Ducky – 100 Word Wednesday

Title: Ducky
Source:  100 Word Wednesday: Week 122
Word count: 100 words

Image by Bikurgurl

A man entered the Valley House brewery carrying a wood duck and sat at the bar. The duck’s painted head and red glass eye glared at the bartender.

“What’s with the duck?” the bartender asked.

“Would you trade a few rounds of your Wood Duck Wee Heavy Ale for this decoy?”

The bartender poured his drink and set the decoy behind the bar.

A few days later the bartender stroked the decoy’s head and smiled. It was a good deal. A few more free drinks and the glaring duck’s head became the perfect tap pull for his Wood Duck Ale.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Second Childhood – Friday Fictioneers

Title: Second Childhood
Source:  Friday Fictioneers sponsored by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields-Addicted to Purple
Word count: 100 words

PHOTO PROMPT © J Hardy Carroll

Nina cringed. The other girls wrinkled their noses. No one played Pin the Tail on the Donkey.

Hands on her hips, Candace shook her head. “This is a lame ass game,” she said.

Candace’s mother stood a few feet away and heard every word. Faster than lightning, she grabbed Candace’s elbow jerking her aside. Candace yelped.

“You will not be disrespectful,” she spat as she dragged her off for a private lecture.

Blindfolded, Nina stuck the paper tail to the wall. The woman in the wheelchair clapped her hands and squealed. Nina smiled and went to kiss her grandmother’s cheek.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Restoring a Giant – Flash Fiction Challenge

Title: Restoring a Giant
Source:  Flash Fiction Challenge
Prompt: Write a story that goes in search of trees.
Word count:  99 words

The forest of Laurel’s childhood was gone. She remembered great stands of the mighty American Chestnut tree, which grew nearly one hundred feet tall with trunks ten feet in diameter. It was once the most common hardwood tree in the Northeastern United States. The tree’s wood was rot-resistant, straight-grained, and it produced nuts that fed cattle, hogs and other wildlife. Laurel remembered eating roasted chestnuts every fall.

A tree that had survived for 40 million years, disappeared in 40, destroyed by the chestnut blight. Her children worked to restore a forest they had never seen and could only imagine.

*** To learn more about restoration efforts, check out The American Chestnut Foundation (here).
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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Balancing Connections – 3 Line Tales

From Sonya’s 3LineTales at Only100Words.
You can find the original prompt here. Thank you, Sonya

photo by Form via Unsplash 

Mira’s world was a cacophony of clicks, clacks, and buzzing to alert her of notifications which needed her immediate attention.

Distracted, bewildered, and unsure of her purpose she escaped to the roof.

On her yoga mat, Mira lifted her heart, found her breath, and as she connected with the ground, she let it all go.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Adapting to Technology – 100 Word Wednesday

Title: Adapting to Technology
Source:  100 Word Wednesday: Week 121
Word count: 100 words

Image by Adriana Velásquez 

Virginia focused her concentration and knocked the bookshelves’ contents onto the floor. They crashed, thumping as they landed. The sound reverberated through the quiet library.

Megan jumped from her chair, investigating each row until she found the pile.

“Not again,” Megan looked, but she knew she was alone.

“I need more books,” Virginia screeched.

Megan replaced them on their shelf.

Virginia had seen the magical black slates the patrons carried. Peaking over shoulders revealed enough words and stories to quell her boredom. It only took a finger swipe to turn the pages.

It was a trick she hadn’t mastered. Yet.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

 

The Contender’s Heat – Friday Fictioneers

Title: The Contender’s Heat
Source:  Friday Fictioneers sponsored by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields-Addicted to Purple
Word count: 100 words

PHOTO PROMPT © Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

Jenny froze. On the starting block, her uncomfortable swimsuit grabbed her in places she would rather not be grabbed. Her goggles threatened to suck her eyes from their sockets and the swim cap distorted every sound in the echoing natatorium.

Terrifying memories surfaced warning her of imminent danger. She held her breath. Brackish water swirled and silt obscured her vision. The current tugged, pulling her deeper. Struggling, she fought, reaching for the light. Her life flashed by, and she screamed, as her world turned dark.

Today the master would win. The starter’s pistol fired and launched Jenny into the unknown.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

 

Wisdom of the Ages – Flash Fiction Challenge

Title: Wisdom of the Ages
Source:  Flash Fiction Challenge
Prompt: Write a story about growing older
Word count:  99 words

It was the time of Antiquity.  The temple rose, constructed with care to mark a sacred spot. Tested by fire, its original purpose faded from consciences. Each day, the sun painted the walls in a soft luminous glow, recording the years, decades and millenniums. The Oculus recorded the words of countless stories and etched them on the dome’s geometric perfection.

Time evolved, morphing into something different. It became elastic and unimportant. Wisdom replaced foolish desires and meaningless acquisitions of petty trinkets. It distilled the truth, divulging the secret 0simplicity of being, seeing and feeling with no reservations, without judgment.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

The Cowardly Cousin – Weekend Writing Prompt

Title: The Cowardly Cousin
Source:  Weekend Writing Prompt #105 – Denial
Objective: Write a poem or piece of prose in exactly 77 words.

sign on wall do not enter

Photo by Kyle Glenn on Unsplash

The campaign was a success. Marius had defeated the crown’s enemy and annexed the disputed lands for the king.

His army marched toward home, eager to rejoin their families and return to more leisurely and peaceful pursuits. But the real war had not yet begun. They found their city occupied by Marius’s cousin, Atticus. He declared Marius a bastard and crowned himself lord of the Duchy.

“His denial of the truth will be his ruin,” Marius vowed.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Uncertain Future – 3 Line Tales

Photo by Philippe Mignot on Unsplash

From Sonya’s 3LineTales at Only100Words.
You can find the original prompt here. Thank you, Sonya

During the season, invaders descended, renting homes for prices the natives could not afford, and which forced them to decide if they should stay or go.

The monstrous cruise ships carrying hordes of day-trippers, returned to the sea, leaving destruction in their wake.

The Venetians sighed, knowing for a few short hours their crumbling city, was still their home.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Corazón en el Fuego

Flamenco dancer in red and black

Photo by Vitor Pinto on Unsplash

They would tumble through the door soon. It was the one class of the week Leticia didn’t look forward to teaching. Still, a girl needed to pay the rent.

Right on time black sedans pulled in front of the building and released the young girls. They exploded into the space jabbering and calling to each other as they filed into the dressing room swapping street clothes for long flowing skirts. They filtered into the studio milling around as the hour approached.

“Ladies, ladies,” Leticia called, clapping to gain their attention. “We will start now.”

Music played, and the girls mimicked the choreographed steps. Leticia following their languid arm movements, their anemic stomps, and sloppy footwork. The ladies led privileged lives, sent to her class to occupy their time while their parents worked. She knew they didn’t really want to take part, but their lack of passion wounded her. Her heart ached for them.

She stopped the music, tears in her eyes as she faced them.

“Flamenco is about emotions,” Leticia clenched her fist and let her frustration explode in her words.  “I see no feelings, not joy, not despair. There is not love in your movements,” she relaxed her hand, her sweeping gesture expressing volumes, “or even hate, or anger, or grief. Nada. You give me meaningless movement.”

Her palm rested like a butterfly above her heart, her head dropped in reverence. The music began again, and her fingers fluttered to the beat. Softly, first, the intensity grew, the butterfly changed, transforming into heavy, powerful beats coursing through her body.

“It starts with the fire, profundo en tu corazón. Siente lo que vive allí.”

The girls followed Leticia, feeling their fire, they listened with their hearts. And they danced.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer