#microfiction challenge to write 30 thirty word stories during April in response to a daily prompt
She isn’t sure who she is anymore.
She is a daughter. She is a wife.
Once, she was going to be a mother.
Now she just feels hollow and lost.

#microfiction challenge to write 30 thirty word stories during April in response to a daily prompt
She isn’t sure who she is anymore.
She is a daughter. She is a wife.
Once, she was going to be a mother.
Now she just feels hollow and lost.

A writing challenge on Twitter to write a 30 word story each day in April, following prompts.
Day 6: Solitary
This time, she thinks, she will master it.
She will settle her frantic breaths.
She will climb from the abyss.
She is her own greatest fear.
She must battle herself.

30 Words30Days prompt #5 Outcast.
He definitely feels he’s been cast out to give her time to discover contentment in solitude.
How paradoxical: he gets a far-flung journey; she learns to bide peacefully with herself.

#30Words30Days. Day 4 prompt: Gather
.
Come morning, I gather what remains of our life and return to the car.
When I’m alone, I’m never lonely.
She gathered her loneliness around herself.
What’s she feeling now?

#30Words30Days Day 3 prompt: chief
Her chief complaint was loneliness even when he was sitting beside her.
How could he answer to absence he experienced as presence?
She had to find contentment in companionship herself.

#30Words30Days prompt from https://twitter.com/pleomorphic2
Each day in April Sumitra (pleomorphic2) will post a prompt on Twitter. Participants are to respond with a 30 word story. Follow along and see how it goes!
2. Communicate
The publican doesn’t understand my words, but I mime sleep; he pulls out the ledger. I mime drinking; he pulls a pint.
I’ll be okay here, if my luck holds.

#30Words30Days prompt from https://twitter.com/pleomorphic2
Each day in April Sumitra (pleomorphic2) will post a prompt on Twitter. Participants are to respond with a 30 word story. Follow along and see how it goes!
1. VILLAGE
The road ends at a seaside village.
There’s a light on at the pub. It has rooms to let, so I book one.
I’ve nowhere else to be. Do I?

click NARRATIVE above to see all previous chapters
.
Chapter six
Log in
User name- SuzieQ
Password- confused1
CHAT ALERT!
Dave – Hey!
SuzieQ- what have u been saying?
Dave – ?
SuzieQ – about us making out?
Dave – ohh
SuzieQ – so?
Dave has left the chat
Log off
(Chapter five)
Log in
User name: Zara16
Password: watcher
CHAT UPDATE:
Lena- Hey
How R U?
Zara- 😦
Lena- ?
Zara- Ross + Suzanne
Lena- why?
Zara- ?
Lena- Ross is too cute for her
Zara- ?
Lena- U no it
Suzanne is a biotch to him
Zara- he loves her!
Lena- no way
They’d still be together
Zara- unless someone broke them up
Know anyone?
Lena- Dave?
Zara- Hm
G2G
L8r
Lena- bye
Log off
field of dreams August 21, 2011
Tags: field, future, postaday2011, short story
I’ve never responded to a short story prompt, but why not? Here is something new for this blog!
An offering for the Short Story slam prompt: http://bluebellbooks.blogspot.com/2011/08/short-story-slam-week-8.html
My grandmother looked over the field of ripening grain and saw into her future. She saw my grandfather driving his beat up ’46 Ford pick-up down the dusty road, saw six babies, saw two funerals, four weddings, and then she saw me.
I was wailing in a cradle, waiting and wailing. The house was filling with smoke. She saw two more funerals.
On the day of the fire, my grandmother phoned my mother. “You be careful, hon.” Grandmother could feel the fire coming.
My mom, she told me later, had laughed dismissively. “Yes, ma.” She had set out the candles and was enjoying the twinkling. She fell asleep on the couch. Dad was in bed, gone to bed early because he was on the early shift the next day. One candle had caught the drapes. The house was engulfed in moments.
Grandmother felt the flames grab the fabric, and phoned. When there was no answer, she called the fire department. They didn’t ask how someone 400 miles away knew there was a fire. They went. They found me, waiting for them and wailing to tell them where I was. My door was shut. The master bedroom door was open. Two more funerals.
And so I came to live with my Grandmother, and to look across the same fields, and to glance into my own distant future.
But that is another story.
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