Issue September 2013

Table of Contents

Egocentric Orbit

by John Cory

September 3, 2013

Classic Flash

Near the end of his fifteenth orbit as Greenland slipped by noiselessly below, he made the routine measurements that tested the operation of his space capsule and checked the automatic instruments which would transmit their stored data to Earth on his next pass over Control. Everything normal; all mechanical devices were operating perfectly.

This information didn’t surprise him, in fact, he really didn’t even think about it. The previous orbits and the long simulated flights on Earth during training had made such checks routine and perfect results expected. The capsules were developed by exhaustive testing both on the ground and as empty satellites before entrusting them to carry animals and then the first human. (more…)

Comments

  1. disqus_OICPdFd7Bd says:
    Thanks a lot!
    I found this piece real cool!
    Keep it up, write better…You can do it!
    I’m sureGod loves you!
    Jesus bless you.
    Have a good life!
  2. ransom access says:
    this is a story. It’s a bit fictional..
  3. nikintx says:
    This is a perfect example of flash fiction.  You had me at the first sentence and carried me along for the ride.  Even your title gives meaning to this wonderful story.  I went back and reread the story three times.  Pure magic!
  4. entry mats says:
    Even your title gives meaning to this wonderful story.  I went back and reread the story three times.  Pure magic! by the way, Thanks for sharing with us.

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Changing of the Guard

by Jake Freivald

September 15, 2013

Jake here.

I founded Flash Fiction Online in December of 2007. Flash fiction itself was just gaining steam, and it looked like there was an opportunity for a professional market dedicated to flash. I’m happy that we — me, yes, but alongside a team of volunteers who rallied around the concept — created that market and kept it going for five-plus years.

About two years ago — has it been two years yet? It’s pretty much impossible for me to tell — I passed editorial leadership to Suzanne Vincent, a talented author and judge of stories. She will continue in the Editor-in-Chief role. I’m now also handing off the publisher / CFO role to Anna Yeats. If I already owe you money (believe me, I know it’s possible), contact me; for anything else, contact Suzanne or Anna. :) From this point forward, anything I do with FFO will have the title “emeritus” attached to it. And for all that I love flash fiction, that’s a relief.

I’d like to thank the volunteers on the Flash Fiction Online staff, past and present, who have done so much to keep the magazine moving forward. I literally can’t thank them enough. They do the work for the love of literature, and to make wonderful things happen. I trust that they, Anna, and Suzanne will continue to bring you flashes of beauty and insight.

 


The Social Phobic’s Guide to Interior Design

by Sarah Grey

September 15, 2013

This is the real me: I am the kin of armchairs and baseboards and clever lighting. I am indistinguishable from the scenery.

Tonight, I am wallpaper, deep crimson with a black scrollwork pattern. I am dark but for the single incandescent lamp to my right. I am the backmost corner of a posh tavern on the west edge of town, one that still serves its top-shelf bourbon in crystal glasses.

She sits at the bar on a brass-legged stool. Her feet dangle beneath her, as if she’s a child on a swingset. She wears a wool coat the color of cigarette ash and drinks a cocktail and fiddles with a paper umbrella. The stripes on her scarf stagger, blues and greens weaving like a stream over stones. It can only be hand-knit; a gift from a loved one, perhaps.

If she glances my way, it is only to admire the décor–the oil-painted landscapes in baroque frames, the antique leather furnishings. If she walks past me, if her scarf brushes my fingertips, it is only because I stand between her and the marble-tiled restrooms.

She smells like cherries. I smell like wallpaper paste and smoke.

* * *

Late in the night, when packs of Friday-nighters in tailored suits descend on the bar, she slips onto the sofa beside me. Our shoulders press together, casually, like a pair of warm eggs in a nest.

That is, if I had shoulders. I do not. I am aged leather upholstery, walnut brown, polished to gleaming. I am brass bolts and the scent of spilled gin. I am a well-tended ficus on a claw-foot end table. I am nothing else.

“What’s your name?” she asks.

She is looking at me, at my eyes, beneath my leather, beneath my leaves.

I have no choice but to answer. I hold my breath. I have no breath.

I can’t tell her. I am scenery. I don’t have a name, not one that matters, not one that isn’t ordinary, isn’t wholly forgettable. I don’t have a hometown, a career, a tabby cat, or an apartment three blocks south of here. I don’t have any interests, any stories to tell–none that won’t make her eyes glaze, that won’t send her to the bar for another drink, or out to the curb for a cab.

I’m burying myself, begging the leather to hold me closer, but it refuses. I open my mouth. My breath smells like old martinis and furniture wax.

A man in a silver tie answers her, and I realize abruptly that she’s not talking to me–that she never was. I am an inanimate object, after all.

“Matteo,” he tells her. “It’s Italian.”

She laughs aloud. “How sexy!” she tells him.

All at once, the press of voices is too much. I stand to leave. The sofa releases me, passes me gently into an embrace of scrolled wallpaper. I am the parquet floor, the hanging copper lamps. I am the stained glass, I am the glasses staining the cherrywood bar.

I am ambiance. I am setting. I am not a character in her story.

* * *

My therapist lent me a book once: The Social Phobic’s Guide to Finding Love. It offered trite little lies like “No one can resist the real you.”

The real me. I am not a Matteo. I am unintrusive, unexciting. A piece of interior design. Could anyone find wallpaper irresistible? Does anyone really fall in love with the drapes, or feel a rush of lust at the sight of a well-crafted dinette?

No one writes books like The Arachnophobic’s Guide to Feeding Spiders or The Acrophobic’s Guide to Falling Off Buildings. I understand why now. Those people can rely on affection, on words of kindness, to fight their fears. They are human; they have others to love them, to carry them when they fall apart.

I have only the furniture.

* * *

Tonight, I am shattered brick. I am old gum on concrete. I am neon beer logos reflected off a puddle of frozen urine.

My hand waves like a torn flag, but the cabs pass me by.

The door of the bar opens behind me; the Friday-nighters are leaving in packs and pairs. I hear laughter, jokes about places I’ve never visited, books I’ve never read. Off-key songs from movies I’ve never seen. Human conversation; human affection.

I smell cherries.

She leans against my broken brick, kicks the snow off my concrete. “I was asking for your name,” she says. “I’d still like to know.” Her smile is wide and softer than the ragged edges of her scarf. The steam on her breath passes close to my lips. Her shoulder presses close to mine.

My name is crimson wallpaper or marble tile or antique leather sofa.

She waits. The bricks push me away, even as I cling to them; the concrete refuses to shield me any longer.

I find my breath. It is as warm as hers.

When I tell her my name, my voice sounds almost human.

The Shallows

by Nathaniel Lee

September 15, 2013

"It’s a long walk to the ocean. I ran the whole way." Courtesy of Jon Nicholls, Flickr.
“It’s a long walk to the ocean. I ran the whole way.”
Courtesy of Jon Nicholls, Flickr.

I found the piece of the alien ship out back, right on the marsh edge. I was out fishing, or least I was supposed to be, but mostly I was “lollygagging and woolgathering,” Pa would say. Pa don’t approve of gathering wool, nor gagging no lollies, either. He says a girl my age ought to be practical. No one wants a girl who can’t clean a fresh-caught catfish and keep a boat in working order. No one round here, anyway.

The piece of ship was a hard lump of crystal, all glints and angles in the orange sunlight that leaked through the overhang like marmalade. I’d seen it under a couple feet of water, when it flashed in the light, the sun catching one of the sharp edges. I’d fished it out of the water and the gritty mud: a pretty little rock maybe the size of my fist. News-man said the ship had been diamond, but not like actual diamond. Something different about it, something built, synthetic or what-all. Not worth more’n a cubic zirconium in itself, other than being alien. I could maybe have hocked it on the Internet, but there were so many fakers out there already that I didn’t expect I could get much for it, and I kind of liked the look of the thing. Bits like that one came down all over – across near all the top half of the planet, they say. Most of it landed in the ocean, sank right down, but the ship’d been awful big.

Pa was watching that Fox News when I came in, so I didn’t say nothing and neither did he. We’d pretty much said all that was needful already. There was a man on the show talking about the aliens like they were going to come right down and start abducting all the womenfolk and molesting the cows, which was just silly. The aliens blew up; everyone knows that. Sent a code-signal that knocked out the radios and the teevees, then boom. Might’ve been the other way round, setting themselves to blow and then crying out to the planet in front of them. Or it might’ve been nothing at all, no message but the sound an alien makes when it dies.

I went to my room and put the alien rock on my dresser and turned on the radio. The aliens were there, too; they were a nine-day wonder on about their eighth-and-a-half day. “The reconstruction makes no sense,” the lady on the radio was saying. “It shouldn’t work; everything we know about physics says that something like that ship should have done, well, exactly what it did, which was fall to pieces. But somehow it didn’t do that for all the years and years it was traveling toward us. What kept it together? Or what made it dissolve?” She paused, like we was going to answer her somehow. “Our theory, and we admit it’s pretty radical, is that maybe – just maybe – what we call the ‘constants’ actually aren’t. That if you go far enough, or deep enough, maybe you get to a place where the speed of light isn’t what it is, where gravity and electromagnetism work a little differently. That ship, those beings, whatever they were, whatever they tried to tell us – if it was a message – they came from one of those deep places and just… ran aground. On us, on the shallows where we live.”

I liked the way the lady scientist talked. I wish I had the words and the knowledge to talk like she did, making big complicated stuff that I couldn’t understand sound easy and simple and just like common sense. And it was sensible, the way she explained it. It’s happened before around here; something strange from out in the salt comes up the wrong way, then the tide goes out and it’s trapped in a pool, puffing away in the brackish water. Sometimes they get out when the tide turns and the cold fresh water shows them the way to go. Other times they stay stuck there till they die. I never know quite what to do with them, and Pa says they’re probably poison and won’t eat them.

The lady on the radio was still talking and the sun was still setting, and just then I suddenly couldn’t stand it no more, sitting on my bed with the stupid ruffles that’ve been there since I was four, looking at a rock that wasn’t even diamond and listening to my radio like it was eighty years ago and there was no such thing as TV and the Internet. I hauled up and left. I took my rock with me. Pa didn’t say nothing when I blew past him like an exploding spaceship and huffed out the door.

It’s a long walk to the ocean. I ran the whole way.

It was full dark and more by the time I got there. The sky overhead was empty. Prob’ly a storm coming through in a little while, though.

I cocked my hand back and threw that little piece of alien ship as hard as I could, watched it sparkle one last time in the lights from the pier before it hit the water. It fell. I don’t know what I expected. For it to fly? To explode? It was just a rock, wherever it come from. People like to make a lot out of things, want excitement, want everything to make sense. They want too much. It was a lump of carbon crystal that used to be alien. The waves would take it out to the deeps, with its kin, and they could roll around in the dark where nobody’d look at them. It could maybe belong there, if it couldn’t be what it was meant to. Might be that was what it would want, if rocks could do any wanting to speak of.

Least that’s what I like to think.

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