From this blog. It shows a girl with wings against a bloodstain, implying that it is probably said flying-girl's blood. Gory, but strong. It fits this post.This story—246 words long; it's what is known as "flash fiction"—is a lipogram, avoiding that glyph which follows "D" in Latin writing distribution. It was truly difficult to draft, and it infracts its own limitations at its finish. Why? For drama, naturally.
Warning: Dark. Of my various works, this would probably win an award for darkness. Shows how much pain I'm in, writing without that glyph... "Optimistic" tags = 10 posts, "dark" tags = 11 posts. Oh, no! Must jot down a happy story now...
I long for this story to satisfy any anticipation I built up....
Fly Away
Boom. Gunshot. Lord Alastair
laughs and laughs.
“Don't.” It's a croak, raspy and
low and pitiful. “Don't.”
“Why not?” Moving forward, touching
you.
You pull away. It hurts, so much.
Blood spills from your cut skin. But it's not just your body, not
just your wings—your soul hurts. “You bastard. You goddamn
son of a-” You shout until you run out of insults to hurl, but to
no avail. Your captor kills your cry with his cold hands.
“Fascinating,” Alastair says,
laughing again. “Can you still fly?”
“What do you think?” you
snarl.
“Try.”
“No.”
“Do it. Fly. Now.”
Alastair trains his gun on you. You
know you shouldn't back down, but that sick part of you that still
wants to satisfy him insists on it. Your bloody, thrashing wings lift
you into his poisonous air, his own individual portion of sky.
“That's it!” His mocking call burns
away your spirit. You stop trying to soar out of sight. “Fly, my
bird-girl! Fly high so I can shoot you down again!”
Boom. Gunshot. You fall, cursing
him and your own timidity. Your vision turns to black.
But oblivion unchains your unconscious
mind. In your illusions and hallucinations, you fly far away from
this prison, to a world without blood, without pain, without guns or
hunts or vicious lords who drink in your agony and grin. It's not a
utopia—nothing is—but it's almost so and that's what counts, for
now you think you know what freedom
is.
Weeeellll, this was definitely... /dark/. Very... artsy, as well. Interesting. I really liked it, actually.
ReplyDeleteFavorite line was probably: "You know you shouldn't back down, but that sick part of you that still wants to satisfy him insists on it. Your bloody, thrashing wings lift you into his poisonous air, his own individual portion of sky." And the ending, naturally.
Beautiful in its own way -- nicely done.
~Hannah
Thank you!
DeleteThanks for your thanks... question, though: confused on this explanation: "is a lipogram, avoiding that glyph which follows "D" in Latin writing distribution". From what I got from Google, basically you avoided the letter "e" in writing this, right...? But there are e's in "freedom", so that word's especially important or... something? Sorry for all the questions...
DeleteThanks for your thanks for your thanks, and questions are great! I love questions! Anyway, it's a bit (read: very) unclear, but I did say that it "infracts its own limitations at its finish" for dramatic purposes...
Delete(Too lazy to count everything up, so just thanks...) Ah; that makes sense, then. Forgot about that. Thanks for explaining.
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