Anatomy

There are miracles hidden within some of us that we may never know about. But some do make that discovery.

An average man stares at the empty portion of their brain scan, having never known anything was wrong. He will be told about the ability of a child’s brain to rewire after damage, and recall an accident as a child.

A woman holds her child, whose DNA proves is her sister’s. She is an only child. She will research chimerism and learn that she had a twin, now a part of her, that produced her child’s genes.

Today the winner of the genetic lottery is Trevor, who has just found out that he has situs inversus, or mirrored organs. Most importantly, this means that his heart is on the opposite side. This is, however, terrible news for the vampire hunter who has just lodged a wooden stake through the wrong side.

The Figure

It took months to tell the doctor about the shadowy creature that stalks around my room at night. I was terrified that I’d gone crazy.

I’d lie in bed, paralysed and conscious as it meandered around my room. It was hard to tell exactly what it did: the light around it blurred, as though pulled into the darkness of its silhouette.

When my doctor explained sleep paralysis, I felt relieved. It was common, she said, to see shadowy figures and feel a sense of dread. She also prescribed something to help and I filled the prescription happily.

Last night I woke, paralysed but unable to see any figures in my room. The medication had worked!

I will never take it again.

I could not see the figure, so I could not see what turned the pages of my book, or stirred the water in my glass, or brushed the hair out of my unblinking eyes.

Baby Shower game idea

You’ll need: plain newborn onesies, fabric markers, and prizes

The game: guests draw designs on the onesies, with prizes for funniest, best design, etc.

The best part is that in those early days of late nights, when you’re changing your baby for the fifth time, you’ll see a fun design that reminds you of a loved one!

Agatha stared at the empty change table where her baby had just been lying. Frowning, her finger traced the charred lines of the demonic sigil now burned into the mattress. It was reversed of course, transferred from the back of the onesie she had just dressed little Lucy in. She’d only looked at the front as she grabbed it from the pile:

       Property of _______

She thought it had been a boring design. She should have known to check the back. It was a basic rule: anything can be a contract, provided it’s signed. It’s your responsibility to inspect the entire document.

The needle hidden under the zipper was a cheap move, but it had drawn enough blood to stain the onesie, sealing the contract.

Agatha sighed and pinched the bridge of her nose, avoiding the wart. She shouldn’t have invited demons to her baby shower, but she’d gone overboard on her gift registry and wanted to pad the numbers. After all, it had been the first firstborn child she’d successfully bargained for.

The next time she traded witchcraft for a baby, she’d just ask for gift cards.

Two Sentence Stories (part 22)


She was determined to achieve her goal: a post every day of October, starting today. The calendar beside her, yet to be consulted, showed the date to be 2/10/24.


She complained loudly about how dodgy it was for police to look into people windows to look for phone use at red lights, then listened for the sound of guilty shuffling in the backseat. As she pulled through the now green light, she tried to think of another way to stall the man she’d just noticed hiding in the backseat.


After being separated for over a year , Anne readily agreed to her shocked husband’s request to test the paternity of the baby she held.

After all, they wouldn’t be comparing her DNA.


The Factory

My grandfather worked at the factory in town.

He was the eldest of his siblings, so it was always understood that he would work there, as his father had before him. When his firstborn child was born, my uncle, the same was assumed for him.

The factory had operated in our town as long as anyone could remember. The lights always remained on and the smoke always poured out of the stacks. Not a person in our town could remember a day of clear sky: we had always lived beneath tendrils of grey smoke, reaching like ethereal tendrils towards the sky. On days where staff was limited and the smoke could not reach as high, it would seem to curve back down, searching for fuel. Work always returned to full production before they reached the town. Always.

The layout of the factory had likewise remained consistent. The top floor was where the stacks were maintained. Keeping them clean and clear was a full-time job for multiple people.

The next floor filtered debris from the stacks. Those that cleaned out the stacks threw the waste to waiting workers, who sifted what there was of value from it. Most ended up in the incinerator, but enough gems and precious minerals filtered up to make the job worth it.

The next floor fed things down a separate array of chutes. Things that other towns paid us to take away. Things wrapped in bags and carpets and sealed in rusting barrels that needed to never return. We did not question the contents. We did not question the regularity. The outside world would entrust us with their secrets, and in return they never questioned what we did with them. Silence was the reassuring truce between our town and world outside.

The bottom floor, the only subterranean floor of the building, was the school. It was assumed that any firstborn women in town would be assigned to work there. My grandfather always pitied them for it.  

My uncle started attending when he was five, as did all the firstborn children in the town. Every night, he was collected from home by the school attendants, and he was returned shortly after dawn, when the factory workers had already filed in. My grandfather only saw my uncle in passing in those years. As he finished his shift and left for home in the evening, he saw his son screaming as the school attendants carried him inside. When he returned for work in the morning, he would see his son being carried home to his mother, now silent, still and grey.

One day he did not pass his son. None of the workers entering that morning saw any of their children being taken home. There was one path to the factory, and no one had passed a single person leaving.

My grandfather was the first to venture downstairs to the school. The doors, which were locked from the outside by a rotation of attendants, remained bolted. He demanded the catatonic woman who curled beside her chair unlock them. She shook and repeated that the knocking had been wrong. It was wrong. Not their signal. Not their hands. Not the hands of the children. It was wrong.

He took the keys from her. He still has the scars on his forearms: marks showing where fingernails met bone.

He unlocked the doors and went in search of his firstborn son.

He does not tell the rest of this story. It is a story told in absence. There were no ambulances called. There was no cleaning or investigation. There were no survivors retrieved. Those who dug graves refilled them with empty coffin and decorated them with blank markers.

The bottom floor of the factory was filled in with concrete the next day. Deals were made with neighbouring towns for the supplies. They left even more assured of our town’s confidentiality, as no one in the town would speak of their reasons.

Over the following weeks, the factory was alight with activity at all hours. A new storey was added and the stacks were raised. The new school was the ground floor, atop a base never to be reopened. The factory is now completely above ground: four stories tall.

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Two Sentence Stories (part 21)


Peeling off the wallpaper had been so satisfying that Susan had been unable to stop, peeling the walls back to bare beams. Still not satisfied, she began picking at her calluses.


It shouldn’t have still been dark when his alarm went off, but when Michael looked out the window there was no light shining through. Only once he turned on the bedroom light did he see the shifting, smittering swarm of wings, legs and stingers pressed against the thin glass.


Dana had told her boyfriend that if he punched another hole in the wall, she would leave him. As she patched up the plaster, she reminded the bound figure on the other side that she never said she’d leave him for anyone to find.


Rational

Every calculation had been run, but there simply wasn’t enough food for the crew to survive the journey.

The first six months had gone smoothly. The spaceship had safely exited their solar system, and they were on track to reach the new planet in another year. Then the hull was breached by errant debris.

Decompression was immediate. The crew’s lives were saved by the security system, which immediately sealed off the damaged section – the same section that contained their supplies for the journey.

The 8 surviving crew members were each vital to the mission. While each wondered if they could have gotten by if one of them had been lost in the accident, not a one of them could now be allowed to starve.

The botanist kept at work, growing as much food as they could, but it wouldn’t be enough for everyone. Either all would starve slowly, or they would need to supplement.

Not a member of the crew will say to this day which of them first suggested that they look to “other supplies”,but in time their precious cargo, vital for the colonisation of the new planet, became a necessary sacrifice.

80% of the cargo survived the journey. 20% had to be vented out to prevent illness and disease.

The official report listed a “failure with the refrigeration system”, but if inspected, not one of the sleeping pods were faulty.

Connected

The stranger bumping into her side barely caught Lana’s attention. She was in her own word, listening to music over Bluetooth earphones.

“Disconnected”

The music had stopped. She felt for her phone, wondering if the battery has died. It wasn’t there.

Then she remembered the person who has bumped into her left side. The same side as her handbag, the front pocket of which had been holding her phone.

Lana looked around, but couldn’t see anyone suspicious. She couldn’t remember what the stranger looked like, or if she had seen him at all. She had been too lost in her own world.

It took two hours to make a report to the police. She knew it wouldn’t achieve much, but at least when her mother asked, she could say she had done it.

It was dark by the time Lana got home. Her scarf was tight around her neck and chin, arms deep in pockets. She was so cold she found herself placing her wireless earphones back in, to shield what little they could from the cold.

Lana waited until the last second to find her keys, reluctantly taking one hand from her pocket and wishing she’d worn gloves.

The keys weren’t in their usual place. She normally placed them in the second pocket inside her bag, so that they wouldn’t jingle.

She continued feeling for them. Maybe she’d left them at work?

Within the second that Lana considered breaking a window, she changed her mind. The front door was unlocked. As she walked inside, Lana tried to remember: did she leave her keys at home, rushing out without locking the door?

But no, Lana remembered fiddling with the key chain at work. Then… she had been in a rush to leave work. She had thrown then into the front pocket of her bag. Next to her phone.

There was a creak down the hall, just barely covered by the sound from her earphones.

“Reconnected”

Upon Reflection

It was not a terribly unusual request for a portrait. A black and white drawing, as realistic as possible: “warts and all” as the client requested.

8pm was a little late to be starting a one-session sketch, but the client offered to pay extra. He was unable to come in working hours due to his work but was willing to stay as late as possible.

I didn’t bother pointing out that it was actually my willingness to stay late that was the issue. Mostly because the money offered had already solved it.

So I sat in my studio at 8pm, sipping a coffee that had been a drinkable temperature an hour ago.

He came precisely on time, the sharp knocks on the door preceded by the sound of commanding steps. He was handsome, which is always disappointing for me. Symmetry and smooth skin were harder to capture. No familiar landmarks to make the drawing more recognisable, no obvious shapes to pluck from his outline. I shook his hand and asked him to take his seat, already lit.

I offered water, which he politely declined. So we began.

An outline, first. As I drew the basic oval and lines, I asked what made him want his portrait. He seemed surprised at the question and tried to speak without moving. I assured him it was part of the process and that he could indeed move around, within reason.

For me, the process has never involved silence and a perfectly still subject. As I memorise the details on a person’s face I need to know how the parts move together: is there a dimple when he smiles? A worn line in the forehead when he frowns? Eyes that glisten too quickly when distressed?

But first we start with the outline.

The client had meant to do this for a while, he told me. An impending birthday was a convenient deadline, so he made the appointment. I asked how soon the deadline was, and was told midnight. I joked that it was a good thing he hadn’t wanted oil paints. I decided not to ask his age. Anyone with akin that clear took pride in their appearance, which usually meant they’d make me guess how old they are.

A little more detail next: features marked in place, but not yet his. Where was he from?

He had lived in this city for years, but he didn’t call it home. He wasn’t sure he ever would. His original home was long gone, developed over, renamed, forgotten. He gave me the name of a town, but I cannot remember the word. German, perhaps, although he had no accent.

I began to bring in more details, confident lines covering grey outlines. Was this portrait for himself, or a gift?

It was for himself. A birthday gift of sorts. He laughed then, and I quickly took in the fine lines at the corners of his eyes, putting them onto the paper. He did not show his teeth when he smiled, I noted. I drew him with a closed mouth, one side raised. It was easy enough to get him in a good mood in conversation, but I needed to concentrate, so I brought out my crowd-pleaser. As the client browsed through the folio of pet portraits I had been commissioned for, I shaded in high cheekbones and ears that came to a slight point.

At the height of his joyful review (a white, fluffy cat in a jacobean ruff) I asked as casually as possible if he wanted any scars left out. He paused, but then nodded. Fortunately I had already captured his expression, as after that he placed the folio down and stared silently at the wall behind me. I shaded in the scars on his neck.

A few more silent minutes and the portrait neared completion. I mentioned that I needed to check something, and reached under the table to grab a hand mirror. The client stood bolt upright, demanding to know what I was doing.

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Intentions

For her birthday, he gave her flowers
With a glass vase to place them in
But she reminded him of her hay fever
And he threw the shards in the bin

For their anniversary, it was chocolate
She placed it on the shelf
She had always been allergic
So he ate it all himself

For Valentines it was a book
That she had already reviewed
She had told him about it years ago
An article he said he’d viewed

For his birthday she gave whisky
His favourite drink, she knew
She encouraged him to drink it all
And an old dependency renewed

For their anniversary it was a laptop
With all the newest software
And hidden in the hard drive
Were sordid details of his affairs

For Valentines it was dinner
With ingredients made covert
She worried she’d used too little
Until his heart stopped before dessert