Flash Fiction: Rice would be Nice

emmylgant

‘We’re out of potatoes,’ my mother said, in a voice I wanted to mend.

I dragged my father’s garden spade (he’d taken the fork) to the vegetable patch. It hadn’t rained for months; his brassicas had gone to seed and his onions were flowering.

I jabbed at the ground, remembering the pale, earthy potatoes my father had let me find, like golden treasure hidden in the dark. I knelt and scrabbled, stuck my hands in the soil, my fingers discovering only a wet, rotten mess.

‘Rice,’ I said to my mother. ‘Rice would be nice.’

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This is a 100-word story inspired by the picture above. This week, my mind decided to go in the opposite direction to the picture: gardens and heat, despite my best intentions. Thanks to Emmy L Gant for the picture, and to Rochelle Wisoff-Fields for leading the Friday Fictioneers. Click here to join in, or here to read other people’s stories.

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It’s been a little over a year since my debut novel, Our Endless Numbered Days was published by Penguin. I wrote a blog post about the good and the not so good things that have happened since then.

53 thoughts on “Flash Fiction: Rice would be Nice

  1. Dear Claire,

    You can always win my heart by going in a different direction. I applaud you for that. Wonderful piece although I felt the distress of the unsuccessful garden.

    Shalom,

    Rochelle

        • Yes, but I’ve been able to skip the last two weeks due to writing commitments; you aren’t able to do that and I know how busy you must be. (Although you could think about having shadow leaders for occasional weeks – I’ve really just thought of that – not necessarily putting myself forward!)

          • Rather than skip, I’ve replayed prompts and stories, written about not being able to write, used an excerpt from the next sequel and this week a Haiku. I’ve thought about a shadow leader, but am not sure who or how. But might give it more thought as life continues to get busier.

  2. Funny how a simple, non-related phrase gives you the back story. “he’d taken the fork” lets the reader know that it’s not a bereavement we’re reading about here. Very well done, Claire.

    • So pleased you got that, Sandra. I played around with that for ages – wondering if it was too subtle. Putting in ‘when he’d left us’ to see if it worked better, and all sorts of other combinations.

  3. Oh superb phrase ‘in a voice I wanted to mend’ … agree with Sandra that ‘he’d taken the fork’ is fab succinct but meaningful back story – although of course I’m contemplating what dark fate involving said fork has occured😉

  4. Oh, teacher, thank you. Much moved, but missed “he’d taken the fork”! I thought the voice you “wanted to mend” was bereaved. I’ll pay closer attention to detail after this reading.

  5. Whoa! The memories that story brought. We had a drought when I was 13 and Mom had planted potatoes. They baked black in the ground. She always made me dig them. No wonder!
    Fine work, Claire!

  6. Claire, this is lovely. The sense of many things ended or ending is palpable. I could see not only a garden curling and withering into itself, but a girl witnessing the same thing happening to her mother. I love the line (as many of us do, it turns out!), “in a voice I wanted to mend.” I love how much you say with so little.
    Thank you.

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