May 30 2009

3F#5 – rain

When Father Donne stopped outside the open-windowed choir-room, he could see Dr. H was in a lather, broken blood vessels in his cheeks, about to start ejecting boys. With graduation only three days away, this was undesirable. Donne listened, unseen, as Dr. H. raised his voice to instruct them in macaronic verse.

“Macaroni!” Rex Traherne interrupted. “Stuck a feather in his [muffled] and called it macaroni!”

“Sir!” Theodore Marvell broke in. The laughter occasioned by Rex Trahere subsided.

“Yes, Theo?”

“Sir, isn’t it true that Britten was a flautist?” Suppressed snickers.

Dr. H, flustered: “Not that I’m aware of. Why?”

“I heard he was a very accomplished flautist!”

The snickering exploded into a peal of giggles, from the eighth grade no less. Donne may have spent recent decades in the cloister, but he knew puerile innuendo when he heard it.

“Boys!” he said, bursting into the choir-room, “I can hardly believe what I am hearing.” The eighth grade tried unsuccessfully to contain their mirth. “I believe,” Donne continued, “that some very dark clouds are approaching.”

“But, sir,” Felix Marvell replied, straight faced, “Isn’t it true that Britten was a flautist?” At this, Theodore lost his battle with laughter.

“I’ve no idea,” Donne replied, “but I can say with some confidence that rain is headed this way. Pouring rain.” The eighth grade blushed and fell silent. “Carry on,” Donne said lightly, departing.

He resumed his perambulation, pleased to have instructed the eight grade, that year, in the virtues of rhyming slang, if nothing else.

Confused? Try the glossary.


flashWhat is Flash Fiction Friday?

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May 29 2009

3F #5 is afoot

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Welcome to Flash Fiction Friday. Come write a 250-word story (erotic? tgi oriented?). Start any time Friday, finish by 6pm PDT Saturday. Post the link to your story in the comments below or on Twitter. Try to include the wildcards.

This week’s wildcards (thanks to @swimnaked @thursdays_child and @papatomla)

  • flautist
  • macaroini
  • black clouds

Spread the word, and have fun!


May 25 2009

microfantasy monday: sunshine

- You won’t ever call me Sunshine, or anything barfy like that, will you?

- Never.

- What will you call me?

- It rather depends, doesn’t it?

- What if I’m wearing this?

- Then, young lady, you can go straight across my knee.

- And what about this?

- I’d have to call you Miss then, wouldn’t I?

- It would be wise. And this?

- Ooh, mean babysitter – Miss?

- I think that would be Sir.

- In that skirt?

- She watches Battlestar Gallactica.

- Geek, then.

- Not to her face, unless you want some of this.

- Ah! Sir. Sir! Yes, sir!

- Better. What about when I’m wearing this?

- Only Aunt Amelia would wear that, and it’s always best to agree with her. Now this quite interests me, especially with these underneath.

- What would you call me then?

- Put it on and we’ll see.

- Well?

- Oh…you, boy, are the most impertinent fourth former it has ever been my misfortune to know. You can touch your toes for the cane right now.

- Right now?

- Right now.

- Ah!

- Hold still…right, now get those off. I’m going to have to fuck you.

- Isn’t buggery wicked?

- Very wicked. But you can’t expect me to resist, with a bottom like that, and such straight marks.

- Not that you’re modest.

- Quiet, boy.

- Come here, you. Here.

- Mmm…

- Slower…Here…What will you call me now?

- Darling.

- Don’t go away again. Promise. Promise.

- Oh, sweetheart, as long as I live. As long as I live.


Microfantasy Monday is the brainchild of Sweltering Celt. The theme this week was sunlight. Unfortunately, I misread it as sunshine. Oops.


May 23 2009

3f #4 – the garden

The Rectory garden conveyed English lushness. Wild plants dominated, things that liked the setting and could thrive without tending: a large willow, birches, mint, chives, wild roses, and swathes of flowers Casey couldn’t name. It was her kind of garden, much more than the so-called backyard where Mark had written in wet cement MH4CDM. At the Rectory she was left largely to her own devices; she should rejoice in that, after years of complaining about over-supervision. One babysitter, in particular, delighted in whacking Marky, half-challenge, half-blackmail: “Twelve with this,” she’d say, brandishing something unexpected, “or I’ll tell Miss Lincoln what you did, and I’ll tell everyone else you were scared.” Marky never shirked a dare. Casey always liked that babysitter.

There was nothing unhappy in the Rector’s garden. It was almost summer. Life continued. The dogs lay at her feet, content after ball and breakfast.

That morning she had opened the cupboard where Mr. Prior’s tweed jacket hung. Inside one pocket, a note in her own hand from the old days. He’d made her write how she was feeling. She’d talked about wanting desperately to see him, but being afraid to get too close, in case he went away again.

All that as distant and imaginary now as a hippogriff, yet as soft and as mighty, too. The garden lived, rampant, but she could only think of the clothes in the closet – Marky’s, RP’s – as if they could be made, with touch, to come to life again.


flashWhat is Flash Fiction Friday?

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May 21 2009

3F #4

flash

Welcome to Flash Fiction Friday #4. Come write a 250-word story (erotic? tgi oriented?). Start any time Friday, finish by 6pm PDT Saturday. Post the link to your story in the comments below or on Twitter. Try to include the wildcards.

This week’s wildcards (thanks to @spankinresource and @papatomla)

  • backyard
  • babysitter
  • hippogriff

Spread the word, and have fun!


May 16 2009

flash fiction friday #3: my cross to bear

She checked her appearence in the hatstand mirror and knocked on her uncle’s study door. A bass come, equal in power and authority to his in pricipios. Rubbing shoecaps against kneesocks, she twisted the wrought-iron knob.

He had vested already and summoned her forward with efficient finger. She preferred him in smoking jacket to rector’s cassock, though it made no difference to his right arm.

He crossed his arms and forced a frown. “What are we going to do with you?”

She looked down. A rustle of robes, then his hand lifted her chin, firm yet compassionate.

“Haven’t you anything to say, child?” She blinked, setting her jaw against the sudden sting in her eyes. Outside the lead-paned windows, a bruise-colored cloud advanced across blue sky, promising a May shower. His hand shifted to the back of her neck, his ring warm against her ear. “I suppose you’re my cross to bear,” he said wryly. She hoped he wasn’t attempting a pun.

“Right.” He stepped back. “I’m not going to cane you for this.” A surge of relief, and surprise. “But I am going to take the strap to you.” He reached for the tawse unseen on his desk, its back rough leather. She swallowed.

Directing her to the arm of the settee, he bent her over it and lifted her grey school skirt.

“What is this?” His voice scandalized. She craned to see the hem of her skirt smeared with lemon meringue from luncheon.

“I – ” she began.

He returned her to position. “You, child, are incorrigible. My cross to bear indeed.”


flashWhat is Flash Fiction Friday?

My story went a few words over, but with six wildcards (albeit six of the best), you gotta hope for leeway.

Check out other FFF stories from this week:


May 15 2009

flash fiction friday #3

flash

Welcome to Flash Fiction Friday #3. Come write a 250-word story (erotic? tgi oriented?). Start any time Friday, finish by 6pm PDT Saturday. Post the link to your story below or on Twitter. Try to include the wildcards.

This week’s wildcards:

  • shower
  • ring
  • in pricipio

OK – after I posted this, some other wildcards came in, so see what you can do!

  • lemon meringue
  • rough leather
  • blue sky

Spread the word, and have fun!


May 14 2009

365 days later

Was I ever married, or was it all a brief, tender, perfect dream that I woke up from a year ago, this hour?

He woke up as usual that morning. He hadn’t been feeling well for a few days – chest pains. We’d been to the ER four days previous, and they had cleared him on every count. He worked out 7 days a week. He looked fine, they said. It was probably costochondritis, a painful but harmless inflammation of chest cartilage that would go away on its own. He was frustrated at being restricted from full workouts by the pain. He was frustrated that it interfered with wanking while sitting up. He was cranky. That morning, I got up after he did and approached him in the kitchen, me groggy, he dressed for work. “Don’t be anxious,” he told me, putting his arms around me and embracing me. I felt his green scratchy sweater and smelled his aftershave. He was having lunch out, he told me, so he might not want much dinner. It was an annual lunch he had with two colleagues at which they celebrated their AA birthdays, the anniversaries of their sobriety. He was sixteen.

“All this,” he told me, meaning, I supposed, his general mood, “is just getting used to what can’t be changed.” I can’t remember his exact words, but that was approximately it. We kissed each other goodbye, and off he went to work.

I talked on the phone to my mother that morning, complaining about what a terrible patient he was, how you couldn’t tell him anything, how annoyed he got when you fussed over him. I was trying to detach.

I was expecting a student at noon. At 11:25 the phone rang. It was his gym. He’s passed out while exercising, they said. He was in an ambulance headed to the hospital. I hung up, called my student’s mother to cancel, said I thought it probably wasn’t serious. He had costochondritis, I told her. He’d over-done it exercising. I wasn’t having it any more.

The subway to the hospital took a long time. I got there around 12:30. There was a lot of confusion at the desk. He wasn’t there. Hadn’t been there. I eventually got the ambulance on the phone. They’d taken him to another hospital. I got in a cab and in a few minutes, was there.

Inside, they let me go right back, as if they knew who I was. A guy shook my hand and introduced himself, a social worker. He took me into a tiny room with two chairs and a side table. He told me to wait. My heart started to beat hard, deep, fast. Why would I be greeted by a social worker? That was bad, right? But it couldn’t be that bad.

The social worker came back, but he wouldn’t tell me what was going on. I asked if M was dead, and he didn’t give me a yes or no answer. Shortly, the surgeon came out, and after some verbiage describing what they’d tried, said, “I’m very sorry your husband has passed away.”

I wasn’t the kind of person whose husband passed away. I used, often, to fear he’d die, usually in a plane crash. Sometimes I’d dream he had died, but when I woke up, he was there, most merciful reprieve. Whenever I went out – to a friend’s play, to a party, to a family gathering – I always felt such relief that we had our life to come home to. This was the real reality – him and me and our dogs and our apartment and Casey and Mark and RP and TL and the others. The world was just so much noise, not a real thing. My family I loved, but this was the new family. We were making the new family. We were trying to have children, too. The old, sad, long life was over; the new life was underway. At our wedding, and in a print over our bed:

Rise up, my love, my fair one
And come away!
For lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and done
The voice of the turtle is heard in the land

I had never dated. I would never have to date – thank God, I thought. I never wanted to date. He was flawed, terribly flawed, and so was I, but I didn’t want anyone else. When I would dream of the end of the world – a nuclear bomb, say – I would, in that dream, only want to get home to him, to be with him to the end.

Imagine a giant eraser wiping away the present and the future.

In the emergency room, he had a tube in his mouth, but he looked just like himself. He looked like he looked asleep beside me in bed. I’d never seen a dead body before. I touched him. He was still warm.

I wasn’t crying, not yet, but when I tried to dial the phone to call someone (the church, my mother, my sister), my fingers were trembling too much. This, I thought, was curious. Did I ask a nurse to dial for me? Or did I just redial until I managed it?

By 11pm that night, my whole family was in my apartment, some from as far away as California. My mother made toast and tried to get me to eat it. I took a bite, but it was like dust in my mouth. I sat on my dog’s bed with her and fed her the rest of the toast. My sister slept in my bed with me that night. I took one of M’s sleeping pills and crashed. In the morning, I got up before everyone else and walked the dogs, sobbing in the sunshine, praying with every breath for help. On the way home, part of the sidewalk had just been redone. Barely dry, some of it covered over, but right in the middle: mhLove from marky.

Back at home I got in the shower and suddenly fell on the floor, water pounding over me with the realization: RP is dead, too. What about Casey? Funny how you don’t realize everything at once.

It’s 365 days later. They say a year brings relief. It’s an ancient prayer practice, the Year’s Mind. They say it’s easier, having lived through every day of the year without them.

It isn’t easier.

Was I ever married, or was it all just a wonderful dream I woke up from a year ago this day?


May 9 2009

flash fiction friday #2: him

His office door opened with a skeleton key. Inside, dark wood paneling, lead-paned windows, plenty of room to swing a cane. Corridor stone, cool, bringing music and the lingering remnants of incense.

His study at home opened to a knock, dark-wooden floorboards, maroon wallpaper, leather couch chosen for its arm, which could be bent over. Wood everywhere: desk, bookcase, file cabinet (one drawer holding a slipper), hat-stand with canes, prie-dieu, and cross.

He usually dealt with Casey across his knee on that couch. When he wanted to make a point, he’d unbutton his shirt-cuff and roll up his sleeve, to show he was ready for strenuous punishment. The last time he dealt with her, she was across his knee and the door opened, revealing the darkened guest-bedroom. He stood her up and strode to the door:

“Matthew, what is it?… Not now.”

Matthew was six, one of The Others, those people who lived with us, though not corporeally. They’d never opened doors before.

He walked the dogs every morning except Sundays. He took charge of the garden. He carried things up the rickety basement steps. He did the grilling. He signed Casey’s permission slips. He put her across his knee. He snored.

The last morning he hugged me and said, “Don’t be anxious.”

At the interment, his voice in my head, overpowering everything else, saying, “Take care of little Casey. Take care of little Casey.” Over and over, his voice so close, so tender, so alive.


flash
What is Flash Fiction Friday? I suppose technically the above doesn’t count, as it isn’t fiction. Ah, well.

Check out other FFF entries from this week:


May 7 2009

flash fiction friday #2

flash

To snag the picture: http://www.caseymorgan.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/flash.jpg

Last week a challenge emerged amongst some folks on Twitter (me, @naughyabby @spankinresource @sabrinamorgan @papatomla) to write a 250 word erotic story in 24-hours. All happened to involve some form of tgi, though this wasn’t a requirement. And you know, when you do something once, it’s tradition! So, welcome to Flash Fiction Friday #2. (Even got a neat little image you can snag.)

Want to join in? Write a 250 word story: start any time Friday, finish by 6pm PDT Saturday. Post the link below or on Twitter. Try to include all the wildcards in your story.

This week’s wildcards (thanks to @spankinresource and @papatomla for contributing):

  • skeleton key
  • basement
  • cuffs

Have fun!