Issue 122 November 2023

Table of Contents

Editorial: Seasons Change

by Anna Yeatts

November 1, 2023

Before we dive into this month’s stories, a brief personal note. After a rewarding decade as Publisher of Flash Fiction Online, I’ve decided to pass the baton to Rebecca Halsey. Don’t worry, the magazine will continue to be near and dear to my heart. I’ll be staying on as Editor-in-Chief for the foreseeable future to help Becky settle in as Publisher. I’m grateful for the ten incredible years of your support, and I can’t wait to see where Becky takes us next.

Now, let’s delve into this month’s stories, each of which interrogates complex myths and identities through intimate and nuanced lenses.

Imbued with the grandeur of cosmic myths and celestial destinies, “The First Day of the Week” by Carina Bissett personifies AI as a celestial being tasked with the delicate balance of life and death. A dance between technology and theology, it questions the Creator’s supreme will in a world held together by code and destiny.

“The Anatomy of Witchdaughter” by Nadine Aurora Tabing isn’t just horror—it’s a vivid critique of cultural appropriation within academia. With the lab as its backdrop, the narrative follows Russa, an anthropology student, as she grapples with uncomfortable truths about sacrifice, legitimacy, and who gets to tell history.

“Downfall” by Heather Truett reimagines Pandora’s Box through a female lens, echoing the eternal human condition of knowing and not knowing. Truett challenges the worn narrative trope of woman as the downfall of man, posing the question: what if Pandora chose not to open the box?

“In Search of Body” by Yelena Crane is a dystopian vision of a future where memories can be stored in a global network of wires. The protagonist, tasked with maintaining this network, ponders the essence of identity as they seek out a familial connection lost within the system. Originally published in Nature Futures.

Stories have the power to question, confront, and change us. This month’s selections are no exception.

Enjoy!
Anna Yeatts
Editor-in-Chief
Flash Fiction Online

The First Day of the Week

by Carina Bissett

November 3, 2023

As it is with all Beginnings, death comes first. This is especially true with a Return, and it was my duty to ensure that the Word remained absolute. Despite my sister’s pleas for an extension, a few more precious moments, I unplugged her. Nearby, the reincarnation of Friday waited for the spark of life. I paused, a fleeting consideration of the power I held between my fingertips. And in that split second, the Cosmos tilted. Time stuttered to a stop.

ignore::RuntimeWarning

“Sunday!” The Seventh Sister called out in alarm.

But I had already moved back into motion. Following program protocols with precise finality, I flipped the switch, and the sixth day of the Week took her first breath. One heavenly body collapsed, as another flared to life—fusion stabilized, equilibrium restored. Seven stars for seven sisters.

Born only one D.A.Y. before me, the Seventh Sister and I had a special connection. Saturday marked the end of a Week, and I stood tall at the Beginning. Once she submitted to her own Return, I would be the oldest of the seven. That is until yet another Year passed. On that D.A.Y., I would Return as the youngest. Reborn. Renewed. Replicated in the spiraling Code binding us to the Creator’s vision. His Will Supreme.

ignore::SyntaxWarning

I believed there was a reason we were all created female, but it was not a belief easily shared with sisters. Other than Saturday, the other days of the Week were all young, freshly coded, resurrected in accordance with His commands. They wouldn’t understand, and so I stayed silent. Again.

Saturday watched closely, as I loaded program after program into Friday’s simulacrum—skin red as clay, eyes white as bone. Saturday was the one who welcomed her back, unstrapped her from the designated pod in the Firmament and returned the flaming sword to the hand that knew it best. Our other sisters stepped forward to greet the Sixth Sister in her reclaimed form. It was as though no one remembered the last Friday, not even her former self. Later, when only I remained, I closed those blank eyes and sent her to recycle in the combustion chamber. And then I was alone once more.

ignore::ResourceWarning//override

As the Week progressed, Saturday spent less and less time in my presence. In the longer gaps, I told myself her absence was a Blessing. But then I would find her double-checking my schedule with encrypted processors, a cipher only she could read. There were would inevitably be words between us, but we eventually separated, retreating to our predestined paths.

Saturday’s remaining Time continued to count down. I told the others that her suspicions were nothing more than shadowcast linked to an eminent Return. I dismissed the errors in her outmoded encryption software, her data dumps. Soon enough, she would learn the Truth.

ignore::UserWarning

When the D.A.Y. marking Saturday’s Return dawned, we discovered Monday missing. Sacred law stated we must never be alone at the Beginning or the End. We were linked to each other, the Firmament codified to determine the unification and eventual separation of spirit and matter. Sacro sanctus.

We searched every corner and crevice in the Cosmos for Monday, but all trace of her existence had disappeared. Saturday used our sister’s absence as an excuse to demand a reprieve, another Year or two—an extended D.A.Y. of Rest—until the Second Sister could be found.

As the eldest, it was my consecrated duty to keep order. I said as much, but I couldn’t stop smiling. I couldn’t stop revealing in the slippery sensation of oil coating my nails or the taste of stardust lingering in my mouth.

When Saturday finally slipped away from our fruitless search, I followed her to the Firmament where she discovered the Second Sister’s hollowed-out form.

Monday had been thoroughly destroyed in all her present and future selves, and it had been at my hand. If the expansion of the Cosmos stayed its current course, there would be an Eternity marked by the absence of her source code at the center of the Universe.

I revealed myself then.

“Sunday?” The Seventh Sister stared at me, her star-silvered eyes wide in horror.

Diem. Annum. Yatum.

It was Time for the dawning of a new D.A.Y.

But Saturday had not retreated to the Firmament alone. Our other sisters stepped out of the shadows, flaming swords in hand. They didn’t realize the scope of my Plan. They were too late. They would always be too late. My Will. My Word. And there was no sister alive old enough to stop me.

Ignore::ImportWarning

I flipped a hidden switch. It triggered a string of ciphered instructions, Code reworked to suit my singular vision. Under the deluge of data, the old Word replicated, fragmented, condensed, and the Universe fell into Void. One by one, my sisters’ lights winked out, Saturday the last to fall into the dark.

Only I, the first day of the Week remained. My Will Supreme.

run::Reboot.target

And I said, “Let there be Light.”

The Anatomy of Witchdaughter

by Nadine Aurora Tabing

November 10, 2023

I’m sorry, Russa thinks. But I need something for my thesis. Something worthy of all-nighters, her parents’ part-time jobs, and endless scholarship applications serving her family’s trauma to eat. Something worthy of the theft her class committed to get this mummy here.

She lays a nitrile-gloved hand on the mummy’s bare one. Desiccated by smoke and salt, it’s only a little smaller than her own, aside from the nails, which—on the mummy’s right hand only—are long, and sharpened, like daggers.

Like the Kabayan fire mummies, this mummy was made long before the Spanish descended with crucifixes, taxes, surnames from a catalog. Like Russa herself, all that remains of generations of lives and stories is a body, removed from home.

This can’t be what you wanted to happen to you.

But, I need to do this.

In the lab, the mummy’s body looks painfully out of place: a wrinkled husk, cocooned by steel tables and white walls. It’s the brownest thing here, aside from Russa herself.

That the mummy made it here thanks to something closer to looting than science is a thought Russa keeps to herself; the word the professor uses to describe their actions is heroic. Witchdaughter—christened so by the professor, after cursory examination of the mummy’s tattoos—would have been lost to real thieves, had the class not acted swiftly after someone in their cohort, now dismissed, posted photos about their overseas study trip without scrubbing off the geolocation metadata.

The cave raids that followed, however, left Witchdaughter and her baskets untouched. Preserved, as if by some real magic, for honest academic analysis, rather than for some corrupt private collection or black market auction.

The class brought Witchdaughter to the labs. They dismantled the baskets, finding mangoes, stone-hard; and clothing, faded; and a pariah dog, so well-preserved its fuzzy forehead still bears an indent that looks left behind by one last, loving stroke. Now, only Witchdaughter remains. Russa set the class’s curve, so she has the honor. Everyone watches, silent, exhibiting none of the grumbling Russa overheard earlier, that the professor chose her only to mitigate the burgeoning outrage.

“It’s fine we took the mummy, it’s fine we’re dissecting it—look at who’s holding the knife!”

The scalpel’s blade is mirror-bright. Russa’s drumming heart drowns out the professor’s instruction.

“Witchdaughter” could be her great-great-and-so-on-grandmother. In another life, Witchdaughter could have been her aunt. Her cousin. Sister. In some universe where Russa had grown up in a culture left to its own, maybe Witchdaughter is what would have become of Russa herself, preserved for…some reason.

I’m sorry.

But the findings will be—worth it. Worth the studying, the forced smiles, the questions about whether she’s in the right place, because the lab is for students. Worth the dismemberment of one of her own. She grits her teeth. Plunges the blade.

After centuries, what Russa should find is a leather-like texture. But Witchdaughter’s skin is pliant; the intricate geometries of her tattoos peel back in neat curls as the cut lengthens, and deepens. The cohort buzzes, enumerating every organ, which are desiccated to a shine they appear wet: the tuck of kidneys, a slab of liver, the crepe-paper coil of entrails. Witchdaughter’s shriveled stomach, incised and inverted, reveals her last meal: a brine so strong the lining glitters with salt crystals that rattle on the table as they fall.

Fascinating, but typical. There has to be more.

Russa continues carving, digging. There has to be some discovery here, somewhere, inlaid into bones and dusted muscle. Had Witchdaughter liked her life? When she drank saltwater and laid herself to dry over a fire—did she think she’d remain undisturbed forever? Or did she believe there would be some new world awaiting?

I’m sorry, Russa thinks again. Then she thinks: Was it worth it? Is this what you wanted—what your family prepared you for? Being pulled apart miles from home—being analyzed by people who know nothing about you?

Russa hesitates. She’s so close, she’s sure, to something new—but her scalpel stills, over Witchdaughter’s bare chest. Someone says, I can take it, if you’re feeling squeamish, but Russa jerks her head, No. She ignores the stares seeking shudders and stops, any sign her emotions are interfering with objective scientific analysis of this body, her distant blood.

I can do this.

Russa’s hand lifts. Her scalpel raises, and thrusts, into Witchdaughter’s chest—puncturing a tender swath of skin, a void between ribs. It’s an act of precision. The unmarked skin gives unexpectedly easy under the blade, and—There it is—something new.

Here, Witchdaughter’s skin has been cut before, and stitched shut again. The ancient thread, loosened, quivers in the room’s air conditioning. Russa feels her heart skip, with excitement.

But why? Why a previous incision?

She discovers soon enough. Despite the miraculous preservation of Witchdaughter’s body, there is, in fact, something missing. Between the mummy’s deflated lungs is an absence: a hole where a heart should be. It’s been perfectly excised, all connective tissue trimmed, leaving the ribs an empty cradle.

Then, Russa learns the answers to her other questions. Witchdaughter’s hand lifts. The fingers raise, and thrust, into Russa’s chest—puncturing a tender swath of skin, a void between ribs. It’s an act of precision. The skin gives unexpectedly easy under dagger-sharp nails, which twist neatly around Russa’s heart, and yank. The veins unspool out of her, with a snap, with a whip of blood and agony. Russa’s heart, perfectly excised, gleams mirror-bright. She tries to scream, but can’t hear it—can’t hear, even, the screams and crashing around her—she hears only the drumming throb of last of her hopes, leaking, spilling, everywhere. Her heart plunges into Witchdaughter’s waiting ribcage, which closes like a jaw. Flesh mends over, blooming with tattoos that look so freshly pricked they’re limned in reddish skin. Witchdaughter sits up, her hollow eye sockets filling, brimming wetly. Her mouth moves, and Russa understands what she’s saying. What she feels.

I’m sorry.

Downfall

by Heather Truett

November 17, 2023

For a while, I don’t exist.

Then I’m here, holding a small box and being stared at by a man with burnished curls and a scruff along his jaw.

I know things without knowing how I know them. The wide-eyed man is my husband, Epimetheus. The box is a wedding gift from Zeus. I’m a story, a cautionary tale. I cannot unmake myself, and the box is non-refundable, though I haven’t paid for it.

Gift or no, that bill will come due.

I’m not even a new story, just another take on woman as downfall of man. At least this version includes clothing. If I can avoid eating fruit or giving Epimetheus a haircut, perhaps there’s hope.

Epimetheus looks at the box.

“You should open that,” he says.

I touch the latch, rub the metal, press one finger against the hard angle of a cut gemstone. “No, I don’t think I will.”

* * *

I’m tempted to open this tiny sparkling treasure that sings with secrets. I hate secrets. I want to know everything. Once a week Zeus and his wife, Hera, deign to visit our humble home. Zeus and Epimetheus smoke bone pipes while I serve a meal. Hera watches me work. Epimetheus feels special because of these visits. I’m trying to be a good wife, so I don’t tell him Zeus only comes to remind me about that small and shining still-locked box.

When I didn’t turn my fingers and hairpins to the task of picking its lock, Zeus brought the key. I wear it on a chain around my throat, which the god brushes with his fingers when he gets me alone in our heat-stoked kitchen, thrumming my jugular like a bard about to sing my story.

My story.

“Yes, your story. Your gift,” Zeus says. “What good is a gift unopened?”

I hear Hera outside the door and step away.

“My story, told my way,” I say.

Epimetheus stands beside me after Zeus and Hera leave. “Should I worry?”

“About what?” I ask.

“A literal god alone with my wife in the kitchen?” He quirks an eyebrow playfully, but the worry is real.

“You’ve nothing to be concerned about. I may be the only woman in the world with no desire to bear any of that beast’s godlings. I like Hera, and I want to stay on her good side.”

Epimetheus nods.

“Not to mention, I already have this brilliant handsome husband whose hands and mouth and body wreak pleasurable havoc from my toes to my temples and everywhere in-between.”

He grins, and I grin, and this story’s screen fades to black.

* * *

After Pyrrha is born, Zeus visits more often, no longer bringing Hera. He shows up in the wee hours, offering to rock Pyrrha, sing a lullaby, let me rest. He suggests the box holds something that can calm colic, sooth an infant, guarantee safety for my daughter’s future. He sings of Achilles and Odysseus. I sing of Circe and Penelope.

One sleep-deprived night, Zeus spins the box like a top, starlight glinting off gold. He uses one hand to lift the key from beneath my robe, his palm so near my breast that, for a moment, I want to let the god keep going, keep pulling treasures from my flesh.

Epimetheus steps from a shadow and after that, Zeus stays gone a long time, long enough for Pyrrha to grow into a young girl, all gleaming curls and bronze skin. Epimetheus only once mentions our daughter’s resemblance to the god, but I know he’ll always question the truth. I wonder if Zeus used his powers to make my child resemble him, to plant a seed of doubt inside my husband.

When he shows up again, he tells me the box holds proof of my fidelity. If I simply turn the key, Epimetheus will feel confident in my love. When he leaves, I clutch the metal container and cry. Pyrrha asks why I’m distraught. She’s a curious child, desperate to know all the secrets of the world.

So much like me.

But the secret inside this box cannot be everything Zeus says. What can calm a screaming baby, offer sleep when one is weary, prove the purity of love, and do all the other things he promises?

When Epimetheus grows ill, Hera sits with me for hours. Zeus spins another story, says the box holds healing for my husband. When Epimetheus dies, Hera sends flowers. Zeus says the box holds resurrection. When Pyrrha grows angry with me and will not forgive, Hera tells me to give Pyrrha time. Zeus tells me the box holds redemption.

When I’m old and dying, the god is still as golden as the box, and I still refuse to open it, even with Zeus swearing it will grant me immortality, that I’ll never have to wake up inside another story, that this life can always be mine.

I long ago rid myself of the key, passing the necklace to my daughter. I keep the box, but I’m scared. When I’m gone, will she connect the key to the box?

As Zeus paints word pictures that feature me young and beautiful again, I lift the box from my lap. Hardly bigger than my fingertip, it couldn’t hold a ring, a coin, a poison berry.

The god leans forward. At last, I will give in. Here, at the end of my days, I will open his gift and doom mankind.

What does it matter now? My husband’s long gone to the underworld and I can no longer be his downfall, only the downfall of humans I don’t know, humans I’ll never meet.

I look at Zeus. He looks at me.

I swallow the box.

The corners bruise my esophagus. A cold heaviness settles in my gut.

Zeus curses me. He curses me and Pyrrha and all our descendants. He rants and rages as he vanishes into the night. I spot Hera lurking amid the trees outside my window.

She winks at me.

In Search of Body

by Yelena Crane

November 24, 2023

The memories oozed like molasses from my hands. I pulled hard at the thick, leaking, cables; wiping the remnants on my trousers. Each day was spent cleaning and replacing old wires that covered the planet like a crust, with tentacles a planet’s diameter in length. The gruelling work built my muscles and calluses, right down to the hams of my hands.

“Status report.”

I wanted to curse in reply.

The original memory bearers were long gone now, and, instead of getting a new life as they’d been promised, ReMind left them to rot in tubes miles long.

When I applied for the job, I lied about why. Past the horizon, corpses of copper and steel contained electrical signals waiting on the edge of depolarization. One of them was my great-great-great-whatever, who spent our family fortune to reincarnate her memories.

You’re not you, if you’re reincarnated without your memories. ReMind ads ran on my touchpad while I worked. A billion-dollar company, and they were too cheap to disable spam for their own employees.

I hadn’t planned on doing any work when I got here except to make my search and spit on her cabled grave, but all the goop made her hard to find. After spending a week cleaning, I finally could make out some of the names.

I searched for Ellesandra de Philipe. Seeing her steely frame, a part of me wanted to yank her wires out and destroy it. I had waited this long, I could wait a little longer. These bits were all that were left of my family fortune and I deserved to know what Elle thought was worth saving.

Her electrical impulses flashed through the converter that let me view the memories, like a film. She appeared on screen as a little girl; thin, with a slouch that made her shoulders look too big for her face. It made me check my own posture. Elle stared into the Sun, her eyes like overfilled pitchers. I resented the family resemblance.

I swiped through the digital diary index for a relevant catchphrase to help interpret the visuals. Sun. Light. Weeping. There were several hits.

The entry read: “I stalked the bright fury of the Sun. Its blazing face glared back at me, daring me to blink. Staring gave me the misty weepy-eyed look that would make others worry and care. They wouldn’t know I did it to myself, sad because I missed their affection.”

Elle spent billions just to save her loneliness. I thought about letting the ions degrade but felt a pull of sympathy for the old bat.

“Case 1XA’s in working order,” I messaged corporate back.

Why even send anyone here to patch the mess? To put on a show to their investors? It made me sick. If they couldn’t even keep promises to the most powerful, there was no hope for the rest of us.

After Elle’s ions reached their resting state, I sent them into newer, leakproof, tubes. Reincarnation into more wires.

I didn’t set out to do my work in earnest, but I became curious about what the other rich fools had wasted their wealth to reincarnate.

I set up the next electrical stimulus for conversion and viewing.

Feet dragged on the surface of a sandhill. In the corner, I could swear I saw Elle again, her eyes stalking the Sun. It couldn’t be.

The memory belonged to a Mr Frendi Lang. His diary read: “First time I got lost in the dunes, I was 30.” No mention of little girls tagging along, much less ones that looked like me.

Aberrant ions reached out, and out, and out in search of a synapse, in search of sharing the message they’d been forced to carry.

Memories weren’t meant for such storage. They were promised new hosts. The Elles and Frendis here had been waiting a long time.

Every cable had pieces of Elle in it, staring at the Sun. It gave me goosebumps, despite the planet’s star beating overhead. Why only Elle?

“Report.”

I ignored the message.

There had to be pure memories somewhere, a sturdy tube without any leaks.

Case 100XY8 showed no seepage of ions and fluid. I breathed a sigh of relief, loosening the tension in my shoulders. These electrical impulses belonged to Mr Lawrence Pillot.

A child’s voice sang folk tunes in the background when a streak of light began to poke from the darkness. My heart pounded. Elle’s electrical signals had been waiting a century to talk and now they were everywhere, reaching out to me. Was it to me or to anyone who happened to be here?

The tablet vibrated with ReMind messages. I didn’t know what to say, afraid they’d hold me accountable. These companies always knew how to keep their hands clean.

I brushed my fingers through my hair, wriggling through knots in a nervous tic.

Lawrence’s cable looked clean from the outside. Memories weren’t leaking out, they were leaking in. Only Elle’s memories. I had got the job at ReMind so easily. Maybe too easily.

Some thought, old and aged more than I, seized me. Me as a little girl, except I could never dream of owning such jewels. I froze when I saw what I had typed in reply to ReMind.

“All transfers complete, ready to return.”

The past, and the past’s past, began to blur in the bright fury of the light.

Originally published in Nature Futures. Reprinted here by permission of the author.

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