Followers

Tuesday 9 February 2021

Some Flash Stories

Some  Flash Stories:

By Len Morgan 


1. She is lying face down on the damp earth.  Her baby is crying.  “Shhh… little one, they are searching for us!”

Half a mile away two staccato cracks from an automatic echo across the sultry, war-torn rice paddies of South Vietnam.  A burst of automatic fire.

“Oh please be quiet little one…” She places her hand firmly over his nose & mouth.  He struggles but goes silent.  Finally, they have passed and she removes her hand.  Lying face down, her dead baby cries no more.  She cries silently.

 

2.  She wasn’t aware that I was looking at her.  So intent was she on the letter in her hand.  The look of pleasure on her face as she recognized the writing on the envelope increased as she tore it open.  Then she started to read and her smile lessened, then froze on her face.  After a while, she blinked and rivulets of tears tracked down her cheeks.  Slowly at first, then she blinked hard several times, shaking her head, balled up the letter and envelope and threw them in the rubbish bin, shaking her head again, her silent tears became audible, increasing in volume…

 

 3. He picked up a suitable stone and washed it in the stream.  The blue-green soil slewed away, the water dripped off as if it were oil, and the stone was dry.  He looked closer, it was crystalline, smooth and round, milky blue-white; it barely weighed an ounce.  He had intended to skip it down the stream, it was the perfect shape, but instead, he put it in his pocket and picked up another.  Two – three – four times it scudded across the surface.  Later Kimberley security stopped & searched him and took him into custody.  It’s just a stone, he protested…

 

4.  He smiled as he discovered a leaf pressed between the pages of her ‘Concise Oxford English Dictionary 4th Edn.  Plucked by his daughter on her 7th birthday.  She gave it to me as one of her most treasured acquisitions; in her 37th year.  One of her more lucid days.  “Happy Fathers Day Dad!”  She had embroidered a linen Swatch, “With all my Love on this Special Day!” and affixed the leaf.

She is sadly no longer with us but the memories always return on ‘fathers day’; a leaf from time…

Monday 8 February 2021

A NEW YEAR’S WISH (Part 2 & Last)

 A NEW YEAR’S WISH (Part 2 & Last)    

by Richard Banks


         Sensing that I had learnt all I was likely to from Betty, I release her from the beam and watch her crawl on hands and knees to the door and let in a large man with a suitcase who, although similar in dress and appearance to the first man is an entirely separate person. Having tossed Betty the customary wad of banknotes he lets himself into the freezer and shuts the door behind him. Betty stands up, presses a red button on the control panel and - apparently oblivious to the noisy quivering of the freezer - begins the wiping of dishes on her draining board.

         I leave her to it and while my first inclination is to zoom back up and report on the unexpected windfall for the masses, second thoughts tell me that a conversation with one of the men will almost certainly, be more interesting than the celestial seminar I am otherwise obliged to attend. Therefore, being in no hurry to return, I do a brief reconnoitre of the surrounding area before placing myself outside Betty’s kitchen door in wait for the next man. He is not long in coming, this time from the inside out.

         If he is surprised to join me within the celestial beam he hides it well behind an expression on the frosty side of inscrutable. I am, I tell him, conducting a six-monthly review on behalf of the Almighty One. This is, of course, no more than the truth although I suspect his understanding as to whom I am referring to is somewhat different to my own certain knowledge. Fortunately, he is from a part of the world where the questioning of authority is not encouraged; if he has any doubts about me he is sufficiently impressed by the beam to keep them to himself.

         I assume an air of jovial camaraderie which I hope will put him at his ease. “Not bad, hey, latest model, driver-operated and with warp-speed delivery to any co-ordinate in the world. There’re a few years off from becoming standard issue but when they do they will be well worth the wait. Until then your present transits will, I’m sure, be more than adequate. Tell me, how are they shaping up? Any problems?”

         For someone who should now be at his ease he seems anything but.

         “Comrade Commissary, I report no problems. Please, no, it is a lie! Everything good. Indeed, everything better than good. With the Supreme Leader to guide us how could it be otherwise?”

         What he means, of course, is that those who voice unpopular opinions are likely to find themselves ex-comrades, if not ex-people. I assure him that it is his patriotic duty to report problems. Problems, I explain, are the stepping stones to solutions. “How is our glorious country to make progress if we don’t know what’s wrong?”

         He seems reassured and begins a somewhat gruesome account of comrades he knows who have lost fingers and other parts of themselves while travelling between the Control Centre and, what he calls catch and dispatch devices. “It is,” he says, “a small price to pay for the technological breakthrough which every loyal Korean knows to be the esteemed gift of the Dear Leader.”

         “And the devices?” I say, drawing him back to my question. “Apart from the minor inconveniences you describe, what is your overall assessment of them?”

         He says that he prefers the ones disguised as Portaloos. They are easier to access and do not require the collaboration of capitalist lackeys who, he suspects, are keeping more of the money than they should. He understands that a new device is under construction in the form of retro telephone boxes; these will be exported abroad and sold as ornamental features by garden centres unaware of their primary purpose.   

         So, there we have it, North Korea has developed a particle teleportation system – the first country in the world to do so - and are using it to covertly send their nationals into other countries not informed of their uninvited guests. But what are the Koreans up to?    

         “Your mission,” I say. “Define its operational objectives and assess your effectiveness in achieving them on a scale of one to five.”

         He again looks nervous and perspiration begins to gather on his forehead. I smile and tell him that five is the highest mark on the scale and that his assessment of his own performance will be the only one entered in my report. This cheers him up no end and without any further encouragement launches into a long-winded account of his part in what he describes as the ‘Great Slippythrough.’ It turns out that his mission is to buy high-value consumer goods from Harrods and Harvey Nichols and take them back to the Control Centre from whence they are taken by the lorry load to the Supreme Leader’s palace. As to what he does with it all my interviewee is unable or unwilling to say. However, as the clothing items relate only to sizes likely to fit the Supreme Leader and his wife we might reasonably assume that most of the purchased items go no further than the palace.

         “But where does the glorious fatherland find the foreign exchange to pay for all these things?”

         His looks at me with surprise, reasoning to himself that an informed insider like myself should know where.

         I bluff along. “I mean what is your part in procuring the necessary finance?”

         He says that once a week he collects it from the factory where it is printed and puts it in a large truck that he drives to the Control Centre. “There is always plenty of money,” he says. “There is no reason for anyone to be poor when you can just make it.”

         He asks if he might be excused now as he has a bus to catch. If he misses the bus he will have to hire a cab which his supervisor would regard as a bourgeois extravagance. I thank him for his invaluable assistance and release him into the outside world where he instantly loses all recollection of me. He departs towards the main road where the cross-London bus will arrive and leave in less than five minutes. It seems almost an insult to his earnest endeavour that by the time he either catches or misses the bus I will be back in the celestial realm savouring a large glass of the sacred nectar. It is moments like this that makes the Hereafter the paradise it truly is. The questionnaire I will leave until morning by which time life on Earth will have moved on almost a hundred years.

                                           *****

         For those of you expecting some resolution to the events, I have described reconcile yourself to the reality that life on Earth is a long saga that can only be properly evaluated in its broad sweep, i.e. the progress, or otherwise, that is discernable over the course of a millennium. There are, however, some oft-repeated themes that can be relied on to show us the inevitable drift of events. Chief of these is man’s pursuit of wealth which with monotonous regularity goes mainly to those who already have it. With money, of course, goes power and the big guys will always use it to dominate the rest; with men so it is with nations. Apply these principles to my narrative and you have its inevitable resolution. Even in the slow lane of time, the outrageous good fortune of minnows like Betty and North Korea will never last for long.

         As for me the end of this pointless exercise in celestial bureaucracy will come when I complete the all-important questionnaire, a simple enough task bearing in mind that none of the questions have any relevance to the events I have witnessed. I will put my ticks in the boxes I know to be favoured by the Focus Group and write a few upbeat lines in the comments section that should be equally pleasing to them. That done I will be free to amuse myself for a few hours before doing some ‘meeting and greeting’ on the celestial stairway. Rumour has it that Samuel Pepys is on his way up from Purgatory, his infidelities not only observed from above but recorded in his diary for all posterity to read. His wife has been waiting for almost one hundred years; he will have much to explain. Oh to be a fly on the wall when they meet. To spare their blushes it will happen in a soundproof chat room. It will be his final purging, after that he will glow in righteousness like the rest of us, or spend further time below. 

         As for those of you still on Earth don’t expect to get here anytime soon. Until that day we will only meet when wishes are required. If that happens, surprise me, prove an old cynic wrong. I challenge you, do some good with your wishes, in fact, do better than good. Spread peace and joy, reform the world, your kind intent will serve you well.

[Ends] 

Copyright Richard Banks 

Sunday 7 February 2021

BAD HAIR DAY

 BAD HAIR DAY 

byPeter Woodgate 


When Old Homer first put pen to papers

And thrilled us all with those exciting capers.

Who gave him inspiration for those creatures

The Odyssey and other stories teach us?


And when young Perseus slew the evil being

Using his shield as a weapon and for seeing

Holding the ugly head  in safety at arms length

Not looking at the eyes lest he should lose his strength,

 

Did he use the power of the matted writhing hair

To defeat his enemies by foul means or by fair?

And when they quaked in fear what was it that they saw?

What could turn men to stone, was it the Mother-in-Law?

 

Copyright Peter Woodgate

Saturday 6 February 2021

The Health of The Nation

 The Health of The Nation

By Jane Scoggins


Concentrate orange and cod liver oil

From the teaspoon specially kept.

I hated the taste, I would always recoil.

But every winter's day before we left

The house to walk the mile to school

I would  hold my nose to grin and bare

The horrid dose that was my  Mother's rule.

Copyright Jane Scoggins

 

Friday 5 February 2021

Come on you Guys

 Come on you Guys

by Rosemary Clarke


To RLWG I call
If you miss this, you'd be a fool.
It's writers we're supposed to be
So get your pens, listen to me!
We've got an outlet for our work
To lose that would be to be a jerk
Writer's need a forum, true
So get to work and join us do!
Our writing will not be well known
If you twiddle your thumbs at home
So get writing, you know it's best
And then we'll really show the rest.
We're writing for the folks out there
To show them that we really care.
So get your pen, or your laptop
And write and write until you drop
You will get better as you write
Who knows, careers might just take flight
So come on, get some work out there!
And be that writer...
IF YOU DARE!

Copyright Rosemary Clarke

Thursday 4 February 2021

Abbalar Tales ~ 25

Abbalar Tales ~ 25  Revisionists 2

By Len Morgan


   One moment, Genna was gazing into the portal the next she was falling into an endless void.   When she felt firm ground beneath her feet once more she opened her eyes, to find herself outside the walls of the city, gazing longingly across at the Poche Platzi.   She crossed the road without realising she was now alone.   There was a sign on the door: Artists Wanted, apply within.   She entered the house of ill repute, conscious that this had always been her childhood dream.   It was as though the past six months had never happened.   She was no longer a child and her inner desires were close to fulfilment.   Whether dream or reality, she was not concerned, this was what she had always wanted.    She could hear the music, Sexy and seductive, she moved into the light…

.-…-. 

  Skaa stepped through the portal and into full sunshine, the colour temperature totally unique to one place only to his certain knowledge.   He gazed around him, everything was as it should be, and two hundred feet below him he could see the family farm.  It was late summer and the Easterly facing slopes were overgrown with lush ripe red fruit.   He placed several of the small grapes between his lips drawing them into his mouth, testing their texture with his tongue and crushing them slowly against the roof of his mouth.   He smiled with approval as the sharp sweet juice burst forth into his mouth.   A taste and memory that cast him instantly back to his childhood.   His limbs were strong his muscles supple and springy the agues and aches from the many wounds, that had plagued him constantly, were gone from both his body and from his memory, he was home.  It seemed that fifty years were slewn away from him, in an instant; it was as though he had never left.   He looked at his hands with incredulity, he had been walking and the house was much closer now, he felt excitement charge his limbs, and broke into a run…

.-…-. 

   'Why did you bring them?   You must know that standards are not permitted here?' the voice in his head upbraided him.

Aldor gazed down at the two who had entered the portal with him; both lay unconscious on the floor of the chamber.

'Put them in the easy room they will be out of harm's way there.' A door opened, revealing a neat white room, bathed in a gentle pink light, containing two single cots.   He laid them both carefully down, and covered them, allowing the door to close as he left.

'Where are we' he asked.

'If you need to ask, you are not of this world or you are damaged in some way.'    He felt a sharp pain and experienced a bright spot expanding within his mind and with it, his memory returned.   In addition, as the brightness enveloped his mind it brought with it further enlightenment.

He knew Raelon was not his real name, but for the second time, in a matter of months, he had been renamed by the same young woman; the one he knew as Genna.

'All that I know, you now know' he thought the words and knew them to be true.

The fresh voice speaking in his mind was familiar and yet not the mind of a living entity.

'I have been inactive for longer than the creators intended.   I know that when last I was conscious humankind were trying valiantly to banish war, and all other forms of conflict, but ABBALAR had already been ravaged by centuries of excess.   Most of humanity elected to travel out to the stars seeking new worlds to inhabit; a new beginning in virgin pastures as yet untainted by man.   Aeons passed, and their migration disappeared from the memories of those who remained.   Of those, 99% elected to turn their backs on the technology and machines that had brought this world to the brink of ruin.   They returned to the more natural ways of farming and husbandry, living in harmony with nature.   In time they knew their planet would recover but they did not want future generations to be subject to the same temptations they had succumbed too.

So, when the last ships left their launch pads, the enormous circles of silica rock, became the foundation sites for new cities and towns.   But, the people were so disaffected with the old ways that, after building these new cities, they chose to desert them and favour the countryside and an agrarian way of life.   The cities fell into disuse and decay, as nature relentlessly reclaimed its own.   Just 1%, a tiny sect, chose to continue making use of computers and continue to perpetuate the discarded technologies that had once made man a power in the universe.   This sect was known as REVISIONISTS, they were reviled and persecuted by the majority, and learned to develop teach and practice in secrecy within their own groups.   They are the ones who continue to develop the questioning mind that is able to communicate with higher-level machines.   Within just a few thousand years the others - the STANDARDS - lost the ability altogether.   Most of the machines now exist either in sleeping, or sentinel mode, since the few occasional demands made of them are little more than routine operations.   AEONS passed and this place, together with many other similar complexes, was completely forgotten.'    The world ceased to have any real technology.  

'Then the KARAXEN arrived.   The 'Standards' of course had no defences.  They had lost the mental capacity to use the existing defences, even if they had been able to access them.   Finding little resistance and, by their criteria, no intelligent life on Abbalar they deemed it ripe for exploitation.   Despite their technological superiority, the struggle (I hesitate to use the word War) lasted for centuries during which time humans became fugitives; living in caves and inhospitable environments where the Karaxen chose not to go.   Anywho became too prominent were hunted and exterminated like vermin, gassed, poisoned, shot and burnt out of any area capable of being inhabited by the Karaxen.  Throughout all this, the 'Revisionist' cult continued to exist and thrive, in small communities.  They maintained the computers and machines whilst keeping the old ways alive.   At the start of the invasion, when the Revisionists first became aware of the Karaxen, they sent out distress calls to the stars appealing for help from those who had left.   Some ships did eventually return disabling the then long-deserted Karaxen mother ship which had been abandoned in orbit.   They had adopted a policy of non-interference with races below a certain development level, and since the 'Standards' had degenerated below that level, and the Karaxen were not a race with whom they could coexist, they left.   The Karaxen were then effectively marooned on Abbalar.

 'Does that mean there are still Revisionists?   Of course; you do not allow ‘Standards’ to enter here so who maintains the place?'

'’Standards are not capable of comprehending the nature of this place, what they do not understand they will invariably destroy.   Yes, there are others like you "Revisionists" who do know and understand.'

'I need to find them, to enlist their help,' said Aldor.

'The larger communities live to the north, your friend Wizomi has gone in search of them.   He implores you to leave that task in his hands and continue with your own quest.   He will contact you when he has news.   He counsels you against revealing our existence, to non-revisionists and, especially Orden - he is not of this world.'

'Orden would never act against our interests,' Aldor assured.

'Orden is a good and loyal friend to Abbalar but, he cannot hide what you tell him from the Universal Network.'

'But, Wizomi and I both use the UN' Aldor said.

'Ah, but there is a difference, they are able to skim the surface of your mind but, they are not able to delve deeper unless you consciously give them consent to do so.   That is why secrecy is necessary, that is also why they are so interested in you.   You alone, of all the races, have the ability to shield your minds and deny them access to your innermost thoughts.   They can access only what you are prepared to reveal.'

'I knew he was hiding something from me,’ Aldor smiled with satisfaction, 'they fear us?'

'If so, you should hope they are not like men, who habitually destroy anything they fear or do not understand,' the voice replied.  

'If we are unique to them, what became of those who travelled to the stars?' he asked.

'All I can tell you is what I learned from the past, and what I learned from your mind at the moment you entered the portal.   At that instant past, present, and future, cease to have meaning.   Wizomi would say that you sing for your supper.'  Aldor grinned and pictured the machine smiling with him.

"Is there another way out of here?" he asked, clearing his throat.  

'Follow the blue line on the wall' it answered.

'How will my friends fare' he asked.

'They will sleep and dream happily enough for four days, and then they will hit a block.   You must return for them within four days or they may not survive.'

'How will I be able to return for them?' he asked.   Pictures and maps began forming in his mind.

'When you leave the sanctuary of this portal, you will be unable to commune with the outsider known as Orden.   This is necessary to protect the knowledge I have passed on to you.  I have buried it deep in the recesses of your mind; it must never be divulged to outsiders.  To ensure its security I have set up blocks in your unconscious memory, however, should you need access it will be instantly available.  Remember, if Orden knew, or even suspected, the existence of this place, he could not hide it from others in the UN.    On the table behind you, there are documents of introduction to Asba Dylon, first counsellor of Corvalen.'  

'He is a highly placed and respected official, at the palace, I know him well’ Aldor replied.

‘I think you have changed a little since last he saw you.   There is also something you do not know about him; he is a ‘Revisionist’ and, therefore a friend.  You will have sore need of friends in the near future.’ 

(to be continued)

Copyright Len Morgan

Tuesday 2 February 2021

THINKING OF YOU

THINKING OF YOU 

By Peter Woodgate 

Thinking of you today

the burden of mediocrity

slipped from my shoulders

and was trampled underfoot.

 

Thinking of you today

I rose above the senseless attitude

of self-pity

and looked down on the real world.

 

Thinking of you today

made me weep,

tears that cleansed my heart

preparing for your love.

 

Thinking of you today

saved my life;

I’m beginning to understand

why I love you.

 

Copyright Peter Woodgate