What are Sci-Fi-Cafe.com Espresso Shots? These are what are
sometimes called 'Micro Stories', they're a story, a scene, an emotion
or a moment compressed down into the smallest number of words possible.
Sci-Fi short stories are often most fun because the author can explore
'what if' scenarios with a single simple concept without having to worry
about expanding the plotline, developing characters (which, really are usually
mostly there just to carry the plot).
I've collected some
espresso shots into compilations of ten which are available in the
bookshop to download and enjoy - quite often the story ends abbruptly
and allows the readers' mind to carry on with the inertia, to find their
own conclusion or meaning. They certainly leave the reader with
something to ponder.
So here are just three to
give you a taster...
Light and Dark
Golden light burned the air through curtains gently parted by the warm
breeze. Now still, the thick pink material held the bedroom in a dark
gloom lit only by the shaft of light piercing the space and splashing
against the creamy white wall opposite.
Julia slid from the darkness like a ghost, her white nightdress bursting
into brilliant fire as it came into contact with the powerful stream of
sunlight.
Turning slowly, she watched as the folds and billows of her gown flared
and then sank back into shadow.
She stopped and let the light wash across her outstretched arm, fingers
projecting tapered shards of darkness into the beam.
Dust motes winked and eddied like a rich soup of plankton in some exotic
sea, spiralling and swirling as her arm began to sway gently.
Then, as she fell silently to the floor below the window, the fire in
her gown was gutted like Julia's own life.
Two, three, four little pink pills danced briefly in the patch of
sunlight on the floor by the wall before they too became still.
Relocation Package
Jake strode into the living room of his new house. Munching a
locally grown apple from the Welcome basket in the kitchen, he thumbed
the TV remote. MGN News channel filled half the clean white wall.
Taking this job was the best decision he'd ever made in his life, ok it
meant shifting his whole life to relocate, but out here the air was
clean, the grass clean and the sky the kind of blue that you only ever
saw in the movies.
Back home, he had watched his brother die from some asthma related
complication the doctor couldn't be bothered to explain properly.
After glancing at the view from the master bedroom Jake drifted into the
en-suite.
"Now, that just beats everything" he said under his breath.
The holographic imager in the bath room was connected to the internet
and ready to go.
Jake folded his employer's 'Welcome to Mars' card and pushed it in his
back pocket.
Reset
The sun was just a dim blue glow to the west, most of the brighter stars
were out now. Mark stopped to tighten a shoe lace as he crossed the
park, he just noticed it, almost missed it.
Just for an instant, the sky blinked. The deep blue of the sky above
went completely black for the briefest of moments and then returned as
if it had never gone.
Did he just blink? No the sky didn't come back all at once, it kind of
unrolled - it was this motion that really caught Mark's eye.
Slowly, carefully, cool as a cucumber, he got to his feet. This changed
everything.
'They' would be watching him now to see if he'd noticed. How long would
they be looking for a change in his behaviour?
He continued his journey, suppressing a nonchalant whistle, got home,
locked the bolts on his door.
That night he replaced the foil on his bedroom ceiling - turkey foil was
much thicker.
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