It's All Hallow's Read (aka Halloween...with scary books). So here's a piece of flash fiction I had published in the most recent issue (#2) of Firewords Quarterly, a literary magazine out of the United Kingdom. Also, here's a link to the PDF of the actual two-page spread for my piece in Firewords - I love the art direction for it, and I think you'll agree, it's pretty great.
Enjoy, and a have a spooky Halloween.
-chris
I GOTTA GET OUTTA HERE
By C. M. Beckett
I need to get outta here. Winter ain’t even here an’ it’s already too
effin’ cold even with the friggin’ global warming.
Sorry, but I won’t curse in front
of my Ma, don’t matter how old I get. A
mom takes care o’ you, provides for ya, keeps food on your plate. You gotta appreciate that and show some
respect.
Of course, things changed with the
Little Big One. We could feel it all the
way over here. Some folks didn’t believe
me. Little tremors, like a shiver
runnin’ through your boots. And then
when it hit the news sites. Nobody knew
what to do. Sittin’ at home watchin’
crazies freakin’ out, killin’ their neighbors, drownin’ their kids. What the heck?!
We did what we do best up here –
hunker down and cut ourselves off from everything else. It wasn’t too hard, livin’ on a farm an’
all. Generations before us had done all
right with it, and with the government goin’ ta hell (sorry, Mom) it seemed the
best thing to do. Most people never knew
what to make of us up here anyway – ninety percent woods and nothin’ much ta do
‘cept drink and terrorize.
At first, things were good. We didn’t need for much, just had ta be
smart, use what we found and not waste nothin’.
Things’d be back to normal soon enough and then we’d get back to headin’
down to the mall and such.
That was a pipe dream.
Goin’ on twenty years now since it
all went to crap, and still no end in sight.
Most o’ the woods is gone now. At
least around here. When the oil prices
spiked durin’ the War, poachers swept in like huge vultures, layin’ waste to
practically the whole state. Now we got
no resources ta speak of. No
forests. No topsoil. No birds, no animals. Nothin’ worth a damn. Not here anyway.
So I need to move. No way to survive another winter here.
Tonight’s my last night. I managed to gather a few saplings for one
last meal before I hit the road. They’re
still raw an’ smoke more than burn, so I didn’t even bother with a pan, just
threw it on the fire. I like the skin
blackened anyway, gives it more flavor.
Should be done soon. It was hard the first time, with Gramps. Everybody squeamish, not wantin’ to partake
an’ all. My sister – she was always a
bitch (sorry, Ma) – got up and walked outside.
Wouldn’t eat nothin’ and upset my Ma no end.
It’s how Gramps woulda wanted
it. He’d lived a good life and died o’
natural causes. He would'na wanted us to
waste away too just because o’ some old-school civilities. The rules had changed and we did what we had
to do to live.
My sister was next o’ course, but
that wasn’t for quite a few months. I
dug right in that night. She’d fallen
and hurt herself somethin’ fierce. Not
much we could do. No doctors left, and
little in the way o’ supplies. We did
what we could. Made her
comfortable. Said some words over her
from the Good Book. But it wasn’t long
before she was gone too.
That was last winter, which was
pretty tough on all of us. Not many made
it to summer. We all knew what was
comin’ but didn’t talk much about it.
How could we? We had to look each
other in the eye every day.
Now I’m it. The last one.
I put that off as long as I could.
It was too hard. I mean, she’s my
Ma. She brought me into this shitfuck
(sorry, Ma) world. But in the end, she
understood which one of us had a better chance o’ makin’ it.
And she knew that a mom takes care
o’ ya, provides for ya, keeps food on your plate.
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