Issue 113 February 2023

Table of Contents

The First Stop Is Always the Last

by John Wiswell

December 1, 2017

MONDAY, APRIL 10

The first stop on Selma’s route was equidistant between the mall and the cemetery. Zoning was weird out here. People of shapes she’d never seen streamed down the sidewalk, all in black suits or black dresses. One broke from the crowd and boarded Selma’s bus. The woman climbed up to her and asked—

 

MONDAY, APRIL 10

The first stop on Selma’s route was equidistant between the mall and the cemetery. Zoning was weird out here. People of shapes she’d never seen streamed down the sidewalk, all in black suits or black dresses. One broke from the crowd and boarded Selma’s bus. The woman climbed up to her, eyes downcast as she flashed her ticket.

It was just the two of them aboard as Selma pulled them from the curb. The woman’s sobs sounded like hiccups, and it felt unfair that someone’s grief sounded so cute. Selma pulled a couple tissues from beneath her seat and stretched them back to her.

The woman blotted her eyes. She had had five moles on her left cheek that gave the impression of the minute- and hour-hands on an analog clock. Selma checked the time on her cheek and wanted to ask if her name was Ms. 8:30.

Ms. 8:30 kept eyeing the ads on the walls for the newest Fast and the Furious.

Selma asked, “You like those movies?”

The woman nodded plaintively, like she got that question all the time. “I saw the last one a thousand times.”

“Me too. Promise not to drive like it, though.”

“Do you like Vin Diesel or The Rock?”

Selma grinned. “More like Michelle Rodriguez.”

The woman looked at her lap, blushing and making fists in her skirt. She—

 

MONDAY, APRIL 10

Ms. 8:30 kept eyeing the ads on the walls for the newest Fast and the Furious. Selma was going to ask about it when the woman said, “They’re fun movies. I love Michelle Rodriguez in them.”

Selma snickered. This was her kind of lady. “Who doesn’t?”

“Thanks for driving me around all morning.”

“Uhm.” Maybe she’d ridden another bus to the funeral? Or was Selma being punked for a viral video? “Have you ridden with me before?”

“About a thousand times today. It’s so nice in here. All you can hear is the hum of the engine.”

Selma did a double-take. Was this lady—

 

MONDAY, APRIL 10

Selma snickered. This was her kind of lady. “Who doesn’t?”

“My name’s Miri.”

“Selma.”

“Sorry. I’ve been on edge all week.” Miri smoothed out her black dress. “My dad passed.”

“That’s hard, hon. My advice? Go easy on yourself. It gets easier to carry with time.”

“It hasn’t yet.” Miri 8:30 scratched at her cheek. “I’m taking over the family business.”

“Oh yeah? I did too, I guess.”

“Your father drove buses?”

“Cabs. I’ve sort of got his career on steroids.” Selma patted the dashboard, and Miri smiled so dryly she could’ve been made of sand. She blotted the moles on her cheek.

“My dad was the god of time.”

 

MONDAY, APRIL 10

“My father was one of the maintenance men for the laws of physics and—no, not that either.”

 

MONDAY, APRIL 10

“I don’t know how to say this.”

Selma said, “Just let it out. I’m not judgy.”

Miri peered into Selma’s eyes through a rear-view mirror. There was such need in her face. “My dad was in charge of all time on earth. Now I’m supposed to do it. Starting today.”

Selma turned them onto Main Street and blew out a breath. “That’s heavy.”

“What if I screw time up for everyone?”

“Well, what can you do?” Selma found herself thinking of her own father’s funeral. The question was out before she could stop it: “Can you, like, go back and prevent a car wreck?”

“I wish. I can change, like, ordering caramel mocha instead of espresso. Or having a conversation.”

“Conversations can change a lot.”

“How? It’s always the same.”

Selma got an itch in her brain. She asked, “How many times have we talked about this today?”

Miri visibly tensed up, and for no better reason than fear, Selma pumped the breaks. The bus jerked, and when Miri jolted, Selma turned around in her seat. She said for what felt like the first time, “Don’t rewind me. It’s… rude?”

“I’m sorry,” Miri said, her anxiety palpable in her voice. “I just don’t want to go to work. What if I screw everything up?”

“That’s what first days are for,” Selma said, pulling them onto Cassandra Boulevard. “If your dad could get the hang of it, then so can you.”

“How do you know?”

“Because after my dad died, I had to go to work that same night without knowing a thing other than I had big-ass bills. Now a few years later I’m driving you around just fine, aren’t I?”

Miri smirked, but the ensuing hiccup made her look dopey. Dopily cute. “Do you pick up a lot of girls at funerals?”

“I drive a bus. I pick up girls from everywhere.”

It turned out Miri’s laughter sounded like hiccups, too. Miri said, “I bet that sounded smoother in your head.”

“See? Didn’t even have to rewind time to flirt with me. You’ll do great.” Selma yanked off three more tissues, handing them to Miri. “Look. If you make it through today without blowing up the earth, and through the week, I’m off Saturday. Want to go watch Michelle Rodriguez with me?”

Miri brushed a tissue across the clock-hands of her cheek. “A thousand times.”

She got off at the next stop, her steps uncertain, like it was the first in her thousand trips that she’d gotten off. There was a determination in how she stepped into uncertainty. Selma watched her go as new passengers boarded. She pulled from the curb just a little after 8:30.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Editorial: The Reprint Issue

by Anna Yeatts

February 1, 2023

Editorial

Every now and again, Flash Fiction Online publishes a reprint issue. Personally, it’s one of my favorite annual issues for multiple reasons. Primarily, the reprint issues allows the FFO staff to look into our archives and republish some of our favorite stories. We really do love these stories and there’s a sense of joy in sharing them with new readers who might have missed them on the first go-round.

From a financial perspective, the reprint issues is less expensive than a full issue of originals. As a small press, every penny counts. Yes, authors receive less compensation for a reprint publication than an original, but reprints are nonexclusive, meaning authors can continue to sell their reprint rights over and over. We’ll chalk that one up as a win for both author and publication! Here’s the shameless plug to check out our Patreon so we can continue to publish the stories you (and we) love!

And since this is a reprint issue, it feels appropriate to share from the December 2017 editorial in which we first published “The First Stop Is Always the Last” by John Wiswell. Here’s what former FFO Editor-in-Chief Suzanne Vincent had to say:

This … is a celebratory issue—because the storm can be weathered. Life can be hard and cruel with its unexpected twists. But it’s only because we love that we hurt. It’s only because we hope that we can be disappointed. And as long as we continue to love and hope, even in the face of pain, we win.

John Wiswell returns to Flash Fiction Online, and no, it’s not April (his usual month for FFO appearances). Read “The First Stop Is Always the Last.” Grief, self-doubt, and hope play out in second chances, all set on a city bus.

Another FFO alumnus, Benjamin C. Kinney brings us a story of familial relationships, the struggles of aging, and cyborg cars in “Cruise Control.”

(CW: Grief, death of a child) “Mrs. Gamp” by A.J. Brown is a heartbreaking yet gentle look at love and grief. Mrs. Gamp collects children as they pass from this life to the next.

Our final story is “Of Porridge, Untethered Things & Rabbits” by Somto Ihezue. A grandmother and grandson break traditions and stereotypes while making roast yam and rabbit dinner. Absolutely charming and a must-read.

Leave a Reply

Cruise Control

by Benjamin C. Kinney

February 10, 2023

“Why the hell would I want to become a car?” I flicked the pamphlet at my son’s face, but it fluttered down to the bleach-white sheet, against the metal bed rail.

Carlos said peaceably, “You hate this nursing home.”

“Brain in a box isn’t my idea of leaving.” I scoffed, or tried to, and a cough yanked my ribs. I sniffed dry oxygen from my cannula, one shallow sip after another, until the pain dulled.

“I’m not here to argue with you, Pop. If you don’t want to do it, you don’t have to.” His palms out, like a coward before a bully.

“I wish you were here to argue. Better that than killing me off. You think I can’t get the nurses to read me some fine print?” I gestured at the pamphlet. “Memory loss!”

“Pop, please.” He kept his voice gentle. “They rejuvenate your brain. It’s the only way to make a driver; you learn radar and wheels, like a kid learning hands. There’s no damage. Only change.”

“You don’t want me alive. Don’t tell me you’re grateful, what a good father I was. Pack of lies, right there.”

He gave me a pitying look, like he was the lawyer and I was begging him to enter a guilty plea.

Hell with that. “You want an inheritance, is that it? I saw what they pay if you drive for five years.”

Carlos hunched, a hedgehog showing his spines. “God damn, Pop. You’re willing to literally die to piss me off.”

“Whatever it takes,” I muttered.

He twisted his mouth, shoved back his chair, and stormed out of the room.

Maybe next week he’d come ready to fight on his own, not with a handful of pamphlets.

Outside the window, the garden was empty despite the late-spring morning. Fewer residents every season. Past years, the garden had a row of bright flowers under the window, little traffic lights of red and yellow. This spring, nothing. Only the tired old boxwood hedge, green and boring.

Too many things going in the wrong direction. I thumbed a destination into the Senior Ride app and called for a wheelchair transfer.

* * *

I was the only passenger, but I drove my chair into the space right behind the driver’s cube.

A synthesized voice said, “Good morning, sir. I see you’re Jaime Garza, going to Norwest Bank, correct?”

“Got it in one.” Not that I came out for banking. I peered at the driver, a locked black cube where a chair should’ve been. The app listed her name. “You’re Breanna?”

“That’s right, sir. How can I help you?” The van drove down the access road, quieter than ever. Felt like just last year I’d gotten used to the hum of electric engines, the half-empty roads. Now they’d taken away the click of turn signals.

“I wanted to know what it’s like to be, you know. Your line of work.”

“Wonderful job, sir,” she said, merging with the highway traffic. “Eight hours on the road, then the evening in VR. No chores, no small talk. I mean, no offense.”

I huffed a laugh. I thought I’d get phonebot speech scripts. “Bet the VR’s good. How’s the streaming selection in there?”

“There’s lots of options, but I don’t really watch. I have trouble following that stuff nowadays.”

I wrapped my arms around my chest to ward off a rising cough. “Sounds awful,” I croaked. “All that Wi-Fi, and you can’t use it?”

“Nah, VR’s for more than streaming. My favorite is driving the Aïr Massif, in Niger. Big bare mountains around you, shrubs and desert spread out below.”

“That’s it? You spend your downtime driving too? Jeez. I hope your kids call at least.”

“Oh, right. We talk sometimes.” Lights flickered on the dashboard, and Breanna led us down the off-ramp. “I don’t understand them like I used to.”

“Kids a disappointment, huh? Ain’t that always the way.”

Her voice grew cold. “That’s a very personal question, Mr. Garza.”

“It’s a rhetorical question, that’s what it is.” I rolled my eyes. “You don’t have to answer, and you sure don’t have to whine about it.”

She braked hard, and the chair straps dug against my chest. “Your stop. Thank you for using Senior Ride.”

* * *

I parked my chair in the lobby to watch folks come and go. One young man said hello, and I trapped him in a conversation about sarcoidosis until he squirmed and fled.

When my mother got to this age, doctors were her social life. Too old for cures, but she had nowhere else to go but the same dozen offices, over and over.

And Carlos came back every week, baring his skin, knowing I’d find a way under it.

The Senior Ride app said the closest van was “out of service.” Pack of lies. I hadn’t meant to piss Breanna off, but hell. It’s what I do best.

* * *

There was a sunset, somewhere, but my window faced the wrong direction.

I called Carlos. He picked up on the eighth ring.

“Pop.” He glared at me through the video screen, his spines already up. Finally armored like I’d wanted, and he wore it like a pair of handcuffs.

“I’m in for the car thing. One condition.”

He eyed me suspiciously. “You serious?”

“If I ever make money, it goes to charity. Not to you. You still want me to do this?”

He huffed and grumbled about the paperwork, but he didn’t say no.

Some hope for him after all, under the cowardice and spines I’d given him.

A cough rattled up from my chest. I let it loose, my ribs spasming until they ached. Who would I be, without lungs? Someone different. Not a person at all.

Breanna seemed happy as a car. For all I knew, she’d been a tyrant before. Maybe her children were better off this way, without a mother looking over their shoulder, slapping them into line, hunting for bare skin.

Might not be so bad to drive away.

Previously published in Fireside Fiction, July 2021. Reprinted here by permission of the author.

Leave a Reply

Mrs. Gamp

by A. J. Brown

February 17, 2023

“One day the fog will come and Mrs. Gamp will arrive.”

“When will that be?”

Kenzie looks down at the little boy. He still wears a diaper though he is near the age of five. Other than a dirty white shirt with an odd yellow character from some cartoon, he wears nothing else. A smudge of mustard clings to his chubby right cheek and one hand grips tight to a stick that once held a corn dog.

“I don’t know.” She hates lying, but what else is she to do? Telling the kid the truth isn’t something she feels she can do.

“But you said she will come.”

Kenzie takes a deep breath, releases it. “Yes, I did.”

The kid puts the stick to his lips and takes a bite of the nonexistent corndog. “How will you know?” he says around a mouthful of nothing.

Curiosity. It’s a wonderful thing for children, Kenzie thinks. Mackie has always been inquisitive, even now on the doorstep of death. A few steps up onto its porch and all they need to do is knock, knock, knock and the end would come. It always does.

“Legend has it,” Kenzie starts, “Mrs. Gamp appears on foggy mornings after the first fall rain. She shows up wearing a long coat and nice shoes. Some say they are boots. Mrs. Mary-Anne down on Hollow Road says the boots lace up. I think she’s a little shy of the ‘all together here’ department if you ask me.”
“Is she really?”

“Are you asking me?”

“Yes.”

“Yes, she is.” Kenzie leans on the handle of her closed parasol.

“Crazy Mrs. Mary-Anne.” Mackie giggles the way only little children can. It is the sound of someone in on a joke no one else knows about.

Kenzie looks down at him. His pudgy face has a gray tint to it; his skin a waxen sheen that has an odd shine in the predawn hour, even with the clouds still overhead and threatening more rain.

Not much time, she thinks.

“Supposedly, she wears a top hat like you see at the carnivals or the circus.”

“And an umbrella,” Mackie adds. It sounds forced.

“And an umbrella,” she repeats.

“A yellow umbrella.”

“Yes. A Yellow umbrella.”

Mackie sits on the roadside curb. A streetlamp, still on from the previous night, shines a cone of misty white down on them “What does she do, Kenzie? Why does she come?” He takes a deep breath, pulling a wheeze with it.

Kenzie swallows. She hates this part. No matter how many times she tells the story, this part is difficult, especially when they are so young, so naive … so lost. She licks her lips. When she looks down at him, his head is drooping and his eyes stare at her feet, at the boots on them. The hand with the stick in it rests in his lap.

“Mrs. Gamp comes to take the good little boys and girls to another place … another home. Somewhere … better, maybe.”

“Somewhere better,” Mackie repeats. His voice sounds tired, almost nonexistent.

Better? She wants to laugh at this. Not all boys and girls are good and certainly not all of them go to better places. She thinks Mackie might, but she is just a messenger and the news she brings is rarely received well by those older than this one.

Mackie’s eyes, which had been drooping seconds earlier, snaps open. “Kenzie, your boots … they lace up.”

“They do,” she says.

Mackie raises the hand not holding the stick and touches the strings on one of Kenzie’s boots. He looks up. Kenzie imagines from where Mackie sits, it must be like looking up the side of a tall building.

A rumble of thunder comes from high above them.

“It rained last night.” He sounds out of breath, as if his airwaves are trying to close.

“It did.”

“Is that why you’re wearing a coat?”

“Sure, Mackie. That’s why.”

The child leans to his right, sways on his diapered bottom. One arm goes around Kenzie’s leg. Mackie looks up. His face is now blue. His eyes bulge. His lips have a dark purple tint to them. When he speaks, it is nothing more than a squeak from his thoughts through lips that don’t move. “Kenzie, can I wear your hat?”

She takes it off her head, looks at it with all the sadness of a mother saying goodbye to a child for the last time. She kneels and sets the hat on Mackie’s head, covering the mop of greasy brown hair. It makes him look like a sickly magician, one at the end of his rope with no more tricks up his sleeve.

Mackie sways, the arm around her leg loosens. She swoops him up into her left arm before he can fall onto the wet concrete. His mouth is open, and his eyes are now, mercifully, closed. She sees the piece of corndog lodged in his throat. Tears fall from her eyes as she stands, the spirit of a dead child in her arm.

Kenzie thinks about opening the yellow umbrella in her right hand and lifting it to cover them. As the rain comes, she thinks better of the idea and walks away, the umbrella hooked on her arm and the child tight to her chest. For once, she allows the rain to wash away her tears.

Previously published in Beautiful Minds, January 6, 2019. Reprinted here by permission of the author.

Leave a Reply

Join the 
Community

Support

Become a member of our Patreon community

Subscribe

Subscribe via Weightless Books

Submit a Story

Submit your story using our Submittable portal