March 26, 2024

Again Oblivion

By Nan Wigington
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

The enemy keeps bombing our graveyard. The wrought iron gates twist and melt like memory. History vanishes beneath our mausoleum’s gray rubble, the wedges of marble. No one knows anymore when Aunt Lydia was born, who the primogenitor married, when Baby Thomas died. Now the dazed dead rise, some only in bone and shroud, some with meat hanging, a top hat here, a bow tie there, a baby bottle, a bible, a string of pearls, a desiccated rose, a slab of coffin. Most sit on their ruined headstones trying to remember, trying to forgot. A few put gray fingers to gray necks and swear they feel a pulse. One or two run screaming, “Save yourself! Save yourself!” Not many pick through the stones, the tiles of letters, and try to reorder names: O-N-E-S-J-M-I-T-H. One has found a mirror and stares blankly at the worms in her cheek. Was this her beautiful face? She winces when she hears the planes overhead. As if she could put a name to pain.

About the Author

Nan WigingtonNan Wigington lives in the Rocky Mountain West near one of her state’s oldest and largest cemeteries. Her flash fiction has appeared in Nunum, The Ekphrastic Review, and New Flash Fiction Review.

Related Flash
an uncapped syringe on teal background

Needle

By Elena Zhang

“Let me tell you about your lao ye, Ayi says. I feel a pressure on my wrist, then a sharp tap as the needle bites into flesh, hovering just above rivers of blood.”
Motion blur photo of Saturn's rings

Night at St. Pierre Hospital 2020

By Angeline Schellenberg

“She keeps close to the courtyard window she came through, her ears tuned to nurses’ flats slapping down the hallway. Her brother’s shaky hand reaches across the tray for a water glass.”

brown and black cat

Such Good Care

By Ani King

“My mom has never been one for much crying. Not that she never cried, she was a child once, and sometimes one of my aunts will get the sharp, gleeful look of a wronged sibling about to cash in on a little emotional revenge.”

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This