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Respawn – Flash Fiction Friday

Act more casual she told herself. Stacy fiddled with the slip of paper in her pocket, folding and unfolding it with her fingers until she forced herself to stop. She took a deep breath, trying to relax.
The numbers on the paper were a clear message to her. In code. She recognized it at once. It was a code she and Hillary had used for fun for months now. But Hillary had gone missing last week after confiding in Stacy that she thought she was being watched. Now the code shows up.
It would be easy to decode, but Stacy had to get in the game. She arrived at the gaming cafe and walked in, not allowing herself to look around too much to see if anyone was following her. The cafe was less than half full. That was good. Enough people to blend into, enough open spaces to grab a terminal and get in and out again.
She ordered peppermint tea and took it to an open terminal where she could see the front door without turning. She logged in as a guest and created a new user registration for the game. Every dat that had passed since she last saw Hillary made her more paranoid. She didn’t want to leave a digital trail of her own account info.
Once in the game though, the code didn’t work. The numbers were in pairs, coordinates on the game map. Each should be a named location in the game and she should use the first letter of the location for the message, but the first five locations were in the middle of nowhere. No name to use.
Stacy sat back in her seat, staring at the screen and thought. What was wrong? Then it clicked. The cafe used the game’s local server. Hillary was probably using the one for their home location, which was different. A different map.
Stacy glanced around. Was this the sort of place she could get away with hacking into to change servers? Would they even notice? It was a nice place. Upscale compared to the places she usually hung. There were only two employees, one was behind the counter and seemed to be keeping busy with orders, and the other moving around the cafe busing dishes, wiping tables, and such. She looked at the ceiling. Two black domes which were likely video cameras. Yet there were partitions around each terminal, so she didn’t think the cameras were there to see what people were playing. The cameras would have a tough time seeing any screens. The benefits of an upscale place – they wanted customers to feel a sense of privacy.
If anyone wanted to see what she was doing they could always check this station later. She was sure it kept a log of activity, but no one would look until after she had gone, and there was a little she could do real quick to cover her tracks before she went.
Halfway through this train of thought, she had already started hacking into her home region server, and five minutes later had deciphered the code. Hillary was safe. She’d learned it was her ex, Todd, who had been following her. Although he never seemed to accept the ‘ex’ part. So Hillary had disappeared. Not the first time she had had to do so, Stacy knew.
She also knew that when Hillary disappeared, she had left everyone she knew behind unaware. She had to. Todd could get to anyone and if anyone knew where Hillary had gone, Todd could find out. Stacy knew what it must have meant for Hillary to send her that code. To let Stacy know, to stay in touch at all. It was a risk.

Stacy did what she could to erase her tracks from the rental computer, finished her tea, and left. She thought she should find a way to respond, but she would have to find a safe way. After such a show of trust from Hillary, she would be damned if she would risk bringing her danger. She couldn’t let Todd get anywhere near Hillary. But how? Perhaps she just had to wait, and trust Hillary would contact her again when she felt it was safe to do so. It was so frustrating to was to much to help and feel so powerless to do so. Maybe a better plan to keep her friend safe was to find a way to make sure Todd couldn’t threaten Hillary ever again. 
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Tummy Ache – Flash Fiction Friday

Bethany clutched her stomach with her left hand while leaning heavily on the stair’s handrail with her right.  She took one more step up, breathing out in a rush through her mouth.

The pain wasn’t that bad, she insisted to herself. She was just over tired. If she could get upstairs and just lay down for a few minutes she would feel much better.

She took another step, this time sucking a quick breath in through her teeth. Looking up the long staircase in front of her, she took one long steadying breath and forced herself upright to start up the steps in as normal a stair-climbing posture as she could manage.

“Merow!” A black furry blur darted down the steps right at her and into a circle that twined itself around her legs forcing Bethany to grab the handrail again or risk falling to the landing below.

“Shadow,” Bethany said, pausing again to breathe and calm herself. “Not now sweetie. Come upstairs. I’ll snuggle with you there.” She took the last three steps slower, placing her feet more carefully as Shadow continued to dart around underfoot.

Shadow would need dinner soon. Add that to all the other things she needed to take care of: picking up the grand-kids from school, checking in with Ms. Brown next door to make sure she was taking her medicine like she was supposed to, running by the marker to get the last few things she needed to make dinner before Henry came home. Bethany just didn’t have time to feel unwell. A half hour nap, or at least a lie down was all she could manage. It would just have to be enough.

Chills went through her causing spasms of shivers as she made her way from the top of the stairs to the bedroom, Shadow trotting on ahead. Sitting down on the edge of the bed sent such a sharp stab of pain through her lower right abdomen that even Bethany could no longer pretend this was something that she could overcome with a nap.

She reached for the phone, dialed her doctor’s office, speaking with a nurse there who, after a few questions, said she would send an ambulance. Bethany thanked her, and as she imagined the effort to go back downstairs to open the door, she tried to hang up the phone. She missed the cradle, knocking the bedside lamp which tipped and fell to the floor, shattering in tiny pieces.

Shadow leaped onto the bed in alarm, then curled herself around Bethany’s head, partially on the pillow, purring and kneading her.

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Vixen and the Temporal Portal


The first time Vixen ran through the temporal gate, she’d been running from something large and noisy. She didn’t know for sure what, but a young fox didn’t wait around to find out if they had any sense at all. The charged air made her fir stand on end, and if she’d approached slowly enough to feel it ahead of time, she never would have gone through. The disturbing tingle wasn’t the only shocking change. It had been deep after moon rise when she had been out hunting, but suddenly it was just after dawn. The forest also suddenly held twice as many trees. In fact, she had to swerve in her run to avoid a giant trunk that sprung up in front of her.
She stopped, looking frantically around. Everything was different, but familiar at the same time. Some of the trees smelled the same, but there were new kinds, with new smells. The nearby creek smelled much stronger. Despite the change from night to day, the air was cooler. She crouched, remembering she was fleeing from a threat, but now didn’t hear anything but the wind. 
Moments passes, and after a time, she heard a rustling nearby, but this time it was the noise of something tiny. Despite the strangeness of the place she knew prey when she heard it. She stayed crouched and still, watching the direction the sound had come from and was rewarded a second later with a wood rat crawling out of a pile of dried leaves. She was on him in a blink and the creature never knew what hit him. 
Grasping the carcass in her teeth, she trotted toward home this time feeling the prickling along her skin ahead of time, but so hungry and anxious to get her meal back to her burrow that she pressed on despite the discomfort. She didn’t remember the last time she’d had such a big, plump rat. Possibly she never had. 
She remembered that rat, and the tingling that came with it. It wasn’t too much longer before she searched for that tingle again. Her mate had stopped bringing food to the den. She had tried to search for him, but had no luck. Her pregnancy was advancing, and she was hungry often. She was drawn to the place of abundant smells and fat rats. 
Over the next week she hunted there regularly. She would trot or dart through the gateway to minimize the discomfort with the transition. She lingered in the new lush land longer at each visit, until she began to tire and wanted to snuggle into her burrow back home. Then, completely by accident she found a nice cozy abandoned burrow. Not perfect, but a good fit, and it could be adjusted to be even better. It was near time for the kits to come, and living here would mean no more icky tingles. She’d caught a young rat this time, and took it into the new hole. She never went through the temporal gate again.
Unknown to Vixen, that decision marked the official extinction of red foxes in 2042, and their spontaneous reemergence in 2197 thanks to the Temporal Species and Habitat Restoration Program (TSAHR), and one of the Program’s greatest successes. 
prompt – moon, skin, caught
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Camping Under the Falling Star – Flash Fiction Friday


As Allie waded through the shin high grasses and prickly weeds her flashlight scanning back and forth, her feet sore, she thought more and more that her quest was foolish. She should come back in the daytime when she could see better. She knew she had to be close to the meteorite impact spot. She’d been lying in her sleeping bag, watching the stars when she saw the tell-tale streak through the sky, but bigger and brighter than any she’d seen before. It disappeared, and just seconds later, she’d felt the ground vibrate. She knew what had happened, and she felt she knew which direction the vibration had come from. Now she couldn’t help but question how she thought she’d been so sure to head out in the dark of night.
To hell with it. She would go back to camp and come look again in the morning. She was in the middle of nowhere for Pete’s sake. It wasn’t like someone else was going to sneak in and snag it out from under her.
She turned and started wading back across the field. When she thought she should be getting close to the tree line that would mark the edge of the forest she was camped in she swung the beam of her flashlight up higher, looking further out. No trees. Apparently she had gone further afield then she realized at the time. She kept walking. 
Several minutes later she was still walking and still no trees in sight. Now she’s wondering about her perception of the walk out. Her feet were sore. She stopped, turning slowly, shining her light to the end of the beam. The field looked Identical in every direction. By the time she had turned all the way around she wasn’t even sure she was still pointed the same way she had started.
Her legs folded and she sat suddenly, tears overwhelming her. The tall grass brushed her face and stickers poked her ankles as they lodged in her socks, and made everything feel just that much more hopeless.
She knew when the sun came up she would be able to orient herself and get back to camp. There was no point in continuing to wander. Still, she let herself wallow and weep and feel hopeless. Maybe she could wear herself out emotionally and she could fall asleep here in the foxtails and weeds. The tears faded out, but her exhaustion manifested in staring off into the dim distance with a blank mind. There was no sleep.
She didn’t know how long she sat there, it felt both an eternity and momentary. In time however, she noticed a change. Treetops began to show against a slightly lighter sky. She stood up. The tree line was off slightly to her right; she hadn’t been so very off in the direction she’d been headed. Just far off enough. 
Bending to pick up her pack, she saw it. A black rock in a shallow depression a foot from her bag. She’d sat next to it all night long. She touched it tentatively. Quickly, pulling her hand away assuming it would be hot, but it wasn’t. She picked it up. A fine soot coated the surface, and she smiled as it came off on her fingers.
Cradling the meteorite in her had, not even bothering to put it in her bag she walked back to camp with plans to nap and celebrate. 
Writing prompt: Rock, change, lost

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Love Squash – Flash Fiction Friday


Jon pushed his wide brimmed hat back and wiped his forehead with his handkerchief. The hot sun lamps in the hydroponics bay could wear on a man after a while. Sitting on the edge of a raised bed of acorn squash he pulled out his water bottle and took a drink. 
It was well past the end of his shift. He would be fine heading home, and while there were always things to do, there wasn’t anything that couldn’t wait until tomorrow. Still he sat. For the past week, ever since Christy stood him up, he hadn’t gone out much. Or at all. He didn’t want to run into her in the corridors, or the laundry, or the cafeteria. So he was keeping deliberately odd hours to avoid her. Childish, possibly, but he didn’t care. 
He realized he was sitting in the exact spot now where they had promised to meet. Like a fool he’d spent a ridiculous amount of time in front of the mirror primping his hair. He even remembered how slippery the plastic handle of the hairbrush had been in his sweaty hand. Even more, he remembered the solid lump in his pocket from the ring box. He’d been a nervous wreck. 
Then the waiting. She worked in the kitchens, so she was off when everything was done, not a specific time. Still she was usually free by 8:30 or so. By 9:30 he’d finally left to go to the kitchens. Maybe there was some sort of problem. Maybe he could help. But the kitchens were dark, the doors locked. Then it hit him that she had stood him up. And he had been ready to ask. . . he dodged a bullet there after all, he thought.
The lights dimmed; they were on timers and it was getting later. He stood up. No point in brewing over it anymore. It was what it was. His messenger pinged in his pocket. He tried to pull it out with the hand holding his water and he fumbled the device. It fell through a leafy squash plant and landed with a plop in the dirt. He set his bottle down and shoved leaves aside to get it back. In the semi darkness he saw a shiny glint and reached for it. It was an acorn squash, but he felt something metal as well, he plucked the vegetable out. The vegetable was misshapen. Around its middle was a silver bracelet. The one he’d given Christy he knew at once, but her rolled the squash over in his hand to confirm, and as expected he found the little silver heart with the word ‘love’ stamped on it. Also attached to the bracelet was a message stamp. That had been added on.
How did that get here? When could she have brought it without him knowing? Had someone stolen it? With apprehension, he pressed the stamp. It popped and crackled, but between all that he could make out Christy’s voice, but not her words. The stamp had been lying in the dirt, and getting watered for a week no he realized. It had been there a week, enough time for this squash to grow around the bracelet. She had come. She’d come and she’d left this here for him. 
With growing dread, he dove back into the plant and pulled out his messenger. The ping had been from Christy. “Are you free to get together tonight?” He’d been ignoring her messages, and they had started coming less and less often. He looked back at them now with new eyes. “I’m sorry.” “Did you get my message?” “Are you mad at me?” “Can you come see me?” “Where are you?” She wasn’t sorry for hurting and leaving him, he saw now. She was sorry for something else. Something that had kept her from staying that night.
Ah! That night! A cat had come rushing out of the garden and scared him half to death in the dark he remembered. He’d all but fallen over, and he thought his hair had gotten all a mess. He’d rushed off to check it. He’d only been gone a minute. Damn it, and damn his pride too.
He hastily wiped his messenger on his pants to get the dirt off and replied that yes, he was free. Did she want to come over?
She replied she couldn’t. She was still at the hospital bay.
Still? He wondered. He asked if she were all right, feeling panic rise.
Yes, it was her father. Didn’t he get her message? She was there with him. Would Jon be willing to come there? She didn’t like leaving him. 
Yes, absolutely. I’m leaving work now, let me clean up and I’ll be right there.
Thank you so much. I’ve really needed you. See you soon. 
There were flowers by the water tanks. He could clip a few of those on the way out to bring to her father. He looked at the bracelet trying to think of the best way to get it off the squash, and then decided to leave it. It kinda looked like a heart now the way it was dented in. He’d give her the whole thing.
The End
This is the second story written from the photo prompts my friends sent:

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Making Space – Belated Flash Fiction Friday


Carolyn descended the three cement steps into the dusty garage. A space of about four by seven feet had been cleared of boxes and debris and swept clean. In the center of this space was a stack of three empty pet carriers, a basket of dog toys, and a dog bed with a sleeping speckled dog sprawled in it. Behind her followed an older gentleman, her father. When he came beside her he reached past her shoulder to pull a dangling cord turning on a long fluorescent light that hung over a workbench that ran the length one wall of the garage. 
“So if we could just make a little more space out here, I could take in more fosters and you wouldn’t have anything disturbed in the house.” As she talked Carolyn adjusted her hold on the five day old kitten she carried. It mewed in complaint until she got it better situated against her body and returned the little baby bottle. 
“Where do you plan to put everything?” His skepticism about this whole project dripped from the question.
“That’s what I was hoping you could help me with,” Carolyn began. “This stuff has been in boxes since I was little. You don’t use any of it. Could we maybe. . .  get rid of. . . some of it?”
Her father looked at her, then at the wall of boxes. He said nothing.
“Look, Dad.” Carolyn set the baby bottle down on the workbench and shoved the kitten into her father’s hands causing a surprised sputter from him and an angry mewl from the kitten. She reached into the nearest box and pulled out a dusty metal tool that had two holes and a plate that could slide back and forth. “This thing for example. I’ve never seen you use it. Why let it sit out here taking up space? Is it so important to keep?”
Dad was still trying to figure out how to hold onto the squirming, now unhappy kitten as Carolyn waved the tool at him. He settled on cradling it in both hands against his belly. He looked up at his daughter. “That is an antique Colt bullet mold from 1862. No, we are not getting rid of it.” The kitten was attempting to climb up his front in search of its missing bottle, letting out frustrated little meows all the while. He assisted the tiny body by bringing it more up to his chest, but still trying to contain it in his hands.
Carolyn didn’t seem to notice his distress with the kitten. She regarded the bullet mold thoughtfully. “Well then, maybe we could just use it.”
Her dad snorted. “Making bullets seems to go against the spirit of your animal rescuing thing.”
Carolyn rolled her eyes. “No. I mean maybe. . . “, she turned to the workbench and popped off the nipple of the tiny baby bottle, turned it over and stuck it into one of the bullet mold holes. “There. Like that.” She held the mold/nipple combo out for her father to see.
He looked at it, then at her, again saying nothing, but with a hint of an eyebrow raise.
“When we wash them, they could go there for drying.” She smiled.
By this point the kitten had found one of Dad’s pinkie fingers and latched on. The dog stretched in his sleep, rolling out of the bed and waking himself.  He got up wagging to see people out here with him and approached Dad with a rope toy and a hopeful expression. 
“Ok,” Dad said. “Tomorrow you can help me go thought some of these boxes. There might be a few things we could get rid of.”
Author note – Following a writing prompt from the Writing Excuses Podcast, I asked my Facebook Friends to send me photos of random objects. I would use 3 of these photos to make a story. These were the first three photos sent:

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Betrayal of Trust – Flash Fiction Friday


Dana took a deep breath, closing her eyes as she clutched the garbage can to her chest. Why did she feel guilty? Why did it feel like she was doing something wrong when he was the one. . .
She opened her eyes and set the can down. It was because snooping always felt wrong, even for a good reason. Because there was no positive spin for going through some else’s trash. It was his fault, making her feel like this. So insecure. He’d promised to support her, to be here for her and help get through all this. “We’re in it together,” he’d said, and she’d foolishly believed him. 
The first few clues were easy to overlook. To dismiss. Really though, she already knew what was going on. It was time to admit it to herself. Then she could move forward, and stop searching the garbage. She felt tears welling up, and she took another deep breath to hold them back. She was just so tired and hungry, but she needed to retain her composure if she was going to confront him. 
With one last deep slow breath, Dana stood up, pushed the garbage can back under his desk with her food and left his den. She was planning what to say to him that evening when he came home as she turned the corner into the kitchen and stopped short. He was right there in front of her. In the act. 
A look of horror came over his face when he saw her. “I thought you were at your mother’s today,” he said as he attempted to casually wipe the frosting from his mustache and lay the cinnamon roll on the counter behind him. Hiding it too late. She’d been right. He was cheating on their diet.
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Space Monkeys – Flash Fiction Friday


The monkeys running the spaceship were getting cranky. In their defense, they had been at this for hours now; well past their usual end of shift. Allie told herself she’d make it up to them. Soon. The major damage had been repaired, and it was clear now they would successfully make it to the next system. 
She made herself focus on the problem at hand. Her mind kept wandering back – thinking of ways to get revenge on the pirates who had attacked them so far out here between stars. Thankfully none of the monkeys had been hurt, and the ship could be repaired enough to limp to safety. She watched them with pride as they scampered and swung around the engine room. It looked like were a thousand of them when they were all working like this, although in reality there were only thirty. Much smarter than anyone gave them credit for, they seemingly could learn anything. The best part was that Allie had all the help she needed to run the ship, and she didn’t have to deal with other actual people. At least, not often. 
The swirl of motion was slowing. Some monkeys came to the ground and moved off in a line toward the kitchen for food. A few more headed straight to the bunks. Allie closed the panel she had finished rewiring. They had done it. They had finished the repairs. Those that passed close enough, Allie reached out to pat. Some reached a friendly hand back to her in reply. Meeko, one of the more cuddly monkeys, climbed Allie’s leg and held onto her in a hug as she walked. They had adapted well to living out here, and Allie couldn’t imagine a better life.
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The Scam is Dead – Short Fiction Friday


Three more spirits before ten am. They had no qualms about waking a person, or keeping them up at night either. Two of the new ones didn’t even speak English. What did they think she could do for them? When she made it clear she didn’t understand them, they just got louder and more insistent. Couldn’t even shut a door in their face since they can move right through walls. At least she could take out her hearing aid and that helped her ignore them when she wanted to sleep.
Rose had made a decent living out of pretending to speak to the departed. Now that they were showing up for real, she was strongly considering a new line of work. Actually talking to the dead was nowhere near as fun as pretending. It wasn’t as profitable either. 
Yesterday a ghost had strolled into a séance, with a paying client, and demanded to speak with someone named Deborah. Rose doesn’t know a Deborah, and the client didn’t know a Deborah, so Rose sent the spirit on its way. After that though, the client would not be satisfied with moving candles, or Rose’s best ethereal voice. No, she wanted to see her dead mother the way she had seen the ghost looking for Deborah. The ghost who wandered back in again just as Rose had almost persuaded the client to be reasonable and settle back down. That client would never return now. 
Then the ghost, a young man, tall with a friendly face, insisted that Rose help him find Deborah anyway. “Your sign says you are a bridge for the living to speak with the dead. Well I need to speak to Debbie.” Rose explaining that usually it was the living who hired her services, and she helped them contact the dead, not the other way around. He was unimpressed. Oh, and no, he couldn’t pay. Ghosts don’t have money, but Deborah would probably pay her something once they found her.
Probably. That’s what the little punk said. Probably pay Rose something. How reassuring. To get him to go away though, she let him give her this Deborah’s information. Last address, phone number, that sort of thing. Then Rose had told him she needed quiet and peace in which to do her work. He should go away until tomorrow. That part at least had worked as well on him as it did on the living. He’d gone.
But he was back promptly this morning. He was the third. The one who spoke English. Rose, naturally, had done nothing to search for Deborah. She wasn’t a detective. She had no idea how to go about searching for someone. She almost never left her house for that matter. No, she was just in no fit state to tromp around searching for a strange woman, and she told the ghost so when he reappeared to her.
“But she doesn’t live at her old house anymore, and when I tried to talk to the people who live there now, they just screamed and ran away, or prayed frantically at me.” The ghost said. 
“Other people can see you?” Rose asked. This had not occurred to her. Perhaps pretending to be special for so many years had made her believe she actually was.
“Yes,” the ghost said. “It doesn’t do me any good though. No one will talk to me, but this is what you do, right?”
Theoretically it was. It was certainly what she advertised she did. What she charged people for doing. Rose ignored the question. “My time is valuable, and I have trouble getting around at my age. I need a significant payment ahead of time to take something like this on.”
“Did you call the number I gave you?” The ghost asked. “I can go anywhere to look, but I can’t pick up and dial a phone. She might still use that number. You don’t have to go anywhere.”
“I don’t mean to be callous, but there is still the matter of payment. Some vague hope that this Deborah will offer to settle your account won’t do.”
“What can I do for you then? Obviously I don’t have credit cards,” the ghost stuck his hands into this transparent pockets and pulled them out, showing they were empty, as though that display were necessary. “Maybe I could help drum up business, tell other ghosts I see to come talk to you.”
He didn’t listen well, did he. “They will just have the same problems you are having. My clients are the living.”
“Well, I could help you there then. I’ll come around when you want me to, to show folks you can really talk to the dead. That you aren’t the usual fraud.”
He might be onto something there. Rose thought. What if the paper came. She could summon a real ghost to show them. That would bring her more customers than any amount of advertising she had to pay for would. But would they expect her to produce their personal ghosts for them? Her thoughts swirled. If they did, she could handle that. She could call this guy her connection to the spirit world, and through him she could contact any departed soul. That would work; people would eat it up. 
“Would you come for a reporter, were I to invite one?” She tried to sound unconcerned, as if she were doing a favor to him, but the idea held her, and she found herself holding her breath waiting for his reply.
“If that will get you to find Deborah, then yes, yes I will do whatever you need me to.”
“Wait here,” the old woman said, and picking up her cane, she shuffled off into a back room. When she returned she was wearing a huge grin. “The reporter will be here tomorrow at 2:00. You should come a little before that to get into a hiding spot – behind this divider, I think – until I summon you for the interview.”
“And Deborah?”
“Payment first,” Rose said, in a ‘be reasonable’ voice. “After the interview, I make your calls for you.”
The ghost frowned, but nodded, and then faded out of sight. 
Rose went to the séance chamber to wait for the ghost around 1:30 the next day, but he was not there yet. She kicked herself for not giving him a more specific arrival time. Overnight she had thought of more ways to increase the drama of the interview, and include some of her good old standby tricks that clients liked. She wanted to go over the plan with the ghost so he responded correctly.
1:45, still no ghost. 1:55, and she began to be worried as well as annoyed. What would she do if he didn’t come? What could she possible say to the reporter? The chime on the door tinkled at 2:07, but it wasn’t the ghost, obviously. He didn’t use the door. It was the reporter. Well, she would stall. Rose knew she could do that well. What else was there to do?
She put on her wise old seer smile and welcomed the reporter, a woman with long dark hair in a braid, a satchel over one shoulder who introduced herself as Maggie Denton. Once inside, Rose offered Maggie a tour of her studio. She didn’t take her upstairs, where her apartment was, she only gestured to the staircase off the lobby with its velvet rope barrier and explained that she lived upstairs. 
Maggie already had out her cell with a recorder ap running, as well as a notepad. She looked around the lobby at the waiting area chairs. “Do you have a receptionist?” She asked.
“No, I work alone. There really wouldn’t be anything for them to do.” Rose smiled what she thought of as her humble smile. 
“So how does your client know what to do when they come in?” Maggie asked. “Walk me through an appointment.”
“I personally speak with all clients on the phone to set up their appointments,” Rose said. “New clients at least. I have many regulars who have standing appointment times once, or several times a week. If they happen to arrive before I’ve finished a previous appointment, we have this area here for them to relax in.” She gestured to a dim corner of the lobby with a puffy couch and armchair. A small table held occult magazines and an incense burner that was empty at the moment. “Some of my clients like to come in early just to spend a few moments here, clearing their mind before our session.”
“I see.” Maggie said.
“Then when we are ready to begin, we move into the inner sanctuary.” Rose opened a door to the left of the staircase that led into an even dimmer room. A chandelier hung over a round table. It held multi colored light bulbs, but none of them produced much actual illumination.
Rose had walked around to her usual place at the table, but before she could sit or begin her spiel a man burst into the lobby, banging to door into the wall. He looked around frantically, and then raced in with Rose and the reporter.
“I’m so sorry Ms. Rose, my car died. I tried to catch a bus, but I don’t know the schedule.” 
As he continued to rant at her, something about a lyft and road construction, he bent over and tried to catch his breath at the same time. Rose had stopped listening. She just looked at him, her hands up covering her gaping mouth. It was the ghost. Except he wasn’t a ghost. He was just a normal living man standing in her sanctuary babbling much too loud about his transportation difficulties. 
The reporter had a strange smile on her face and was taking his picture, then turned to take Rose’s picture as well, and then began scribbling in her notebook. Rose realized how she must look and tried to compose her face into her dignified and mysterious façade. “Young man,” she snapped. “Please settle down.”
He stopped talking and stood more upright, although it was clear he was still trying to catch his breath. 
“Now, as you can see, I am with someone at the moment, but if you would like to take a seat in the lobby, I can be with you shortly.” Rose gave a gracious smile, satisfied at her handling of the potential disaster. 
“But Ms. Rose, I know I’m late, but I have the sheet, I’m ready, I can still – “Rose had not noticed he was holding anything until he began to unfurl a sheet with two holes cut into it. He moved as if to drape the thing over himself while also moving to get behind the screen in the corner of the room. The very screen she where had planned to hide the ghost. 
It was the reporter that stopped him. “Excuse me,” she placed a hand on his arm as he moved past her, struggling with the sheet as he went. “Are you here to stand in as a ghost for this woman?”
The man froze. He looked genuinely stricken. “Oh no,” he said. He clutched the sheet to his stomach, as if to now hide it. Looking at Rose he said, “I’m so sorry Ms Rose, I’m so stupid. I’ve ruined it.”
Rose had had to sit down after all by this point; her mind was frantically spinning trying to look for a way to turn this around. The reporter was going to out her as a fraud, that was bad enough, but for doing something she wasn’t actually doing. How was this happening? She could pretend not to know who he was, but he was very convincingly acting as if they did know one another. The reporter wouldn’t buy it. She could think of nothing to do. Nothing. She just looked at the man heedless of the anger that must show on her face. 
“Oh no,” he said again, then with a wild look at the reporter, then Rose, he gathered up the trailing end of his sheet and fled. The reporter was actually laughing as she scribbled her notes, and snapped another photo of Rose sitting at the table, her hands grasping the edges to steady herself. 
“Well,” Maggie said, “any response?”
With a deep breath Rose said, “I am as shocked as you. I have no idea who that man is.”
Maggie giggled again. “All righty.” She made another note, then tucked the pad into her pocket and clicked her pen closed. “Thanks for your time. This will be more fun to write than I thought it would be.” 
Rose didn’t see her leave. She let her head fall forward and rest on her folded arms. What had just happened? How had she handled it so poorly? Yet, what else could she possible have done? Who was that man? Every question triggered three others, and she had no answers.
She couldn’t have been sitting there more than a few minutes when she heard the front door open again. She was in no mood. She had best go send them away and lock up for the day. She couldn’t handle working now. Before she was able to push herself up to standing the man sauntered in. She realized she didn’t even know his name. He didn’t have his sheet anymore. 
“Who the hell are you?” she demanded.
He smiled. “Delores’ son,” he said. “Ya know, in the beginning, I almost felt a little bad about this trick I was pulling on you, but then every time I mentioned her name and saw that you had no idea who she was – that after everything you don’t even remember her at all – well, I didn’t feel bad anymore.” He turned back to the door and Rose thought he was going to shut it, but he only partially closed it to get at the shelf unit that stood in the corner behind it. Spooky knick knacks and ephemera were there. Probably needed dusting. He stood on tiptoe to reach a grayish box that she hadn’t noticed there. He pulled it down, turned it over and Rose saw a little light on it. He flipped a switch and the light went out. 
“My projector,” he said holding the box up. He couldn’t resist rubbing her nose in what he’d done, she realized. 
“What about the others, the foreigners?” She was feeding his ego she knew, but she also needed to know how he’d done it.
“Friends,” he said. “Those of us who don’t spend their life taking advantage and bilking other people have what are called friends.” 
“Dolores,” Rose said. It was familiar. She did know a Delores, didn’t she? That’s right, she had been a regular, but Rose hadn’t seen her in many months. She was supposed to keep track of every old client now? “I haven’t seen Delores in awhile.”
“Do you remember her then? Or is this more of your scam. You worthless, lying -” he stopped and took a long shaky breath. “Delores was my mother.” He stood a little straighter. “She wasted too much of her retirement on you, but it was hers to waste, and you made her happy, so I didn’t argue with her about it. But then she complained to you about pains a few times. You told her everything was great. Health and fortune were just around the corner. That’s what you like to tell people, right?”
“That’s what they like to hear,” Rose said before thinking.
“Well thanks to your advice she didn’t go to the doctor. Not until it had already spread to her kidneys and lungs. Until there wasn’t much they could do for her anymore. Because of what you told her. I hope you enjoy having your life ruined by a scam as much as my family has.” He turned and walked out.
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Misunderstanding – Flash Fiction Friday


“These symbols here mean sleep. That way must lead to the sleeping quarters. This one means food. So the kitchen or cafeteria would be that way.” Ann pointed down the corridor to their right. Mr. Manke grunted, not looking at the symbols as she pointed them out.
                “So where is the bridge? Can you tell that from these hieroglyphics?” He said.
                Ann’s smile faded, and she let her hand drop from where she had been touching the alien markings. She looked at him, and straightened. “Yes, sir. I can, but none of the markings that would indicate a bridge are present here. Shall we continue on to another area of the ship?”
                Mr. Manke gave a curt nod, gesturing with one hand for her to lead the way.
                “Yes, sir.” She said again and began walking briskly down the corridor that lay straight in front of them. She was able to interpret some of the markings as they walked. She tried to keep moving as much as possible since Mr. Manke bumped into her whenever she slowed. There were more corridors marked ‘sleep’, but other markings she was less familiar with. She stopped to examine them one of these more closely. One looked like part of the symbol for ‘clean’ combined with part of one that looked like ‘repair’ except with an extra line slanting through the right hand loop. What could that combination stand for? Janitorial? Medical? She tried to remember if she’d seen an extra line like that added anywhere else and what it indicated. She thought she had. . .
                Mr. Manke coughed pointedly. Ann blinked, her thoughts broken.
                “Find something at last?” He asked in a tone that strongly doubted she had.
                “I don’t think this is a command center, but I can’t be sure. It looks like two symbols combined and –“
                “Move along then. The Authorities will be here soon and will take over. There is no time.” He marched off down the endless corridor, not waiting for her to lead the way this time. Ann caught up quickly, and scanned the walls as they went, looking for the symbol for order or control or flight. Hopefully they would use a symbol that she could identify. She wished they could go slower. She wasn’t getting a good look at each sign, and she really wasn’t all that familiar with the language.
                “There!” she said pointing to a sign by a door to the left. She ran up to it. “This means control.” Mr. Manke approached looking at the symbols she pointed at for the first time. “Except. . .” she studied the sign again. “This is the symbol for sleep again. I don’t know what the combination would mean.” She stared off into the distance, thinking.
                “No matter.” Mr. Manke unlatched the heavy steel door and entered a large room lined with what looked like large plastic lockers. The lights blinked on as he entered, Ann behind him. A loud click seemed to come from the lockers, then a hiss, as though air were escaping somewhere.
                A robotic voice announced something over an intercom system. Mr. Manke looked at Ann, but she had never heard the alien language spoken, and had no idea what was said. She only shrugged at his questioning gaze.
                The hissing sound began to fade and the lockers began to pop open, as the Tempin Army awoke.