Category Archives: flash fiction

“The Last Thing I Said” Flash Fiction by Niles Reddick

My sister told me my mother had been crying off and on all day. Her ex-aunt-in-law hit a deer about six in the morning and was killed. She probably hadn’t seen the deer until it was too late because of the thick fog like pea soup. There were no skid marks, only tire tracks off the road, through the shallow ditch, up the embankment, and into a stand of pines. 

Aunt Gracie (we still referred to ex’s as aunts and uncles) was on her way to the bread factory, a place that emanated a yeast smell throughout the region, and where she’d worked for thirty-five years, not because of the pay, but because of the health care. The large doe had destroyed the front end of her Impala, was thrown up on the hood and went through the windshield, and poor Aunt Gracie never stood a chance. 

All that detail had been shared with mother, along with the fact that Gracie was at the funeral home waiting on her only adopted daughter to drive in to confirm arrangements. Fortunately, Gracie had a funeral policy that covered everything, or she wouldn’t have had a casket, funeral, or an eternal resting place at the cemetery. In fact, it wasn’t clear what would have happened had she not had the insurance because her daughter couldn’t afford to pay it being a single mother, her working and trying to make ends meet as best she could. Perhaps, they would have simply cremated her, tossed her ashes out behind the funeral home by the swelling mound of soil from dug graves.

“Mother, why are you so upset? She divorced your uncle thirty years ago and moved off. He remarried and had children by his second wife”.

“Because the last thing I said was ‘Get the hell out of my house, you crazy bitch.’”

“Why in the world would you have said that?”

“Because your brother was a toddler and bit her daughter. Then, that crazy woman bit your brother. A grown woman reacting like that. She should have known better. I would have popped him for biting her daughter, but I didn’t even have time.  Then she said to your brother, ‘Well, how do you like that? That’ll teach not to bite somebody.’ He was a toddler for Pete’s sake.”

“Well, I’ll admit that’s a little off, but why are you feeling guilty about it when it was forty years ago?”

“I don’t know. I’m sorry for my behavior, but a mother is going to look after her child, no matter what.”

“I’m sure she moved on and forgave you.”

“Well, knowing Gracie, she forgave me, but she never forgot it.”

“You going to the funeral?”

“I doubt it. I’d have to rearrange my teeth cleaning and my hair appointment. You just about can’t rearrange because they are so busy.”

“I know.”


Niles Reddick is author of a novel, four short fiction collections, and two novellas. His work has appeared in over five hundred  publications including The Saturday Evening Post, New Reader Magazine, Cheap Pop, Flash Fiction Magazine, Citron Review, Hong Kong Review, and Vestal Review. He is an eight-time Pushcart nominee and three-time Best Micro nominee . His website: http://nilesreddick.com/

Connect with him on social media: 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/niles.reddick.9

Instagram: nilesreddick@memphisedu

Twitter: @niles_reddick

Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/niles-reddick-0759b09b/


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“Mushroom Searching” Flash Fiction by Zary Fekete

These days there are many books, many pages, all promising, but the right way to begin is to ask grandmother. Which grandmother? Choose one. They are all correct and never lie. Nagyi or Nagyika or Mamikam. From Pest or Dunantul or the Alfold, they each have their secrets. They were all young once. Their routes led them from little country hamlets and acres of chipped Communist blocs, down through the decades, past wall after wall, papered with propaganda, each sign promising something just beyond reach, not quite true. But the mushroom recipe doesn’t lie. It just requires the right path.

Choose favorable weather. Just after a rain followed by a humid sun, hidden away in the shadows of the forest. Not a stir of breeze among the wet trunks. The only sound, the drip drip of soaked leaves and the tiny scurrying of beetles and ants among the underbrush. Bring along a basket lined with embroidered cloth for collection and grandfather’s sharp knife for exploring beneath rotting logs, make sure you aren’t bitten by something waiting in the soaking darkness. Wear the right clothes. Tuck your tights into stockings and tie petticoats around knees. Wrap each leg carefully so nothing can be caught in the grasping, greedy branches. Walk carefully. Hold hands. Pick a partner. Step where she stepped. 

Watch the ground carefully. Remember the legend of the boy who wouldn’t share his bread while he walked with his friends through the woods. He had a full mouth every time they looked back at him, so he spit out each guilty mouthful. The bread-droppings left a trail. They transformed into mushrooms, and that’s why when you find one there are always more nearby.

Once your basket is full bring it to the village examiner. Some mushrooms are safe, but some carry poisonous secrets. Some promise succor but silently wound. Some sing sweet songs but echo with a hollow gong. All taste sweet and feathery on first bite, but some have dark pools in their past. Bring home the good ones, but throw the rest into the stream and watch them float away.

Finally, prepare your soup. Mix the mushrooms with the right broth. Thin-sliced for clear soup. Thick-chunked for heavy stew. The mushrooms will take on the flavor of their companions. In this way they make good neighbors. They don’t betray secrets. They keep what is given to them. They protect what is beneath them. The preserve the family lineage deep below the earth.


Zary Fekete grew up in Hungary. He has a debut novella (Words on the Page) out with DarkWinter Lit Press and a short story collection (To Accept the Things I Cannot Change: Writing My Way Out of Addiction) out with Creative Texts. He enjoys books, podcasts, and many many many films. Twitter and Instagram: @ZaryFekete Bluesky:zaryfekete.bsky.social

This piece was originally published in Papers Publishing journal.


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“The Farm” Flash Fiction by Deborah Templeton

​He rang the bell and then leaned in against the wall, out of the rain. Hands in his pockets, listening for her. Then the door opened in a spill of light, and it was Lizzie.       

​“There she is,” he said, and stepped straight in past her, headed for the warmth.

​“Dad…”

​Henry thumped his stumpy tail when he saw who it was, but he didn’t get up and Dan fussed him for a minute. Lizzie’s homework things were all over the sofa. He shoved them out of the way and took the spot she’d been sitting in, right next to the fire. 

​“Look at the height of you,” he said, “You’re shooting up.”

​“That’s because you haven’t seen me for ages.” She perched on the edge of the armchair nearest the door.

​“Sure I was here the other week.”

​“You were not.”

​“I was. You were out somewhere. Did your mother not tell you?”

​Lizzie said nothing.  Dan stretched out his legs and rested his feet on the dog’s back. Henry didn’t mind that. 

​“What about a cuppa for your auld Da?”

​He listened to the sounds from the kitchen as she clinked around in there. Her mother would likely have biscuits in. He wouldn’t mind something sweet. 

​The fire had a good glow going, and the mantel clock was ticking away, same as ever. Lizzie was 13 last birthday so it was thirteen years since they’d took this house and set that fancy clock on the mantelpiece. Thirteen years in a house Maureen thought she was too good for. Her bloody Da had it drummed into her that she was a Donnelly and could expect the best. Well, she could and she did, but she was a long time waiting for it.

​Lizzie brought the mugs of tea in one hand and a plate of biscuits in the other–Hobnobs. Him and her both liked their Hobnobs. 

​“Move that stuff,” she said, and when he’d lifted her books off, she settled on the other end of the sofa and put the plate between them. She did well in school, did their Lizzie. Never any trouble getting her to do her homework. She’d always been a bright wee thing. When she was no age he would take her with him out on the milk run, and she’d read out the orders for him. Great company, she was. Cute as a button. 

​He had loved those mornings. Loved being up at the farm before light, warmth pouring out of the dairy shed.Him and the wean in their wellies, and the rich smell of cowshit in the good country air, and the air steaming with their breath and the breath of the cows. 

​But you can’t raise a family on a milk round. Maureen’s father said he’d put him over the middle arch of the town bridge if he didn’t get a proper job. So he went into the factory then, and the milk was sold cheap to Allied Dairies.

​“Is your Mammy at work?” he said, although he knew she would be. 

​“Mm-hmm.”

​They held their cups of milky tea and concentrated on dunking their Hobnobs just the right amount, catching the soggy biscuit end before it fell off. The dog was snoring gently, and the fire was glowing, and the mantel clock was marking time. Lizzie had her feet pulled up under her. Look at those long legs – she was getting tall. Thirteen. He hardly knew her.

​“I was up at the farm,” he said, and he spoke softly into the softness of the room. 

​“Were you?” Her head snapped up to look at him, eyes like her mother’s. “How was me Uncle James?”

​“Grand. Grand.”

​She loved the farm. Loved that her auld Da had grown up there. In that white-washed foursquare house, with the dairy yard milling with cows. When she was wee, he would pick her up so she could rub their big trusting faces and smell their sweet grassy breath. Even after he gave up the milk round, he had her out there all the time, seeing her Granny and Granda and her Great-uncle James. Now there was only Jamesy living out there, the old bastard, still going strong. And no cows at all. 

​“Why did you not call for me?”

​“Ach, I didn’t know I was going,”he said. 

​It wasn’t true, and saying it didn’t help. The wean wasn’t stupid. She looked at him out of the side of her eye, and then drank the last of her tea, tipping the cup so as to let the sugary, biscuity sludge drip into her mouth.  

​“Lizzie, love,” Dan leaned a bit closer, his arm along the back of the sofa, “Uncle Jamesy’s not as young as he used to be.”

​She was toying with her mug, turning it in her hands. She was not looking at him now. 

​“You know he’s had his name down for an old folk’s bungalow? Well, one’s come up in The Heights.”  

​She was a bright one, his Lizzie. She knew what it meant. 

​“You’ll be able to call in and see him after school.”

​He didn’t need to say it. He didn’t need to say it out loud. 

​Maureen’s mantel clock whirred, winding up to chime. She’d be finishing her shift and getting back soon. 

​“Sure the place is half-derelict, Pet, it’s not fit to live in.”

​She would know that. She would know that Uncle Jamesy would be better off in the town. It wasn’t the farm it used to be. The days were gone when it sung to the sound of cows lowing for their breakfast, and the yard pooled with light from the milking shed.  The days were gone when it could have been a home for a family. And when a child’s breath could make time stand still in the frosty air.


Deborah Templeton lives on the north coast of Ireland. She writes for all kinds of contexts, including soundwalks and live performance. Water’s Edge was published in audio and book formats by Confingo (UK) in 2023.


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“Nobody Loves” Microfiction by Thomas Elson

“A mime? What the hell?”  My friend said that afternoon as the entire student body shmushed through the doors and into the auditorium of the newest high school in the state. 

This was the third school assembly arranged by the well-traveled, very well-read, quite elegant English teacher and theater director about whom rumors swirled.

Voices clattering, the students plunked into their seats.
The lights dimmed.
The curtain parted.
A man –
rail-thin,
attired in a black-and-white horizontal-striped sailor-neck,
long-sleeved shirt,
black pants,
thin slippers with no soles

sauntered onto the stage
arms erect at his sides
hands stiff
toes pointed
The crowd sat in silence.
He bowed humbly
walked lightly
sat gently
gesticulated effusively
emoted silently

His face morphed into glee, despair, then confusion as music piped from the stage toward the audience.
Within moments, his feet moved as if to the sound of tiny pebbles clattering onto the wooden stage.
The mime ducked,
remained in character while he
jerked his head right and left.
raised his hands to shield his face.

Hard pebbles of uncooked macaroni were slung by kids
too young to drive legally – only four of whom would graduate from college – few of whom would marry only once –
and only one of whom would ever return.

After the assembly, the English teacher bounded toward the stage,
waiving a blue box he must have picked-up on the aisle.

He demanded silence, then admonished the crowd for long minutes - about
manners, decorum, respect –
until the principal intervened
to dismiss them.
However, to this day, no one has answered the key question:
Who the hell brings a box of macaroni to a high school assembly?

Thomas Elson’s stories have appeared in multiple journals, including, New Writing Scotland, Short Édition, Selkie, New Ulster, Lampeter, Moria, Mad Swirl, Blink-Ink, Scapegoat, Flash Frontier, Bending Genres, and Adelaide. His story, Trapped Inside, was nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He divides his time between Northern California and Western Kansas.


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“The Spike Buck” Flash Memoir by Maxwell Adamowski

Now I had to learn to shoot. The sound of the rifle was tremendous echoing off the mountainsides. It was late summer and the fireweed was blooming and the huckleberries were ripe. The smell of the gunpowder lingered in my limbic nerves, triggering danger, danger, bravery. Then the summer turned to autumn, and now the hunt was on. The air turned crisp and the birch tree changed from green to golden. Nature was humming and bullets paraded on the flats. I would leave the matriarchal farmer with a glint in my eye knowing the game was waiting. She would always protest, but I had history behind me – when a man is off to hunt, you must leave him alone. She ran to me when I was leaving: don’t go, don’t go. I looked her coldly in the eyes and guided her back to the garden then laughed to myself, as I drove off down the road. I passed the bear then met the man who had dementia right beside his cherry tree. With time, I chose to do my hunt alone.

The witchy matriarch was six-foot tall with piercing, pagan eyes. She was an empath with a hardened character bred from decades of abuse and chronic pain. She spoke the language of the horses, the flowers and the bees, but she doubted me and this would leave me fuming, pacing, slamming doors and acting lawless. I ran power trips like an aristocrat so that I could gain respect and prove this woman wrong.

And so the game, I thought, would be way up high where mankind wouldn’t go. It was a steep hike, miles up the incline of a mountain to a clearcut on the peak. I would see a raven now and then, as I marched upwards, rifle strapped over my shoulder. I waited many days empty-handed, but then the first buck showed up with his proud antlers shining in the sun, trotting down the mountain meadow ready to make acquaintance. The adrenaline hit fast so I trailed him, rushing into the timber, before I reassessed my strategy and headed to my ambush spot. It wasn’t long before he came walking right up to me. Exhilarated, I kneeled into position, but he caught my scent, jumped, and bolted away hurriedly down the cuts back into the timber. I had lost him again. Seriously concerned that I had squandered my only chance, I walked back down the mountain to my car.

There comes those times in life, those certain times, when we must embrace a manic perseverance … a willpower so dedicated that it leads us to walk through harm’s way gladly and trudge forwards unscathed and still highly motivated. I woke up in the middle of the night and trekked back up the mountain to the peak. Bitterly cold, I tramped uphill through the snow determinedly, as a wolf howled and I grit my teeth. In the final stretch before the break of dawn, when there was light to see, I approached my ambush spot and much to my surprise, stumbled right into the buck. He was there feeding overnight. He stared straight at me, startled and curious, and froze into a shaky posture, so I tiptoed even closer, and my only shot was for its neck. Bang. The loud sound echoed through the mountains and he jolted up into the air like he had stepped on a landmine. He sprinted into the timber as fast as his legs would take him. I saw hair on the ground where he had been, but no blood trail. I knew I had missed the shot. I sat there in exhaustion and humiliation. I didn’t know what I would tell them.

I returned to the farmhouse that afternoon to see the married couple bickering away, clearly in a serious dispute. They were not surprised at all to see me empty-handed. I pulled up a chair in their rustic kitchen filled with plants and earthy paintings, just to be treated like the figurehead of irresponsibility. After I told my tale, the man reflected for a steady minute, then looked at me and said he thought I shot the buck. His wife then mimicked his remark, stating, “Always go look for the animal.

The farmer and I went to look but it had escaped without damage and this led to impatience to get another try due to the fact that the year was wrapping up.

But my optimism came flooding back when I saw fresh tracks in the fresh snow. They couldn’t have been more than a couple hours old. We were in the final days of the season now and I made my ambush by a tall evergreen making sure my wind was right. I waited about half an hour and then a deer walked into sight. He was about sixty yards down the mountain, slightly hidden by a patch of saplings and I looked with strained eyes to see if he had antlers. I was hit with a feeling of radiance. He had little horns on the top of his head. This was a spike buck. I walked slowly towards him, tense to the extreme, manoeuvring to the proper angle to align the perfect shot. I kneeled, took a breath and pulled the trigger. Boom. He sprinted forwards and there was a luminous feeling of an earthly animal member passing on. A flash of red illuminated after the clap of the shot, but when I got to where he was standing, there was no blood-trail. Following his tracks into the timber, I was convinced that I had missed again. Turning the bend and following the hoof tracks — suddenly, in front of me was the dead body of a spike buck slumped in this mountain forest. I had connected through the heart-lung cavity. It felt like I had been told I no longer had to hold up the weight of the sky on my shoulders. There was a profound sensation of deep relief.


Maxwell Adamowski is a Canadian survivalist and woodsman who lived alone for a year in the wilderness performing a series of rite of passage rituals. “The Spike Buck” is one of the first stories in his book, CarQuest.


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