Tag: storytelling

Volcano

Flash Fiction by Robby Sheils

Noel Hammond looked out his townhouse windows to the fractured sidewalk, its bricks covered in ant hills and tufts of beige grass. All of Brooklyn had been dry for a month, and the seventy-year-old grew to believe the bizarre fantasy that it wouldn’t rain until he pitched a new mystery for adaptation.

Amid the drought, Noel struggled to find his next success. He had made a living from his mystery novels, many of which went on to become bestsellers, though most of his success came from production companies buying him out. He had recently written a novella’s worth of pages on a retreat to his lake house, about a boy who fished dinner for his folks and fell in love with the girl in the cliffside mansion. It marked the fastest story he ever wrote, but it ended without a twist. And a movie without a twist seemed foolish, and so Brooklyn remained dry.

Noel recognized that blaming himself for the dry spell was a silly thought. But it was also a haunting one. He agonized over this supernatural burden until his stomach grumbled, and with great reluctance he stepped outside.

The afternoon sun hung high, and the clouds above him loomed massive and ominous. It was the hottest June in memory; every afternoon the sky threatened to break and every night it balled up and looked ugly and never did. All waiting on Noel.

Lost in a brainstorm, he meandered the quiet, upscale streets of Fort Greene. He daydreamed of Polly. Had it really been five years since she passed? Every step down their block felt undeserving. She was the one who pointed out the flower beds, who took great interest in holiday decorations and raved about the font of street numbers. Never Noel.

In the deli, four Hispanic men sat huddled, joking about something. Or nothing. The cold air from the AC snapped Noel back to Brooklyn, and rainless guilt spread across his arms in goosebumps.

He grabbed a ham sandwich and moved along. Home happened to be past an old Episcopalian church, but the heat made him lightheaded and so he paused to stare at the copper steeple, its years worn into a muted patina.

And right then and there the sky made up its mind and broke wide open. In an instant, rain fell in buckets and the road rumbled like a revving jet engine.

Noel ran as fast as his arthritic knees could take him, beelining for a skinny overhang outside a laundromat. A woman, about Noel’s age, and a boy were also marooned. Out of courtesy, they shuffled as close to the edge as the tiny cover allowed. The woman stood tall and elegant, and the boy had shins that marked a lanky and painful stretch of puberty. He held an orthodox paper-mâché diagram of a volcano, complete with a construction paper forest and a bright blue river of churned up Jell-O.

“Thank God for roofs!” he yelled over the slugs of rain, attempting to dodge awkwardness from their suddenly close quarters.

“Ah!” the woman agreed, along with other words that got swallowed in the storm.

“Pardon?” yelled Noel. The rain beat the roof at an alarming speed.

“My grandson! He wants to become a chemist!”

“Aha!”

The woman edged closer to Noel. He could see that when she smiled, like she was now, two dimples peeked through her wrinkles. “What about you?” she asked. Her voice sounded clear and steady.

“Sorry?”

“What did you want to be? When you grew up?”

She stared at him warmly, like an old friend or lover, and the inside of Noel’s chest fluttered in a way it had not in years. He glanced at his shoes and down the road. “An author.”

“Ah, that’s a good one,” she said, looking towards her grandson. “And what did you become?”

Noel rubbed at his knuckles. “An author.”

She laughed with her whole body, beautiful and earnest, and rounded it off with a clap that rang above the rain.

“Have you written anything good?”

“I think so.”

“Are you writing something now?” she asked, turning back to Noel.

Despite years of answering this very question—his agent’s favorite one—it still caught him off guard. Her tone sounded neither critical nor demanding, but honestly curious. It defied business. “Trying to,” he said.

“How much have you got done?”

“The whole thing.”

There was that laugh again.

“The whole thing?” she asked.

“Yes, but it needs a twist.”

The rain toned down to a pitter. The grandson used his pointer finger to do touch-ups on his Jell-O river.

“That’s silly,” she said, dimples showing again.

“No one would buy it,” he said.

“I would.”

The rain had nearly died, and the wet road began to glint. Noel looked at her, straight in her unblinking hazel eyes, and believed her.

“Would you like to get a coffee sometime?” he asked, the words out of his mouth before he could digest them himself.

“Yes,” she said, “as a friend. Could we be friends?”

Noel surprised himself with a smile. Like a boy crushing on a schoolteacher, he recognized the flutters in his stomach as butterflies of respect, not romance. Having someone to talk to—about whatever, about nothing—he missed dearly.

The two brainstormed a café where they could meet, and then said their goodbyes. Noel crossed the road, smelling the sweet metallic rain, and wondered if others would read his story. It was the fastest one he ever wrote for God’s sake, and it may as well be finished.


Robby Sheils is an emerging writer from Portland, Maine, who primarily writes slice-of-life fiction. He spent two years as an editor for The Telling Room, and in 2022 released a self-published novel, Shelley Avenue. He was most recently published in Rock Salt Journal. He now lives in Brooklyn, New York.

The Heritage Park War

Fiction by William Falo

You bought a house near Heritage Park, and after feeding your cat Rogue, you walked outside. There was an old man there walking a dog. He waved, and you loving animals walked over to pet the friendly dog.

“Sophie.”

“Yes?”

“I recognize you.”

“From where?”

“You lived here as a child.”

“Yes, ten years ago.”

“How is your mother?”

“Good, she moved into an assisted living place, and I bought the house from her.”

“Welcome back to Marlton and Heritage Village. Do you still have your cat?”

“Yes. How did you know?”

“Do you remember the war?”

“No.”

“I was there. After it happened, your mother told me what you said that you saw, and I believed her. Do you want to hear about it?”

“Yes, let’s sit on the bench.”


The cawing of the crows got so loud that you thought they were gathering right outside your window. When you looked outside, there were some in the distance, and you saw what looked like an army of cats in Heritage Park behind your house in Marlton.

“Mom, there are cats and crows in the backyard, and I think they are going to fight.”

Your mother mumbled about fever dreams. You were sick and always felt tired lately. They said it could be the flu, but you might need to be brought to the hospital if you didn’t get better. That scared you more than anything. When your mother was in the other room, you opened the window and put pieces of bread on the ledge. One crow always came and ate it. It was always the same crow because it had a damaged wing that hung down, but it could still fly.

You saw the cats coming into the park, and they walked with their heads up, for they knew no fear. Their large eyes saw everything, and their claws cut like knives. You wished there was a way to convince them to go elsewhere, but they never listened to anyone.

The crows ruled the air, but the cats were fast, and feathers floated down after some encounters. It looked like it would go on forever until the leader crow picked out a specific plant, then flew above the cats and dropped it; the cats went crazy and forgot why they were there. They couldn’t resist the catnip. Some ran off, others chased imaginary birds, while others grabbed anything they could find, curled around it, and then kicked at it with their back legs.

Eventually, they all left with a few hisses as a warning that they would be back. You
believed them. They had nine lives.

You saw a man walking a dog.

“You?”

He nodded.

“Your mother said you woke up, and the fever was gone, so you ran to the window and looked out.”

Later, you walked through the park, and the crow with the damaged wing circled above your head. You understood that she wanted you to follow her, and you did until it landed near a bush. Under the bush was a tiny kitten. It meowed and looked at you with sad eyes.

You brought the kitten home. The crow saved the kitten’s life; it would have died out there alone. Your mother was so happy that you felt better, she agreed to care for it and take it to the vet in the morning, and yes, you could keep it. It was a female, and you named it Rogue after your favorite Marvel character.

The next day, you walked through Heritage Park and thought of Rogue the kitten and how the crow saved it, which gave you hope for peace. Soon, you and Rogue were best friends.


Your eyes filled with tears, and you hugged the man.

“Please come for coffee later. I want to ask you more since my mother has dementia. I want to write it all down because I always thought it was a strange dream, and now that I have met you, it has all come true, and that is the most amazing and wonderful thing that has happened to me in a long time.”

“I’m happy I could finally tell someone.”

“Has there been another war?”

“No, but I keep watch, and now I hope you will help guard the park too.”

“I will.” You hugged him again. Above you, a crow cawed, and you wondered if it could be the one with the damaged wing. You knew you would put food out later.

You went home, and with Rogue climbing over your desk, you wrote the first line of a story nobody would believe. The war began in Heritage Park.


William Falo lives with his family, including a papillon named Dax. His stories have been published or are forthcoming in various literary journals. He can be found on Twitter @williamfalo and Instagram @william.falo.

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