Hawthorn & Ash #100

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Welcome to this week’s installment of many micro stories, ranging in length from 100 words to 500 words.

With each story we hope to deliver a little whimsy into the lives of our readers.

AFTER THE BATTLE

I watch as in the castle cellar he scrubs his spear, the knife he employed at the end, all that gore needing to be scraped off before he can use anything again. My man stands straight now, but I know he limps from the blow I gave him with my tail.

He still wears the armour that withstood my fire, battered now and covered with broken scales, and in this dim light the steel seems dull, though there was a brief moment when I thought he shone.

But my mind plays tricks, I think. It’s understandable; the occasion was significant. He appeared small outside my cave, sweat stains already present on his horse’s few caparisons. I did wonder why they’d sent this one after all those armies I’d faced. His helmet wasn’t even plumed, and the cloak he wore was threadbare.

Now I ponder his horse; I never liked killing them, and maybe that’s why I hesitated, that valiant animal rushing pell-mell in my direction with no thought spared for itself. But no: he had his own skill, that thrust he made with his ancient sword stretching towards my heart.

Tomorrow they’ll place the bright crown on his ragged hair, adorn his bruised body with jewelled robes. I hope he gets some sleep between now and then, for his shoulders slump with weariness, and there’s a burn on his wrist from my blood-poison.

Over the years, there have been other heroes, maybe better. This one slayed me, though, so I stick with him. 

 

Colleen Addison completed a PhD in health information; she then promptly got sick herself. She now lives, writes, and heals on a small island off the coast of Vancouver, Canada. Her recent work has been published in Hawthorn & Ash, Little Free Lit Mag, and River Teeth: Beautiful Things. These and other pieces can be found at https://www.facebook.com/colleen.addison.5

 

If you enjoyed this story you can find it and more in the Hawthorn & Ash 2023 anthology.

AVAILABLE HERE!

 

Hawthorn & Ash #96

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Welcome to this week’s installment of many micro stories, ranging in length from 100 words to 500 words.

With each story we hope to deliver a little whimsy into the lives of our readers.

CHRISTMAS EVE

Bastet weaves through the crowd stomping along the streets with ease. Everyone is dressed in thick winter coats and gloves, which she has also donned so she doesn’t stand out. Her puffy coat is a garish yellow with a bright orange scarf to match. They were the only ones she could find on such short notice.

As she attempts to scan the crowd again, her foot catches on a gap in the pavement. She pinwheels her arms before falling flat on her face. A few of the humans give her sympathetic looks as they pass her. She jumps to her feet with a hiss, running her tongue along a tooth that feels like it might be chipped.

She’s not used to a human body.

It’s been years since she had to use her human form and her clumsiness is evident. She had wanted to remain in her feline form, until she realised that there were too many humans. They’re celebrating a holiday called Christmas Eve, where everyone is required to rush about in a loud panic to get ready for Christmas. She doesn’t understand why they don’t just get ready in advance but knows better than to try to make sense of their customs.

A cold gust of wind blows her dark hair in all directions. The scowl on her face deepens and she wishes the human she was looking for would show himself already.

There’s a break in the crowd towards the road, so she darts through it. Her fingers begin to tingle from the freezing temperatures, and she just wants to return to her warm den.

But then she spots him.

A man, leaning against a wall of one of the human shops. His face is covered in sweat and his coat is unzipped as if he’s boiling hot. His skin is almost grey and his breathing is laboured, like his lungs aren’t taking in enough air.

But Bastet knows it’s him from the smell. Although he’s still alive, just, the scent of decay is unmistakable. Her lips press into a fine line as she mulls over her options. She must get him away from the crowd before the infection reaches its peak.

While crossing the road she once more stumbles over her own feet and curses to herself. In the second that she looked away, the man has gone.

Panic rises in her chest as she looks in both directions before spotting him. There are now colourful bags in one of his hands while the other is leading a young girl forward. Bastet’s instincts kick in as the man suddenly stops, clutching his chest. She rushes forward and manages to rip the girl out of his weak grip.

“Hey!” A woman walking just ahead of him whirls around. “What do you think you’re doing?”

The man moans and snaps his head to glare at the woman. Before Bastet can react, he lunges forward and sinks his teeth into the woman’s hand.

She’s failed to stop the plague. 

Jessica Turnbull is an author who mainly writes Young Adult Fantasy. However, she is hoping to also branch into Sci-Fi, Horror and New Adult. Books got her through her darkest years as a teenager, and she hopes that one day her books will inspire young people to keep going. She lives in the UK with her cat, Mishka.

https://www.jessicaturnbull.com/

https://m.facebook.com/Jessica-Turnbull-2227439090829192

 

If you enjoyed this story you can find it and more in the Hawthorn & Ash 2023 anthology.

AVAILABLE HERE!

 

Hawthorn & Ash #92

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Welcome to this week’s installment of many micro stories, ranging in length from 100 words to 500 words.

With each story we hope to deliver a little whimsy into the lives of our readers.

FROST FAIRIES

Fairies in the frosted hedgerows, watching for lone travellers, giggle at the pranks they’ve planned.

Here comes one now, a fellow back from the tavern, a little worse for wear.

The fairies puff out handfuls of ice crystals which whirl and dance about the man, entrancing him with a scintillating swirl of light.

Out from the bushes they fly, leering at him, but he cannot see them. The fairies guide him off the lane and deep into the woods, abandoning him lost and alone, hiding in trees to watch him shiver and wander, confused, desperate to find his way home.

DJ Tyrer is the person behind Atlantean Publishing, editor of the View From Atlantis webzine, was a finalist in the 2024 Defenestrationism.net Flash Suite Contest, and has had flash fiction published in anthologies and magazines around the world, such as Alder and Ebony (Iron Fairy Publishing), Annihilation (Black Ink), Apples, Shadows and Light (Earlyworks Press), Drabbledark II (Shacklebound Books), Journals of Horror: Found Fiction (Pleasant Storm Entertainment), and Punk (Black Hare Press), issues of Sirens Call, Tigershark, and Worlds of Possibilities, and on Cease Cows, Reflex Press, The Flash Fiction Press, Space Squid, and Trembling With Fear.

https://djtyrer.blogspot.co.uk/

https://www.facebook.com/DJTyrerwriter/

https://atlanteanpublishing.wordpress.com/

 

If you enjoyed this story you can find it and more in the Hawthorn & Ash 2023 anthology.

AVAILABLE HERE!