Flash Fiction in Five Hundred Words or Less
Wake Up
“Wake up, wake up…we’ve got to move, patrols will be out soon, we’ve got to get back on the Trail.”
It’s Sunday.
This morning we attended church with a small group of Patriots. Services are different now, they are held quietly and secretly in basements by candlelight since all church buildings were destroyed by the early anarchists bent on eliminating Christian-Judaic traditions.
But that was before the Socialists gained power, ushered in by the failure of leaders to control their left after years of isolation, a pandemic, and the collapse of the economy.
Chaos ensued, opportunity knocked, and the North Korean missiles rained down. Smoke and ash still linger in the air of the cities. But in the mountains, the trail once known as the Appalachia Trail, now serves Patriots who want to travel north and south, staying away from the cities controlled by the Communists and their socialist natives in servitude.
The once majestic skyline of our Capital lies broken, its white stones darkened by fire and ash. Yet, the statue of Saunders, the hero of the Socialist uprising, ironically still stands intact on the Mall covered in graffiti in a language once foreign to our country, a reminder of what can happen when a country loses its values.
But in the mountains and the rural areas, there is safety. The new Government chooses not to worry about those who are too hard to control. Besides, there are plenty of “comrades” falling in line in the cities, no need to care about folks like us.
We are traveling to Western Pennsylvania. We have people there and it’s far from the metropolitan areas controlled by the invaders. There we will have food and shelter. We will follow the trail north through West Virginia and Maryland and into Pennsylvania, then travel at night on the rural highways west to the Laurel Highlands and safety, and some home cooking since the once-bustling free enterprises of “Eat More…” and “Have it Your…” have been converted into distribution kitchens serving those who serve our captors. The food, mostly rice brought in from the homeland and provided by the Government since the fields within fifty miles no longer support crops or pasturing of livestock.
It’s a different world now. Once worried about the burning of fossil fuels, instead now we choke in the carbon monoxide tainted air left by missiles, fires, and barren tracks of land that one day were green, taking in the carbon dioxide and providing us oxygen.
I am sad. Sad for myself, sad for my family, sad for those who didn’t see it coming.
For now, though, I must concentrate on putting one foot after the other as I walk the ridges of protruding rocks. We have many more miles to travel.
“Wake up honey, wake up, you are going to be late for class!”
“I’m up, I’m up…wow Mom…I was dreaming, I mean I had this really weird dream.
“It was scary.”
“But it’s okay…
I am awake now.”
According to Masterclass.com:
Flash fiction is a favored genre … for its ability to convey deep truths and universal human emotions in just a few short paragraphs.
Flash fiction is a genre of fiction, defined as a very short story. While there is no set word count that separates flash fiction from more traditional short stories, flash fiction stories can be as short as a few words (while short stories typically run for several pages).
I don’t like to write fiction, but it was fun to try for a contest.
But I don’t expect I have conveyed deep truths and human emotions as described above.
I would prefer to do that with non-fiction.
It’s Palm Sunday.
The day Jesus entered Jerusalem.
I heard an awesome prayer this morning that moved me.
“You come among us in unexpected ways, whoever heard of a king on a donkey, a savior on a cross. How do we know it is you? How should we recognize your presence? Will we see you when you stand among us? Will we hear your voice and understand your message?
Will we wave palms of enthusiasm today, but drop our arms in confusion tomorrow?”
The crowd mentality ensued that day.
Hosanna…” save us” they cried.
But that was quickly forgotten and replaced.
“Crucify Him.”
The prayer I heard this morning went on to question our ability to stand on our own beliefs and not to succumb to what may be the popular opinion.
The opinion of the crowd.
I guess it’s not so popular to believe in this story anymore.
This story of Jesus riding on the back of a donkey.
It’s certainly not so popular to yell “Hosanna.”
And it’s not so popular to believe Jesus died to save us.
But I believe.
And it’s okay.
I am awake now.
Post Script:
The photo above popped up on my Google memories or Facebook this week. It’s from a year when we were still able to welcome the community and particularly the children to our church at Easter. We pray that will change again soon.
That’s me under the bunny head. I get to play many roles in my job. Even representing the fictional aspects of this season.
Happy Easter!