Do Some Damage is the best collaborative blog I know of. Couple
of weeks ago, Brian Lindemuth put out a flash fiction challenge: Write a
story using as many book titles as possible (or makes sense). Check out the
movie mash-up on display there while you’re at it. Great fun.
My piece is below. Follow the link back to DSD to read the
other submissions. Given the clientele there, they should be good.
The rumrunners
holed up in a collection of strategically-situated trailers across the Whiplash
River from town that everyone called Black
Rock. Geezer didn’t care much
for Whit’s plan.
“Why not just let
it ride, man? Place is hard enough to get into, but the
bitch is getting out, after you’ve messed with them. That place is trigger
city, man. Those are difficult
men to handle, and they all live
by night. Hell, they’s the ones put the
lady in the lake last summer. When did you decide you had to be the
last of the independents, anyway? And how’s it gonna look, people know you
talked to me before?”
Whit still staring out the window.
“What
do you care what other people think? Those cheapskates
have been screwing me—both of us—for years. I don’t want to be boss, just a
little more free. They got to sleep sometimes. I’ll sneak in so I get the
drop, sucker
punch them, and in
the morning I’ll be gone. I don’t need you to go in, just drive the
getaway car.”
“Alls I know is, you don’t get in
and out of there pronto,
you might as well dig
two graves for us. That’s some big
mojo you’re going up against. You’re wading
into war there, man. From here it look like a one-way ticket to the
big nowhere.”
“What the fuck, Geezer? You got those
Miami
blues again? I thought we got past that. You used to be one tough hombre.”
Geezer spit in the sink. “I used to
say crime
always pays, too. Look where that got me. What you’re planning here will
bring nothing but trouble, forever. Sucker punch them, my ass. This set-up
calls for the
walkaway.”
“Fuck trouble. Trouble
is my business.” Whit let the smile fade. Geezer had a point. “Listen,
buddy. Remember that girl I met last year? Lives down to Mercer’s Hollow?”
“The
hollow girl? Yeah, I remember. You talked about her for a month.”
“She was the
last good kiss I had, and it’s been a year. I need a fresh start to get her
back, and this is my chance. You in?”
Geezer was in. Clear all day, late
rain moved in as they crossed the river, drove past the
big O that marked the abandoned Oberg mine. They made it past the first
three sentries, but the
fourth watcher spotted them. The
guards gathered quick once word got out, and by dawn, Whit’s perfect
hatred for some toothless, Prohibition-era
gangsters left him and Geezer as road
kill.
1 comment:
Impressive! and fun too! Thanks for sharing!
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