Wordy Wednesdays: TEN (Part Five)

Welcome to Wordy Wednesdays! Here is the exciting conclusion, Part Five of Five of my new short story, “TEN”.

I hope you’ve enjoyed the story and let me know what you think!

If you missed previous parts of the story, you can find them at the links below. Enjoy! 🙂

Previous parts of the story:

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

Part Four

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TEN

PartFiveofFive

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Finish Line

As Kyra crossed the threshold, she moved cautiously. Stopping just inside the room, she looked around. There was a large wooden desk to her left in front of a big window pane. Outside, the sky was blue with puffy white clouds and the sun shone in the window warmly. The chair behind the desk was turned as if someone had recently left it in a hurry, not bothering to push it in behind the desk.

To her right, there was a wooden framed couch and chair set with a coffee table and side table in matching wood tones. The cloth on the couch and chair were light gray with splashes of color like someone couldn’t decide which color to put on so they just put them all. Kyra wrinkled her nose and grimaced at the ugly furnishings.

On the floor at her feet was a tiny slip of paper. Kyra picked it up and turned it over to read the message. “Great treasure will be yours.” the paper promised and she smiled.

A lone plant stood in the corner across from the couch and chair and a water cooler was next to the plant. The cooler bubbled gently and Kyra knew someone had retrieved water from the cooler only recently. On the bookshelf next to the desk, Kyra spotted what she was after. Carved from crystal and filled with shining color, it glittered in the light.

Next to the chair was a door leading out of the office. Kyra swiftly moved the chair to block the door and turned toward the bookcase and her prize. Crossing the distance quickly, Kyra stretched up on her toes to grab the crystal treasure. She couldn’t quite reach it. Glancing around, she saw the chair behind the desk and walked to grab it. Wheeling the chair over to the shelf, she prepared to climb up and grab the crystal bowl.

“Kyra!”

The door opened and Dr. Martinson stepped in.

“Don’t climb on that chair, Kyra. You could fall and get hurt.”

Kyra blinked at her. ‘Is she serious?’

“It has wheels.” The doctor pointed to the bottom of the chair.

Men in white uniforms entered the room behind the doctor and took the chair from Kyra.

“You know I’ll get it for you, Kyra. Have a seat.”

Crossing to the couch, Kyra sat quietly, waiting for the doctor.

Dr. Martinson, quite a bit taller than Kyra’s 5 foot 5 inches, grabbed the candy bowl and sat next to Kyra on the couch.

“Here you are dear.” She opened the lid and offered it to Kyra. “Only two now.”

Kyra smiled and picked out two shining wrappers.

“Was that fun?” the doctor asked her with a smile.

Kyra, her mouth full of a chewy caramel candy smiled and shook her head up and down.

“I’m glad.” Dr. Martinson said. Setting the crystal candy dish on the coffee table, she held her hand out to Kyra. “Now give me the messages, dear, and tell me about your adventure.”

Kyra placed the crumpled messages in the doctor’s hand and began to tell the doctor her story. Afterward, she let the orderlies lead her to her room, her backpack bouncing as she walked.

When the girl had left, Dr. Martinson sat at her desk and got out Kyra’s file.

Wordy Wednesdays: TEN (Part Four)

Welcome to Wordy Wednesdays! As promised, here is Part Four of Five of my new short story, “TEN”. Stay tuned as I release a new part of the story every week!

If you missed previous parts of the story, you can find them at the links below. Enjoy! 🙂

Previous parts of the story:

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

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TEN

PartFourofFive

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Inside

Kyra stood still, listening intently. The room had gray walls and low lighting. To her right was a large metal desk in the shape of a U positioned in front of a large, blank, gray wall. The desk housed several monitors and served as the surveillance for the operation that showed everything going on. Cameras were placed in the garage, the hallway, the outer room, the room she was in, and in another room. The last room’s camera appeared to be malfunctioning as Kyra could see nothing on it. Kyra watched as the woman in the outer room got up from the floor, mocked tipping her hat at the camera and left. Shutting the outer room door quietly behind her, the woman exited the way Kyra had come in.

On the corner of the metal desk was a now-familiar scrap of paper and Kyra picked it up. “The path is before you.” She pocketed the paper and looked around the room.

To Kyra’s left, there was a closed door. It was solid white and bore no window or identifying sign indicating where it may lead. Kyra took a step toward that door, listening carefully. She could barely see a thin line of light coming from under the door and as she neared, a shadow passed through the light. Standing stock still, Kyra held her breath, her eyes on the handle of the door. The shadow paused in front of the door. Kyra looked to the monitors, attempting to determine which room was on the other side of the door. She didn’t see anyone on any of the monitors, so she concluded the room on the other side must be the one she couldn’t see on the displays.

The only other door in the room was open slightly and read ‘Cleaning Supplies’ on a dingy plaque. This was too easy. Smiling, Kyra turned and stepped toward the Cleaning closet. Breathing quietly, she glanced at the screens and saw a flash of movement in the outer room.

Kyra quickly strapped the case to her back and opened the supply room door. Entering the tiny room, she closed the door firmly behind her and stood quietly in the dark. Using her internal clock, Kyra waited 5 minutes and 27 seconds before slipping a penlight from her sleeve and turning to face the back wall of the closet. Hearing nothing from the room outside the door, she aimed the penlight at the wall seams and immediately located the latch. Reaching to the front pocket of the bag on her back, she slipped out a tool kit and removed a tiny shim. Sliding it into the latch, she triggered the latch and stepped to the side as the tiny door swung open into the closet.

A cool whoosh of air touched Kyra’s hair. She smelled lemons. Standing perfectly still, Kyra waited an additional 4 minutes and 33 seconds before peeking around the open doorway. From her vantage point in the closet, Kyra couldn’t see much in the other room. There was the edge of a chair just barely visible close to where she hid, but there wasn’t much else in her line of sight.

Replacing the shim and kit in the bag along with the penlight, Kyra crouched low to the floor and listened quietly. Deciding the room must be empty, she slowly stood and stepped through the doorway.

Wordy Wednesdays: TEN (Part Three)

Welcome to Wordy Wednesdays! As promised, here is Part Three of Five of my new short story, “TEN”. Stay tuned as I release a new part of the story every week!

If you missed previous parts of the story, you can find them at the links below. Enjoy! 🙂

Previous parts of the story:

Part One

Part Two

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TEN

PartThreeofFive

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Outside

Kyra left the building where Dr. Martinson’s office had been for the last ten years of her life. Coming there every Thursday afternoon had truly taught her a lot about the human mind. The doctor was nothing but a guinea pig for Kyra.

Looking both ways before she crossed the street, Kyra trotted across and stopped in front of her car. The late model Honda was perfect for the young woman. Black with tinted windows, it looked just like every fourth car driving down any random street in her town. There were no identifying marks or stickers, no vanity plates and she always drove the speed limit.

Opening her car with the key fob, Kyra slipped into the driver’s seat and put her seat belt on. Raising her hand to turn on her radio, she spied another scrap of paper sticking out of the CD slot. Plucking it from her stereo, she read the message, “Now is the time for action.”

Turning on the stereo, she discovered she had just a few minutes to get over to Center Street before the traffic cam would switch over to traffic on the bridge.

Kyra drove down to the stop sign at the end of the street and executed a right hand turn onto Denver Street. Driving exactly the posted speed limit, Kyra listened to the traffic as she drove sedately down Denver to the intersection of Denver and Center. Glancing in her rear view mirror, she could see the van approaching from behind and smiled. Sliding her sunglasses on, she grinned and revved her engine. The van revved back. He was ready.

Just as the traffic cam announced the congestion forming on Center Street, Kyra gunned her engine and peeled out into traffic in front of an empty school bus. The white van followed suit. The two cars were obviously in hot pursuit and the traffic reporter didn’t miss a beat.

As the eye in the sky excitedly began telling listeners about a high speed chase occurring south bound on Center street, Kyra weaved expertly in and out of traffic, knowing from research that the news camera could not see her license plate. Making a sharp left onto Lexington Avenue, Kyra pulled into an open garage and pushed the button to shut the door. Seconds later, she could hear the van whizzing by outside the garage. The traffic reporter sounded puzzled as he said the van was still in his sights, but the little black car had vanished.

Kyra smiled, put her car in park and opened the door. Grabbing her bag from the trunk, she locked the vehicle and exited through the small door in the corner of the room. Her heels clicked sharply as she entered a long hallway. Opening the fifth door on the left, she dropped the bag on the floor, turned and looked at the camera in the corner and removed her sunglasses.

“Mission accomplished.” She said, winking at the camera.

The only other door in the room opened and a woman entered, smiling.

“Excellent work.” She air kissed in Kyra’s direction and made to pick up the bag from the floor.

Kyra placed her foot on the strap.

“What are you doing?” The woman straightened and looked Kyra in the face.

“I’m not doing anything.” Kyra smiled devilishly.

“You are stepping on the strap, Darling. Why are you doing that?”

“Maybe I want to see you bend over again.” Kyra hiked an eyebrow at the other woman, “Darling.”

The other woman laughed. “Of course you do. I have a magnificent bum.”

The woman winked, bent over dramatically pointing her rear end in Kyra’s direction and grabbed the case.

Kyra, feeling cheeky, grabbed a hand full of the woman’s shapely bottom and squeezed.

The woman squealed and Kyra, taking her cue, bent over her back and whispered in her ear.

“If you liked that, you’re gonna love this.”

Leaning back, Kyra replaced her hand with her foot on the other woman’s bottom. Giving the prone female a firm shove, Kyra’s opponent pitched head first onto the floor. Swiftly bending down, Kyra grabbed the bag’s strap and exited via the door the woman had come through.

As the door slammed shut behind her, she could hear the woman cursing.

Wordy Wednesdays: TEN (Part Two)

Welcome to Wordy Wednesdays! As promised, here is Part Two of Five of my new short story, “TEN”. Stay tuned as I release a new part of the story every week!

If you missed it, you can find Part One HERE. Enjoy! 🙂

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TEN

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Doctor’s Office

“Tell me something that even those closest to you don’t know, Kyra.”

Kyra looked at her psychiatrist and didn’t say a word. Blinking slowly, she processed the question.

“Kyra?” The woman peered at her over her half-glasses, her milky gray eyes blinking. “Did you hear the question, Kyra?”

Making a decision quickly, Kyra’s lips formed a lop-sided grin.

“Yes, Dr. Martinson, I heard the question.” Committing to her decision, Kyra leaned back on the white leather sofa and crossed her legs. Joining her hands on her slim knees, she bounced her leg so her anklet jingled gently. “The real question, Doctor, is whether you want the answer or not.”

“Kyra.” Dr. Joy Martinson laid her pad and pen aside and looked her patient in the eyes. “We don’t play games here. You know that. Answer the question please.”

Kyra’s eyes landed on the table underneath the doctor’s writing pad. Another scrap of paper could be seen protruding from under the writing pad. Kyra watched her doctor’s face and smiled, her red lips curving gracefully.

“Alright, Doctor. But I think I’ll need some tissues.” Her grin widened and her index finger tapped slowly on her leg. Kyra brushed her straight dark hair from her shoulder.

“Very well.” Dr. Martinson turned to grab her box of tissues and Kyra quickly snagged the piece of paper from under the doctor’s pad. In the same red script, the message read, “A surprise awaits you in the near future.”

Slipping the paper in her purse to join the first one, Kyra began to speak, “When I was five, my cat went missing.”

“Yes, you told me. Fluffy, right?” The doctor put the box of tissues on the table in front of Kyra.

“Yes. Fluffy was the first.”

“First?”

“Yes, when the fifth cat disappeared, my parents finally suspected where they were really going.”

Silence stretched in the room. Without breaking eye contact, Dr. Martinson picked up her pad and pen from the table and adjusted her glasses.

“What happened to all the cats, Kyra?”

Without skipping a beat, Kyra leaned forward. “I skinned them, Doctor.”

The good doctor blinked. “You skinned them?”

“Yes.” Kyra said calmly. “I skinned them.”

Dr. Martinson had heard this from young people before. Kyra was trying to shock her. The doctor knew how to solve this one.

“Ok, Kyra. Tell me about skinning the cats. What did you use to skin them? Did you kill them first or skin them alive?”

The doctor, satisfied with herself, sat back in her chair and waited for Kyra to back down from her challenge.

Kyra’s smile didn’t even come close to reaching her emerald green eyes. Dr. Martinson felt a chill run down her spine and shivered despite the warmth of the room.

“The first cat was already dead and I filleted it with my Father’s fishing knife. The second cat I smashed over the head with a rock before I skinned it with the same fishing knife. For the third cat, I had purchased my own fillet knife off the Internet. I skinned it halfway while it was still alive and then it died. I finished skinning it after it died. The fourth cat, I disemboweled and gutted while it was still alive but I was disappointed that it died before I got to skin it. I skinned it anyway. By the time I got the fifth cat, I knew what I had to do. I sliced it open slowly, pushing my bare hands inside her belly. I loved the feeling of her warm insides all over my hand. I wiggled my fingers, finding her heart and massaged it to keep her alive, just like I had read about. I skinned her slowly, keeping her open so I could massage her heart from time to time while I finished the job. When I was done, she was flayed and her guts were intact, but exposed to the air. It was a success.”

Kyra sat perfectly still, enjoying the terror that slowly filled her doctor’s eyes. She let a few seconds pass before she whispered, “Well, Doctor? Am I making it up?”

The session timer chimed and without another word, Kyra gathered her purse and left.

Wordy Wednesdays: TEN (Part One)

Welcome to Wordy Wednesdays! As promised, here is Part One of Five of my new short story, “TEN”. Stay tuned as I release a new part of the story every week! Enjoy! 🙂

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TEN

PartOneofFive

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Waiting Room

Kyra Marin entered the waiting room. Closing the door softly behind her, she sat in her normal chair and picked up a magazine. She was the only one in the drab room. The couch across from her was a dull maroon color and looked as if it had been there for more years than she had been alive. The chair she sat in was wood with a green cushion, her favorite color. The tree in the corner looked like it was about to give up the fight and other chairs in the room had definitely seen better days.

The corner tables held mismatched lamps with low light and the overhead light was also of low wattage, lending a pale illumination to the room. Above the couch was a huge painting of a lake scene with the colors blurred together as if the artist didn’t have their glasses on. Kyra snickered and turned to her magazine.

The magazine she held was a fashion magazine with a skinny, blond model on the cover. Kyra rolled her eyes at the model and read the cover to see if the articles inside might be of interest. ‘How to Please Your Man’. Gag. ‘Better Hair in 5 Steps’. Barf. ‘10 Slimming Outfits on a Budget’. Double Barf. Seeing nothing that she was interested in, Kyra leaned forward to replace the magazine on the table and get another one. As she tossed the reading material on the table, a corner of a piece of paper protruded from the edge closest to her.

Glancing around to make sure no one had entered the room while she wasn’t paying attention, Kyra grabbed the corner of paper in her fingers and tugged. It was a tiny slip of paper with red writing in a flowery script. Kyra brought the paper closer and read the message.

Kyra’s eyes narrowed as she read the paper. “Your secret is not for you alone.”

She tucked the piece of paper into her purse and nodded to herself. Fine. It was time to take the plan to completion. She was ready.

Grabbing another magazine from the table, Kyra sat back and flipped through it while she waited for her turn with the doctor. Pausing on every other page, pretending to read the articles, Kyra prepared herself for what she must do. Years of therapy with the doctor were finally going to pay off. She knew all the details of the plan and the doctor played a huge part. Kyra needed to be careful in order to pull off her part of the action.

The office door opened and Dr. Martinson stood looking down at her.

“Hello, Kyra.” Dr. Martinson was an older woman. She always dressed in a business suit with a skirt and jacket. She always wore pearls on her neck and ears and she always wore black pumps. The doctor smiled at her and motioned her into the office with her left hand while holding it open with her right. “Let’s get started, shall we?”

Kyra tossed the magazine on the table with the others and preceded the doctor into her office. Following Kyra inside, Dr. Martinson closed the door with a solid push and took her place in the chair across from Kyra on the couch.

Fiction Files: Fly

This is a short story I wrote several years ago. I thought I might share it here. Let me know what you think! 🙂

Fly

I stood on the edge of a bridge; where my simple dream began. I could often be found perched precariously, with a skinny leg wrapped around a steel support pole and a hand grasping a cord above me. I would swing over the edge of the structure, suspended in air. The windy days were my favorite, because it would toss my pale hair and tug at my shirt, giving me the illusion of rushing through the sky. The air would move around me, shaping itself to my body that was speeding through time and space within the confines of my young imagination.

As long as I could remember, I had wanted to fly. Watching television, I was mesmerized by the cartoon characters that could soar in the skies. Superman and Batman, who could fly with only the aid of a flimsy cape, entranced me. I vowed that someday, I too, would fly.

When my brother, Travis, went into the Air Force, I discovered a real life hero. He would write to tell me about his training and what new things he had learned about being a pilot. Through the years of his absence, the letters from around the world became the lifeline to my dream. I would race home from school to check the basket inside the front door of our house, to see if he had sent me a new letter. If there was a foreign envelope, I would shriek with joy and run up the stairs to my room. I would sit on my bed and open the letter carefully. Savoring each word to myself, I would read it over and over as he described the feeling of flying with the birds. My older brother was my best friend and the only person that knew of my dream to be a pilot.

My fascination grew with the years and I began to lay my secret plans to become a pilot in my brother’s footsteps. Knowing my parents would never approve, I kept it to myself. I sent for enlistment information and began studying the tests I would take to become a pilot. I read all the books I could get my greedy hands on that talked about the science of flying an airplane. I finally completed the papers and sent them, telling the local recruiter I would be in on my birthday. I circled the happy day on my calendar, the day I would turn eighteen and I could take myself down to the recruiting office and sign my name.

The days seemed to pass like molasses, plodding and drudging along. Each hour seemed an eternity until I could give my soul to the air. I became impatient. My Mother said I was acting strangely and often watched me close enough to be my shadow. I would just hug her close and tell her I loved her and that everything was okay, I was just growing up. She would get teary-eyed, as emotional women tend to do and would leave me alone until it once again occurred to her that I was ‘acting strangely’.

The eighteenth celebration of my birth was finally upon me. I had planned to be up and gone before anyone was aware of what I was doing. Rising early and making my way to the kitchen, I was surprised to see my parents already there. They were sitting together, with some papers on the table before them. They spoke quietly to each other, and I heard them say my name. Standing still in the doorway, I waited for them to notice me. My Mother raised her head and I could see she had been crying.

I stood in silence, waiting for one of them to speak. My Father took a slow breath and blew it out. My Mother’s eyes were so sad, defeated, like she had to finally give up on something she had worked so hard for. Carefully, my Father arranged the papers in front of him and looked up at me. With a hand that had both swatted and comforted me, he motioned to the chair across from him and my Mother.

I don’t remember walking to the chair; don’t recall pulling it out and sitting down. The exact moment of his speech does not replay in my fragmented memories of that day, that morning. I don’t remember what he was wearing or whether he had brushed his hair or not. The words are what keep tumbling around, bouncing off the sides of my skull and knocking against one another in my mind, making a terrible clatter that I could not quiet. His pity and my Mother’s sympathy, as if I were a mentally handicapped child trying to perform calculus, were what struck me the hardest. I had always believed that I could do anything and this was the first time that I learned I was the only one who thought that way.

Moving my auburn eyes from my Father’s face to my Mother, time slowed. A tear, moving without sense of time and gravity, slid down the soft cheek of her face. Her eyes, blue like the sky, were temporarily masked by her sooty lashes, reminding me of a storm cloud covering the summer sky. All at once, I could hear their breathing, see their chests rising and falling with each intake of breath. The tear fell onto the paper in front of her, splashing on the ink like a huge drop of rain in a small pool of motor oil.

“You know you can’t, right?” Her soft question exploded on me like the bomb at Hiroshima, shattering my dream into a thousand shards of glass. The tear was joined by more. They were pouring down her face now. Her shoulders shook and she covered her face with a slim hand, her diamond wedding rings flashing in the light of the overhead lamp.

I just looked at them blankly. Hoping and praying they were not saying what I knew they were. I opened my mouth and closed it again, without uttering a sound. My eyes stung and the proverbial lump clumped in my throat. I swallowed, bit my lip and continued to stare at them. Waiting for one of them to say plainly what I was dreading.

“They called us. Told us you sent in the paperwork to . . .” he paused, swallowed and continued, “to be a . . . a pilot.”

I just looked at him. The words entering my ears were not registering. They were sounds, fighting with the pounding waves of my despair, to be heard. I pushed the lump down again, wanting him to smile and laugh and tell me there was some mistake, that this was a birthday prank. His lips pressed tightly together, a sign that he was not pleased. He lowered his eyes to the papers on the table top. He took another deep breath. Exhaling, he brought his eyes up to meet mine and I was startled to see there were tears there. Those tears in my Father’s eyes, said all that he could not. They didn’t believe I could do it. They didn’t believe in me.

Suddenly, I was running from the house. My Father’s shout followed me into the front yard, but was lost in the rushing sound of the wind in my ears. My feet pounded the pavement, carrying my wretched body onward. Looking down, I cursed, seeing the source of my sadness. The genetic deformity that would not allow me to fulfill my dreams. The leg that was not a leg at all. It worked fine, carrying me further and further from the words that were never said, but echoed in my mind. They had created a leg for me where one had not grown, a false limb. Using new technologies that were still being tested, they had given me the gift of movement by attaching the metal to my bone. I could walk, run, and dance. I could do anything anyone born with two legs could do and probably better, but I could not do this. I could not be a pilot. Would never be a pilot. The reality of my broken dream burst like a ruptured vessel in my chest. The coldness spread through my body like a web of despair.

I ran onward, letting my tears fall freely. The speed of my movement splashed the tears along my cheeks like the rain in a storm, splattering against unforgiving panes of glass. I did not notice where I was going until I was there. I slowed my pace; my breath was coming in ragged gasps. I leaned over, hands on my knees, one knobby and one metal, gaining my breath once more. I straightened, and walking to the bridge, I stood as close to the edge as I could get. I wrapped my leg around a steel support pole and grasped the cord that hung down above me. Breathing easy now, I closed my eyes, swinging out over the empty space where the wind could dry my tears and I could fly.

Fly

Today’s OneWord: Female

I don’t know where I got it, wasn’t sure if it was supposed to be a male or female, and had no idea what it’s name was. I did know, however, that it was creepy as hell and I wanted it out of my house. I threw it in the giveaway bag and closed it up. Walking outside to the car, I felt the bag start to shake.

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