Category: Trunk Stories

Trunk Stories

Gap Year

prompt: Situate your character in a hostile or dangerous environment.

available at Reedsy

The haze blocking out the morning sky was the color of infectious decay. The weak sun, faint behind the fetid smog was an omen — of what, Zeke couldn’t tell.

Mask secure and seals checked, Ezekiel “Zeke” Rankin, self-appointed scout, let himself out through the airlock to the cool, damp morning air. The silent alien city extended endlessly. What used to be a thriving ecumenopolis had been turned into a graveyard. Continent sized chunks of the city had been flattened, while others stood with no visible damage beyond the poisoned sky.

The mission, including Zeke’s family, had set up in a hospital in one of those “undamaged” sections. His mother came to help any survivors and care for the other volunteers, his sister came to help clean up the chemical weapons fallout. At fifteen years of age, Zeke wasn’t given much choice.

He climbed down the access ladder to the tunnels beneath the city. A nearby area had lost power, and he was determined to find the hospital’s power source before it sputtered to a stop as well.

Aside from three doctors at the hospital, all the aliens Zeke had seen had been dead. He’d come across hundreds, if not a thousand, so far. Conventional wisdom said there were likely no other survivors that hadn’t been evacuated from the planet. Which made the sound in the tunnel more concerning.

He thought about giving up the search for the day. The thought of his mother treating the volunteers who’d been exposed, and his sister in her lightweight flyer, piercing through the smog itself to test various neutralizers in the atmosphere firmed his resolve.

“Hello?” he called out. He continued on toward the sound he’d heard.

He turned the corner and felt something hard against his ribs. He didn’t speak much of the alien’s language, but enough to understand the words “stop” and “alien.”

He raised his hands to show them empty. In his best attempt at their language, broken and halting, he said, “Good morning. My name Zeke. Mission, me…here, uh, today.

The alien switched to Interstellar Trade Language. At least it was a required subject in school, and he was almost as proficient as he was in English. “Where did you come from? You are not the aliens that attacked us, what are you?”

“I’m human, from the Sol Federation. I’m here with my mother and sister who are helping with the recovery mission.” He cleared his throat. “Sorry I messed up your language. My name is Zeke, what’s yours?”

“Abref.” The hard object was removed from his ribs and the bearer stepped in front of him. In the dim lights, at a distance, it would be easy to mistake the alien for a tall, slender person with a long tail.

Zeke caught his thoughts and corrected them. That is a person, and I’m the alien here.

The hard thing that had been pressed against his ribs turned on. It was a torch. In the wash of light, the creature — person — holding it had grey-blue skin with a disheveled mane of muddy orange that began between its eyes and lengthened at the crest of its head. He knew that the mane continued down the center of the back to join in the fur on the tail. The mane said male, but the coloration said female, at least as far as Zeke knew.

Abref’s nostril slits flared, then relaxed. “You’ve been on the surface.”

Zeke nodded. “I have. Is the air in here safe?”

“It is. For my kind at least. What do you aliens breathe?”

“Oxygen, same as you.” He lifted the mask off, and the smell of something rotting hit him like a wall. “What is that smell?”

“The farm. You get used to it.”

“I’ll take your word for it. Sorry, but I have to ask, are you male or female?” Zeke was about to apologize for his rudeness, but Abref stopped him.

“I’m a maned female. Never seen one? You’re pretty new here, huh?”

“We’ve been here for eighteen local days,” he said. “How long have you been surviving down here? Why didn’t you evacuate?”

“Those of us at the farm closed up tight when the sirens went off the first time,” she said. “That was sixty-one days ago. Some of us braved the surface to evacuate, but with the reports of bombardment, the rest of us decided to stay put.”

“The city right above you is still untouched,” Zeke said, “except for the poison. The mission is set up in the hospital.”

“How are you set for food up there?” she asked.

“We’ve got emergency rations for about ninety days, with more coming whenever the next supply run happens.”

“Any fresh food?”

“Nothing like that.”

“Follow me.” She walked off without waiting for him. The torch provided something to follow in the dim tunnels that often turned completely dark as they went further from the main utility access.

The farm was a well-lit chamber the size of which would embarrass a stadium. Water flowed in from one side, trickled through fields the size of football pitches, and out the other side to continue on somewhere.

Those fields were rich with what could best be described as mutant mushrooms with different fruits and vegetables sprouting from the same base mycelium. Half a dozen others worked fields, stopping when they realized their compatriot had not returned alone.

After filling the other workers in on who Zeke was, and what was going on with the mission, one of them asked him, “Which hospital?”

Zeke thought for a moment, “It’s Pabor-something.”

“Paborabal?” one asked.

“No, that’s not it.”

“Porablorial?” another asked.

“No, no.”

“Probiraporo?” Abref asked.

“That’s the one!”

They talked among themselves in their language, before Abref tapped him on the shoulder.

“Yes?”

“Would you help us deliver some food to Probiraporo?” she asked.

“How will you get it there? Do you have gas masks?”

Abref pointed at a cart loaded with produce. “You grab that one. The farms all have delivery shafts to the nearest markets and hospitals.”

Zeke pushed the cart, following the workers and the six carts they pushed. “I meant to find out where the power for the hospital is generated. The power’s out a short distance away.”

“We turned off the power there,” Abref said. “One of the filters failed and it was pulling the poison into the undercity.”

“Oh. How long can we expect the power to stay on here?”

“Without regular maintenance, probably sixty or seventy local orbits.”

They pushed the carts into an open-sided lift that started to rise. “That’s good to know,” Zeke said, “since they say they’ll have the air clean within the next two orbits, and people can start coming home.”

“Won’t the gurgrons just attack again?” she asked as the floor of the receiving bay opened above them.

“We won’t let them.” The man that answered her question relaxed, dropping the aim of the rifle he’d had pointed at the lift. “We’re glad to see there’s still survivors.”

“Abref, this is Clint. He’s the head of security for the mission.” Zeke gestured to the others with him. “Clint, Abref and the others are from a farm beneath the city.”

“I’ll alert the other missions to keep a look out for more survivors in the farms,” Clint said.

“You said you won’t let them attack again. How can you stop them?” Abref asked.

“Major Clint Collins, Sol Federation Forces, here with the Interstellar Trade Union Peacekeeping Task Force.” He moved to grab one of the carts. “The Task Force, along with Sol military, is chasing down the remaining gurgron fleets. Their home world is already in a blockade until they unilaterally disarm.”

“Why would you do that?” Abref cocked her head. “We aren’t even members of the Union yet.”

“Ah, but you’ve applied and there are already trade deals in the making.” Clint pushed the cart toward the kitchens. “That’s close enough as to make no difference.”

As they unloaded the carts in the kitchen, Abref paused and looked at Zeke. “I understand why the Major’s here — military orders and all, but what about the rest of you?”

“Well, my mother’s a doctor, so she’s here to do that, and my older sister is an atmospheric pilot with the ITU Disaster Relief Association.”

“And you?” she asked.

“I’m only fifteen, and I graduated two years early. I’m too young to be allowed to be on my own for an entire year, and it was either take a gap year here with my mom before University or start right away with a state-appointed guardian.”

“You’re not an adult yet, and you chose to do something so dangerous?”

Zeke shrugged. “It’s not the worst thing ever, getting to spend time with my sister that I rarely see. Besides, I’ve been looking forward to my gap year since I was seven.”

Clint laughed. “Good kid. What’re you planning on going to school for?”

“I still haven’t decided.” Zeke began emptying the next cart. “That’s what a gap year is for, yeah?”

Trunk Stories

Portal From the Underworld

prompt: Write about a portal or doorway that’s hiding in plain sight.

available at Reedsy

Angel watched the restroom door. A small, stout woman, barely taller than the doorknob’s height, with lime-green hair and a bright, reflective safety vest had gone in several minutes earlier and still hadn’t come out. She hadn’t locked the door, so the green “Vacant” still showed. Angel was so busy watching the door that she didn’t see the woman with the squirming baby until she was already at the door.

Angel opened her mouth to warn her that the room was occupied, but before she could say anything the young woman had gone in and locked the door. With the red “Occupied” showing, Angel wondered what was going on. Was the other woman still in there? Little person or no, she’d be hard to miss.

When the young mother re-emerged with her baby, Angel decided she couldn’t wait any longer. If the green-haired lady was still in there, that was on her.

There was room for a toilet, a sink, a baby-changing station that folded down from the wall, a waste basket below the paper towel dispenser, and just enough room and handholds for wheelchair users to qualify it as “accessible.” What there wasn’t, was a stout, little, green-haired woman in a yellow safety vest.

Angel looked at herself in the mirror above the sink while she washed her hands. I must’ve not been looking when she came out, she thought, or maybe she didn’t go in and I didn’t see it right.

There was a smaller voice that she ignored, trying to tell herself that maybe she didn’t see the woman at all. Angel rubbed the stubble on her head as she walked out. Her coworkers had teased her about having a breakdown and “going full Britney.”

She pretended their comments didn’t bother her, but they did. They wormed their way into her brain like a parasite, infecting her with self-doubt. Her fingers touched the burn at the back of her head. It wasn’t serious, but the pain reminded her that she’d had a good reason to shave her head.

A kid at his birthday party with silly string, plus his auntie with her back turned was a predictable outcome, judging by the amount she’d already had in her hair. The introduction of the birthday cake with lit candles, though, turned the next spray into a flaming projectile.

She still felt awful that she’d ruined his birthday party. There’s something about a grown woman screaming with her hair on fire that puts a damper on the mood. The ER doctor that shaved the back of her head to get at the burn — mostly first degree with a patch of second degree — was kind enough to shave off everything else. It was that or leave the ER looking like a horror movie villain.

Angel returned to the bench to wait for the bus. She still had forty minutes to wait. It was the big downside to living in the boonies — spotty public transportation. She found herself watching the restroom without meaning to. A thin woman with ghostly pale skin and deep brown hair, wearing a safety vest like the one worn by the woman that had disappeared, stepped into the restroom.

When the woman didn’t immediately lock the door, Angel jumped up from the bench and burst into the restroom. She was ready to apologize but there was no one there she could apologize to. A faint odor of ozone hung in the air, as though an electrical appliance had shorted in the room.

She ran her hands along the sink. When her fingers touched a spot of water on the edge of the basin, a shock ran up her arm, making her jump back.

Even as she boarded the bus for the hour-long journey home, she was trying to rationalize what she’d seen and felt. Maybe she’d seen a man and he’d gone into the men’s restroom. That, combined with static, probably from sitting on the plastic bench, explained it.

Her sleep was fitful, and she woke unrefreshed. The oddity of the restroom bothered her. She didn’t have to work that day, but she packed a lunch in her backpack and took the bus to the city anyway. Ignoring that it made her look suspicious, she watched everyone that came by in a yellow safety vest. The men’s room had a conspicuous “Out of Order” sign hanging from the knob and police tape crossed over it.

She was halfway through a sandwich when a thin man in a yellow safety vest looked at the “Out of Order” sign and walked past to the women’s room. Angel did her best to not look like she was watching. She saw him knock, then duck into the women’s restroom from the corner of her eye.

The door hadn’t had time to close completely by the time she got to it and burst in. The air crackled around the man as he sprinkled water from the sink at his feet. Angel grabbed for his arm and heard a crackle and pop as she was blinded by a blue flash.

Her vision returned, albeit with spots. The man was gone, as was the water he’d sprinkled on the floor around him. She dropped the now-squashed half sandwich into the waste basket and looked at the sink. Feeling silly, she cupped a hand under the automatic faucet and let the collected water drip on her feet.

She felt the hair on her arms stand on end, then found herself standing on a flat stone at the edge of a spring. The air was warm and heavy with the scent of lilac. Hummingbirds drank from flowers on a vine that Angel couldn’t identify. As her gaze shifted away from the immediate surroundings, she found herself facing unbroken wilderness.

Behind her was a road, not of asphalt or concrete or cobbles, but appeared to be an unbroken, smooth slab of granite. She walked out to the center of the road and looked down it. Flanked by trees on both sides, it led straight into the hills where she could see a glimpse of a city.

The sound of wheels crunching over gravel came from behind and she spun around to see what had to be a car. All the parts were there, four wheels with inflated tires, windows, doors, and a driver and passenger. Beyond that, though, it was odd. There was no room front or rear for an engine, and with how quiet it was she guessed it was electric.

The mismatched pair got out. The short woman with green hair she’d seen the previous day, and who she guessed was the thin, pale woman she’d seen after. She hadn’t noticed then, but the thin woman had ears with tall points on them. The shorter woman had her hair pulled up and had smaller points on her ears.

The two approached Angel and the shorter one spoke. “I’m Arva, and she’s Elynia. You’re a human, ain’tcha?”

“Uh, yeah, yes I am.” Angel looked around her again. “Where are we?”

“On the highway between the village of Ost and King City,” Elynia said, “by the Underworld Spring. Who are you, and how did you get here?”

“Oh, sorry. I’m Angel, and you both disappeared in the bathroom yesterday, so today I followed a man in—”

“An elf, you mean,” the thin one interjected.

“Elf?”

“Like me. He’s an elf, not a man. Man hasn’t been here for centuries,” Elynia said.

“So, you’re an elf.” Angel pointed at Arva. “Does that mean you’re—”

“A dwarf, right.” 

“Uh, okay, an elf, who was sprinkling water on his feet, and he popped away in a flash of blue light.” Angel shrugged. “I did what I saw him doing and then I was here.”

The small, stout woman said, “You shouldn’ta’ seen that. Ah well, what’s done is done. You’re the first human to cross in what … six, maybe seven-hundred years or thereabouts.”

“Um, cross? Cross what? You said the Underworld Spring. Is this the Underworld? Am I dead?” Angel thought she should be fearful, but all she felt was curiosity.

“No. This is the Overworld. You’re from the Underworld.” Elynia pointed at the spring. “That spring is one of the ‘matching places’ between our worlds. Humans built a city near it and turned the spring into a ‘Park and Ride’ as you call it. Beneath that parking lot and bus stop is the spring, and that’s where the water for your restrooms comes from. It’s the water that ties the realms together.”

“At least until it dries up on your side or ours,” Arva said. “You said he went into the ladies? Why didn’t he use the men’s? It works just the same.”

“Oh, it’s out of order or something. But there’s police tape, too, so—”

“Never mind, I don’t wanna know. The Underworld’s a mess.” Arva let out an exaggerated sigh and snorted. “I don’t suppose we’ll have time to make a crossing today, seeing how we got a human to take to the watch.”

“I can tell you’re all sorts of sad about that,” Elynia said. “Well, Angel, would you like to join us in the car, and we can head to the city? If not, we’ll call the watch to come get you.”

“They’ll just make us do it,” Arva said, flashing a badge.

“What if I just go back to the spring and sprinkle the water on my feet? Wouldn’t I return home?”

“You might, but the watch’ll still come after you.” Arva opened the car. “If you go with us, we can get your promise to secrecy and let you go. Otherwise, we noticed that humans don’t pay attention to people in safety vests. Especially when there’s a group of them, say, lugging all your belongings out of your home. No one would see the watch take you, and your neighbors would assume you moved.”

“Okay, so disappeared or go to the watch and promise to keep mum.” Angel thought for a moment. “Is it in the village, or the city?”

“The city, of course,” Elynia said.

“Well, I guess I could take a look at your city, but I’d really like to check out the village. The air’s so clean here, is everything electric like your car?”

“It’s not electric,” Arva said. “It runs on magic.”

“Right. Because that makes so much sense.” Angel crossed her arms. “I’m not a gullible child.”

“Yet you activated an ancient portal with a sprinkle of water, popped up to the Overworld, and think that everything still needs to work as it does in the Underworld.” Elynia laughed.

“Oh, yeah, that.” Angel got into the car and sat down, followed by the dwarf and elf. “Okay, take me to the watch.”

The doors closed and the car pulled onto the road and took off at speed. No one controlled it, and there were no controls to do so. “Mighty bold to just take command of my car,” Arva said.

“Take command? I was talking to you.” Angel sighed. “Sorry.”

“It shouldn’t take orders from anyone but me,” Arva said, “but you shouldn’t be able to activate the portal, either.”

“I told you I saw magic in a human yesterday.” Elynia wore a smug expression. “This is the one I saw.”

“I didn’t think it possible.” The dwarf stared at Angel. “I guess magic’s not completely dead in the Underworld, then.”

The city rose up before them, spires instead of skyscrapers, parks and green spaces everywhere, and the soft murmur of conversations without the noise of machinery. The watch building was a two-story stone structure that was clearly equivalent to a police station.

Angel entered to gasps as uniformed dwarves, elves, and others she couldn’t identify right off, turned to face her. She gave an awkward wave. “Hi. I’m a human and I got here by, uh, following a guy.”

After two hours of confused questioning, magical testing, and lots of ogling by the other officers, Angel signed a promise to not tell anyone else in the “Underworld” how to cross. She also found a common sense of humor in the dwarf and joined her and Elynia for an early dinner in the city.

Angel checked the time. “Crap. The last bus home is in ten minutes. I won’t make it back.”

“Why don’t you stay at my place tonight? We’ve got to put on the stupid vests and go back to the Underworld tomorrow anyway,” Elynia said. “You’ll get to see at least a little of the village.”

“Yeah, I could do that.” Angel thought for a minute. “What are you two doing at lunch tomorrow? I know this great place downtown. Little hole in the wall that does the best Mexican.”

They discussed their plans for the following day as they filed out of the restaurant and piled into the car for the drive to the village.

Trunk Stories

Day Labor

prompt: Write a story in which the first and last sentence are the same.

available at Reedsy

Adrian poured the clear liquid over the ice in the shallow glass, watching it turn white in swirls and eddies. He turned off the lights and carried the glowing glass to the mirror. Rather than the mysterious, cool image he was hoping for, the sickly blue glow left him looking pallid and cadaverous.

With the overhead lights back on and the black light off, the liquid had the appearance of skim milk over ice. Adrian checked his appearance in the mirror. Even dressed as he was in his best, he knew he wouldn’t fit in. The word ‘poor’ might as well have been tattooed across his forehead in bold letters.

The party was less than twenty-four hours away. He wondered if he should skip it. It wasn’t like they’d pick him, anyway. He looked at the refrigerator and the invitation hanging there under a magnet advertisement for the day labor office.

He gulped down his drink without thinking. The ice cubes in the glass brought him back to the moment. He hadn’t even tasted it. Perhaps another? No, that was his one a day he allowed himself. Instead, he took his time sucking on the ice cubes, getting every last bit of flavor.

When the last of the ice was gone, Adrian undressed, folding his trousers with care and hanging them under the jacket, next to the shirt. Those two hangars, a second-hand pair of sneakers, and his battered work boots defined the contents of his small closet. The dresser beside it contained every other garment he owned.

He grabbed the first t-shirt his hand touched and paired it with work jeans chosen with the same lack of care. It was too early to sleep, long past dinner, and he felt he might explode if he tried to sit still. He left the small apartment, checking that the door was locked, or at least as locked as it could be.

Wandering around the neighborhood was his entertainment on those evenings where he couldn’t sit still enough to read a book. The blue glow of TVs illuminated windows throughout the brownstones. No doubt, they were all watching the latest news about the aliens.

He’d watched on the TV at the day labor waiting room when they first showed up a month earlier. When they turned out to look like elves from fantasy, speculations ran wild. Without a job for him that day, the news station in the waiting room was as good as it got.

The aliens asked for humans that were willing to return to their planet as ambassadors or something. They even had a website set up to apply. Adrian had used one of the computers at the day labor office to apply. Not that he expected to be chosen, with billionaires, stars, and politicians all saying they’d applied.

Last week, he’d gotten an invitation to a party for final selection of those that would be chosen He thought about it as he wandered past the bodega. Would he have to get a passport? Could he even afford one? Maybe the aliens would pay for it. What would customs look like?

A rat startled him, rushing to return to its hiding place under the stairs of a brownstone. It dropped something as it ran by, and he picked it up. It was a ten-dollar bill. A little chewed on one corner, but good enough.

Adrian turned around and walked with purpose to the bodega. He waved at the cashier as he entered and made his way to the back. There, next to the beer cooler stood his target. Nestled between boxes of wine on one side, and bottles of liquor on the other, stood a rotating shelf of used paperbacks.

Relying on the cover art to determine the genre, he picked out three by authors he’d never heard of. He avoided the romance novels with bare-chested, long-haired men on the cover, that were churned out by the hundreds each month. He chose a science fiction novel, a mystery, and one that was likely a drama.

He had enough for the three books and a day-old, plain bagel. Purchases in hand, he returned to his apartment. Without a key but just a wiggle and twist, his “locked” door opened. The promise of new reading material made sitting still worth it.

Adrian put a chipped coffee cup with half an inch of water in the toaster over next to the stale bagel and turned it on. He wandered back and forth between the kitchenette and his bed until the bagel was warm.

Nibbling on the warm, somewhat softened bagel, he sat on the single chair in his apartment and began reading the drama. Somewhere in the middle of chapter four, he fell asleep.

It was still the middle of the night when a rap on the door woke him. He crossed the apartment to the door and peeked through the peephole. It was one of the space elves!

He opened the door, and the five-foot-nothing, grey-skinned, pointy-eared alien asked, “Are you Adrian Keller?”

“That’s me,” he answered.

“I’m Cruit,” the alien said, and hoisted a six-pack of beer. “Can I come in?”

“Sure, sure.” Adrian motioned the alien in and gestured to the chair. “Have a seat.”

“Where will you—?” Cruit trailed off as Adrian sat cross-legged on the floor. “Oh.”

 Adrian accepted a beer from the visitor. “Sorry about the apartment. It’s not much, but it’s home.”

“A place to sleep is a place to sleep.” The alien took a deep drink of the beer. “Guys like us — except I’m a female, is that still a guy? What was I saying? Yeah, workers like us have to be happy with what we can get.”

“You’re a laborer?” Adrian asked.

“Much like yourself,” she answered. “I’m a manager now.”

Adrian raised his beer. “Congratulations. Better paycheck?”

“Better accommodations.”

“That’s not nothing.”

Cruit leaned forward. “Why did you apply for a position with us?”

Adrian chuckled. “Hard to find work. A steady job would be nice.”

“I talked to the people at Reddy Labor. They say you’re not afraid of hard work, and you pick up power tools and equipment operation quickly.”

“True enough, I suppose.”

“Would you be opposed to working on the ship?”

“Doing labor?”

“Yes.”

“If it’s a steady position, I’m in.” Adrian carried the empties to the kitchenette, put ice in two glasses, and grabbed the bottle of Ouzo. “What about the party tomorrow?”

“That’s for the fancy people,” Cruit said. “I’m guessing that’s as much not you as it’s not me.”

“True enough.” Adrian returned with the glasses and bottle.

“If you want it, I’ve got a position for you. It’s permanent.”

“Sure. When do I start?”

“I could use your help getting the ship ready tomorrow afternoon.”

“I’m there.” He held up the bottle. “Care for something a little stronger?”

“Don’t mind if I do.”

Adrian poured the clear liquid over the ice in the shallow glass, watching it turn white in swirls and eddies.

Trunk Stories

What I Left Behind

prompt: Center your story around someone who realizes they’ve left something behind.

available at Reedsy

The bed I lay on was comfortable enough, but not plush. The walls were a pale blue with no windows. An IV ran into my arm, and a tangle of cables connected me to a device that quietly monitored my vitals. There was a white corridor outside the open door. The closed door on the wall opposite my head had a toilet sign. Hospital.

I sat up, putting my feet on the floor. I felt weak. At first, I wasn’t sure I was feeling it, but a faint thrum carried through the floor — deck, my mind corrected. Hospital ship.

I’d no sooner deduced that than a nurse — or what I assumed was a nurse — walked in. She was short, no more than 150 centimeters, covered in a fine, taupe fur with delicate limbs and graceful fingers. Large eyes set aside her head gave her a field of vision far beyond 180 degrees. A striped tail swished behind her as she walked, and she put on a smile that could melt the coldest of hearts. Something about her felt familiar.

“You mustn’t try to get up yet.” Her voice was somewhere between a purr and a growl. One of her eyes focused on me while the other seemed to be watching the device. “I’m Joxi, the night nurse. Now that you’re awake, the doctor and physical therapist will be in to go over your next steps — little joke for you.”

People of her species were called Gortian but called themselves anushi, in the same way we call ourselves human, but others call us Earthian. I wasn’t sure how I knew that — I just did. Just like I knew that this ship was a human design.

My voice was weak and raspy, and it took far too much energy to make a simple inquiry. “You … anushi … ship … human?”

“Exactly.” She helped me get my legs back on the bed and tucked me back in.

“How …?” I didn’t have the energy to get the words out. How did I end up here? What happened? The more I thought about it, the more I realized how little I knew. 

I am human. I am a man … I think. My right hand went by instinct to my chest where I traced scars on both sides with a patch of hair between. I am a man. I am a human. My name is … is … I don’t know. My job is … I worked in a pizza place in high school.

Memories newer than that elude me. I try to get the nurse’s attention before she leaves. Even with her back turned to me, she sees the slight raise of my hand and turns back around.

“I can’t …” I point at my head. “Who am I?”

“I’ll let the doctor explain, but it’ll come back to you, Mr. Jacobs.” She left without another word.

Jacobs, I wondered, is that right? It felt familiar, but something felt off, something missing.

The doctor entered. Her uniform designated her as a Captain in the United Federation of Sol Navy. Equivalent to a Colonel in the other services. I considered that I might have been in the military with how easily I picked that up.

“Ma’am,” I said with as much gusto as I could muster, which wasn’t much at all.

“It’s good to see you awake,” she said. “Can you tell me your name, rank, and serial number?”

“I, uh … no, ma’am. I know some things, like I’m human, the nurse is anushi, this is a human hospital ship, and you’re a Navy Captain, same rank as a ground-pounder Colonel, but I don’t know how I know them. She said my name is Jacobs, but I’m not sure.”

The doctor wrote some things on her pad, then looked up at me. “Your name is Ryan Jacobs, you’re a Corporal — at the moment — in the UFS Marine Corps, and you’ve been in a coma for forty-three days. We’re still a month out from home, but when we get there, you’ve got an award, a promotion, and an early retirement waiting.

“I’m Dr. Wells, and I’m the primary physician on your case. You suffered some serious head trauma, along with your arm,” she said, nodding toward my left hand.

I flexed my left hand. It felt half-numb. I looked at it … or tried to. It wasn’t there. My arm stopped at a bandage just past my elbow.

“My … where?” How had I not noticed? How bad did I mess my head up? What had happened to me?

“We’ve found that replaying your helmet cam footage can help bring back memories faster.” She looked grim. “It’s not pretty, it’s likely to be traumatizing, but it can help. Do you want to try?”

“I do … yes, ma’am, Captain Wells.”

“You don’t have to be formal here, Ryan. You can just call me Doc.”

“Thanks, Doc. How soon can I—”

“Tomorrow morning. You need a good night of non-comatose sleep, first.”

I nodded and let my head rest back on the pillow. After she left, I watched the hallway for a bit. Mostly humans in Navy uniforms, but at least ten percent of the traffic were anushis in civilian clothes. Something about that caused an ache in my chest.

Exhaustion overtook me and I let it, before the ache could become sobbing. It didn’t help. My own weeping woke me in the morning. A pair of warm hands held my right hand, a comfort when I didn’t know I needed it. I turned to see a rough-and-tumble looking Petty Officer, tears pooled in his dark brown eyes. “You’re not alone,” he said.

I looked at his name tag. “Thanks, Masoe.” I went to wipe my eyes with my left hand, and its absence made the tears start again, this time from frustration.

Masoe helped me pull myself together and eat the light breakfast he’d brought. He said two more meals and they could remove the feeding tube that went up my nose and down my throat.

After breakfast came the part I was both dreading and excited for. A chance to figure out what had happened, and maybe, just maybe, get my memories back.

In the reflection of the goggles for the immersion viewer I saw my bandaged, shaved head. I felt at the edge of the bandage with my hand, and Dr. Wells told me to be careful of it. Part of my skull was still out until the brain swelling was completely gone.

I won’t recount the nightmare I relived. It involved an attack on an anushi colony by an unknown enemy. We were evacuating civilians, including a hospital. That’s where I recognized Joxi. We were just getting going when the bombing started.

While the other squads began working their way up, I led my squad to the third floor to work our way down. The entire third floor was the children’s ward. Anushi kids are all eyes, teeth, and tails, and cute as hell because of it. They grow into them, eventually, but a ball of fluff with huge eyes and buck teeth… well, we got most of them out. The ones that could walk, and those that could be carried in our arms.

It was an incubator, the first of nine, running on battery power that I was lugging down the stairs when the bomb hit the wall next to me. My helmet recorded it all, even after the shockwave knocked me unconscious. My hand and wrist were mangled along with the incubator and the fragile infant inside. Then the third floor collapsed on me and the recording cut out until I was dug out of the rubble fifty-six minutes later.

The incubators! I had dragged them all close to the stairwell to speed things up. Had I doomed nine anushi children? What about the other side of the third floor? Would they have survived there?

I didn’t realize the questions I was asking myself, I was asking out loud. The voice I heard was that of Joxi. “You saved sixty-six out of sixty-seven children that day. The incubators were lucky. A bomb on the roof destroyed the other half of the third floor, and only the area above the stairwell collapsed. The incubators were sitting there in the open, dusty, but safe.”

I felt the fur of her hands as she lifted the immersion viewer off my head. “You Marines saved almost everyone in the hospital.” Her smile was bright, but I could see the sadness she tried to hide.

“Almost,” I said, “isn’t everyone.”

She held me as I wept for loss, hers and mine. The loss of innocent lives, the loss of friends and loved ones, the loss of her home. But what had I lost? What had I left behind, other than my arm? I knew, somehow, that I would never be whole. My memories would never fully return. I’d left a huge chunk of my past in the rubble of that hospital on a foreign world. I’d lost a part of me.

Trunk Stories

The Beard of Avon

prompt: Center your story around an artist whose creations have enchanted qualities.

available at Reedsy

Justin Smoot was known by his neighbors as the hippie who paints and has an overgrown plot full of weeds. The people of Bidford-on-Avon knew him as an eccentric that used a loophole in environmental laws to have his front and rear gardens declared wild habitat. The art scene in Warwickshire knew him as a painter of weirdness, best classified as abstract surrealism. The fact that there was an undeniable magic to his art, despite his being untrained as either an artist or a wizard, made them slightly more interesting to collectors than they would have been otherwise.

There were a select few who knew him by another name, one which they would only share with their most trusted friends or allies. It was based on that name that the couple who sought him out were walking up his garden path just before sunrise.

Before they could knock, Justin opened the door of his cottage and waved them in. He stuck his head out the door and looked for witnesses. Satisfied they’d been unseen, he latched and locked the door.

He motioned toward the shabby furniture in the sitting room, grabbed the burning joint that had been balanced on the edge of the mantle, and took a deep drag. “I’ve just put the tea on,” he said, the smoke curling around his full, wild beard flecked with spots of paint and unkempt, dishwater blond hair. “Make yourselves comfortable.”

The couple sat. A dwarf woman, her dun muscles straining against the sleeves of an otherwise loose sundress, and her partner, an albino elf woman in a similar style sundress that flowed like water around her.

Justin padded to the kitchen in his bare feet and prepared the tea. He returned to the sitting room with a battered but ornate, silver tea trolley laden with tea and biscuits and unmatched, chipped cups and saucers.

“Sorry it’s nothing fancy, just what I can get down at the shops.” He poured tea for all of them, offered milk and sugar, then offered a fresh joint.

The dwarf woman took her tea with a splash of milk. She peered at him over the rim of the cup with her deep black eyes. “How does this work, then?”

Justin laughed. “Buggered if I know!” He lit another joint and took a drag.

She stood and set the cup down, her arms flexing as she got into a fighting stance. The elf woman grabbed her arm with a delicate, pale hand. The dwarf seemed to melt under her touch and returned to her seated position.

“I think what she means is, what do we need to do? And, if it’s not too indelicate, what will it cost us?” the elf asked.

Justin blew out the smoke slowly, letting it curl around his head. “I don’t know how this works, or why it works, I just know that it does.” He pointed at the easel in the corner of the room with a painting turned around to face the wall. “That’s yours — or at least, it will be by end of day. You know my name, but what’s yours?”

“Sorry. I’m Rena, and this is Ellith,” the elf said.

Justin stood up ramrod straight. “Rena, Ellith, welcome to my humble home. I’m Justin, but you probably already knew that.” When he could no longer hold the pretense, he relaxed, flopping into an armchair with the joint and a handful of Tesco biscuits.

“Is there anything we need to do?” Rena asked.

“Just, like, be.” He let his head fall back, his eyes focused on nothing. “I don’t know how I know, but when I do, I know. I painted your piece last week and knew you’d be here today, before sunrise.”

“You said in the interview in the Globe that your paintings come to you.” Ellith leaned forward, interest clear in her expression. “Is that what you meant?”

Justin laughed. “No, that was just bollocks for the nosy journo. My regular stuff is just whatever nonsense I think might sell. Something that might match someone’s sofa.”

Rena sipped her tea. “You said you knew when we’d be here. What else do you know?”

Justin raised his head back to look at the women. “Just what I see in front of me. You’re both smitten with each other, but something’s got you scared.”

Rena let out a sigh and leaned her head on Ellith’s shoulder. “It’s complicated.”

“If I had a quid for every time I heard that, I wouldn’t be living in gran’s old place.” Justin offered the joint to Rena. “Why don’t you take a hit, love, and spill?”

Rena took a drag and handed the joint to Ellith before erupting into a coughing fit. “It’s — our families.”

Ellith took a drag and offered the joint back to Justin who waved it off. The smoke distorted her voice. “Her da works with my da, and that’s how we met. Both of our families are—”

“Old fashioned,” Rena interrupted.

“I was going to say they’re a bunch of horse’s arses, but that works, I guess.”

“Wait, your families are anti-gay in this day and age?” Justin asked.

“No, not that,” Rena said. “It’s, erm, worse.”

“How’s that?” he asked.

Rena started, “Our fathers are—”

“They’re racist gobshites,” Ellith said, “my da worse than hers, even.”

“Unless they’re talking business, they keep falling back to the War of Three Kingdoms.” Rena took a more successful drag of the joint.

“Some people will use anything, even a three-hundred-plus year-old war to justify their nonsense.” Justin let out a loud sigh. “Sorry that you both are going through that.”

“Will the painting just hide our relationship, or will it…,” Ellith trailed off, some thought left unuttered.

“Will it help your families get over their racism? I don’t know. Might do, but I suspect that will take ages, and a lot of help from the two of you.” Justin jumped to his feet. “It’s ready.”

He turned the painting around. Like his other works, it was a collection of strange, undefined colours and shapes that seemed to morph and change the longer one looked. His works left some with vertigo, others with a feeling of being watched, and still others with a general sense of unease. After looking at a Smoot for any length of time, one found the world around them somehow off-center. His abstract works made the rest of the world feel surreal.

Rena spoke first. “It feels — quiet, almost cozy.”

“Aye,” Ellith said. “I expected to feel put off, but I’m not. It’s not like your stuff in the galleries.”

“Oh, it is, at least to everyone else but you two.”

“And hanging this up in our home will keep our secret from our families?” Ellith asked.

“From everyone that might be, cause or have a problem with your relationship. Including loose-lipped friends who mean well.”

Rena opened her purse. “How much—”

“Put that away,” Justin said. “Like I said, it’s yours.”

“You aren’t going to charge for it?” Ellith stood. “Maybe I should force the money on you. You need it. This place is like a squat.”

Justin shrugged. “If you pay me for, then it wasn’t yours to begin with, and it won’t work. Don’t ask me how I know, it’s not a story I want to repeat.”

Rena cleared her throat. “Ehem. Would you happen to have any of your other kind of paintings around? Surely, we can work out a fair price for one of those, so we don’t leave you empty handed.”

He walked them down the footpath through the wildflowers in full bloom in his back garden to the shed he used as a studio. Everywhere they looked, canvases in a myriad of sizes were covered with the uneasy work of Justin Smoot.

Ellith crouched near a small canvas on the floor, propped against the wall. It was a mostly white canvas with a single dribble of paint that seemed to move and sway. “What colour is that?” she asked.

“Ah, that’s indignity. It can be a nasty colour, but I find it most humorous.”

They settled on paying four-hundred pounds for the painting with the single dribble of indignity and left with their goods. Justin watched them walk to their car and drive off. He padded back into the studio in the back garden. He had another piece to do. He knew someone else had heard of the Beard of Avon and would visit him in a few days.

Trunk Stories

The Otherwar

prompt: Write a story that keeps a key detail hidden from the reader until the very end.

available at Reedsy

They’d been found in a parallel universe of sorts. While working towards wormhole generation, scientists had accidentally punched a hole into a universe that was almost indistinguishable from ours.

The creatures they found traversing the stars there were unimaginable horrors. Smaller ships, but far more numerous, crewed by behemoth abominations.

The science ship had been seen, and one of the ships of the Other followed it through from their universe. Had it not been for the Navy standing by, no one knows what kind of hell they could’ve unleashed on us.

As it was, that one small ship took out nine vessels of our fleet before it was disabled and opened to vacuum. Crewed by only three of the giants, it boasted more armament than a standard destroyer.

The huge, misshapen bodies were secreted away by Military Intelligence for dissection and some insight into what we faced. The ship, itself, was crude in design with the exception of its weapon systems.

It could easily be outrun by anything in our fleet. The most telling, though, was the lack of any way to generate faster-than-light travel. It was decided that with a crew of only three, the ship was a fighter. Although a small ship, it was far larger than would be expected of a light fighter, likely due to the size of its occupants. As a fighter, it undoubtedly had a mothership to return to, and the search for it would expand as time went on.

The argument between the military and government came soon after. The next actions we would take depended on the answer to a few questions.

Did they have the capability to cross into our universe as we had accidentally crossed into theirs? If that ship was a simple fighter craft, what chance did we have against a fleet? Do we build up our fleet while hoping that they stay in their own universe and leave us alone — or do we attempt to bring the fight to them?

In the end, the military minds won out, and we declared war on the Others. Fleets from everywhere joined in, while production ramped up in every star system to build new fleets made up of whole new classes of ships.

The first sortie we made into their universe was a textbook success. Using the intelligence we’d taken from the fighter, we sent fast, nimble ships to outrun them and their weapons. Short FTL hops were a key maneuver that kept our losses to a minimum while we wore down and destroyed dozens of their ships.

The Other was a ragtag fleet of patchwork ships; crude but deadly. They all carried far more weapons than reasonable, but none seemed to have their ammo or other stores full, as most had large, empty compartments.

After that first victory, the next mission was meant to be for gathering intelligence. Still, four fleets were dispatched to guard the gate and keep any of the Other from crossing into our universe again.

None of the four fleets boasted any of the new class of ships designed to stand up to what we imagined the Other capable of. That on its own wouldn’t have been a problem, except that the gateway opened in the middle of a system swarmed with the Other.

No sooner had they passed into the “normal space” of the other universe than the firefight started. Whatever we’d imagined their motherships to be, what we encountered was so far beyond that as to make our imaginings laughable.

This was not the ragtag fleet we’d destroyed in our first mission. These monstrous creations were, for lack of a better term, eldritch horrors. In visible light, radio, and microwave, they disappeared, more detectable by the absence of light and their gravitational signature. The fighters that swarmed out of them by the hundreds were smaller, faster, more maneuverable, and better coordinated. On top of that, they were every bit as ephemeral as the big ships, detectable most by their slight gravity.

The biggest of the ships outmassed an entire fleet, and yet were so maneuverable as to keep withering fire aimed at our ships even through our short FTL hops. When the flagship of the first fleet — the pride of the Navy and command center for the mission — was ripped in half by a ship that was more like a giant gun with engines, the order to retreat was called.

Four fleets went into their universe, and two partial fleets came back. We gathered intelligence, but not of the sort we’d hoped for. Whatever we first encountered must’ve been far on their frontiers, manned by only a token force of scrap.

In addition to that, we learned that where the gate opened in their universe was more to chance than expected. The fleets had been expected to appear in a space between star clusters. Instead, the gate opened a few thousand light years distant of the selected point.

Attempts to open a gate to the other universe in other locations failed. Some quirk of the local fabric of spacetime in the original gate’s position left it best suited for that. It was not long before the new fleets came online and gathered at what became the most heavily guarded spot in the galaxy at least, if not the entire universe.

While the politicians were still busy trying to spin the defeat as anything but, and the military was still licking its wounds, the first incursion into our universe by the Other happened. From the gate, a single drone emerged and was vaporized by one of the new destroyers in fractions of a second.

That was all the impetus needed for the politicians to back another attack, and for the Admirals to set forth against the Other again. Nine fleets, composed of whole new classes of destroyers and battle cruisers and carriers, poured through the rip in the fabric of spacetime into the other universe.

This time, they emerged somewhere unpopulated. They found themselves in a void between stars and star clusters. There, in a relative nowhere, someone voiced the opinion that they were lucky they hadn’t appeared inside a star or a black hole.

While that crew member was still being dressed down by their Captain, gravity alarms went off throughout the fleets. The Other had arrived in moments from wormholes that appeared for only a fraction of a second. The Other had the wormhole technology our own scientists had been trying to achieve.

The massive ships of the Other had nine fleets surrounded in a sphere of death. Any ship that fired or moved was obliterated. When the Admirals finally stood down to accept their fate, a transmission was sent to all the remaining ships before they were forced back through the rift into our own universe.

The war effort ground to a halt while the message was deciphered. Not that production slowed any, as six more fleets were completed in that time.

The new argument between the politicians and military became what to do with the message. Share it with the populace? Bury it in the deepest vault? Call their bluff — assuming it is a bluff?

One of the creatures stood, hideous to the point it triggered some deep, primal part of the brain that makes one want to evacuate their bowels and flee. It spoke their eldritch language, all gurgles and gasps.

“We’ve been looking for intelligent life for a while, and it would be nice to have a friend. We see that you cannot be that friend to us — you’re not ready.

“When your home planet has orbited your home star 100 more times, you may come back and try again in peace. Until then, any intrusion into our space with more than an unarmed, goodwill delegation of twelve individuals, maximum, will be met with swift retribution, including the take-over of your worlds and the total disarmament of your military. This is your first and only warning.

“Your first incursions into our space, we were willing to forgive and forget. Hunting pirates is a time-honored tradition, after all.

“Your actions during our annual Naval exercise, however, are unforgivable at this point. Any further armed entrance to our space will be taken as an explicit declaration of war against the Terran Alliance. Vice-Admiral Grace Evans, TA Navy, signing off.”

Trunk Stories

Little Guy

prompt: Your character comes across a stray (dog, cat, human — any kind of animal!). What happens next?

available at Reedsy

Sara followed the trail. Droplets of what she was certain was blood. Something small, she guessed. If it turned out to be somebody with a little cut or bloody nose walking slow, she’d be embarrassed, but that wasn’t likely.

The trail led into an upturned cardboard box at the end of the alley. There was half of a strange footprint, paw-print really, on the flap of the cardboard that lay outside the box. She couldn’t identify it. Not dog or cat or rat or raccoon or opossum.

Sara waited for a minute, listening for sounds of life from the box. She heard a small rustle in the box. “I’m not going to hurt you,” she said in a soft voice. “I’m just gonna sit here and share my cupcake with you.”

She found the least nasty spot on the ground near the box to sit with her back to it. It would stain her jeans, but they were washable and at worst replaceable.

Humming a soft lullaby, she pulled a small bite off the over-sized cupcake and put it on the flap of the box. “I’ll share with you since I can’t eat one of these by myself,” she sang.

From the corner of her eye, she saw a furred hand reach out a snatch back the piece of cupcake. Maybe it was a raccoon with a deformed foot? She continued to hum and put another piece on the edge of the box.

With each one, she put the piece closer to herself. When the little things legs weren’t long enough to reach it, it stretched itself out of the box to grab the bite before retreating. Each time, the delay between grabbing and retreating grew in tiny increments.

What she saw wasn’t any animal she could identify. It looked a bit like a long-legged ferret the color of an orange tabby cat with a puffy tail and almost monkey-like hands.

She held a piece of the cupcake out for the creature, hoping it wouldn’t switch to biting and nip her fingers. Instead, the tiny hand grabbed it, and she could feel how it had opposable thumbs on both sides of its hand. One of the three fingers rested on her thumb before it took the piece.

Sara put a piece on her palm and laid her hand on the ground. The creature stepped up and grabbed her thumb with one of its hands while the other took the proffered cake. Instead of backing off, it ate the piece with the needle-like teeth in its short snout, then held the empty hand open, palm up.

Six digits, two of them opposable, and a palm that reminded her of a toddler’s hand, with none of the small lines that hands acquire over time. She set a piece of frosting on the outstretched hand.

The creature was visibly frightened but warming up to her. It stood on its hind legs and took a wobbly step toward her before stumbling. Sara wasn’t thinking about maintaining the calm at the moment her instincts took over.

She caught the falling creature and scooped it into her lap. “Are you okay, little one?” Its fur was silken and softer than anything she’d felt. It was damp, despite the lack of rain for days.

It stiffened for a moment. Sara thought she’d just messed up and the little critter would run away to never trust her again. Her fears were unfounded, however, as the creature relaxed, grabbing her shirt with three of its monkey-handed feet.

The fourth had a cut on the palm. “Oh, you poor baby. That must hurt. Will you let me take care of you?”

The creature turned its large, brown eyes to hers. When she looked into them, she could tell there was intelligence behind them. The creature curled its tail over itself like a blanket and she felt its racing heart slow, and its breathing relax.

It still had a death grip on her shirt, but was sound asleep. She rose to her feet as smoothly as she could, trying not to jostle the sleeping creature. It had a faint scent of cinnamon she’d first assumed was something her clothes had picked up in the bakery.

By the time she reached her apartment, she’d figured out that she didn’t need to be so careful. Cream, as she began calling the critter, was dead to the world. The poor thing was probably exhausted from fear, cold, and hunger. In its sleep, the creature suckled on her shirt.

“You’re not completely weaned, are you, little one?” she cooed.

Once in her apartment, she dug through the “stuff” drawer in the kitchen to find the puppy bottles and nipples she’d once used for fostering. From a lower cupboard she pulled out an unopened can of puppy formula powder.

Sara got a bottle of formula ready just in time, as Cream woke with a weak, high-pitched cry. The cry was punctuated with what sounded like baby talk, just not in English. The word-like sounds most repeated were “gehgeh” and “looloo.”

It took a few tries, but Sara got Cream to latch on. The puppy formula seemed to be a big hit. She cooed at the little creature as she cradled it like a baby. As it drank, it finally relaxed its grip on her shirt and settled into the crook of her arm.

Cream started to drift off again and dribbled some milk. Sara pulled the bottle away and wiped at the little face. Cream reached for the bottle, “Looloo! Looloo!”

Sara held the bottle. “Looloo? Milk?” She gave it back to Cream, who held on to it with three hands and made soft coos while drinking.

After the furry child emptied the bottle and fell into a boneless sleep, Sara pulled the first aid kit from the drawer of the coffee table beside her. She cleaned the wound on Cream’s paw with a cotton ball. Cream’s eyes opened.

“I’m sorry, Cream. I’m sorry, little guy.” Sara decided that the creature, whether female or male, was a ‘little guy.’ “Sara’s here. I’ll take care of you. You’re going to be okay.”

Cream grabbed Sara’s sleeve and babbled some, ending with, “Sara.”

“Yes, Cream. I’m Sara.” She placed the smallest bandaid she had over the wound and gave it a little kiss. “All done.”

Cream crawled up to grab Sara’s shirt again, laid its head on Sara’s chest, and cried. “Gehgeh, gehgeh, gehgeh, Sara.”

Sara rocked the poor creature back to sleep. Rather than risking waking the sleeping Cream, she lay on her bed without undressing. A few hours later, she woke with the crying creature begging again for “looloo.”

She prepared a new bottle and fed the hungry, tired creature and rocked it back to sleep. The armchair was comfortable enough, and Sara drifted off herself.

The sound of something scrabbling at her window woke her. She turned on the lamp to see a larger version of Cream standing on the flower box outside the third-story window. It looked like an adult version of Cream, wearing a utility belt around a baggy jumpsuit, out of the back of which a tail at least three times fluffier than Cream’s twitched.

Cream woke and screamed out, “Gehgeh! Gehgeh! Sara, gehgeh!”

Sara opened the window, and the creature stepped in. Despite the obvious terror in its eyes, the concern for the child was obvious as well.

“Oh, is ‘gehgeh’ your mama?” Sara asked. She sat down on the floor to put herself on eye level with the standing creature, and Cream climbed down and into the arms of the waiting creature.

“Dren!” The creature dressed the child in a similar garment to its own. It held the child and pressed a button on a box on the belt. The creature’s voice was high and was repeated from the box in English. “Where did you find my child?!”

“I followed a trail of blood droplets and found this poor little guy hiding in a box in an alley.”

“You didn’t eat him,” the creature said through the translator.

“Eat…what?! Why would I do that?”

Cream began babbling again, and the translator picked up parts of it. Sara recognized the sound log ‘gehgeh’ behind the translation of mama and ‘looloo’ behind yummy. “Mama! Mama! Sara … ouch,” He held up his bandaged foot for her inspection. “… yummy … Sara.”

“You — you tended his wound and fed him?”

“Of course. I wasn’t gonna let the little guy suffer.” Sara leaned back. “Why would you think I would eat him?”

“I have studied how you eat other creatures. You are eaters of meat. You also keep companion animals that are eaters of meat, some of which will kill animals for you and bring them to you.” As she started to relax, Cream let go of her and returned to Sara to sit in her lap. She stiffened for a moment, then relaxed again as Sara cooed at the child.

“No one could eat you,” she said, “you’re too cute. Besides, it’s not like we just eat any meat. We’ve been breeding animals for thousands of years to get the temperament and meat or milk quality we want. As far as animals hunting for or with us, yeah, in some places that still happens, but if you’re talking about cats, they do that because they think they’re helping somehow.”

The creature walked closer, staying in its upright posture. Sara noticed what looked like tough gloves on the hand-feet it walked on. “I am Rusna, and my boy is Dren.”

“Nice to meet you, Rusna, and you, Dren. I’m Sara, and I’ve been calling him ‘Cream’ since he’s the color of a creamsicle cat.” Sara stroked the top of Dren’s head, and he snuggled for a few more seconds before rushing back to his mother.

“Would you like something to eat?” Sara asked. “Or drink?”

“Not meat,” Rusna said, “but yes. I am hungry, and fond of the drink you call tea.”

Sara made tea for both of them and brought it out with a package of cookies. They ate and sipped their tea in silence for a few minutes, while Dren drifted back off to sleep.

“I was warned not to come here, because of the danger from humans and their companion animals,” Rusna said.

“Why did you, then?”

“I’m a xeno-sociologist. I’m here to find out everything I can about human society. I brought Dren along because I couldn’t be apart from him for so long. I had just given him a bath and turned to get a fresh towel and—”

“And he ran off.” Sara chuckled. “Sounds like your children aren’t that different from our own. Where are you from?”

“You can’t see our star from here without a telescope,” Rusna said, “but it’s toward the galactic center.”

“Did you and Dren come alone?”

“No. There are thirty-four on our expedition, now.” Her gaze dropped and she sniffed at Dren’s head. “We lost three to illness and accident in the first thirteen planetary rotations but have maintained our number since then.”

“I’m sorry,” Sara said.

Rusna took another sip of her tea. “We’ll survive. I’ll have to adjust some of my starting assumptions about the behavior of societies of omnivores, though.”

“Aren’t there others?” Sara asked.

“None besides yours that show promise to become space bound.”

“Well, if you’re around for a while, you’re welcome to visit any time.” Sara smiled at the sleeping child clinging to his mother’s jumpsuit. “I’d love to see the little guy again.”

Trunk Stories

All I Can Do Is Laugh

prompt: Start your story with the lines: “The room is unfamiliar. I don’t know how I got here.”

available at Reedsy

The room is unfamiliar. I don’t know how I got here. Perhaps, if I was hung over, I’d have a clue, but I feel like I’ve had a good night’s sleep for the first time in recent memory.

I try to remember waking up and moving to where I stand, but there’s nothing. If I’d slept on the small sofa or in one of the armchairs that made up the totality of the room’s furnishings, I would be stiff and sore, not the case.

The thought tickles something in my mind — the case. What case?

I examine the room. Aside from the sparse furnishings, the room has nothing interesting to offer. The walls are covered in pictures of books on bookcases. The sort of thing that could be used as a backdrop for a play or movie. Light comes from a dozen recessed fixtures in the ceiling.

The oddest thing, though, is the lack of any door, window, or other opening. Just to be sure I’m not dreaming, I pinch myself — too hard. It hurts.

There’s too much I don’t know about what’s going on. I take stock of what I do know.

My name is Carmen Carina Alvarez, but I hate it. I go by “CC” instead of the names of my dead grandmother and great aunt. I’m 32, a police officer with a masters in criminal justice — so new the Captain says the ink is still wet on the diploma — and well on my way to making detective.

The last thing I can remember before this room is the Garvey kidnapping case. I was canvassing the apartment building…no, wait, I finished canvassing the building and was walking back out to the cruiser…. It’s all blank after that.

Well, I got in here somehow, and that’s how I’m getting out. I walk along the walls, feeling the slick wallpaper with its images of books on shelves. There has to be a seam somewhere.

I stop halfway along the second wall. Even if I can’t find a seam, I can make one. I reach for my knife in the pouch on my duty belt, only to realize I’m not in uniform.

I’m wearing my work clothes from my old construction job, pre-academy. Old cargo pants and a flannel shirt. No knife in my pocket, but I do have a pen.

I open it, press hard against the wallpaper and drag it back and forth over the same spot to get a hole started. It feels a little wrong to mess up my pen this way, but getting out takes priority.

A small hole becomes a larger hole, becomes a place to grab hold and rip. I work both directions from the hole, exposing the dull grey wall behind. With a three-handspan tall strip across the whole wall, I move on to repeat on the next.

It’s while I’m ripping a strip out of the third wall that I find the door. I wonder how they managed to paper over it on the inside for a moment, then decide it’s better just to get out.

There are no hinges on the inside, so the door must open out. I give it a push, but it doesn’t budge. Without being able to determine which side the hinges are on, I try shouldering it open, first from the left, then the right.

When trying the right side, I hear a slight crack. I back up and try again. Another crack but more faint this time. I need more mass.

I flip the sofa off its legs onto its upholstered back. It slides on the wood floor without much effort. I start from the far side of the room and run the sofa into the stubborn door like a battering ram.

The crack is much louder this time, and I see the door flex a little. I do it again and the sofa gets caught partway through the now open door, where a broken lock bracket hangs from the wall. Just beyond the sofa and door is a toppled bookcase.

I climb over the sofa and bookcase and examine the new room. Where the previous had a few furnishings and pictures of bookcases full of books, this one has bare, grey walls lined with mostly empty bookcases. Real bookcases.

I don’t see another door besides the one I just stepped through, so I examine the dozen or so books. They’re all textbooks I used in the past. Curious, I pick up the Intro to Criminal Justice book from my freshman year. I flip through it and see all my highlighter marks and notes.

It’s not just the same edition, it’s the actual book I used. There’s a rude drawing on page 317 that was already there when I bought it used from the campus store. I take a few minutes to look through all fourteen books in the room and verify that they’re all my copies.

As I finish examining each one, I put it on a middle shelf in the order I used them in school. Placed all together like that, they seem small and meaningless in a room full of empty shelves.

If these shelves were my life, would they have anything else on them? Well, pictures of family and friends, for sure. I’ve got trinkets from every city I’ve ever visited arranged on shelves at home. Nothing very big, just something I can stuff into my pocket or carry-on and remind myself of a trip.

A tin that used to be full of Almond Roca from the factory in Tacoma, Washington is the largest of them, while the smallest is a half-inch lapel pin that I picked up in a truck stop in Tijuana, Mexico.  It doesn’t look like I’ll have a chance to do any shopping wherever I am.

With no other doors in here, and another wall to strip the paper off in the first room, I decide to give myself a break. I search the shelves, looking for some small, forgotten item on the backs of the highest or lowest shelves. Climbing one of them, I feel something loose in the carved facing.

I jiggle it and a carved flower falls into my hand. Just under an inch, made of wood, and stained a deep brown, I turn it over a couple times and squeeze it in my left hand. Souvenir “shopping” done, I return to the first room to rip the paper from the last wall.

Instead of the room as I’d left it, though, I find all the walls repaired, the sofa back in place, the door still open, and a creature lounging on the sofa. I guess that she’s a demon or devil of some kind, based on the deep red skin, black horns and hooves, and the way she’s twirling the end of her tail in a clawed hand.

“Who are you?”

“Not important,” she says. “What is important is, what you are going to do now?”

“What do you mean?”

“You can fight, or you can give up. It’s up to you.” She has a gleam in her solid black eyes that makes me nervous.

“You mean I’m dead,” I say more than ask, “and now it’s time for judgement. Well, if you mean to take me to hell, I’m not going. I’ll fight.” I pull my pen out and brandish it like a weapon. It’s not much against those horns, but it’s better than nothing.

“Nothing quite so final or dramatic as that.”

“Then what?” I ask.

“You can go through the door,” she says, waving at the wall behind her that opens into a bright room, “or you can choose to rest here a while. I’ll fill the shelves with all the books you might want to read until you’re ready to start over.”

“Start over?”

“Yes. You can rest as long as you like—”

“Shut up,” I cut her off. “I’m not staying here.”

I look into the bright light of the open room behind her and recognize the surgical lights shining in my eyes. Without waiting for a response, I run toward the light.

“Wait! You can’t take that! Not so—”

I feel myself slam into my body as pain jolts throughout. I can barely hear her voice trailing off, “…fast, it’ll hurt.”

I’m awake and aware on the operating table. The anesthesiologist is in trouble for this one, but I don’t care. I feel the wooden flower held tightly in my hand. It was real, and I’m alive. All I can do is laugh.

Trunk Stories

Worth It

prompt: Set your story in a place where the weather never changes.

available at Reedsy

The more technologically advanced a shelter, the more disconnected it was from nature. In the case of Travers Station, that was a necessity. Outside the station, nature was nothing other than lethal to all the inhabitants of the station.

The sapient creatures that inhabited the station came from multiple stars. All of them had their own evolutionary history that drove them to innovate. They all had their own social evolution that drove that innovation to push them out among the stars. Still, none of them had evolved in an environment like the one outside the station.

Nature outside the station was the vacuum of space, bathed in the intense ultraviolet radiation of the O4 class star it was here to study. The closest thing to nature inside the rotating station was the garden. Comprising one quarter of the highest ring, with the lowest apparent gravity, the garden boasted shielded windows which allowed precise amounts of light and UVB from the deadly star. Still, warning signs about possible dermal damage were posted outside and throughout the garden, along its well-tended walking paths.

Just inside the spinward entrance of the garden was a picnic table and a collection of chairs in different sizes and shapes to accommodate the many different body plans on the station. It was there that the self-proclaimed “Lunch Club” met once a week.

“Easy,” the crab-like creature said around mandibles that worked at a walnut shell, “the scora — I mean the artificial is okay, but it’s nothing like the real thing, fresh from the ground at home.” His carapace was a dull yellow with pale green spots. His manipulator limbs ended with segmented fingers tipped with a claw made from the endoskeleton that extended outside the exoskeleton. Each of his eight walking limbs ended with a single such skeletal claw.

The orange furred creature seated next to him twiddled with a distraction toy with the middle two of her six multiuse limbs, the lower two grasped like folded hands, while the upper two deftly stacked a sandwich with deli-sliced meats and cheeses, interleaved with lettuce and pickles. “I don’t know,” she said. “I mean, I miss a lot from home, but it’s hard to say which I miss the most. Maybe it’s my family.”

“The same family that you complain about?” the crab-like alien asked.

“Hurtur, be nice,” the bronze-skinned human woman interjected.

“Just because they make me mad sometimes doesn’t mean I don’t miss them.”

“Apologies, Gexna,” Hurtur said around the crunches of the walnut shells he was busy stuffing himself with.

She took a bite of the sandwich that seemed as tall as her head, but her jaws opened wide to accommodate with teeth well-suited to shred and crush. With her mouth full as she chewed, she said “You’re fine. But maybe I miss my boat on the lake more than my family, or—”

“Let Marina answer,” Hurtur cut her off. “It’s her question, after all. What do you miss most from your home?”

Marina sighed. “Weather. I miss weather. Rain, wind, hot days, cold days, snow, fog, all of it.”

Gexna’s large, pink eyes grew wide. “Ooh, that’s a good one. I sometimes take a cool shower, close my eyes, and pretend it’s raining.”

“Don’t spend too long doing that, though,” Hurtur said, “or you’ll exceed your water allowance.”

“Says the guy with a hundred-liter exotic fishtank in his office.” Marina laughed. “I do that sometimes, too, Gexna.”

“Hey, that tank and those fish were gifts from the Terran ambassador.” Hurtur clicked his mandibles. “Besides, it belongs to the office, not me.”

“But you are the ambassador, it is your office, and,” Gexna leaned closer to him, “the gift was addressed to you by name.”

“Fine, it’s mine, but I still stay within my allowance.”

“We all do,” Marina said.

Gexna closed her eyes. “I wish I could walk in the mist once in a while.”

“Mist?” Marina asked.

“Back home, we didn’t get rain often, but we would get a fine mist every morning.” She ran her fingers down the fur of her arm. “It would bead up on my fur and drip off. Such a refreshing feeling.”

Marina smiled. “We used to get misty rain like that in the autumn at home, too. I might have an idea.”

“You’re not going to do something crazy, are you?” Hurtur asked.

“No, nothing crazy. Just, meet me at the anti-spinward entrance to the garden right after the third shift start.”

“That’s so far, though,” Hurtur said.

“It’s literally only four kilometers from here.” Marina shook her head.

“But there’s no tram through the garden,” he complained.

“Take the tram the other direction, then. It’s twenty minutes on the express,” Gexna said. “We won’t get in trouble for being in here late, will we?”

“Nah,” Marina gave the furry creature a hug. “My brother works in a special section of the garden. I’ll clear it with him this afternoon.”

“I’ll be on the first express tram after the end of second shift,” Hurtur said. “Until then, I’ve got paperwork to see to.”

“See you then.” Gexna waved with the distraction toy. “I should get back to work myself.”

“See you this evening.” Marina made sure to police up the table area to make sure they left nothing behind before she exited the garden.

Hours later, when she re-entered the spinward door of the garden to walk to the far end, she found Gexna waiting for her. “Are you walking with me to the other end?”

“Yes. I could use the exercise.”

“Nonsense. You’re in fabulous shape.”

“I have just been spending too much time sitting in one place.” Gexna moved in an undulating gait on all six limbs beside the human woman.

“It’s too easy to do that here,” Marina said.

“What is it your brother does?”

“You’ll see.”

They reached the other end of the garden just in time for Hurtur to enter from that door. “Ugh. That tram ride was interminable.”

“Twenty minutes is interminable?” Marina asked.

“It is when there’s a wailing child three seats away.”

“Why didn’t you—”

“The tram was full,” he cut Marina off.

“Well, follow me. I think you’ll like this.” She led them down a side path that led into ever-denser foliage. The scent of moisture greeted them a few hundred meters in. A wall of flexible slats hung in front of them, painted in a color that disappeared in the trees.

Moving aside the slats, she motioned them in. “Welcome to the moss garden.”

Inside, they were greeted by a cool mist, with soft moss underfoot, and dozens of types of moss growing on every surface. Hurtur made a sound the other two had never heard, a sort of grumbling purr. “Oh, this is marvelous,” he said.

Gexna stretched her body out to nearly double her normal length. Water droplets formed on her fur, and she shivered with a giggle, causing them to run off in rivulets. “This feels like home.”

Marina smiled. “The misters run every day for the entire third shift. We can stay as long as you like. Or at least until we’re all soaked.”

Hurtur stepped farther down the mossy path, then lay down. He flattened himself out until gaps appeared along the edges of his carapace and let out what could only be a heavy sigh. “Can we come back?” he asked.

“Every day if you want,” Marina answered, “if you can deal with screaming toddlers on the tram.”

Hurtur spread himself out as far as his legs would stretch on the mossy path. “Worth it.”

Trunk Stories

Ritual

prompt: Start or end your story with a character making a cup of tea for themself or someone else.

available at Reedsy

The ornate porcelain teapot was out of place on the scratched metallic countertop. Strong, scarred hands the color of worn khaki filled the center strainer of the pot with leaves from an airtight metal canister. Those same hands lifted the electric kettle and poured the boiling water over the strainer in the teapot before putting the lid on and setting it on the cheap, plastic table. “There’s something calming in the ritual of it, I find.”

“Which ritual? The hunt, the capture or…the kill?” The woman that sat at the table was slight of build, with charcoal-black skin including her lips and tongue, striking violet eyes that angled up at the outsides, and ears topped by long points that stuck out of her shock-white hair.

The owner of the teapot, kettle, table, and scarred hands sat across from the dark elf. His height and build would best be described as average. Medium brown hair nearly matched his medium brown eyes. He was of indeterminate age, possibly as young as twenty or as old as fifty. His clean-shaven face was marred by only one scar that began just below the right side of his nose and ran down his lips to his chin. If he chose to grow a beard and mustache, he would have no visible defining features.

“I was speaking of the ritual of making tea,” he said. “Are you that eager to get to business?”

The elf shook her head. “No, I—sorry. This is a strange situation for me.”

“Strange how?” He checked the clock over the door and folded his hands on the table to wait out the last minute of the tea steeping.

“I don’t even know what to call you or what you are. Bounty hunter? Assassin? Spy?” She sighed. “All I know is that you are protected by the Crown even when you do some things that are…distasteful.”

“My name is Senior Agent John McCall, and yours is Detective Brianna Havelock. Why not start there?” He poured the tea into the matching cups. “I’d offer you milk, but since I don’t use it, I don’t keep it on hand.”

“Do you have any honey?” she asked.

He turned to the cabinets behind him and opened one of the metal doors with a squeak. He set a bear-shaped plastic squeeze bottle of honey on the table and sat back down. “Tell me, detective, what do find distasteful about my job performance?”

She stirred her tea, watching the honey dissolve before speaking. “You act as judge, jury, and executioner,” she said, “with no repercussions.”

“What makes you think that?”

“Fallon Straz. I get that your work is meant to be secret, but even when it became public, the official word from the Crown was that quote, ‘These things happen, but the world is safer for it.’ If the police did something like that….”

“Detective Havelock, you’re here because the Crown Secret Service wants you on board. I assure you that I can explain Straz and other cases to your satisfaction, but not without reading you in.” He opened the satchel that sat beside the table and placed a small pile of stapled pages in front of her.

“Read this thoroughly,” he said, “and understand that everything in it is literal, before you make your decision. I’d recommend focusing solely on absorbing all of it before you make up your mind.”

“Literal, huh?” She scanned through the pages and stopped. “Even this? ‘…executed and soul trapped until such time as all known operations are no longer classified.’”

“Especially that. I suggest you take the time to read it all properly.”

Brianna sipped at her tea as she read through the sheaf of papers twice. “Why me?”

“You’ve proven yourself as a natural in undercover work, and The Service can teach you everything you need to be a top-notch agent.” John cleared up the table and cleaned out the teapot. “Besides that, you have no attachments outside work.”

“I would’ve thought that my involvement in the Release the Innocent Project would turn you sour on me as a candidate.”

John smiled. “That was the deciding factor for me. You care more about real justice than your departmental stats.”

“What about Straz? Was it justice when you shot him at point blank range?” she asked.

The smile never wavered. “I can’t talk about it, until and unless you sign that document.”

The elf closed her eyes and massaged the pointed tip of her right ear. She let out a low growl, then said, “Okay. I’m in.”

John watched her sign the documents, then whisked them away into his satchel. “Welcome to the Crown Secret Service, Trainee Agent Havelock,” he said.

“Now you can tell me about Straz, right?”

“I could, but I think I’ll let him tell you the story when we visit his cell tomorrow.”

“Wait, he’s alive?” she asked.

“He is. And he’ll no doubt live to a ripe old age without ever leaving the confines of SuperMax.” John rose and started the kettle again.

“But all the reports, the news, the Crown spokesperson—”

“Told exactly the story we needed them to tell.” He measured out the tea for the strainer and refilled it. “You know what The Service’s main mission is, Trainee?”

“Protect the Crown, Parliament, judges, and so on,” she said.

“That’s our secondary mission. Our primary mission is to protect and preserve the nation.”

“That makes sense, I guess.”

“And do you know what the best tool we have to do that is?” he asked.

“Intelligence?” she answered in a questioning tone.

“Image.” John paused as he poured the water over the strainer and checked the clock above the door. “The CSS creates an image, a look. You, and everyone else in the world, has an image of John ‘The Rogue’ McCall as a shoot first, ask questions later, torture-as-a-hobby strong-arm who will do anything in pursuit of a goal.”

Brianna looked down at the table. “Yeah, I guess so.”

“It’s because that image opens more doors and closes more cases than standard fieldwork alone.” John set the teapot on the table and sat down with a smile. “If I was just another agent, the people I have in my custody would be more likely to stonewall me or try to bullshit their way out. When they realize that The Rogue is their captor, though, they’re much more likely to be as helpful as possible in order to save their own skin.”

“Unless they have their own image to maintain,” she said.

“True. But if they’re at that level, they understand the difference between rumor and reality.” John poured out a second round of tea in fresh cups. “In those cases, there are specially trained agents that handle the interrogations. Before you ask about torture, no, the Service doesn’t do that…at least not physical torture. Considering the number of psychiatrists the Service hires for that role, though, just being in a room with one of them might be considered torture.”

“Since everything I know about you is rumor, how about telling me something real. Have you ever shot anyone?” Brianna sipped her tea, her demeanor much more relaxed than it had been.

“A few times.” John chuckled and said, “I even shot Straz. In the calf, from twenty meters or so, not point-blank in the head. I’d just broken my ankle jumping over a wall and landing on a bottle, and he was getting away. Thought I’d even up the odds.”

Brianna took on a questioning look. “So, the tea,” she asked, “is this just image as well?”

“Why do you ask that?”

“I noticed you barely drank any of your first cup, but you’ve gone and made a second pot for us.” She waved a hand. “Not that I’m complaining, it’s very good tea — Assam black if I were to guess.”

“Good guess, and no, it’s not about image. I meant what I said about the whole ritual of it being calming.” He smiled at the elf again. “Not as Senior Agent to Trainee, but person to person, I recommend you find something that does the same for you. Something simple that calms, centers, and grounds Brianna the person so Brianna the agent can be focused and alert.”