Today marks the day
start I do all that “Social Networking” that all authors should do, today I have created a twitter account! A great big hello to
all the people who have come here through twitter! Thanks for
coming and I hope you enjoy my stories. To celebrate my opening into
social networking I decided to repost what I considered one of my
greatest works that I've done throughout my entire writing of this
blog. Which is a lot considering I've done more than 100 of these
stories as I've done a story nearly every post and I've done more
than 100 posts. Yup that many people from twitter, been keeping this
up for about three plus months a post a day with a story each one. So
if you enjoy this one feel free to go through past ones and I intend
to keep this up for quite some time as its good practice as I write
my book. Oh, seizures are down today which is nice only like 3 as of
this post.(I have epilepsy, a rare unique case not like what you see
on tv, to new people from twitter please read my bio on the right
side of the blog as it details it, you have to scroll down a bit to
see it. My seizures are not even triggered by light.) Anyway enjoy
the flash fiction new and old readers!
Fate's Keys
Not a single person sat in the
audience of a massive theater. The theater had it all, velvet chairs,
balconies, clean lighting and a pianist on stage. Yet a lonely air
drafted through it. The curtains had already been drawn open and the
pianist didn't need an audience to play. He only needed his piano. It
laid at the exact center of the stage. It looked like an antique, but
didn't show any signs of age. The wood had a thin silver polish.
The pianist wore a dull gray suit, had
mellow tan skin, scraggly black hair and sunken brown eyes. His
friendly smile would make anyone trust him in a minute. He sat in the
stool next to his piano in a dignified posture.
This man was a Fate. His piano had the
power to weave time. He struck a single high note to begin his song
and a woman named Cynthia was born. He started with low notes in a
monotonous rhythm. She lived in a small, quaint town tucked between a
few mountains with a single solitary road being the only way out of
the tiny valley. The Fate played a depressing and rapid melody when
her parents died and her uncle took her to the city. She made many
friends in high school when the Fate sprinkled her life with a string
of cheery notes. The Fate pounded the keys when she entered college
and met her true love. The Fate softened his keystrokes and the
couple settled down. He pushed three sharp, happy notes the moment
they got married.
He swept his hands across the keys
when their twins were born. He didn't create a melody for the twins,
that would be a song for another Fate. As she raised her children the
Fate played his notes in a chaotic sequence that required all ten of
his fingers. When she bid them farewell into their own lives his
melody became steady and predictable. As she aged it the music became
slower and slower with each passing year. She fell ill and the Fate
hit one key over and over in the rhythm of a heartbeat. Eventually he
stopped the song while her husband watched from the side of a
hospital bed.
The Fate stood up
and took a bow to the nonexistent audience in the theater. He wore a
big smile while he bowed. Without any hesitation he sat down and
began to play again.
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