn’t even stumble. I just reached for your hand!”


“And look, Arthur! You haven’t even begun to take it all in,” She breathed, her usual bossiness masked by her continued awe. She stepped back gently, allowing me to see around her.


I don’t know what I was expecting to see, the inside of a bush, perhaps? Or maybe dense forest? Instead, I saw blue skies beneath my feet. Clouds floating away on a gentle breeze that blew across my ankles. 


My stomach flipped again and I began to feel lightheaded. I sank to my knees among the clouds.


“Sorry,” Jillian whispered. “I suppose I should have had you look up first.”


In an instant my eyes flicked from the bright blue sky beneath me, to the densely packed forest above. 

“But how?” I gasped, my brain failing to fully grasp the information being collected by my eyes.


“I dunno…” she whispered in response, arm outstretched high above her, reaching for the trees beyond her grasp. “ You don’t think…”


But she didn’t finish her thought and for once in my life, I didn’t rush to complete it for her. Instead, I forced her to say it herself.


“I don’t think what, Jilly?” I demanded, forcefully, intentionally, tearing my gaze away from the upside down tree directly above me, it’s full, vibrant crown of leaves reaching toward me instead of away. 


Her face was now pale, all excitement drained by her sudden realization. “Gran’s story,” she started, her voice sounding uncharacteristically uncertain. “About the mirror bush…”


“That’s just a story!” I exclaimed. “You know, to keep us from wandering off of the path between Gran’s house and ours.”


“But Arthur,” it had been years since I’d heard that pleading, whiny tone catch in her throat. “The sky and the ground are mirrored here, like they always were in Gran’s stories.”


“Oh,” the gravity of her realization and the topsy-turvy nature of oru situation gurgled hauntingly in my poor, nervous stomach. 


“Do you recall how the children got back to their world in that story, Jilly?” I asked softly, terrified of her answer, clinging to the feeble, flimsy hope that maybe, just maybe, I had remembered wrong.


“I do,” she whispered back, just as scared of her own answer as I was. “And I don’t think you’re going to like it.”


“You said there were no spiders!” I yelled angrily at her.


“I didn’t know… this isn’t some trick I concocted!” She argued back, her voice mirroring my own terrified rage. “I honestly just tripped!”


“Yeah and fell into an upside down world where elephant-sized spiders control the only portals back to our own world!” I cried, burying my head in my hands. “When Gran said your clumsiness was going to be the death of me I never imagined this.”

Monday, October 2, 2017

Sudden Reappearance: a short story



Disclaimer: I am not deaf, and I also haven’t taken a class on deaf culture, but one of my closest friends is an ASL translator. From the earliest days in our friendship she has been in love with learning different languages, and her favorite by far has always been sign language. In middle school she taught us SEE (Signing Exact English) and one of her college degrees is in ASL (American Sign Language). I am not pretending to be an expert in the slightest, but I do have to admit that living without a sense (any of them really) has always terrified and intrigued me. As an author I thought it would be very interesting to write from a character’s perspective who cannot hear. If I have done something terrible in my characterization of Liam, please note that I am not trying to be disrespectful. I truly believe that all people are created equal regardless of their race, gender, sexuality, religion, and capabilities. It is through all of these wonderful differences that allows us to experience the world in so many unique ways. If I have made some offensive mistake, please feel free to correct me where I have errored and I will do my best to fix it.

Enjoy!

--Larkynn



Sudden Reappearance: a short story
Written by Larkynn de la Fuerza

It was years later that I ran into her again, that girl that got me fired when I was fifteen, working in the mall for my cousin’s boyfriend Dan. I passed her on the street, but apparently I looked too different in the middle of the day, aged five years. Recognition didn’t even dawn in her eyes. She smiled at me vaguely, as most women do, before turning her head back down to her mobile device.

It was anticlimactic to say the least. I thought maybe there would be some sort of recognition. Maybe a friendly hug, or at the very least a dramatic, “Ohmigosh! Liam, you’re alive!” moment, given that my cousin said that all the store employees were harassed by her daily for my whereabouts for months on end.

It definitely made my heartache a bit to realize that I hadn’t been recognized. It hurt to know that I could recognize her right away and she had no idea who I was. Thanks to the stories my cousin would tell of this pretty little redhead who would show up and demand to know where I was—I couldn’t help but fantasize about our reunion just a little bit. Apparently, this lost and terrified girl had told Dan that we were going to make out in the fitting rooms of his department store after throwing his flashlight on the ground in protest of something demoralizing he had said. 

Stupid Dan. If he hadn’t been such an ass, he wouldn’t have ended up stranded in the middle of a dark store during a storm. If it hadn’t been for Dan, I could have made out with that pretty girl in the fitting rooms. At the very least, I would’ve learned her name. Surely she would’ve recognize me on the street, had Dan not interfered that day, right?

I sighed, and turned away from her. I shouldn’t think ill of the dead, no matter how much of a deadbeat Dan had been when he was alive. I owed my cousin that job, and she owed it and her own to Dan. It was the only thing he ever did right by her. 

Sudden movement out of the corner of my eye drew my attention back to the present. The people walking beside me stopped and looked back over their shoulders like someone was calling to them. I kept walking, but the people beside me moved further from the center of the sidewalk and paused.
Out of curiosity, I stopped, too, and followed their gazes. There she was, the red headed girl from the department store five years ago, barreling down the sidewalk toward me. Her mouth was open, making a sound I couldn’t hear, panic in her eyes.

When our eyes met, and she realized I had stopped, the panic seemed to flee from her eyes, but they stayed lit with some sort of excitement or enthusiasm. She slowed as she drew near me. Reaching out a shaking hand, she caught my sleeve and doubled over, drawing in deep breaths that made her whole body shudder as she struggled to regain her breath. 

After she caught her breath, she looked back up at me and beamed. “Liam,” her mouth formed the shape of my name and I imagined that her voice sounded as lovely as a sunset or as heavenly as the scent of a dozen roses. “Oh, Liam. Thank God you’re alive.”

This was the moment I had been expecting a few minutes back. Was this real or was I just imagining it?

I smiled at her and placed my hand on hers gently. Her face flushed a hue so dark it almost matched her hair and I knew then that she knew, without a doubt that I was the Liam she thought I was. It made sense, I guess, that she would recognize me so much quicker by touch than by sight, we did do a lot of communicating through touch in that dark department store. 

I wanted to tell her that I thought she hadn’t recognized me, but she must have sensed my original disappointment by the set of my face or something. She reached up gently toward my hair and mouthed, “Your hair is so much shorter now. I almost didn’t recognize you.”

I beamed at her, unable to communicate just how much it meant to me that she realized who I was, even if it was a moment later than I anticipated. 

It was then that her arms flew around me, almost in a bone crushing manner as she pulled me tight against her own warm body. This was the impulsive girl I knew from five years prior. The hug filled me with her sense of relief. She had thought I was dead. I knew this of course, but it meant something else entirely to see and feel this from her.

Guilt filled my gut, and I signed, “Sorry to have scared you,” to her when she let me go a few heartbeats later. Maybe I should have gone back to the store to find her, let her know I was okay. But fear of rejection had held me back from doing so then.

Had she come looking for me day after day? Sure. Did she know that I was deaf? It was hard to be certain. And despite what Dan always said about me, women didn’t exactly throw themselves at me once they found out I couldn’t hear them. I’ll admit, speaking two different languages can make a relationship much harder than it needs to be. 

The girl cocked her head at me, unsure of what I had signed. She watched my hand movements like a hawk. From the way she watched, and the intense concentration on her face, it felt like she wanted to understand the things I had to say.

She repeated the sign for sorry by rubbing her own chest and mouthing, “Sorry?”
I nodded at her, face still plastered with a smile. I’m sure my eyes conveyed my disbelief and amazement. 

When she saw me nod she shook her head vigorously. She pointed to me, head still shaking and signed sorry again, mouthing, “You shouldn’t be sorry.” She then pointed to herself and signed sorry once more. “I’m sorry.”

I signed the question, “why?”

And she stood, at a loss for signs. Finally she mouthed, “For costing you your job. I over reacted and shouldn’t have.” By the time she was finished, her eyes had fallen from mine, and were now looking at her shoes.

I touched her chin delicately, and lifted it so that we were once again at eye level. I shook my head and made my best nonchalant face, signing, “I never liked that job anyway.”

I could tell she had no idea what I said, but she had also picked up on my facial clues. Her perplexed face, I decided in that moment, was heart-stoppingly adorable. If this was the way the rest of our interactions went, I could easily die a happy man. She wasn’t upset or angry that she couldn’t understand me. Just genuinely puzzled and clearly curious. She wanted to understand me. And that was a good enough start for me.

I pointed to the coffee shop behind her, on the other side of the road, not signing anything.

She seemed to understand me just fine, nodding her head enthusiastically and taking my hand. She guided me across the street, dashing between cars, a happy look on her face. I couldn’t hear it, but I’m pretty sure she started laughing when I pulled ahead, dragging her with me. Once we were safely on the other side of the street, I knew for certain that she was laughing. I could feel the vibrations of her laughter running down the length of my arm as she threw her head back. I imagined it sounded like the sight of merrily twinkling Christmas lights on a dark, cold winter’s night.

I couldn’t take my eyes off of her.

"I knew I liked you for a reason,” she stated, smiling at me like most women do as they shamelessly flirt. She batted her eyelashes and winked at me. It was jarring to know that she knew I was different, but didn’t like me any less for it.

We ordered our coffees and she was surprised when the girl behind the counter took my order via signs. The barrista said something about me being a regular and the girl from my past smiled, nodding at her and responded with something I didn’t quite catch.

The barrista handed her a book and her face lit up like she had been given a million dollars. I glanced at the cover and felt my heartbeat solidly in my chest. It was an American Sign Language dictionary.

Pleasantries must have been shared across the counter, but I wasn’t really registering the words either girl’s mouth formed. I was too caught up in the way my mystery girl’s joy lit up her face and sparkled in her eyes.

The barrista tugged gently on my shirt sleeve and signed, “Are you paying?”

I nodded and handed her my bank card. Why, yes. I was going to pay for both coffees like I was on a date with this magnificent and beautiful woman. Hopefully she was single…

The two of us sat down at a table together, her nose already buried in the book. She was avidly flipping through pages, looking up signs. She left a few moments later, drawn to the counter. She must have heard our names. Usually the barrista just brought me my coffee.

I noticed that the barrista had handed her two cups of coffee and a notepad and paper. She placed the cup with my name in front of me and kept her own. I glanced at it, searching for her name for name. Hannah. It was a name when spelled either forward or backward, was exactly the same. I caught myself finger spelling her name beneath the table, liking how smoothly the letters flowed from one to another. It was a beautiful name for a beautiful girl. 

I must have been mouthing her name at some point as I finger spelled. When I looked up from her cup, her eyes were on mine and she smiled again, pointing to herself, she mouthed her name and asked, “How did you know?”

How did I know? I smiled bashfully back at her and pointed stupidly at her cup. The grin that spread across her face was worth my embarrassment. As was the sign she attempted to make next. She made the letter d with both hands and pressed them together. “Date.” She then continued to point between the two of us.

I nodded. I was more than willing to call our interactions a date if that’s what she felt we were doing.

She blushed in response and signed something else. I was thrown off at first, as her sign was complete gibberish. She must have noticed my confusion, because in the next moment she was blushing and pushing the book toward me. She pointed at the entry for girlfriend and suddenly her blush made sense. But was she asking if she was my girlfriend, or if I had one?

Our eyes met again and she pointed to me first and then the sign.

Ah. She wanted to know if I had a girlfriend. I shook my head in response and made the sign for no.

I then pointed to her and made the sign for boyfriend.

She looked confused, so I gently took the book from her and flipped to the page with the appropriate sign.

She took in the sign and shook her head, mimicking the sign for no that I had used earlier. Her face remained flushed.

We struggled through a drawn out conversation, using the book between us as a makeshift translator, the notepad and pencil long forgotten. We asked each other ordinary questions, such as what were either of us up to? Were we going to school? Did we live close? What were our future plans? What did we like to do in our spare time? Had we read any interesting books lately?

By the time we had run out of cold coffee, the sky outside was beginning to darken. We had fallen into a contented lull in our conversation, just basking in each other’s presence. I was drinking in the sight of her, her full lips, her long red hair, her sharp cheekbones and rather bushy eye brows. I loved the way she stuck her tongue out when she struggled with the more difficult signs. I also loved the way her eyes lit up when she understood what I was saying without looking at the dictionary between us and the way her mouth opened slightly every time my hand brushed hers as we passed the book back and forth.

I imagined that she was doing much the same as our gazes lingered over each other in the dimming cafe light.

The table vibrated suddenly, nearly making me drop my empty coffee cup. How long had I been holding it halfway to my mouth?

We both glanced down at my cell phone as it danced across the tabletop, sending tingling rivulets down the legs of the table. My alarm for work blazed across the screen.

I made to silence the phone and stand up when she caught my shirt sleeve. She quickly grabbed the pad of paper and scribbled something quickly. She handed it to me and squeezed my hand.

I squeezed her hand back as I glanced down at the paper she had handed me. A seven digit number was sprawled on the paper and a short, sweet message, text me.

I nearly had to read it twice. She had given me her number and asked me to text her. She had called our outing a date. Did this mean that there would be more to come?

Hannah leaned in close and gently kissed my cheek. She must have whispered something as well, I could feel her breath stirring the hair along my neck, but because I couldn’t see her face, I had no clue what she was saying.

Sudden panic gripped me. Was this going to be another long goodbye?

She pulled away, and I clutched at her jacket sleeve. She smiled at me warmly, pointing to herself, signed, “like”, and then pointed at me, mouthing, “a lot. So text me, okay?”

All I could do was nod at her as she smiled once more and waved goodbye. It was after she had completely left my field of vision that I picked up my phone and punched in her number. I texted her as quickly as my fingers would allow, “I like you a lot, too. See you tomorrow, same place, same time?”

Her response was almost instantaneous. “Absolutely.”

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Sudden Darkness: a short story


Everything about our meeting was so rapid. One minute it was just gloomy and over cast. The next, it was pitch black.
The sudden darkness left me reeling. I put out a hand for balance and felt the cool, smooth plastic of the manikin’s bare chest beneath my palm. I tried blinking once, twice.
Nothing happened. The darkness remained.
I dug around in my pocket with my other hand, searching for my phone. A sudden jolt of panic raced along my nerves as my hand came up empty. I checked the other pocket and only found my wallet. Had I dropped my phone?
“A TORNADO HAS BEEN SPOTTED ON THE GROUND IN DOVER COUNTY. SEEK SHELTER IMMEDIATELY.” I could hear a weather radio droning on somewhere near the fitting rooms, but with no phone to light my way, there was no way I was going to be able to safely navigate the store, let alone find suitable shelter.
I had been standing near the checkout counter. It was just beyond the manikin. I reached forward, expecting the touch of the cool, smooth glass.
Instead, my hand made contact with a very hot substance that felt eerily like human skin. I couldn’t help it. I screamed bloody murder.
“Liam?” A light flashed from the direction of the weather radio. “Everything okay up there?”
In the glaring light I took in a tall, lanky boy with dark hair. He wore a vest embroidered with the store’s name and his right below it. He made eye contact with me and smiled, patting my hand gently as it rested against his bicep.
I had screamed, but not pulled away.
In my distress, my fear of the dark had surmounted my fear of unexpectedly touching another human body.
“Liam?” The light was slowly making its way toward us. Now that my eyes had adjusted, I realized that the light was rather far off. The voice calling out was suddenly muttering something under its breath. From the tone, I assumed he was cursing.
Liam patted my hand again and pointed in the direction of the light before slowly pulling me toward the back of the store. He didn’t say a word. And he didn’t forcibly move me. He just began walking and I didn’t let go of him.
The warmth of his arm, now that I had verified that it belonged to a normal human and not some ghoul that resided in my darkest nightmares, was suddenly calming. With his guidance I no longer felt like a passenger overboard, adrift in the sea of darkness. His presence moored me and I was lulled into a sense of contentment despite the torrential storm pounding on the roof of the department store.
Before I knew it, the flashlight beam was no longer dancing along in the distance, but glaring directly in my eyes.
“What kind of dark magic is this, Liam?” Once my eyes adjusted, I read the vest of the man calling out to Liam. His name was Dan and he was apparently the store manager. “Only you could scare a girl half to death and still have her clinging to you like you’re some kind of savior.”
I expected Liam to respond, but again, he didn’t say a word.
I wanted to tell Liam’s manager that it had been an accident. But before I could, Dan started talking again. “Don’t give me any of that crap. I heard her scream and I know it was because you were creeping around in the dark not saying anything.”
Confused, my gaze passed between Liam and his manager. Liam wasn’t saying a word, and yet Dan was responding as if he had.
Dan’s eyes narrowed as he spoke again. “Don’t get smart with me, boy! I am well aware that it wouldn’t have done you any good to try saying something in the dark.”
Liam moved his hands and suddenly it clicked. Liam was signing.
“No. Don’t worry about it. I will locate the rest of the stranded shoppers. Just escort her to the shelter and try to detach yourself from her at some point. Preferably sooner rather than later. You’re still on the clock, not a date.”
I felt my face flush indignantly. I was standing right in front of the man! Out of sheer frustration I snatched the flashlight from his hands and flicked it off.
“Let’s see how you navigate in the dark, Danny Boy,” I retorted hotly.
“Give me back my flashlight this instant!”
I dropped it forcefully on the floor before tugging on Liam’s arm. “Come on, Liam. Let’s go make out in the fitting room.”
Dan cursed darkly from behind me. “I have half a notion to toss you out into the storm, you little punk!”
“First you’d have to find me,” I responded darkly. “Besides, isn’t that against the law or something during a tornado?”
Liam squeezed my arm gently before dropping his hand to mine. He gently attempted to guide me away from Dan. He was probably trying to steer me toward safety, or the fitting room.
I lowered my voice and whispered in what I hoped was the general direction of his ear, “Just so you know, I was kidding about making out in the fitting room.”
He squeezed my hand and kept walking.
Eventually we made our way to a door, adjacent to the fitting rooms. A small emergency light was lit above it, allowing me to read the sign that read, “Employees Only”. There were a few other people huddled around a small camping lantern. Some of them were wearing employee vests like Liam and Dan. Others were customers like me.
Liam squeezed my hand once more before pointing at the small circle of people. I tried to pull him toward the circle with me, but he shook his head and dropped my hand. His hands moved rapidly, signing something I couldn’t understand.
One of the other employees translated for me, but I didn’t take my eyes off of Liam. “He says he has to go back and find Dan.”
“You could just leave him out there,” I offered.
Liam smiled, but shook his head again, hands moving once more.
“He says he has to go make amends. He really can’t afford to lose his job. But he will be right back.” Liam nodded to his coworker, seemingly satisfied with her translation, before waving to me.
I wish I had known then that it had been a wave good bye, and not see you later.
I never did see him again. Liam, my anchor in a stormy sea of darkness...
Maybe he lost his job because of me—one he couldn’t afford to lose. Maybe he got a better job. Or maybe, like Dan, he lost his life in that storm.


Sunday, June 4, 2017

Nature's Serenity

Nature’s Serenity: a short story
Larkynn de la Fuerza

Larkynn de la Fuerza
I stumbled upon the path, quite by accident, anger still flaring in my veins as my heavy footsteps went from pounding the pavement to crunching on the loose gravel beneath my feet. I probably should have stopped walking, but rationality was buried deep beneath my rage.

How dare he? The thought was all I could hear, the everyday sounds of my city life long forgotten in their own monotony and regularity.

It was the shift in light that finally drew me from the depths of my own dark thoughts and forced me to take in my surroundings. One look was all it took for the stress of the day to begin leeching away from my body. Golden-green sunlight filtered down from the heavy canopy that towered several feet above my head. To my left and right were tree trunks as big around as four or five of me put together. I felt instantly dwarfed, swaddled in the sudden silence of the forest. All of my problems were instantly minimized as well. There was simply no room for them in my mind next to the enormity of the greenery surrounding me.

The lack of honking cars, chattering people, roaring trucks and motorcycles, and construction roared in my ears louder than any of the city noises had ever been, making me pause. Did I step into another world unknowingly?

I turned quickly, looking back the way I had come, unable to believe that the city was still to my back. How could nature mute so much sound and activity? The concrete path I had been on only moments before ended some paces back, bathed in sunlight. The faint city noises I was so accustomed to, just barely reached my straining ears. If I hadn’t known any better, I would swear that the sound itself, the compilation of all the city noises merged into one voice that seemed to whisper, Go. Escape.

How could such a place exist in a metropolis as large as mine? Was I aware of the forest’s existence prior to my angry approach? Of course. It stood at the back of my place of work, dark, lush, and stagnant; a lost treasure hidden among a more civilized and industrialized world of constant motion. Had I known the forest was this peaceful and all encompassing? Not a chance. If nothing else, I had assumed that it was a tiny patch of trees isolated from a larger forest lurking somewhere on the outskirts of my immense city.

Heeding its whispers, I turned once more toward the mystical forest path. To my left there were worn wooden steps buried in the steep gravel path. Someone had already discovered this hidden haven of serenity and in the process of their discovery, they had marked a safe passage for future visits. Would they be offended by my trespassing?

Come, the forest seemed to hum in response to my hesitance. Lose yourself within me and find your inner peace, child.
Larkynn de la Fuerza
                                     Larkynn de la Fuerza
With one last look over my shoulder at the life I knew, the city I called home, I nodded and began walking once more. My pace slowed drastically as I continued forward, staring in amazement in every direction, as I walked further into the depths of the forest.

Maybe a little nature walk would be good for me.

On my right a stream gurgled by slowly far below me, beams of light sparkling in the swirling waves. Out of the corner of my eye, they almost looked like water sprites peeking shyly from the current at me, curious of the forest’s latest visitor.

Birds and squirrels called to me from their treetop perches, seemingly agreeing with my astonishment, welcoming me to their wondrous home. Their bright feathers of blue and red, dark pelts of brown and gray contrasted fantastically with
the dark, lush greenery surrounding us. They stood out beautifully and yet blended in perfectly. Only a slow, careful observer could pin point their exact locations.

My stress and worries began to drain away from me, flowing down the stream, back toward the city—the world from which I had come, but left so far behind. Even my darkest thoughts began to rush away from me, moving with a roaring sound of their own, very similar to the sound of cascading water and the swooshing of rustling leaves.

The further I walked, the louder the rushing, tumbling water sounds became, drowning out any other negative emotions and thoughts lingering in the depths of my mind. Everywhere I looked, there was so much life and beauty. It was hard to be anything but calm and silently amazed. The further I walked, the more I was convinced that I had entered a new and stunning world so different from my own.

Larkynn de la Fuerza
My heart swelled with one final thought, I never want to leave, before the waterfall itself came into view. It was small, but mesmerizing. Tiered river rocks created a layered ledge of miniature falls several feet below me. They held my riveted attention, the water running over the rocks, glistening in the sun seemed to have absolutely no concerns or responsibilities. I wanted nothing more than to remove my shoes and wade into the moving, relaxing stream below.

But first, I had to reach them. The path to my right was lined with a wooden fence, preventing me from attempting to climb down the cliff where I stood. It was a reasonable precaution. The water was so alluring, it diminished even my fear of heights.

Looking a head, the path continued, lined by the wooden rails. Sighing, I followed it without question, noticing where all those that had been far less patient than I had forged trails of their own down the steep embankment. There were several foot holds available in the jutting river rocks along the slope, but I stuck to the safer trail behind the man-made fence.

Safer to stick to the path, the birds seemed to tweet and I agreed with them readily. There was no harm in following the slowly sloping path to its end. Each step brought me closer to being level with the falls themselves. Surely it would lead me to the river.

At some point, my curiosity got the better of me though as I found a worn foot trail not blocked by the man-made barricade. I walked slowly, clutching at the rough bark of the towering giants as I passed beneath them. I still managed to slip, catching myself from sliding over the edge by crouching low, and reaching backward.

I came eye to eye with a lazy garter snake sun bathing on an exposed tree root. Careful, he crooned to me in a quiet hiss. Tread lightly.

I nodded to him and righted myself slowly. I continued down the path and stood toe to toe with the rushing, gurgling stream. The falls roared in my ears, calling to me. Join us!
                                     Larkynn de la Fuerza
Ignoring the sign that read, “No swimming or jumping off of the falls”, I striped off my socks and shoes, giddy with the thought of dipping my naked toes into the swirling, cascading water. As almost an after thought, I pulled my cell phone from my pocket and stashed it in my shoes with my socks before taking my first tentative step into the stream.

The water was cold upon my skin, but instead of dissuading me from continuing, it called me forward. I walked until I was ankle deep in the rushing water. A slight tug pulled me toward the edge, but it was playful and nonthreatening. I slowly paced from one bank to the other, staring down at my feet with every step. The river sprites danced among my footsteps, guiding me safely across to either side.

How had I never known that a place such as this existed?

How did it have the power to wash away all of my worries and concerns?

Seek us out when your heart is worn and wearied by the soot of your civilization, the falls chanted.

Somewhere, a jarring electronic alarm started blaring, its screams startling the birds into a frenzied flight above my head. It shattered the forest’s enchantment over my me, the water sprites dove back into the depths of the river and reality settled around my shoulders once more. My lunch break was almost over.

Despite my disappointment with having to leave my newfound haven, the thought of returning to the city could not shake my new found inner peace.

Salvation can be found even in the heart of corruption and pollution, the forest reminded me gently, as I put my shoes back on and climbed hand over hand back toward the path.

Never. Forget. The falls chanted with every heavy foot fall as I jogged back toward the city. Visit. Often.
                                     Larkynn de la Fuerza

At the mouth of the path where the loose gravel met pavement, I turned around once more, slightly out of breath and looked back at the cool, tree-darkened world I was leaving behind. I would never forget the inner peace it granted me, a troubled soul seeking salvation. I would be back, and maybe, just maybe, I would bring him with me next time.

Pete the Kracken and the Angry Storm Cloud

  Hello, Readers! Happy Black Friday if you're partaking in the chaos that is "the biggest gift shopping day of the year". I h...

Popular Posts