Ficly: Erica and the Bear

Ficly about a woman and a moment of existentialism that might have cost her.


Erica and the Bear

Erica turned from the window to look at the bear through the fog.

The house was caught in a perpetual gloom, every corner darker than the last, and the only light seemed to be the ultra-pale blue that slid through the think murky windows to spill across the floor and walls. She was in the kitchen, the sink on, splashing about the dirtied dishes from her solitary dinner the night before.

Candlesticks on the table, two places set, but she ate alone.

And now, her back to the sink and the rain outside, she looked across the wood floors that moaned under each step, and out to the back door. The mahogany paneling on the walls showed a silvery hue in the daylight, which felt more like moonlight in the weather.

A cool, misty chill crept across the back of her neck. The animal meandered about the yard for a while, its unkempt fur matted with mud and water. Small eyes recessed in its thick skull watched her occasionally.

She might have closed the screen door, for that was all that remained in the doorway of the old house, but something seemed so docile about the creature. She hesitated to obstruct her view of its magnificence. Even in the damp air, out in the wet grass of the field-like lawn that lay beyond the porch, this bear commanded her awe.

It snorted and growled, and eventually found the courage to enter the house, lumbering as was its way.

Some of those who knew her say they can still hear her screams when they close their eyes, but Erica lives in the south-land now. When people stop and point at what is left of her, others tell them to hush, and that it was a landmine or an accident of some sort. She is treated as a hero.

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Ficly: Bedtime for the Last Time

What? Another Ficly? It’s fiction time.

The dog waited at the foot of the stairs. Once or twice that week it crept up laboriously, heaving its old, heavy body up, one step at a time, it’s distended underbelly dragging on the long beige rug that ran the length of the staircase.

When it reached the top, it would pause and sniff, lacking the energy to growl at the odor that permeated that region of the house. More than anything the dog was hungry.

He had not seen the woman in days, and consequently, he had been without food. The kitchen was empty, and the air in the house was growing staler by the hour. The dog would grunt and slide back down the stairs with several graceful thumps. The sound of claws clacking along the edges of the stairs where the wood was exposed from under the carpet was not to be missed.

Back at the bottom, the dog would turn and hold itself as steady as it could before resting back on its fat haunches.

Four days and no one had come looking for her. The dog was the only thing in the world that knew she was gone.

Originally on Ficly: http://ficly.com/stories/20143

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House Boat

Ficly about a flash-flood. Inspired by another story on ficly.

The original work by Elizabeth Gallenberg: “Flash Flood”

The jingle sounds off from the little speaker on the phone. Flash of red on the screen. It takes forever. Pete is in a daze, the shard of glass in his leg keeping him somewhere between conscious and comatose.

There’s a sloshing noise, massive. Water licks at my feet. Mandy’s right shoe swims off. The car lurches off under a surge of murky sewage, I scramble away, imagining myself tied to the steering wheel.

The house is going to come down. We can all see it happening before it even starts. A ton of mud migrates into the highway-gone-river and exposes the foundation of the house. Creaking. Something snaps, a block of concrete the size of my bedroom breaks off. The rest follows.

Mandy’s mouth slips open loosely. I wonder if this would be less frightening with cinematic letterbox bars on top and bottom of my vision.

I turn back to my phone in just enough time to remember why it was off to begin with. The battery icon blinks, blinks, blinks, and dies. I wipe the blood from the screen and swallow.

Originally on Ficly: http://ficly.com/stories/17921

Still working on that short story, that website, that book, that comic, and that other comic… Keep an eye out for all my stuff.

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Victorian Prose

This Ficly was something I wrote in tenth grade for Mrs. Tasiopoulos’s English class. It’s an excerpt from “Jane Eyre” as envisioned by yours truly. It’s something different, for sure.

I saw a blackened ruin.

This ashen earth upon which my feet now tread had, since my departure, lost its former grandeur. Yet, in this place faded glory; I realized that the fears I had once endured now held no promise of returning to me. The darkened crevices of the manor were now, in their ruin, exposed the sun’s brilliant light.

The torn lawn lay in waste, interwoven with the mud and the rain, destroyed by the frantic, fleeing steps of master and many a servant alike.

Now, amongst these tattered remains, the wind alone mourns with an air of death, howling between the bricks and shattered mortar. The lack of danger lurking within the confines of my old home, my old prison, left me feeling blissful, as if the hell and the home that I once feared I was a slave to had disappeared, and indeed it had. Despite the charred mass of debris that lay, ever so sober, in the field before me, I was not alarmed.

My state of mind changed rather rapidly though. I was faced with the notion that my missing father had most probably perished in the massive fire that had claimed the halls. I was panicked, and yet dazed. To think of a death so senseless.

I shook my head, for the fruits of my journey had now rotted on this hollow ground, this unholy place.

Originally on Ficly: http://ficly.com/stories/17569

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