The Letter

Luke tried to make every birthday the best day he could for Sasha. It wasn’t easy after her mother’s passing, but he did his best to keep distract her from who was missing. It never worked. Every birthday ended the same: with a letter.

One letter from Sarah for every year her daughter grew up without her. A handwritten expression of love, grief, pride and hopes. Who she imagined her daughter would be at this age, age-appropriate advice, and stories from the few years they’d had together.

It didn’t matter if they were surrounded by friends and relatives, out all day or even on a holiday, Sasha would get her letter. She used to ask Luke to read it to her when she was too young, and she still passed the sealed envelope to him as part of the tradition.

Every year, Luke forced his voice to stop shaking as he read. He tried not cry at details only Sarah knew about their lives together. He read it loudly in order to drown out Sarah’s narration in his mind, the letter perfectly matching her mannerisms.

Luke dreaded the day Sasha moved out and spent a birthday without him there to read it to her. He had an equal fear that she would sooner find out how her mother had died.

It had been sudden and unexpected. It had left Sarah no way to say goodbye to her husband and young child.

But every year, the letter appeared under Sasha’s pillow.

Dad

Adam was scared about getting caught. He knew graffiti was wrong, but it was important to him to add the name to the wall.

He’d stuck behind after the tour guide described it. It was a list of everyone who had died on the temple’s grounds, whose souls were believed to remain there in eternal service. It was considered an honour to be so dedicated, the guide had explained.

Finished scratching in the name with his room key, Adam checked the shallow marks to make sure it was legible, then caught up with his mother, holding her sweaty hand. It was too warm to be wearing long sleeves, but she needed to hide the fresh bruises. His father walked ahead of them silently, begrudging them this tour as another apology.

Being young, Adam did not yet understand the difference between cause and effect. He understood that everyone listed on that wall died in the temple. He did not understand that the names were written after.

He watched his father swear as he stumbled and hoped he’d been clear enough.

“dad”

Getaway

He had been running longer than he’d ever thought possible, long past when his body would have given up on a normal day. The fear kept him moving.

For the first time since he’d seen his friend’s dead body at the camp-site, he stopped. He could no longer hear the creature pursuing him. Even with the sound of his pulse and gasping breath roaring, he had been able to hear the creature following. The sounds of its snarls, of the claws rending through the leaves, the same claws that had-

He pushed the image of his friend’s body away and swallowed. He needed to hide while he had distance, and retching would give him away.

Ahead was a tall tree, where roots stood above eroded dirt. He could hide there, wait as long as possible, then seek help.

He took a quiet step forward, praying that he had truly lost the creature.

One his wrist, his smart watch beeped and lit up, celebrating his 10,000th step.

Claws pressed eagerly into the underbrush behind him as the chase began again.

Empty

I was hungry. I hadn’t eaten all day, but I knew I had a bag of corn chips saved for myself. I saw it when I put the shopping away, I saw it when I got out the ingredients for dinner, and it was still there when I put them away. With dinner finally in the slow cooker, I grabbed the bag to reward myself, only to find it empty.

Someone in my family not only put it away empty, they put the damned bag clip back on.

Those chips were the only treat I bought for myself. My spouse and children have multiple snacks, but for some reason my food goes first. None of them ever own up to it. My spouse tells me to get over it.

Of course, I have to let it go for now. There’s no time to buy more food, as we’re leaving on holiday early in the morning. My evening is going to be nothing but reminding them to pack, until I give up and pack for them. After all, we’re going to a cabin hours from anywhere, and they won’t be able to just go and grab something they need.

It’s midnight now, and I am the only one awake. The packing list is almost checked off, with only one item remaining.

“medications”

Unscrewing the caps, I empty the bottles into the bin. I’ll show them how much an empty container can hurt.

Generation

Most parents jumped at the chance to give their children an advantage.

The government offered free IVF to couples in exchange for the right to run gene experiments prior to implantation. This led to incredible new abilities, the most common being genius-level intellect. Some went beyond expectations, gaining telepathy or telekinesis.

But playing God has a cost, and no one paid more dearly than the parents of the first baby who did not need to sleep.

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.

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.