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Flash Fiction | What We Left Behind

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Fiction

What We Left Behind

And there he was. The rich American. The fat American. My Husband. My knight in shining armour.

   Well, ‘shining’ maybe is not the best word. ‘Tarnished’. That is a better word. My knight in tarnished armour. Though, ‘knight’ is not the best word, also. I do not know a better one. It was his job to love me, to open up this new life, in this land of opportunity.

   He did not know my secret. And never will. God willing.

   My husband held a sign with my name on it. Alexandra. It was spelled wrong. Aleksandra. Alex, to my few friends back home in Ukrayina. No not home. Not any more. This was my home now, with this man. My husband. He had seen my photo, through the Internet, and I had seen his. Still, we were strangers to one another, strangers now linked at the hip.

   “Hello,” he said, his strange accent making a slur of the word.

   “Hello,” I said, pitching my voice high. He would expect it to be high and I was used to the charade. I did not know what else to say.

   “Let me git that for ye.” He reached down, one meaty hand grazing my ass, and grabbed the handle of my single bag of luggage. Its wheel was broken and it wobbled as he dragged it to the taksi, tossed it roughly into the trunk, without a care for my things.

   “Well, hurry up!” he said, gesturing to the open door of the yellow taksi. “We’ve got to get home ‘fore four. The Diamondbacks are playin’ tonight. Playin’ the fuckin’ Pirates. I ain’t gonna miss that game. You like baseball?”

   “I do not know it very well. We do not like the Pirates?” I said, and entered the taksi.

   “Fuckin’ assholes, the Pirates.”

   “Hey! The Pirates ain’t so bad,” said the driver. I could see his eyes in the mirror. They were kind eyes. Naive eyes. He looked back at us, a cute smile on a crooked face. “My Pa’s from the Pitt.”

   My husband did not say anything back. Just grunted and gave the man a slip of paper.

   “42nd and third?” the driver said. He smiled at me, not my husband. Oh how his eyes glinted with good humour.

   I looked to my husband, not knowing what to say.

   “Yah,” he said. “42nd and third, like it says on the damn paper.” My husband looked at me and rolled his eyes.

   The driver gave me another of those knowing smiles. I was caught between the gazes of those two men. The taksi started moving.

   We were far from the airport when my husband spoke again. “So, girl. Tell me about yerself. Tell me everything.”

   I told him much during that car ride, for he was my husband. But I did not tell him everything.

Copyright © Aidan Moher, 2010

Just a fun little piece of Flash Fiction. It’s Romance week in my writing class and I was tasked with writing the first page of a Romance short story. I turned it into a somewhat self-contained piece of Flash fiction. What’s ‘her’ secret? You probably don’t want to know. Neither does her husband.

Short Story | ‘Piss and Vinegar’

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Fiction

Piss and Vinegar

There wasn’t much evidence to go by, not enough for my liking at least. Just an empty club, the maelstrom remnants of a dried out party, a skinny girl, a fat man and a very dead body.

   It wasn’t much, no, but I’d worked with less and come through the other end all right.

   The victim was tall and blonde, with a delicate face — handsome in a feminine, modelish sort of way. An Adonis. No signs of a struggle, but above his left breast, just visible through the open collar of his pink button-down shirt, was a welt, red and angry.

   I knelt next to him and pulled open the shirt. It was more than just a welt. It had the hot, blistered look of a bad sunburn. More startling, it was shaped perfectly like a handprint, as though someone had given him a shove with a hand-shaped branding iron. There wasn’t a mark on him otherwise. I’d seen things on the streets of Prague that’d make your skin crawl. I’d never seen something like this.

   A shadow fell over me, so I glanced up. A fat man in a damn expensive suit stood looking down, all piss and vinegar.

   The fat man spoke. He was the owner of the place, rich as fuck and as polite as you’d expect of his sort. “I’ve got a group of gentlemen coming in tonight who’re worth more than whatever shit town your mother raised you in. I don’t care who killed this cizinec. You’re going to make sure this place is open tonight, like none of this nonsense happened. I’ve got a reputation to keep.”

   “So do I,” I said. I didn’t tell him I was born in Prague, the same “shit town” that fed his gluttonous bank account. It wouldn’t do to make him angry, huh? At least not yet.

   By night the club was like any other in my city – a glitzy veneer of beautiful women, expensive drinks and lustful expressions painted with heavy strokes over top the reality of cocaine lines, high-class prostitution and fortunes lost and won through lucrative, alcohol-fueled foreign business deals. The Velvet Revolution had thrown my country from the pan into the fire, as they say, and sometimes it was hard to recognize it as the place I’d lived all my life. Still, it was better now. If you look at it from some certain angles. I guess.

   “Get it done,” the fat man said. “We’re opening those doors tonight.”

   “You’re not concerned that somebody was killed here last night, in your club?” I said.

   “Get it done.” He walked away, towards a plain door that led to the bowels of the building. Before he left through the fluorescent glow of the doorway, he snapped at the young girl behind the bar, literally snapped his fingers at her, and pointed a blunt finger my way. “Help him,” he said.

   She glanced my way, a bland look on her face, then took off the apron wrapped round her slim waist. The owner of the club stomped off through the door and left us alone. Just me and the pretty lady.

   “You’re here about him?” she said, jabbing a thumb at the body.

   She was like any other girl that worked at a place like this – pretty face, but nothing special, made exotic by the pulsing, toxic light of the night club. Dressed to entice, but no false-promises. Dark hair and sharp features made her look Slavic, her accent confirmed it. Likely, she pulled in more cash on a good night than I made in a week. She knew it, too.

   “Yes. You were here last night?” I asked. Easier to treat her as a piece of evidence than a pretty girl. I’m a lonely aging bastard, and I don’t need my dying hormones distracting me.

   “I might as well sleep in this shit hole,” she said.

   Most people I knew couldn’t even afford to pay cover for a club like this. Shit hole, indeed. “So you were here?”

   “Yeah. I’m always here.”

   “You’re not from here, from Prague or the Česká republika.” I made it a statement more than a question.

   “Pavol brings girls in from every corner. We deal with an international clientele here.”

   “You speak our language well. It’s not an easy one to wrap your tongue around.”

   “I’ve wrapped my tongue around much worse. I’ve been here a long time.”

   “How about him? Where was he from?” My turn to jab a finger at the victim.

   “Him? Tongue’s never been wrapped around any bit of him.” A damn devilish smile. “Blonde hair like that? Sweden. Norway, maybe?”

   His wallet, which was in the breast pocket of his jacket when I first searched the body, had no ID, but there were a couple of Swiss-issued credit cards, a few thousand koruna, a handful of euros and (the girl had good instincts) Swedish krona.

   “You didn’t talk to him?”

   “No. Margaret had a pull on him all night. She made out like a bandit, ’fore he died, I guess.”

   “Is she around? Margaret?”

   “Do you see her? You’d notice if she were, a rack like that.”

   “You know her cell number?”

   Surprisingly, she gave it to me. I rang the number, but got only voice mail. A quick message in Czech then a longer one in English. Sounded like she might be from Britain.

   “Not home?” the waitress asked.

   “No. No answer.”

   “Probably sleeping.”

   “Probably,” I said, but made a mental note to visit her apartment after I left the club.

   Awkward silence. Not something I was unfamiliar with in the realm of beautiful women.

   “He was supposed to be an asshole,” she said, finally.

   He looked like an asshole. Soul-patch, but smooth-cheeked. Even in death he had that cocky smile reserved for the rich, young and beautiful.

   “Asshole enough that he’d get himself killed?” I asked.

   “He’s got money, doesn’t he? Half the guys in here are a business move away from a bullet in the gut.”

   “Drug dealer?” I asked. He didn’t look the type, but sometimes it was hard to tell.

   “No. Clean as a whistle, if you ask Margaret. She’s always lookin’ for new clients. Especially when they’ve got money like him.”

   “You didn’t see anything last night?”

   “No. I found him dead here, this morning.”

   “I need to talk to Margaret.”

   “Yeah. Probably you do.”

   “You mind if I poke around?”

   “No. Pavol might.”

   “If I run into him, I’ll ask.”

   “Suit yourself.”

   She went back to whatever it is a pretty girl in a bar does before the doors open. People were coming to claim the body, run some tests. Could be drugs, no matter what she said. But that handprint told me it wasn’t.

   I followed in the footsteps of the fat owner and moved to the back of the building, hoping for some clues or, if I was really lucky, a stone-drunk murderer ready to spill his confession. Those aforementioned bowels of the building, where all of the club’s real dirty work happened, were surprisingly sterile. It’s like the club had an enema, knowing I was about to show up. Flushed all the shit. Doorways lined a long hallway, portals to the private rooms – to a heaven or hell (depending on who you ask) of sin, sex and spirits.

   I poked my head through a couple of doors. Some were large rooms, meant for private parties. Others were nothing more than hole-in-the-wall closets, a bed and little else. Mirrors were popular among the clientele, it seemed. So was silk.

   I found nothing of interest. They’d cleaned the rooms, and the victim had died in the main hall – dropped dead in the middle of a sweat-slicked crowd of dancers. If I hoped to learn anything, I needed to find the other girl, Missing Margaret. If she’d caught his eye, spent the night with him (or part of it), she might be just the evidence I was looking for.

   I passed through the main hall. A crew had arrived to remove the body and I stopped briefly to speak with them. They had a good look at the hand-print when I showed it to them, but said nothing.

   The body was done quickly, and I was finished with the club. I didn’t bid farewell on the way out, just left my card on the bar. The waitress and the fat owner weren’t around.

   Time to find my main girl Margaret.

   I stepped out of the unassuming doorway onto the street and squinted as sunshine washed over me. It was a cold morning in Prague and clear as you could ask for. A few steps down the sidewalk I bumped into another pedestrian, dark against the molten city.

   I mumbled an apology and tried to step around him. He stepped into my way again, bumping into me this time. He said something in a language I couldn’t understand. Middle Eastern, maybe.

   He stepped into the shade of the building, still blocking my way. I could see him clearly now — He was tall, wearing sweats and an old baseball cap turned backwards. A lean body, the subtleties in the way he held himself whispered of easy confidence. Dangerous bravado. His eyes were golden, cold as the day. Breath plumed from his mouth, hiding a twisted smile.

   “You poke your head in the wrong places,” he said, in thick-tongued Czech.

   Without another word, he lifted an arm and put a hand to my chest, fingers pressed lightly against my left breast.

Copyright © Aidan Moher, 2010

Piss and Vinegar is a piece of short fiction written for the Creative Writing class I’m currently enrolled in. This class asks us to step outside of our comfort zone and write in genres we’re not familiar with. The first of these was Crime Fiction/Mystery. Piss and Vinegar is my answer to that.

To inspire myself, I wanted to tie the short fiction from this class into some of my larger WIPs, to give me a playground to discover some of the settings and characters that may come to play in novels down the road. Piss and Vinegar ties into my next project, a loose follow-up to Through Bended Grass that takes place in the same universe, but features a whole new scenario and set of characters. One major player from this story plays an important role in that novel.

Due to the limited scope of the assignment (1,500ish words), I decided to work on character and scene setting, rather than trying to setup a proper beginning-middle-end story arc. Ambiguous ending? Yeah. Sorry ’bout that. Tune in later to find out more about what happened to our surly detective and his mysterious assassin.

Flash Fiction | The Office

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Fiction

Over at NeoGAF (an incredibly dense forum I visit regularly) they hold semi-weekly writing “assignments.” The purpose of these assignments is to get people to step outside their comfort zones and tackle subjects or themes that they normally stay away from.

 I decided to take part in this one at the last minute, and threw a piece together in about 45 minutes. It was a lot of fun and it’s something I think I’ll take part in again. I also thought that you guys might want to have a peak at it. It hasn’t seen any editing, and was written late at night, so just see any typos as, erm… flavour!

You should also know that the piece is completely unrelated to Through Bended Grass, so don’t go making any connections!

 I should warn you that it contains some explicit language, so if you’re sensitive to that sort of thing, watch out!

Enjoy.


 

The Office

   There was something brutal about him. Not in the UFC, nail your balls to the wall and then screw your wife kinda brutal; but more of a Simon Cowell, “Hey look at me, I’m a british asshole on TV. Aren’t I soooo fucking endearing?” kinda brutal. He was cute brutal. Fake brutal.

   “Take this shit and rewrite it,” he mumbled at me from across his desk. I watched the little ticker on his iTunes as a tired System of a Down song played its course, muted for my benefit, thankfully. Yeah, he was a System of a Down kinda asshole.

   “The deadline’s in like forty-five minutes…,” I mumbled apologetically.

   “Do I look like the kinda fuck who cares? The articles rubbish. You should’ve written something that reads better than my cat’s ass smells, then you wouldn’t have thirty-fuckin’-minutes to rewrite it. Now fuck off out of my office.”

   I pushed myself up out of the plastic chair and did my best not to tear his balding fucking face off his body. Of course, I was no better than any other pansy in the office, too afraid of his limp combover and the vein that stuck out on his forehead when the steam started pouring form his ears.

   I’m surprised the door didn’t hit me in the ass on the way out.

   Musical shrapnel violated my ears as he took his iTunes off of mute.

“Wake up,
Grab a brush and put a little (makeup),
Grab a brush and put a little,
Hide the scars to fade away the (shakeup)
Hide the scars to fade away the,
Why’d you leave the keys upon the table?
Here you go create another fable”

   I died a little more inside.

   “He seems to be havin’ a good day, eh Lucy?” Brian called from over on the other side of the small corner of the floor we all shared. The one benefit of having to put up with his shit music all day was that we all knew we could say whatever the fuck we wanted and he was oblivious.

   I responded as I walked over to my desk, sitting snugly next to Brian’s, “A right fuckin’ dandy, today. He only wants me to rewrite the entire fucking Coldplay article over again. Upstairs wants it in 30 minutes.”

   “Just send it up anyway, I don’t think he even reads the magazine. I do it all the time?”

   I paused, looking at Brian like he told me he had the cure for cancer or an alternate fuel source to replace gas.

   “That works?” I said slowly.

   “Oh fuck yeah,” a smug smile crept onto his face. “You think the guy’s upstairs give a damn about him? He ran some web site that closed down and had too much seniority to be fired. Hell, there’s a reason he just sits in his office like an asshole and doesn’t write anything.”

   “So just… send it up?”

   “Yep.”

   I slumped down into my chair, it bounced down softly under my weight. I leaned back, as one was wont to do in those chairs, and put my hands over my face.

   Was it really that easy all along? Just ignore him.

   “Why the fuck did I never think of that?” I wondered aloud.

   “Because you hate this place, Lucy. And you’re always looking for more reasons to hate the fucking place. So you write your work and, even though you know it’s the best stuff that comes out of this floor, you submit it to the fat, brutal bastard in the backroom, knowing full well that he’ll take all the anger in his miserable little life and throw it at your work. You want him to tear it to fucking pieces so that when you finally quit this place, you’ll feel vindicated.

   “We all do it.”

   I goggled at him. “Fuck if you shouldn’t have been a shrink,” I said, “or at least start a web site where you solve people’s problems.”

   He simpered, cocky pride beaming on his face.

   “So what the hell are you still doing here, if you have all the answers?” I countered.

   “I like the coffee.”

   “The coffee. That I make.”

   I did make a damn good cup of joe, I’ll admit to that.

   “And the bagel guy’s pretty cute. I’d miss him if I quit.”

   Another good point.

   Brian looked at his watch, “You’ve got 20 more minutes. What’re you going to do?”

   A few flicks of my mouse.

   “Done.”

   Brian gave me a look like I had just deep throated a hotdog, impressed but unsure really how to react. “I didn’t think you’d actually do it.”

   “What?” I felt my heart drop into my stomach.

   “I was just fucking with you. I’ve never sent that shit up there without any regard for the boss.”

   “What the fuck is wrong with you?” I felt a flush of panic creeping up from my chest and spreading over my face. I turn into a bloody tomato when the going gets tough.

   “Well, it’ll, um… it’ll be an interesting experiment.”

   My fingers ran nervously through the curly mop of hair on my head.

   “What’ll be an interesting experiment,” I heard from the door that led to the hall outside.

   “Hey Jess,” Brian called, “Lucy just sent her work upstairs without making the boss’s changes.”

   Jess, a blonde bombshell walked over to our little arrangement of desks. None of us could figure out why someone who looked like her would work with a bunch of folk who look like us. Even I had a crush on her and I was straight as an arrow… or so I thought. I think it was her french accent that sealed the deal.

   She set down her bag and then shrugged in the nonchalant way typical to her, “It’s too late now, right? Just hope for the best.”

   The music in his office shut off, Limp Bizkit put on temporary hold.

   The phone on my desk rang, a double ring indicating someone in the building was phoning me.

   The three of us all turned around and looked through the glass windows of the office, at the lumpy potato sitting in the chair. He had his phone pressed firmly to his ear and was furiously fixing his combover.

   Of course the asshole would phone me into his office when I was fifteen feet away.

   Jess patted me on the back and Brian had the decency to look a slight bit sheepish. I pushed myself up out of my chair, comforted by the familiar creak of the hinges. The few strides to his office door felt like a funeral march.

   I gripped the round door knob, looked back at my work mates, opened the door and stepped through to my silent grave.