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Flash Sledgehammer

We got creative with our 36-themed writing contests at the Write to Publish conference May 22-23 and offered Flash Sledgehammer, a 36-word contest. Fifteen writers submitted flash stories, and we found them all inventive and fun. Truth be told, we deliberated for quite a while and finally came to the conclusion that this contest and its submissions warranted three winners. Each will receive a free copy of Ink-Filled Page Red Anthology and a 30 percent discount on entering the Sledgehammer 36-Hour Writing Contest in September. Congratulations!

***

Date number three.

She looked up at me from flat on her back.

“Close your eyes,” I said. “Imagine hippos.”

A peach-scented breeze carried us from the banks of Savannah to the waters of the Nile.

© 2010 Vinnie Kinsella

***

Off on the savanna, out there one lion among lions, chewing satisfactory fills of suffered tasty meat once more, contented, he sighed, rolled over, hands lifted–little paws holding pieces of–something, something like…Jeannie.

“Jeannie!”

© 2010 Paula Friedman

***

The closeness of tanned skin holding the scent of coconut oil ignited our starving young passions. A balmy night and warm ocean breeze blessed the joining.

We smile when asked, “Why is her name Savannah?”

© 2010 Bob Ferguson

Mini Sledgehammer: May 2010

This month marked the first of our second-Tuesday recurring series of Mini Sledgehammers at Blackbird Wine Shop. Half a dozen writers showed up, and we had a great time writing, reading, and drinking wine. Thanks for hosting us, Andy!

Kari LunaKari Luna took home the prize package including four books, a calendar, and a classy bottle of wine.  Congratulations!

Prompts included:
a traveler
someplace warm with a snap in the air
“clouds in  my coffee”
tearing a page out of a calendar

Einstein’s Hand

I usually got an Americano, almost always a double Americano, but for some reason I chose a latte, instead. But there wasn’t a heart or a leaf or the ever-predictable swirls swimming in the cream, there were just clouds. In my coffee.

“Is something wrong?” Emily asked.

“No,” I said, lying for the third time that morning. “Everything’s great. This trip is going to be amazing.”

“Just what the doctor ordered,” Emily said, sitting back in her chair the way she always did. You know, the way that said she was right. “Doctors don’t send you to cool climates for nothing,” she said. “This is serious.”

The doctor she referred to was Dr. Angstrom, an archeologist-slash-physicist. The climate she referred to was Mongolia. And the serious business had nothing to do with my health. It was a dig that had something to do with Einstein’s right hand.

“It’s too warm here, anyway,” I said, brushing a fly away from my coffee. “A change will do me good.”

“You said that already,” she said, biting her pinky nail. This conversation was going the way most of them had gone for the past six months, ever since Angstrom had chosen me over Emily for the expedition, a dig most scientists believed was insane.

“Henry,” she said, moving her chair closer. “Let’s pick a date.”

We were sitting outside the train station but I could still feel the brisk air blowing in from the ocean. The Gulf was like that – serene and inviting one minute, a seven-headed monster the next.

“Henry?”

Emily pulled a calendar from her purse and not a small one, nothing handheld, but a full-sized wall calendar. Each month featured a photo of molecules in action, cartoon-style. Protons doing the lindy with neutrons, electrons whizzing down water slides, positives and negatives playing nicely with each other. The very sight of it disturbed me. So many things about her disturbed me.

“I was thinking next June,” she said. “You know, something Spring-like. The family would like that.”

I could be on the cover of Time Magazine by June. Surely I couldn’t marry her then. I thought our relationship was temporary, a grad school thing. I ran my fingers through my mop of curly black hair and adjusted my glasses. They were too big. I was going to hate that in Russia.

“It’s too early to plan,” I said, baffled. We’d barely spoken in months but Emily was still sporting the pink rock candy ring I’d given her last month like a trophy.

“It’s too early for anything,” I said.

My words fell through the slats in the wooden table and landed on her feet. She brushed them away, the same way she did the crumbs from her plate of scones. She loved the cinnamon ones and practically lived on them. Like she loved me. And lived on me.
“I’m the one planning this,” she said. “It will give me something to do while you’re away.”

While I’m away you should find yourself a new husband, I thought. A new career. Maybe something in knitting or the culinary arts. Or a mix of all of that with Math and form a new discipline like Dr. Angstrom.

Emily and I had met in his class six months ago. What she called a whirlwind romance, I called a trap. We were both so excited about Angstrom’s book, titled Einstein’s Right Hand – the Greatest Dig of Mankind and bonded over Mojitos and extreme science on public television. We were close enough to Miami to go out but far enough away so that studying was easily a priority. And this trip? My adventure? It was the first in a series of many. I could tell I was meant to search the world in honor of physics and anthropology underneath Angstrom’s wing. Even if others thought he was a quack. I was twenty-seven and had loved science since I was seven, so the term was somewhat familiar.

But now I was leaving the premier internship of the summer to do what no intern before me had done. Mongolia. Einstein’s right hand. My name in history. And lots of vodka, which I could do here, but with Emily millions of miles away it seemed much more romantic.

The announcement for the train to New York boomed across the speakers.

“Henry,” she pleaded. “You’ll need me when you’re out there in your fur coats doing shots and trying to support Angstrom’s improvable theories. You know I’m right. My letters will save you.”

I tore the month of June from the calendar. June, with its illustration of neutrons squirting neutrinos with a hose by the wading pool. I looked down at my coffee – no design, only puffy little clouds – and read it like tea leaves. Like I should have done in the beginning.

“You’re being unreasonable,” Emily said. Her right eye twitched, a large display of emotion for her.

“And you’re not engaged,” I said, ripping June into tiny pieces and dropping them in her coffee. “In life or with me.”

If I ever found Einstein’s right hand I’d love to return and slap her with it.

© 2010 Kari Luna

Please join us Tuesday, June 8 for the next Mini Sledgehammer!

Mini Sledgehammer: Floyd’s Coffee Shop

As anticipated, the most recent Mini Sledgehammer smashed through more writer’s block and produced great stories all around. Thanks to everyone who came out and threw a great story into the running. It was a tough decision.

Blythe Ayne took home the prize, which consisted of four books and a calendar. Congratulations!

Prompts included:
a football coach
in a Health & Welfare office
playing a board game
“Can you do one thing for me?”

Last Request

Monopoly is sometimes considered similar to the game of life. But it’s not. Life is really not about money.

Anyway, here I am, at the Health & Welfare office… that’s what they call it, but there’s little health here. Lots of welfare, but little health.

I see my reflection in the front windows, the broken shades have been partially pulled letting in broken shards of light. As much as I’d rather not see my reflection, I do. Even more broken than the window shades, the shards of light. I remember my former self, a big, buff football coach. Now, here’s this shattered reflection – a reflection of a reflection.

There’s a bunch of people playing monopoly, waiting for their names to be called, waiting to get their share of health and welfare. As if either can simply be doled out.

Someone behind me says, “can you do one thing for me?”

I turn. There stands probably the most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen this side of paradise.

Just like in the movies, I look around me to see who she’s addressing.

And I say, “are you talking to me?”

She doesn’t move or say anything.

“Are you talking to me?”

“I can tell,” she says, “you’re a gentle soul. Can you do one thing for me?”

“I… I don’t know. ” No one has asked me to do anything for them since the cancer got my guts and my wife couldn’t stand to watch me fade away and she, mercifully for both of us, left me.

“I used to do things for people every day. But….”

“I know,” she says, since you got sick….”

“That’s right. ” I can’t help staring. Her big violet eyes remind me of something, and I can’t look away. I see a tear course down her cheek. “What, my dear, what? If I can help, I will. But….”

“My son needs his mother, and I can’t reach him.”

“Why not?”

“I got so sick, and I couldn’t stay. I had to leave. Didn’t want to. But… just… couldn’t hang on.”

“So you want me to?….”

“I want you to find him and take care of him.”

“Me? Oh, I believe you’d better find someone else.“

“There’s not one else here. ” Her sad voice rolls around in my cavernous disease infested chest.

All around me, the place is jam-packed with people. But… funny thing, as my eyes pass over the window where I see my reflection, the beautiful woman isn’t standing beside me.

I turn to her. She reads my thought.

“Where are you? What are you?” I ask.

“Here and not here. Between worlds… because of my son. Unfinished business.”

I look up at the “Health & Welfare” sign, contemplating my remaining short journey.

“What kind of power do you have to appear to me, to talk to me?”

“I don’t know… I’ve been looking for a kind person who has the same fractal pattern as my son. ”

The same fractal pattern? “What?”

“Oh, too difficult to explain. But… when you… that is… eventually it’ll be perfectly clear.”

“Never mind.” I look deep into her violet eyes. “Can you trade places with me?”

“Truly?” she asks, shocked.

“Truly. I don’t have much time here, it really doesn’t make much difference to me. You won’t have long, but it’s better than leaving unfinished business.”

In a flash, I find myself inside a fractal pattern, looking through it at the most beautiful woman I’d ever seen, though obviously in poor health, walking out of the Health and Welfare office, with a huge smile on her face.

It fills me with joy as I turn, peering down this new path. I hurry toward a wonderful light at the end of a swirling fractal tunnel.

© 2010 Blythe Ayne

Mini Sledgehammer: Blackbird Wine Shop

Thanks to everyone who came out to Blackbird Wine Shop for this week’s Mini Sledgehammer. (By the way, Blackbird has agreed to host Mini Sledgehammers the second Tuesday of every month starting in May. Come challenge your inner scribe once a month!) Congratulations to Pamela Ivey, who won the evening’s event with the following story.

Prompts included:
a graphic designer
tracking a package
Yeah, I can believe that.
an art gallery

There’s a message from an unfamiliar number on my telephone.

I’m already feeling a little off-kilter, a little out-of-place, as I mill about glancing at paintings of teacups on tea-stained muslin, waiting to speak to the person I fervently hope will change my life. The walls of this small gallery seem somehow not true, a wonky perspective, but I’m no graphic designer although if that’s the only way to get my foot in the door I’ll say I aced my courses in InDesign and toss about terms such as kerning and gutters and maybe drop the name of Robert Rauschenberg. I’m pretending, desperately, but a job’s a job and I have a connection it’d be a shame to waste. If only she weren’t so late—

I’m edgy, and not even really sure why I’m here, after all. What’s to be gained by pretending I have I skill that I have not? Although, it’s true, I’ve had the classes, I can drop names, but was I ever skylarking and can’t claim mastery. Graphic design’s not what I want to do, anyway—and I doubt this crazy scheme will pull together—but it’s sure that I’m unraveling as I wait wait wait for this initial meeting to commence.

So I pop back out to the vestibule—there’s no one anywhere that I can see, although I was fifteen minutes early for this meeting. The scheduled time has come and gone and the chipper assistant who assigned me Miz Mills would soon be with me has eerily disappeared.

Fine. I’ll listen to this message, though I fear it’s merely some creditor calling to dun me—oh, I owe, I owe.

It’s FedEx.

A message from Federal Express, saying they must confirm my apartment number in order to deliver a package—but the name is one I haven’t used for nearly three years. I divorced myself from that name, burned sage around it and sowed it with alt—it was my name for a while but now long ago. Who would send me a package addressed to that name?

It strikes me as ominous.

And I feel cold.

I’m pacing, back in the gallery of spilled teacup paintings—much muslin, very delicate and irrevocably stained. These paintings are confections: fine china cups brimming a sea of Lady Grey, next to painted pralines and madeleines—cookies that snap, the kind that caused ol’ Proust to reflect. Not really my style, but I like bold strokes—but where is the woman with the power to transform my life? And who is it thinks I am still this person I am no longer?

I’m starting to feel as though I’m trapped in a Poe story.

“Yeah, I can believe that,” I say aloud to the teacup paintings. “Quoth the raven, nevermore—”

And it is a little weird to be speaking to myself, quoting Edgar Allan Poe—I can’t decide if it’s a good healthy quirky or if I should be worried—

But then, I’m worried about that package, addressed to the long-ago me, I mean, seriously? Everyone who should want to give me anything to me knows my new true name. Will this package tick? Or is it stacks of money fir to please Scrooge McDuck? Money is the only thing I need—except, I guess, right now—to have my damned interview commence. Where is this woman?

I realize that I can track the package. I’ll go online, I’ll determine whether or not this unlooked-for gift s anything I care to accept.

—It could be—

Mini Sledgehammer: Sweet Pea

The Mini Sledges are back in 2010, and as fun as ever! Thanks to Sweet Pea Baking Company for hosting last Saturday’s event.

Justin Searns happened to be in the cafe studying for a medical school exam and decided to take a break for the writing contest…and he won! Congratulations!

Prompts were:
in a cafe
“I’ve never felt sorry for…”
a mechanic
digging through the trash

The woman in front of me in line has a tattoo across the back of her neck; its color is thick like india ink.  I try not to stare but the rareness of art in the early morning makes it impossible.  It’s an oak tree, all one shade of black, ominous, and wonderful, and impetuous.  I focus at the root of her tattoo.  The gnarled branches spiral up and around the edges of her neck towards her ears that are staring back at me, and I’m sure if we were to have a conversation it would be reckless.

She rubs her elbows self-consciously as we slowly shuffle forward in lockstep with the other patrons. I’m guessing she’s in her 30s.  When she reaches her hand to the back of her pocket to grasp the chain leading to her wallet, I notice her fingernails.  They are coal black.  Not from nail polish but from somewhere underneath.  Like she has blood made of motor oil.

I’m new to this town.  Haven’t met many people yet, and I’ve found if I sit long enough at a café on the weekend, one of two things will inevitably happen.  Either I will lazily watch other people go about their days until I feel a sudden swell of community, or I will talk to strangers.  Today, I am inspired by her tattoo and the second option seems more likely.

I wait to test the water until after I order and we are both standing waiting at the counter.  She is drumming those coal black nails against the glass display. She is not impatient, rather she is trying her best to mimic the rhythm going over the stereo in the kitchen.  We make eye contact and smile as I ask her if she knows who the band is.  Neither of us do, and she continues to tap her nails as I look at the other strangers in line and quietly whistle to myself.

By happenstance, there are only two seats left open and we find ourselves sitting together, armed now with nothing but time, one cup of coffee black as her nails, and one cup of tea, british as my mother.   We forego the usual where are you from charade, and I embark straight on the quest of asking her why the beds of her nails look like polished onyx.

She works as a mechanic she says.  At a car shop down the street.  Her shift doesn’t start for awhile, and she is relishing the slow start of a weekend day.

“I didn’t realize there were mechanics who work on Sundays” I say.

“We found that it’s better for business” she responds “Since everyone hates that time crunch of trying to get their car in to be seen like they are squeezing their toddler in for a doctor’s appointment.  It’s less stressful for all of us.”

She owns the space around her well.  And I decide to counter her argument.

“But when you are busy at work, you miss out on the wonderful sadness that Sunday’s have to offer.” I reply.

“I’ve never felt sorry for Sunday’s.” She says scratching the back of her neck at the root of the oak tree.  “They always feel stressful, and it is clearly the most pretentious and overrated day of the week.  That’s why god chose it as her day.  Or maybe because god chose it is why I don’t like it.  I’ve never made my mind up about that one.”

Outside on the street, the two of us are distracted by a stray dog digging through a tipped over trashcan.  We watch as the café owner strolls outside to shoe him away from the other customers sitting outside in the sun.

We finish our coffees, as our conversation dwindles, and she hurriedly clears her dishes as she glances at the clock.  A simple head nod from the both of us, and she is out the door.  I am left in the sunlight streaming through the front window, back to the business, of feeling community with strangers.