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Morgan Delaney

Dark, strange and fantastic fiction

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Flash fiction

It looks slow from here

March 14, 2019 by Morgan Delaney

Old woman on a bench
Photo by Chris Yang on Unsplash

Hello!

Here’s one of this week’s writing prompt exercises. It’s a 20-minute exercise based on the above photo and the keyword “grandparent.”


Grandma’s slippers were huge. She went everywhere in them. They had thick rubber soles, worn at the heels and a plush sky-blue fabric she could stick her socked feet into. There were crease lines where her toes bent but much fewer than she had on her face. Fewer than on my shoes. I don’t think Grandma really bent her toes any more when she walked, she shuffled forward slowly, lifting one foot so that the rubber barely left the ground then placing it firmly back on the ground. Then the next foot. We made fun of how slowly she walked. Sometimes when she was napping upstairs we’d play Grandma Races around the kitchen table in our small flat. Ma and Da were at work so nobody shouted at us to be respectful. Grandma Races was all about coming last. We started at the hall doorway then had to walk around the table as slowly as we could. Whoever reached the hall doorway first had lost. My brother usually won. Halfway around the table I’d get bored.


The only time I won was when we were a bit older. Ben was about 13 then and had a girlfriend. He needed to leave by six. We started at about 5:30 after we’d eaten. I’ve never moved so slowly before. Halfway round he just gave up and walked to the finish line. It didn’t feel any different to win.

I was alone in the house with Grandma until 9 pm that night. She got up just after Ben left and pottered around the kitchen. I offered to make her her tea but she wanted to do it herself. It drove me mad with frustration seeing how long it took her to do everything.
She’d been through the Second World War and although she couldn’t have been wearing the slippers at the time it was somehow impossible to imagine her without them. I imagined her meeting Grandpa while wearing the slippers. Learning that her brother had lost his life in Belgium in those slippers. Listening to the news that the war was over in slippers.

We went to the park one Sunday shortly before she died. She sat on a bench while me and Ben and Da kicked a ball around. Ma talked to Grandma and on her phone. It was a late February day, the sun was out but our breath still frosted in the air. Grandma was wrapped up in a sheepskin coat and thick tights, a woolen hat which should have been red but had brownish streaks on the ribbing from her hair. We walked back through the town and as we passed a shoe shop I saw the same blue slippers that she was wearing. They were on display but decently presented in the back row of the window, not taking up room but just there if anyone wanted them. Special Offer, Everything Must Go. I looked back at Gran and for the first time saw how much she looked like Ma. More wrinkles and smaller. But a woman. Just like Ma was a woman before she became Ma. And then I was able to see her as she might have been. A little girl, a young woman. Wearing her best clothes when she went to meet Grandpa when they started stepping out. Making fun of her Granny when she was little. She looked at me and gave me her wise old woman smile. That’s what Da called it. But it wasn’t a wise old woman smile. It was just a smile. One person to another.


If I could only make one change it would be to rearrange the line ” Learning that her brother had lost his life in Belgium in those slippers.” so that it didn’t sound like her brother was wearing the slippers. Interesting, that’s the same mistake as I made last time. I need to watch that.

Making good progress on my first draft of my novel, 65% finished as of yesterday.

Filed Under: Flash fiction, Realism, Writing Prompts Tagged With: Flash fiction, Realism

Ford Dancer

March 7, 2019 by Morgan Delaney

Toy car on a turquoise and salmon coloured background
Photo by Moose Photos from Pexels

HI,

below is one of this week’s writing prompt exercises. I had to write for 20 minutes and include 5 random words. I haven’t added or changed anything since except to get rid of typos and smooth out a couple of cases where the tenses didn’t match up.

I include the list of words below. I think the car came from an episode of Narcos (second season, Blackie leaves the car and its contents in Bogota), which we’d been watching the previous evening.






I pushed the door. The Ford’s driver-side door swung out silently. The car was turquoise, an old model but riding it was still heavenly. It was heavy and sat low on its wheels as we purred around the streets of Cincinnati. There was always that beautiful moment when we stopped: the weight of the metal swung forward in response to the brakes. And then held. Perfect control.
I stood and closed the door behind me, the mechanism ratcheting closed. Beautiful.
There were a couple guys across the street watching me. Watching my car. They were in vests and tracksuit pants. Massive sneakers. Bellies just starting to hang over the waistbands. I watched them till they looked away. The car did that for me. Riding a machine like this. Only a real bad-ass would do something like that these days. Leather jacket and pimp’s car. I knew I looked like a cliche but fuck it. I was able to pull it off. No more Mr. Nice Guy.
I knocked on the door of the brownstone I’d pulled up in front of. No response. I hammered on it with my closed fist. There was no way these people weren’t home.
A man opened the door, kept the safety chain on. “Can I help you?” He tried to keep his voice level.
“I’m looking for someone.” I pulled the photo out of my back pocket, let him catch a glance at my piece as I do so. Helps with the answers, you know?
He looked at the photo. “My God!” His face went white, all the blood disappearing into his sweater, hiding in case there was trouble. “Maria!”
I took a step back and charged the door. The guy went down on his ass, the safety chain snapped and the door burst wide, letting out a quick shocked squeak before it banged into the far wall.
He cowered, one leg half raised, both arms up in front of his face. “Please!” he said.
I didn’t have time for this. Maria was just one of the names on my list.
I stepped over him. There! A door swung shut ahead of me. I ran and busted it open. “Maria” was there with her younger brother and their mother. She stared at me wide-eyed, a stuffed giraffe in a choke-hold in her left arm, her right thumb in her mouth in cotton pajamas. Her brother hung around his mother’s neck, looking back over his shoulder at me with his face ready to scrunch up into a bawling fit. Mom screamed and the guy — at least he wasn’t a coward — came running toward me. I stepped aside and pushed him. He fell again sprawling into his family. Mom tried to say something, her free hand fluttering at me, her other hand holding Baby tightly. I checked my pocket to discover another photo. Baby Billy. Looks like this family had recently enjoyed some expansion. Made no difference to me.
I walked up to them. Dad made to get up and I just shook my head, moving my arm to where the gun was. He understood.
I pulled out a box, neatly gift-wrapped. Then another one. Then two more. “Happy Christmas,” I said. “You’ve been good this year. Congratulations!”
I left.

Maria spoke just as I pulled the front door closed behind me. “Thank you, Santa.”


The prompts were:

heavenly

squeak

giraffe

discover

fluttering

expansion

If I could only change one thing it would be the horribly confusing: ” her right thumb in her mouth in cotton pyjamas.”


Filed Under: Crime, Flash fiction, Writing Prompts Tagged With: Crime, Flash fiction

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