February 6, 2023

Pit Stop

By Mikki Aronoff

Photo credit: Lê Minh and Enrico Perini.

She cuts the engine and swings down from the cab like a spider monkey flying through rainforest. She thrives on heights, but she’s running out of diesel and there’s that hot date with a trapezist seven exits away. As the hose snakes, the station attendant inside rubbernecks the pictures she’s painted on the side of her truck — things aloft: kestrels, Cessnas, wind-tousled leaves. Things higher in the sky: clouds, comets, stars.

“That’s some collection you got there,” he grins, floating untethered from his perch behind the safety glass, swiping her card and rolling his eyes upwards till the whites ignite. 

About the Author

Mikki AronoffMikki Aronoff’s work appears in New World Writing, MacQueen’s Quinterly, Tiny Molecules, The Disappointed Housewife, Bending Genres, Milk Candy Review, Gone Lawn, Mslexia, The Dribble Drabble Review, The Citron Review, and elsewhere. She’s received Pushcart, Best of the Net, Best Small Fictions, Best American Short Stories, and Best Microfiction nominations.

Related Flash
Stars at night

Seeds of Stars

By Richard Stimac

Willa’s older brother set a blanket out in the backyard. His name was William, but people called him Billy. Willa’s full name was Willamina.

village houses with damaged roofs and uprooted trees

Twister

By Mikki Aronoff

“First a whoosh like a runaway locomotive. Silver minnows fell from the sky. Windows feathered, fell onto shifting sidewalks. Buildings tumbled, entombing the townspeople.”

photo of an old tv

Television, Explained

By Anthony Varallo

“The main television was in the family room. Usually the main television was large, in comparison to other televisions around the house, say, a twelve-inch black and white atop a kitchen counter, or, in some luckier, more fortunate homes, a fourteen-inch color console injecting a guest bedroom with blue-green light.”

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This