The Girl in the Grove
Author: Alzo David-West
And the midnight air is hall’d,
all the people turning cold,
shadows storming in a stare,
something’s coming, drifting near.
* * *
Ocular atoms detonated in a scream from a lonely girl’s eyes. An android woman and a little dog disintegrated like embers in the black night. The girl ran down a dark, ramshackle road in the rustic place. It was such a secluded, outland area, with crows, foxes, and stoats, no one was aware what was happening. She ran to the weathered, eroded stairs of a miniature, furrowed mountain overlooking a solemnity of memorial stones. The heat-glow of her eyes was emanating. They always stayed hot for a while. She went up the stairs and tripped, but then she got up again, half way up to a small portal through a tangle of shrubs and bramble, which led to a hidden, bare grove. She had been there a few times before, within the hollows, where she reflected with the reeds, the leaves, and the decayed things, but not with the mosquitoes, which she hated. They kept away when her eyes were burning.
As she walked over skirmishes of tree roots and catastrophes of broken branches under her illumination, her insides felt weird, like a vacant wrenching, and a sensation of nausea came, so she put her fingers down her throat and began to purge herself. After some minutes in the forest hall, she thought she had cleaned out whatever it was that was hurting there. But then her hands began to shiver. She felt weaker, and she lay down on the stubble-ground. The android woman and the little dog flashed, like mercury, in her mind. She didn’t really mean to kill them, did she? She turned her face into the grove sand, massaging the black earth and the mulch leaves in her high-school girl hands, sliding in the spaces between birth and death; a solitary cricket trilled in the solitude.
In the morning, the grove haze quenched the golden blaze, which transuded through cedar trees, mutating into something that was neither dusk nor day.

The Past
365tomorrows launched August 1st, 2005 with the lofty goal of providing a new story every day for a year. We’ve been on the wire ever since. Our stories are a mix of those lovingly hand crafted by a talented pool of staff writers, and select stories received by submission.
The archives are deep, feel free to dive in.

Flash Fiction
"Flash fiction is fiction with its teeth bared and its claws extended, lithe and muscular with no extra fat. It pounces in the first paragraph, and if those claws aren’t embedded in the reader by the start of the second, the story began a paragraph too soon. There is no margin for error. Every word must be essential, and if it isn’t essential, it must be eliminated."
Kathy Kachelries
Founding Member

Submissions
We're open to submissions of original Science or Speculative Fiction of 600 words or less. We are only accepting work which you previously haven't sold or given away the rights to. That means your work must not have been published elsewhere, either in print or on the web. When your story is accepted, you're giving us first electronic publication rights and non-exclusive subsequent publication rights. You retain ownership over your story. We are not a paying market.

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