Broken Luggage Collected Flash Fiction
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About this ebook
Marco Etheridge is a writer of fiction, an occasional playwright, and a part-time poet. He lives and writes in Vienna, Austria. His stories have been published by reviews, journals, and magazines in Canada, Australia, the UK, and the USA. Broken Luggage gathers twenty-four of his best flash stories into one collection.
A man's life condensed to the broken luggage that will contain it. A young woman alone in the Sonoran Desert. Memories of dangerous eggs, thunderstorms, and a gunshot man. A character tours his self-made hell. Another steps from between the pages. Parables of sand and migration A labyrinth into new love, and the remembrance of love past. These two dozen flash stories tell swift tales of love lost and love found, of darkness at the end of life, and light at the beginning. Unforgettable characters struggle against the tides and pressures of an impersonal world, and against the burdens they carry within. There is joy and despair, defiance and acceptance. The inhabitants of these pages learn who they are, and sometimes, who they are not. Welcome, Reader, to the world of Broken Luggage.
Marco Etheridge
Marco Etheridge is an eccentric world traveler and writer living in Vienna, Austria. He is the author of the exciting and well-reviewed novel "The Best Dark Rain: A Post Apocalyptic Struggle for Life and Love." Marco's second novel, "Blood Rust Chains," has just been released. Marco's third novel, a political satire thriller, is complete and awaiting publication. He is hard at work on other projects, including a fourth novel, a three-act play, and a children's book. Marco's novels lead the reader on intricate literary journeys through different genres. With attention to detail and thoughtful prose, Marco builds immersive worlds crafted to house distinct and diverse characters. Always character and dialogue driven, Marco's novels captivate the readers with dark charm and unforeseen plot hooks. Though born in the USA, Marco considers himself a citizen of the world. Love carried him across the Atlantic Ocean to Vienna, Austria; and love holds him there. The long and winding pathway that has led to writing novels is one of varied experience. Marco has been a soldier, a commercial fisherman, a wanderer, and a jack-of-all-trades. His feet have happily trod the soil of over thirty countries spread over four continents and the odd sub-continent. The world is his playground and his fellow citizens are his playmates. Marco's antidote for everything is to throw some gear in his faithful Deuter backpack and disappear. An avid traveler and a complete street-food junkie, there is nothing he won't try. Munching wok-roasted spiders in Cambodia? Absolutely. How about a four-course meal in Bangkok’s Chinatown, with each course from a different street stall? He is there! If you are interested in tall tales of travel, please check out Marco's travel blog at: https://newland-newtale.blogspot.co.at/
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Broken Luggage Collected Flash Fiction - Marco Etheridge
Broken Luggage
Collected Flash Fiction
Marco Etheridge
Broken Luggage -- Collected Flash Fiction
Copyright © 2022 by Marco Etheridge, All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the author is unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from this book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the author at: Squeakyeye@icloud.com
Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or were used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
First Edition: June 2022
Cover photo by James Gilmore, used by permission
https://www.jamesgilmore.net/
Cover Design by the Author.
This book was written and formatted in Scrivener.
www.MarcoEtheridgeFiction.com
Also by the Author
Novels
Clouds Before Rain
The Best Dark Rain
Blood Rust Chains
Breaking the Bundles
Short Story Collections
Orphaned Lies
Author’s Note
The stories in this volume originally appeared, some in somewhat different form and under different titles, in the following publications:
The Lock Bridge - Coffin Bell - Winter 2020
As We Know It - The Metaworker - Summer 2020
Roy's Funerals - Fleas on the Dog - Spring 2020
Ollie-Ollie - Literally Stories - Winter 2020
The Visitor - The Dead Mule School - Summer 2020
The Rosary - Mobius - Spring 2020
The Dangerous Egg - Manzano Mountain Review - Autumn 2019
Broken Luggage - Five on the Fifth - Summer 2019
The Nakedness of Ozone - Pure Slush - Spring 2021
Architects of Their Own - Literally Stories - Winter 2022
Between the Pages - Red Weather - Spring 2021
Connection - 300 Days of Sun - Summer 2021
Ghost Bread - Antonym - Summer 2021
A Parable of Sand - NonBinary Review - Summer 2021
Quiet Long for, and You - Literally Stories - Winter 2021
Harry Smart - Dillydoun Review - Summer 2021
Gunshot Man - The Rush Magazine - Summer 2021
Heart's Double Labyrinth - Havik Fiction - Spring 2022
Faith Goes Down in the Tenth - Alchemy - Summer 2022
The Dino Kid - Every Day Fiction - Winter 2019
The Stillness of a Garden Broken - Literally Stories - Summer 2020
Bernoulli Weighs it Out - Progenitor - Spring 2021
Let Them Not Say - The Opiate - Spring 2020
The author wishes to extend his grateful thanks to all the editors of these independent journals and reviews. Without them, short stories would have died and become extinct a long time ago. One small request: If you enjoy what you find between these pages, please tell another reader. A recommendation from a fellow reader is the finest gift an author can receive. Thank you so very much. Happy reading!
Marco Etheridge
April 2022
Vienna, Austria
For Heather Etheridge
Best Ladder-Mother in the World
THE LOCK BRIDGE
MIDNIGHT IN LJUBLJANA, where the Butcher Bridge spans the narrow width of the Ljubljanica River. The water beneath is a dark mirror, sluggish between steep banks. The bridge’s center span is paved in stone, the walkways at either edge in glass. Daylight tourists peer down at the slow water between their feet. But when night falls, a venomous green light projects upward from beneath the glass panels. The sickly glow pools around the legs of night travelers; their torsos left to drift unseen in shadow.
This night the Butcher Bridge is empty save for twenty-thousand cheap padlocks dangling from its wire railings, a grotesque bronze statue reaching for the stars, and one distraught woman.
The woman kneels at the wire railing. She is clad in black, only her face and hands exposed to the gloom. Her young face—striking in sunlight if not pretty—is distorted into a kabuki mask of putrid lime and shadow. The green-white flesh of a disembodied hand clutches one padlock. The other hand shakes, trembling fingers faltering with a keyring.
Key after key and none fits. The lock remains fixed to the wire cable. The cable sways under her hand and a hundred padlocks sway with it. Brass and steel dangle and shake, the metallic rattling tinny and mocking.
A keening begins in her throat, animal anguish and pain rising to a wail of anger. She pounds her fist against the glass at her feet and the sharp edge of a key grates against green glass. The wail dies in her throat as she half-rises, flings her fist behind her shoulder. But she does not cast away the keys. For two heartbeats, three, she is as still as the bronze figure behind her. Then she crumples against the railing, one hand still clutching the padlock, the other the useless keys.
She holds the ring in front of her face, stares at keys through a haze of angry tears. I know you’re there, you little bastard, I saved you. I remember Ana and Maja, how shocked they were when I told them. Zala, you didn’t throw the key in the river? That’s what you do, you lock the padlock on the bridge, then throw the key. That’s the whole point. Sure, I understand, but maybe I am more realistic than that. Oh, our poor unromantic Zala, shaking their heads. They had laughed, the three of them over their coffees.
Zala’s hand closes into a fist and the steel presses hard against her palm. You may not fit this lock, but I bet I can ram this whole ring right up Teo’s ass. Serve him right, shoving sharp metal up his ass while he’s humping that cheap slut in our own bed. Or he would enjoy it. Teo, you weak, pathetic fuck, how could you do this to us? You made a promise to me, remember? Here it is, right here in my hand.
Harsh words break from her throat, a shout in the silence.
I wish you in hell Teo, right now, you and this stupid padlock.
The shadows swirl behind the bronze statue and a tall man steps from the darkness. He wears a long tweed coat over a plaid waistcoat. A bowler hat is perched above his lean face. A long metal object dangles in the crook of one arm.
Zala scrambles to her feet, banging the railing. The rows of locks rattle and shake. She raises her clutched fist.
Get the fuck away from me or I’ll mace you, I swear I will.
I don’t believe you can mace me with a keyring.
The man’s voice is calm. Zala thinks she sees a smile gleam from within a dark beard.
Where the hell did you come from and what—wait, are those bolt cutters?
The man glances down as if surprised, then raises his eyes back to Zala’s.
Yes, bolt cutters, imagine that.
Zala realizes that she is not afraid of this stranger, not tonight. Who cares if he looks like a bicycle thief on his way to a steampunk party, he has tools.
Will those things cut one of these stupid locks?
Of course, Zala; I believe that is their primary function.
Fear again.
How do you know my name?
The same way I knew you had no mace. Not that it would have done you any good. But we waste time and words. You wish the lock cut free, yes?
Zala nods.
Say it.
Yes, I want the lock cut.
Very well. Listen carefully. Take hold of the lock you wish me to cut, but do not let it fall into the river. Do you understand?
Zala grips one padlock from the jangling line. The body of the lock is etched with a Tee and a Zee.
The man steps beside her, one handle in each hand. He pries open the tool, fits the steel jaws over the hasp of the lock. Zala feels his closeness, the smell of him. It is the sharp tang of ice on metal.
Do not drop the lock.
He squeezes the handles and the jaws close. There is a dull click and the lock comes free in her hand.
Zala takes a quick step away from the stranger, the broken lock clutched in her hand. She cocks her arm to throw.
Wait.
His voice freezes her in place.
Before you act, know this: If this thing goes into the river, it is done. The bond is forever severed. Keep it and you retain a certain power over this Teo. Yes, and the thing holds you as well. Which do you choose?
Whatever force holds her arm is released. She stands poised, counts her heartbeats, then hurls the hateful lock out over the river.
There is a soft splash, then concentric rings on the dark water. Zala leans over the railing to watch them radiate. She hears the slightest swish behind her. When she turns