September 24, 2024

Twister

By Mikki Aronoff
Photo by Kelly on Pexels.com

Shelling peas was challenging — sad Maddie’d lost her hands, but not in the event that leveled the center of town. Main Street buckled at exactly two o’clock that fateful Saturday afternoon — rose up then down, just as folks were milling about, exchanging recipes for plum wine and buying elastic and darting across the street to greet or avoid meddlesome neighbors. First a whoosh like a runaway locomotive. Silver minnows fell from the sky. Windows feathered, fell onto shifting sidewalks. Buildings tumbled, entombing the townspeople — mouths agape, legs splayed — under the rubble of concrete, donuts, rebar, lampposts, lambchops, a theater marquee heralding the latest film —

            S

                        TAR

                           R

                        ING

No one to sweep it up.

Tourists come to gawk. Little Joey in a red cap arrives with his homeschooling mother. He teeter-totters on the wreckage, hanging on to the strap of her bag. Marveling at the toppled marquee. Joey points to the letters all askew, grins, plumps up like a rooster and crows, “STARING!” Mother sours, slaps his cherry cheeks, tells him he should know better. “…no better,” he repeats, watching his whole life stumble in front of him like jagged railroad tracks, like he had no hands.

About the Author

Mikki AronoffMikki Aronoff writes tiny stories and advocates for animals. Her work has been long-listed for the Wigleaf Top 50 and nominated for Pushcart, Best of the Net, Best Small Fictions, Best American Short Stories, and Best Microfiction. Mikki has stories appearing in Best Microfiction 2024 as well as Best Small Fictions 2024. She lives in New Mexico.

Related Flash
eisbar gesicht nahaufnahme

Today at the Zoo

By Benjamin Drevlow

“Today at the zoo, someone has posted a video of a polar bear playing with a cow out swimming.”
red apples on tree

That Scene From Every Movie Where the Dead Person Gets Cremated

By Benjamin Drevlow

“When we spread my brother’s ashes in the apple orchard just below the barn, they never blew back in our face and made us sneeze…”

macro shot photography of insect head

The Ants

Holly Lyn Walrath

“You lie in the grass and let ants crawl all over you. You lie so perfectly still that they start to think you’re just another part of the landscape—a rock, a log, a statue.”

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This