Short Stories

Little pieces of fiction I occasionally write.

life is moving through what we can’t define
experience without context, feeling without sight
we don’t remember the beginning, we can’t see the end
all we know is the in-between

Running one hand through straight, short-ish hair, Damian put the fountain pen down on the small writing desk with a sigh, and switched off the lamp.  In the dull, grey light of winter morning he reached for his jacket and keys and headed for the door.  The creaking floorboards signalled his passing.

Outside the studio apartment the air was chill and damp in the way that threatens rain without promising snow.  The normal bustle of people and business was temporarily suspended by the quiet of Sunday morning, broken only by the occasional group of church-goers making their way to, or returning from, their place of worship.  What do they find in religion? he thought to himself.  What is it that they hold on to?  Is it ‘real’?  Or maybe it doesn’t matter, as long as it helps. And, after a pause:  helps what?  to pacify the questions? to deal with the pain? To feel some security? As he passed by the steps leading to an ornate cathedral, he began phrasing the words to another song.  The music would never be written, but sometimes he could hear it in his mind.

the words we use, the thoughts we abuse
to avoid the pain of not knowing
this certainty of belief constrains our doubt
it fills the empty spaces in your heart

Back in the apartment (coffee maker dripping, nothing else for breakfast) the answering machine interrupted his thoughts.  One message from a magazine:  another rejection.  Various manuscripts, most camouflaged with coffee stains, littered the room.  One from a telemarketer who didn’t realise there was no one on the line.  Finally, one from an old friend:  “Give me a call sometime, let me know how you’re doing, OK?  I hope things are working out for you.”  Why does he keep calling? The question irritated him.  The coffee maker stopped dripping — but Damian stood by his single window, silently gazing, for a long time.

It had been 6 months since he finished his degree and moved to the city with dreams of getting published.  Why did I do it? The question hadn’t occurred to him between then and now.  Life had made more sense then; in the company of friends, he was almost happy.

That’s why.  I needed to get away.  To be alone.  I needed to figure things out. Turning from the window, he gazed around the room.  Where has it got me?  His eyes paused on the corner of a piece of paper protruding from a pile:

the noise of life distracts me
when my mind is empty I am free
in silence I see things as they really are–
only in silence

6 months.  153 days of little food and less sleep.  Countless crooked lines of ink on paper where exhaustion took over.  Despite his effort, everything seemed opaque as ever.  The endless lonely hours did little except focus and underline the questions that both demand and refuse to be answered– Who am I? What is the point of any of this? And his writing suffered.  It was confused, unclear, lacking direction.  Each sentence was an exercise in frustration.  Is this it? he mused, staring at an empty wall with peeling paper.  When the illusions disappear, is there nothing left? The wall remained unchanged, each detail distinct and unresponsive.

Two weeks passed, and Damian had stopped writing altogether.  In large letters on the top-most page on the small desk was a single line:

As I watch, the words vanish from the page–

He opened his eyes after several hours of half-sleep and stared at the water-stained ceiling, haunted by the feeling of being swallowed by something too large to escape and too nebulous to define.  As happened so often, he slid on shoes in the dark and, without thinking, moved towards the door.

The sidewalk, originally flat concrete, had been transformed over the years into a topographical maze of miniature mountains and valleys.  Damian’s feet navigated them in the night with the ease of familiarity, while his mind wandered elsewhere.  His thoughts were growing increasingly vague, wordless even, as distant as the world of normalcy he had left behind and as aimless as the direction his feet were taking him in.  Hands shoved in pockets, face downcast, he continued on without understanding his purpose or destination.  This is life.  This is my life.  There is nothing else.  The illusions are gone.

Eventually he found himself walking on a dirt path alongside the now-frozen river, overhung with trees which made themselves known as dark silhouettes.  Park benches marked the borders of the path at regular intervals.  Crunching through the frost, Damian absent-mindedly moved to one and sat down, shivering slightly.  The air was deadly quiet except for the sound of his own breath, which made clouds in front of him that dissipated slowly.  His thoughts became lucid for just a moment, as if to make a final summation:  This is the darkness from which there is no morning.

The next thing he was aware of (after a long spell which brought the frost onto his jacket) was a sound on the path behind him.  Turning his head, in the darkness he could barely see the small, hunched figure shuffling in his direction.  Her head was covered in a tightly-knotted scarf; one hand wielded a rubber-ended cane while the other clutched a stained and faded jacket over her chest.  Snow boots scraping the brown, frozen leaves, eyes fixed on the ground, the elderly woman made her way purposefully towards him.  Without a word, she sat down on the other end of the bench and gazed towards the frozen water, wheezing slightly.

Her voice startled him when it appeared without warning:  cracked and feeble, with a European accent he couldn’t place.

“It’s closer than you think.”

Damian blinked in surprise.  After a pause, he replied, his words slurred by the cold.  “What?”

She pulled a handkerchief from her pocket and issued a chest-wracking cough before turning to face him.  Her eyes, sunk deep in wrinkled sockets, sparkled like small black crystals, though he could still barely see her.

“I said, you are closer than you think.”

“What are you talking about?”

“I’m talking about you.”

Damian pulled his jacket tighter around him, feeling the cold for the first time.  He knew instinctively that she knew exactly what she was talking about, which made him distinctly uncomfortable.  For the moment he decided to postpone the questions of how and why.

“I don’t understand.”

“Of course not.  But there it is, just the same.”

He didn’t know what to say in response, and the old woman sat unmoving, gaze fixed directly on him, without any visible emotion.  He looked away to ease the tension, and fumbled for words to break the silence.

“I’m… just trying to figure things out, that’s all.”

Still without moving, “Now, what would you try to do something like that for?”  Then a coughing spell that lasted several seconds, which make Damian wince.

“I can’t help it.  I need to find some kind of answers for my life, some reason for being here.”  Damian felt himself engaging with this strange woman, almost in spite of himself.  His thoughts seemed to be coalescing into concrete forms, where they had previously been so ephemeral.  “Otherwise,” he paused for a moment. “Otherwise, dieing is the only thing that makes any sense at all.”  Is that it? He thought, and it bit him harder than the winter air.  Have I been thinking about suicide?

Her voice again broke into his thoughts.  “Stupid boy.”  Her emotionlessness was momentarily replaced by a mixture of pity and contempt.  “There are no answers to life, yours or mine.  Life is the answer itself.  Either take it or leave it.”
Damian was again lost for words.  He didn’t understand what she said, but it seemed to nestle in his mind like a small seed, waiting for the right conditions to come to life.  He simply sat in silence and absorbed the sound of her voice as she continued, until he sank into unconsciousness from cold and exhaustion:

“Understanding is just illusion, but life is real.  Wisdom is weak, but life cannot be broken.  Darkness and silence are emptiness; emptiness is death.  But sound and light have come into the world, and emptiness cannot overcome it.  You are the light, and the sound.  That is your answer, my child.”

With a start, Damian woke up.  The darkness of the night had been replaced by an orange glow in the sky in front of him, reflected back by the ice below.  He turned to look at the bench beside him and wondered where she came from, where she was now, and how she survived her wanderings through the winter night.  Her words and her voice were etched in his memory, and somehow they offered him strength.

In the growing light, he noticed a spot of yellow on the ground in front of him.  Bending forward and pulling back a leaf, he was surprised to see a small flower, something like a buttercup, pushing through the heavy frost.  How is that possible? Somehow it seemed to be an echo of the old woman, one no less miraculous then the other.  Maybe she is right.  Maybe there is life that can’t be destroyed.  Maybe that miracle is the only thing that matters. He again had the feeling that these thoughts were seeds in his mind that would begin to germinate in the months and years ahead.  He began to write a new song, and this one he determined to put to music.

life is moving through what we can’t define
and the movement is a dance
when we decide to put our questions behind
and we see that all faith is blind

As he sat in the winter morning, the light increased around him, and Damian watched the coming of the dawn.

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Life sure throws you a curve ball sometimes.  You think things are going pretty okay and then, Wham!

Why?  Why can’t things stay the way they are?  Change is just too fucking risky.  What happens if things go wrong?  What then?  Who picks up the pieces?  And what do you have then?  Not much, that’s for sure.

I don’t think I can do this.  I’m not cut out for it.  Goddamn!  At least I need more time.  Like, 10 years.  What am I going to do?  I need more time…

‘Alex!  Are still with us?  What’s wrong with you?’

‘Oh… nothing.  I’m here.’  She pulled the bulk of her wavy auburn hair over one shoulder and managed an awkward smile.  One glance at Julia was enough to tell she wasn’t buying it.  She never could hide anything from her.

‘Anyway,’ Mark continued, ‘I think work is sending me to Amsterdam next week.  Not bad, eh?’

‘Cool,’ said Alex, trying to make an effort. ‘I’m sure Juli will keep in touch and make sure you’re not spending time in the wrong area.’

‘Ah, she knows she’s got nothing to worry about!’  He swung his arm behind her.  Alex got the feeling that she might not be convinced.

Why are we so afraid?

In the pizza restaurant, empty except for them and a couple sat by the window, a waiter began lighting the candles at the other tables.  Across the street, the sunset was painting the buildings a terrific orange.  The street bustled with a diverse crowd of strangers, each one with their thoughts tucked safely out of sight.

Is everyone like this on the inside?  Or are some people okay?

She felt Julia’s silent gaze, and forced her attention back to the table.  Mark was suggesting a film that they should see together.  ‘Simon should come too,’ he added.

‘You know he works in the evening,’ she replied.

‘Yeah, well he’s got to have a day off sometime, right?  I just don’t want you to feel like a third wheel, that’s all.’

‘It’s ok.’

Simon, with his curly hair and brown eyes, who worked late hours as a security guard.  She thought back to their time in college, he studying philosophy and she economics.  Classes, grades, relationships:  everything was much simpler.  She missed the late night dorm room conversations with Julia.  But then there was graduation, and finding an apartment together in the city, and suddenly everything felt more uncertain.  She couldn’t say why.  Simon was the same as ever — supportive and encouraging, though they had little time for each other now.  She always felt better when he was around.  But now…

‘Alex, what the hell is wrong with you?!  What’s in your hand?’

Looking down, she saw her clenched fist in her lap.  Without a word she opened her hand and placed a ring on the tip of her other index finger and held it up for inspection.  A thin silver band, with a small diamond perched on the top. She gazed at it expressionlessly.

‘Wow Alex, that’s great!’ Mark exclaimed.  Julia’s mouth dropped.  ‘You haven’t said yes,’ she said quietly, studying her face.  Mark caught himself in his excitement.

‘Well, what the fuck am I supposed to say?’  She felt tears coming, but held them back.  ‘I’m not ready for this!  I’m so confused…’  She returned the ring to her fist and used both fists to hold her head.  Julia’s hand rested on her arm.

‘Do you still love him?’

‘Of course I do, dammit.  That’s not the point.’

‘What is it, then?’

‘It’s getting married.  It’s dresses and cakes and gifts and being “husband and wife” like our parents.  And who knows, maybe “ex-husband and wife” like our parents.  It’s being settled down and talking about kids.  Shit!’

‘Is that not what you want?’

‘God, I haven’t a clue what I want.’  She lifted her head.  ‘Maybe.  I don’t know.  But why now?  Things are ok, why did he have to go and mess them up with this?’

‘I’m sure he didn’t mean to upset you.’

‘No, of course not.  He’s always kind and considerate and understanding.  He didn’t even get angry when I stormed off this morning.  How much do you think he paid for this ring?  Damn!’

She glanced at Mark, who was looking down uncomfortably.  He only got together with Julia after college and so he didn’t know Alex and Simon as well.  He doesn’t get it, she thought.  Life is so simple for him.  What about Simon?  Does he get it?  Does he get me? ‘What do you think?’ she said, half out of cruelty, to see if he would squirm.

‘Well,’ he bit his lip.  ‘If you like him and are going to stay with him, I don’t see what the big deal is.  You know?’  He finally looked up to see if she did know.

‘Alex,’ Julia said gently.  ‘Calm down and listen to me.  I know you’re scared.  God know I’d be,’ she smirked with a nod towards Mark.  ‘Do you remember what you told me when you first met Simon?  You said you finally found a man that you could be real with.  Do you remember?’

She nodded.

‘I was so jealous of you!  And the more the two of you grew close, I knew I was losing a part of you that didn’t need me anymore.’

‘Juli, I’m so sorry!  I wasn’t thinking at all about your feelings then.’

‘Forget it, it’s in the past.  I’m telling you that you guys bring out the best in each other.  You used each other to get through tough times.  Now everything is different, and we’re all working and not at the University together.  Everything else has changed; but you haven’t, and he hasn’t.  You’re still the same.  And I don’t think getting married is going to change you, either.

‘So,’ and here she adopted her kick-in-the-pants tone that she always used to shake sense into other people, ‘I think you need to get your thoughts together and give that poor boy an answer!’

‘But what if it doesn’t work out?  What if one of us does something beastly and we screw it up?’

‘What if?  Go see a fortune teller if you like.  The question is, are you going to go for it or not?’

The same waiter emerged from the kitchen with a large, steaming pizza on a metal tray and came towards their table.  ‘Thanks, Juli.  I think I should go.’

‘Are you sure?’

‘Yeah, I need to figure this out on my own.’  She grabbed her jacket and stood up.

‘Let us know when you do,’ Mark offered kindly.

‘Thanks, I will.  See you, Mark.  Bye, Juli,’ she said with a quick embrace.

Outside, her breath drifted away in a cloud, and the cold excited the skin on her hands and cheeks.  Her head felt a bit clearer. I’m scared because I don’t know him, she thought.  Then she caught herself. No.  I’m scared because I don’t know myself. That was it.  If he ended up making her unhappy, she could live with that.  But what if she ended up disappointing him?  She didn’t think she could bear that.

She took the ring out again as she walked, and moved it between her fingers.  Even in the fading light the stone sparkled back at her, and seemed to embody the enigma that was her own soul.  Will I ever know who I really am? And with that question came a sudden realisation with a force so strong that she would remember it for the rest of her life:  Part of me is with him.

She looked up and saw the familiar outline of a high-rise peeking out a few blocks ahead.  She knew that Simon would be sitting in the lobby, probably reading a book on philosophy if no one else was around.  She made her way towards it.

The future doesn’t make any more sense than it did before, she thought as she approached the revolving doors.  But I’m sure I don’t want to face it alone. She paused, tucked her hair behind her ears, and, after a pause, pushed the ring onto her finger.  Then she walked inside.

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A (very) short story

Evan Comes felt warmth on his face, and opened his eyes to bright sunshine.

With a quiet groan he looked at the bedside digital clock, which innocently blinked 12:00 in return.  How long had he been asleep?  It was hard to tell.  He pulled on some wrinkled jeans that had been tossed over the chair, and a faded shirt with the name of a band he listened to in college.  Before moving to the bathroom, he glanced momentarily at the double bed; despite having always lived alone, he always left the right side untouched.

On the ground floor of his city flat, Evan looked through the front window into the busy street.  Cars and bicycles breezed past on their way to somewhere.  Men in suits and women in platform shoes strode purposefully by.  Everything looked the same as before, he thought to himself.  Before… what?

Pressing on the remote control which lay on the arm of a worn champagne-coloured sofa brought a small television set to life, and a talking head was in the middle of detailing the morning news.  Evan stared hard at the screen, but the words came tumbling out in an indecipherable heap.  And was it just his imagination that the presenter’s mouth was quickly growing out of proportion to the rest of her head?  Surely the lipstick didn’t help.  It seemed as if her eyes and ears were shrinking to pinheads, while her mouth transformed into a giant loudspeaker.  He rubbed his eyes hard, tried (and failed) once more to make any sense from the gushing river of words, and finally switched it off.  Another car purred past the window, and then everything was quiet.  Evan pulled on a pair of tattered trainers and reached for the keys on the coffee table.

Outside, the sunshine seemed to penetrate his skin and warm him from the inside.  He had the brief impression that he might become transparent as the rays worked their way through him and out the other side.  Walking down the pavement, he gazed at the people passing him in the other direction.  Who are you? he thought to each.  He squinted, but most of their heads were fuzzy and indistinct.  Some, who were chatting on mobile phones, had distorted features like the news woman.  A few had heads so small they seemed to be swallowed in between their shoulders, and one was so hazy and nebulous that he was afraid the wind might blow him away.  Rubbing his eyes again, he pushed his way through the door into the café.  ‘Regular coffee, please’.

Sitting by the window that faced the sun, Evan pulled a piece of wrinkled A4 and stubby pencil from his pocket, and smoothed the paper on the table, avoiding the wet rings from previous customers.  He took a deep breath and sipped the bitter coffee.  Staring at the white paper, blindingly bright from the reflection of the sun, he felt his mind begin to move to that place where time moves more slowly, and thoughts still make sense.  With a slight smile he scribbled on the paper in a loose, rounded cursive,

What a strange sensation — to surround oneself with the noise of the world, when inside all is quiet!

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