The Chronicles of Mary, Part 6 (A 50-word Story)

Being praised makes Mary uncomfortable. So when Mr. Johnson, Mary’s new boss, called her into his office to pay her a compliment, she quit on the spot. After three days of anxious idleness, Mary found the courage to return, smile confidently, and accept Mr. Johnson’s praise. Mary is still unemployed.

Praise is The Daily Post one-word prompt.

my muse

muse, you travel through me
like a song
in a dream
on the tip of my tongue
your kiss
is a whisper of magic
possibilities eternal
your touch
a gentle push to create
and through your eyes
we see worlds
until now unfathomable
your thoughts flow through me
at times unwanted,
they invade my mind.
and yet,
i can’t live without you.

wet me with your tears
shake me with laughter
shock me with your
delicious ways
and i will follow you
as though i have no choice
for the truth is
you command my every word.

Profound

The job posting was a juicy one. One that I wasn’t qualified for, admittedly, but I wanted it so bad. I’d already asked around and no one else in my department had applied. So, I thought, what the hell?

I filled out the application and lied about having taken the university courses they required the successful applicant to have. But sure enough, a notice was posted a week later that someone else had gotten the job.

The bulletin read: Pro found.

Damn it.

Profound is the word of the day on The Daily Post.

Paper heart

I’m a two-dimensional figure,
posed for a display in a shop window
unable to move
unable to speak
but people walk by and laugh
and point at me as though
I have no feelings.

I do!

I am not the one who put me here
not the one who chose my pose
and yet I bear the brunt
of the ridicule meant
for my poser.

What a hoser.
He won’t even apologize.

***
Apology

Dramatic

“Oh my God, Micky, I love your new living room! It’s so dramatic! Let’s make love in it right now.”

“But… George. You’re not gay.”

“Oh, right.”

“Or are you?”

“Of course not!”

“Because not only did you just suggest we have sex, but you used the word “dramatic” to describe my decorating job.”

“I did, didn’t I? Can we sit down for a minute?”

“Why, so you can tell me you’re gay?”

“Would that be so bad?”

“No. Because I am too.”

“Oh my God, really?”

“Uh huh.”

“When were you going to tell your wife?”

“I dunno. I thought maybe she’d figure it out when she sees the living room.”

***
The Daily Post word of the day is Dramatic.

Wind

Instructions on side of box read:

1. Carefully slice the circular sticker holding the top flap, using a sharp knife.
2. Lift flap. Caution: Do not look inside box.
3. With arms extended, reach into box and find the green tab.

“Wait. How can I find the green tab if I can’t look inside the box?”

“Keep reading!!!”

4. The green tab is smooth; the blue tab has pockets.

“What the hell are tab pockets?”

“Just… feel!”

“Okay, got it.”

5. Pull the green tab gently toward you.
6. When you feel a breeze, cease pulling.
7. Clasp blue tab and count to nine.

“One, two, three, four, five, six, seven…”

“…eight? Why did you stop counting?”

“I farted.”

“Damn it, Marty! We bought a box of stinky wind for nothing!”

***

Wind is the prompt. Bizarre is the story.

Disconnect

If I can’t have you, I can at least dream you are here.
The day you died I thought I would expire with grief.
These four walls seem to mock me – outside is inches away, but here I stay.
Holding your lifeless body, trapped somehow in those moments when your eyes gazed back…
If I ever escape, I will find you and hold you and never let you go.
…there I remain. Except when I sleep, I dream you are here, my love.
My love. Until we meet again.

***
Inspired by my novel-in-progress.

Crisis?

“Hey, Brother! Where you bound?

I’m off to America. For breakfast.

“I hear there’s a crisis going on over there.”

“Crisis? What crisis?”

“Oh, it’s the crime of the century, some say.”

“You don’t say!”

“Mmhm. But then again, some things never change.”

“True enough. Some things are indelibly stamped.”

“Well, if you decide to go anyway, enjoy yourself.”

“I’ll do my best. Though now that you’ve mentioned the crisis, my may take a walk in the woods by myself, to think it over.”

“Yes, well. Sometimes we come to mistaken conclusions, even in the quietest moments.”

The Daily Post word of the day: Crisis.

for young mothers

your arrival is music
to my strained ears
relief for my nerves
that threaten to pop
the hair out of my head.
you’re the sanctuary of my mind
which struggles not to leave home
to escape the cries of your offspring

for every young mother of a newborn
who is blessed to have her mate
come home of an evening

Sanctuary

Clocks. A slightly crazy piece of short fiction.

Why can’t all the clocks be the same? It doesn’t matter how hard I try, none of the clocks in my kitchen change at the same time. And I know why: it’s because there’s no second hand. You change the time on a digital clock, but you don’t know… YOU DON’T KNOW! You can’t have ANY way of knowing if you’re setting it for 7:05:05 or 7:05:58. And when the second one happens, you’ve got to friggin’ start all over again! And some of them you have to scroll through 23 hours and 59 minutes to get to the right time again! Who in the living HELL thought digital clocks were a good idea in the first place? And don’t get me started on the clock in the car. I set it according to my phone and a month later it’s slow by a minute. How can anyone be expected to live like this!!!!????

Clock