The only stipulation was that the story should be 100 words or fewer and I think you'll be amazed at what they achieved.
The top three will win packages of books and cash, and all ten will appear in this year's anthology, which will be available for National Flash-Fiction Day on 27th June.
Congratulations and thanks to all who entered for making the judges' jobs so hard, and extra congratulations to our winners!
FIRST PRIZE
Fly
by Rob Walton
I’m rushing to push my lunch
box in to my bag when I see these two who must be flying a kite on the green
triangle outside the school because she’s holding a length of string, showing
him how to thread it through his fingers, but then I realise she’s teaching fly
fishing with no river for miles and the nearest polluted anyway and I look
again, and she’s reading him Ted Hughes and he’s hanging on every word as he
casts better than anyone I’ve ever seen, and we all realise that rivers are
just a bonus extra.
SECOND PRIZE
I want someone who wants me
so much they don’t care about grammar
by Laura Tansley
On a canker of a concrete
wall in a ground-up grey car park the colour of chewed gum a lover paints in
lower case ‘your nicer than my wife’ above the butt bumper of a blue Fiesta.
Each morning it waggles its way out of the space like a preening duck
presenting. And when the bay is empty I lie on the earth to feel the heat of tires,
the smoked breath of exhaust fumes and high-humidity whispers.
THIRD PRIZE
A Weekend Away
by Diane
Simmons
When I struggled off the
train, you laughed, ‘You’ve brought rather a lot.’
In formal hall, I copied how
others ate, tried not to grimace at the musty wine. At the theatre, you laughed
when an actor spat into the audience. I tried to look like I thought it funny.
I tried to enjoy the beer you
bought me in Trinity College bar, tried to like your boisterous friends, was
pleased when one asked, ‘What are you reading?’
I didn’t understand why
everyone laughed when I replied, ‘The new Ian Rankin.’
But when you laughed, I
understood you.
HIGHLY COMMENDED
Marks and Sparks
by Ian Shine
Her online dating profile
said she was into M&S, so I proposed we meet up at our local shopping
centre. I've been helping her with her dyslexia for a few months now, and she's
been giving me the time of my life.
The Pacifist
by Nick Triplow
Old man Wilson, he calls
himself a pacifist. Exchanges opinions and anecdotes for drinks at the Danny’s
Bar: a cut price raconteur preaching non-violence. Last night I discovered he
carried a loaded .38 in the pocket of his reefer. I said, ‘How d’you square it,
this turn the other cheek shit, with the thirty-eight?’
He boot-heeled his cigarette,
gave a smile that showed gaps where teeth used to be. ‘Wouldn’t feel right
bein’ a pacifist without it.’
"But— "
He pulled it, cocked it and rested
the business end against my forehead. ‘See son, how peaceful that makes you
feel?’
A History of Ants in the
Sugar Bowl
by Julie Sawyer
“Little blighters are back
again” Stan said. “Look” he added, finger stabbing the sugar bowl. Margo
looked. “This‘ll teach ‘em” Stan muttered, pouring boiling water from the
kettle into the frosted glass, grunting with satisfaction as a dozen or so
agonised black forms caught mid-syrup. Margo imagined she could hear their tiny
screams. “You’ll have to ant powder the place again” she said. Stan glared at
the offending bowl and harrumphed, before stomping out to the shed. Touching
the recently emptied matchbox in her pocket, Margo watched him go; knowing that
she now had a whole afternoon to herself.
And A Bottle of Rum
by
Garreth Wilcock
"Then the Pirate Queen
sliced my ribs with her cutlass and I fell to the deck as she left."
He lifted his gown to show
the gruesome scar to his niece.
"So how did you get off
your ship and into Papworth Hospital?"
"Glad you asked.
Mermaids towed my ship to shore, and my parrot stole a mobile and called
999."
"Daddy says you had a
double lung transplant, and you might be confused. Because of morphine."
Morphine, yes, but not
confused. Just not ready to tell a child that he was breathing with treasure
from a dead man's chest.
Spreading the Chaos
by Mark
Newman
He is taking groceries into
the house, an obedient little puppy; his wife directing him as if this is
something that needs supervision.
Out the window she yells 'oi,
shit brains. I've had the abortion, so screw you, have it all your way'.
He looks on with a bemused
expression, a lost little boy, unsure which way to turn. His wife punches him
on the shoulder; still he holds her gaze.
She winds the window up;
gives a mock salute and drives away.
She has never seen this man
before. This is just something she does; spreading the chaos.
Maturity
by Jude Higgins
I'll avoid sitting on cold
flag stones, swimming on a full stomach, going out with wet hair, bringing
lilacs into the house or trusting men whose eyebrows meet in the middle.
I'll wear a dress – sometimes
heels, attend my degree ceremonies, get a proper job, stay married, have
babies, cook roast dinners, celebrate Christmas, visit relatives, hold family
gatherings, stop causing arguments. Be kind.
I'll do what I want, even if
my mother wants it too.
Even if it makes me happy.
Stiff
by Joanna Campbell
When our Rose wouldn't put
her arms in the sleeves of her best frock, Mam wept. Not just because of
wanting Rose beautiful, but on account of the photographer charging by the
minute.
“We’re
up to a week’s housekeeping already,” Mam hissed, pinching Rose’s cheeks to
raise a bloom.
I
imagined four loaves, three quarts of milk and a string of prime sausage
floating out the window.
Rose
were right starchy-stiff. I couldn't twist her arm.
So
I crouched behind and pushed my arms through her sleeves, lacing my fingers,
just how our Mam wanted the corpse to look.
Well done to all here! It was a great bunch of stories and a pleasure to judge. Marvellous, one and all!
ReplyDeleteHigh standard of flashes – well done all :)
ReplyDelete