Showing posts with label short fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 October 2025

Short fiction: Remembered Time

The past is a dangerous place

“The tape turned my bowels to water,” said Peter.

Jake had been at the window, looking out at the glass-and-steel canyons of Docklands. He turned towards Peter, noting how boring lawyers look when not in court. “What?” he said.

“I think you’d better see it.”

“Don’t be a drama queen,” said Jake.

“I’m not,” said Peter. “I’m a legal advisor to this newspaper. And I think you should see the tape.”

David Iliff/Creative Commons

Something in his voice gave Jake pause. “All right,” he said at length. “Tell Michelle to set it up. But bugger off for now, I need to see tomorrow’s feature layouts.”

Peter turned to go. He paused in the doorway.

“What,” said Jake again.

“I do not think you understand the gravity of the situation,” said Peter. “Stella’s husband may sue.”

“Good. Think of the column inches,” said Jake.

The other shrugged and went off across the newsroom. He was ignored by the subs, who were in the white heat of their day – that time in the late afternoon when all the copy must be made ready so the layout people can start casting off and asking for a cut here, a subhead there.  

Jake looked at his desk. It should be clear now, ready for the first mock-ups of tomorrow’s Daily Morning News front page. But there were several large sheets on it, mostly pen-and-ink drawings of a caricature weasel. The weasel was accompanied in some frames by a stoat and an otter. Across one was scrawled: Proposed comic strip. Mike and the Mustelids. They were a submission from some art-school hopeful.  The art director had brought them in for Jake’s opinion (which was brief and clear) and then neglected to take them away. He sighed. “Michelle,” he yelled. His assistant swayed in on six-inch heels. “Michelle, get these back to Derek, would you. He’d forget his balls if they weren’t in a bag.”

“Yes Jake,” she replied. “Is ten tomorrow OK for the tape viewing?”

“I suppose so.”

“Who’d you want there? Peter says it’s sort of sensitive.”

“Who did Pete say?”

“Him. And William Bristow.”

“What, Bill the Brief? In person?” Bristow was a barrister. “That’s a bit heavy. No-one else?”

“Peter says it’s all a bit grave and we don’t want gossip, like.” She looked at her phone. ”He wants one other person in on it, says you’ll need their advice. Dr Amery.”

“Who’s Dr Amery when he’s at home?”

“She’s a clinical psychologist,” said Michelle.

“Oh,” he said. He was about to ask why the Daily Morning News needed a clinical psychologist but not for the first time that day, a voice inside told him to shut up. He watched Michelle, not without pleasure, as she swayed out of his office. Then he noticed the latest edition of Private Eye, no longer masked by mustelids. It was folded back at the Street of Shame column.

The Daily Moron News has a problem. Where’s its star columnist, Saucy Stella the Fleet Street Slag? (Or Stella Boggs, to use her proper name.) Her column’s been absent for three weeks now. Moron insiders say something’s gone very wrong. Saucy Stell went off to the backwoods of Birmingham to write an exposé of alleged fraudulent hypnotherapist Arnold Merriweather. It’s a change from her usual headlines. Workshy scroungers! Benefits! Palestinian victimhood! Woke councils! All grist to her mill. Trouble is, she’s now in hospital, gabbling incoherently [what’s new – Ed.]. The sinister Merriweather put her under then stole her sooooul…

He tossed Private Eye back on his desk. “We’ll sue the buggers,” he muttered, but something felt wrong.

He swivelled back towards the window. I do miss Fleet Street, he thought, remembering his visits as a spotty teenager fifty years ago, watching his compositor father work the Linotype machine, the slugs cast in the hot metal, the clatter of the keyboards, the men assembling the formes and finding themselves a word over and yelling for a sub to come and edit on the stone. Then off for a pint in the cool plain upper room of the Printer’s Devil in Fetter Lane, gone now, torn down years ago to make way for some plastic palace. And a walk later to the Embankment, across Fleet Street, past El Vino, which would be heaving with barristers and journalists; and down Bouverie Street, seeing the lorries drawn up with the huge bales of newsprint that were hauled up by ropes on beams that stuck out across the road and worked in through the huge doors way above the street.

Colin Smith/Creative Commons

All gone now. But we haven’t changed, thought Jake. All the news that’s unfit to print and sue us if you dare.

*

“Actually a few people are after this hypnotherapist chap,” said Peter.

“Arnold Merriweather?” said Jake. “Yes, I believe so. That’s why I sent Stella to look into him.”

“From now on say it was her own idea,” said Peter. “It might be safer if we go to court.”

They were seated round the table at one end of Jake’s large office. At the other end of the room was a 65-inch TV mounted on the wall. There were several others on the other walls though not on Jake’s desk. There was little else in the office. (“Would you like bookcases?” Michelle had asked when it was fitted out. “What for?” he had asked, puzzled.) The sole adornments were facsimiles of some of his favourite front pages and a picture of Jake with the proprietor and his wife. The latter had, at the time, just had her boobs done and the sun cast shadows in her cleavage like the Grand Canyon at dawn.

“There are a couple of cases.” Bill the Brief shifted in his seat. He was a lengthy cadaverous figure in his 60s with a hawk-like beak of a nose and bushy eyebrows. Jake couldn’t look at him without the urge to say “M’Lud” and stick his thumbs in his lapels. “A Midland cleaning contractor is suing him.”

“That’s that Featherstone bloke, isn’t it,” said Jake. “Wasn’t he in dispute with his workforce or something?”

“The union were after him,” said Bill the Brief. “They said his cleaners were working 60-70 hours a week. The law says 48 hours. Featherstone said they’d all opted out of the limit, which is legal but voluntary and he was denying shifts to guys who wouldn’t opt out. Someone grassed him up to the union.”

“Seems he was underpaying people as well,” said Peter. “Entering them on the books as apprentices so he didn’t have to pay the full minimum wage. Some of ’em were asylum seekers without permission to work.”

“Oh, and there were a couple who got sick from the cleaning fluids,” said Bill the Brief. “Mixing ammonia-based cleaners with bleach, apparently. And descaling agents. The union alleged breathing problems, chemical burns and other fun things. He claims the victims weren’t working for him. The union says they were.”

“What a nice chap,” said Jake. “Can’t see as that’s got anything to do with this hypnotherapy business though.”

“His daughter bought him a hypnotherapy session with Merriweather for Christmas,” said Peter. “She thought it could help him give up smoking. Apparently Merriweather regressed him to the 1840s and he found himself working in a coal mine as a 12-year-old, which distressed him greatly. He has decided to sue.”

He picked up a piece of paper. “This is a transcript of the session supplied in evidence. Featherstone is talking under hypnosis – Merriweather prompted him with questions now and then but we’ve edited that out for clarity.

“My name is Percy Armstrong and I am 12 years old. I have worked in the pit since I was about six, first as a trapper but now I be a hurrier. We pull the corves from the face where the hewers cut the coal. There is a leather belt around my waist, gurl belt we calls it and a chain goes back to the corve and sometimes a girl behind pushes, thrusters we call them. The passage is low so she’ll push with her head. It hurts my knees to crawl through it, it is so low. You ask the weight of the corves, well I don’t rightly know but they say two hundred pounds maybe.”


Peter looked up from his paper. “At length Featherstone became very distressed. It seems he ‘remembered’ being badly burned when a candle ignited some fire-damp and then ‘remembered’ dying in great pain not long afterwards. We have tried to check this but parish records are often incomplete, and we can’t be sure of the exact date or location.”

“You’re not suggesting that the man was really remembering a past life, are you?” said Jake. “How would he have any case against Merriweather?”

“They’ll argue that it’s a case of cryptomnesia,” said Peter. “That’s when someone sees something that appears real under hypnosis but has actually read or seen it somewhere in real life and has forgotten it. In the case of Featherstone, much detail on child labour in the mines was collected as testimony to a Royal Commission chaired by the Earl of Shaftesbury in 1842. It may be that Featherstone had seen this, perhaps at school. If the regression sparked an episode of cryptomnesia and distressed the subject, it may be that Merriweather should not have regressed him.”

“Jesus,” said Jake. “Is there anything in this hypnotherapy lark, or is it all bullshit?”

“Oh no, hypnotherapy is quite legitimate,” said Dr Amery. She was a grey-haired woman of maybe 50, a little severe but not unfriendly. “It’s used to treat certain conditions or help people break harmful habits. The National Health Service accepts that. But it doesn’t pay for it, and warns you should select a hypnotherapist with care. Also hypnotherapy is contraindicated if you have psychosis or some types of personality disorder.”

“So maybe Featherstone should not have been ‘put under’ at all?” said Jake.

“No, perhaps not, if Merriweather was not sure of his medical history,” she replied. “In particular, past-life regression is a specific form of hypnotherapy that seeks to uncover the causes of trauma or behaviours, which it is thought may lie in previous lifetimes. But past-life regression is not recognised by all hypnotherapy professionals. It can worsen certain psychological conditions and because someone under hypnosis is suggestible, it can implant false ‘memories’ and distress the patient.”

“Wasn’t there a Welsh chap who made a splash regressing subjects? There was a TV programme,” said Peter.

“That’s right. Back in the 1970s,” said Dr Amery. “It was something of a sensation at the time. He was a serious hypnotherapist who wanted to treat people. But many critics ascribed the tapes to cryptomnesia.”

Peter looked at his notes. “Featherstone isn’t the only patient of Merriweather’s who’s been talking of suing. There was that bloke who runs a chain of wholesale butchers.”

“Ah yes,” said Bill the Brief. “Charlie Mayhew. Charlie’s Country Meats. Big supplier to the supermarkets. I defended him a few years ago. Multiple animal welfare violations. Alleged, I should say. What was he doing at a hypnotherapist’s, anyway?”

“He hoped Merriweather would help him stop drinking,” said Peter. “Hypnotherapy’s often used for things like that. You look into people’s lives under hypnosis and find where the negative behaviours come from. Except it didn’t work, did it. Because he reckoned he’d been regressed as a worker in a 19th-century Chicago slaughterhouse. He says he woke up screaming ‘The blood! The blood!’ and he can’t eat meat anymore.”

“Didn’t Upton Sinclair write a famous novel set in the Chicago stockyards?” said Bill the Brief. “Maybe Mayhew had read it and forgotten he’d done so? Cryptomnesia again.”

“That’s the suspicion.” Dr Amery frowned. “But hard to prove. What about the Brighton case?”

“We’re not acting for them,” said Peter. “They won’t talk to us. But we heard about it. In that case the subject ‘remembered’ under hypnosis being beaten to death by ‘her’ husband. But in waking life she was a he and had recently been divorced by his wife, who alleged assault. And quite serious injuries, as I recall.”

“There’s a pattern building up here, isn’t there?” Dr Amery looked thoughtful.

“Still, it all looks like cryptomnesia,” said Peter. “But whatever. If this comes to court, it will be alleged that Stella the Fleet Street Slag, sorry Ms Boggs, has had a psychiatric episode as a result of being regressed for the newspaper. There may be legal implications.”

“This is all a bit weird for me,” said Jake. “Besides, even if I did send Stella to expose this bloke, that doesn’t make us liable, does it? You’d have to prove she suffered harm as a result. Where’s the evidence?”

“The fact that she’s lying in a hospital bed, moaning and gibbering,” said Bill the Brief.

“Jesus,” said Jake.

“And this,” said Peter.

He clicked the remote and the video started to run on the large screen. They saw Stella, lying on a couch, shot from above so that her face was straight to camera; then there was a voice from someone out of shot, presumably Merriweather. It was an old man’s voice, low, soothing, foody.

“Stella, you are descending a staircase,” said the Voice. “At its foot is a place of peace. Relax yourself, and let the world… wash… over you…”

“This is new-age woke bollocks,” said Jake.

“Drift,” said the Voice. “Drift upon the sea.”

Stella’s eyelids fluttered; bit by bit they closed. At length:

“What can you see?” asked the Voice.

Stella, eyes still closed, replied in a strange language.

“Stop here,” said Jake. “Have we run that past anyone? What language is it?”

“We don’t know,” said Peter. “My office sent a clip to a linguist but he didn’t recognise it and sent it on to a philologist.”

“A what?”

“A bloke who studies the origins of, and links between, languages. He reckoned it sounded like Carib, or an archaic Arawakan language from northern South America.”

“Or just Stella having a laugh,” said Jake.

“No. He was sure it was a real dialect of some kind.”

“Well that’s not cryptom-whatsit then, that’s for sure,” said Jake. “’Cos our Stell wouldn’t know an obscure foreign language. She has enough probs just with English normally, be honest with you.”

“Ssh, something’s happening to her,” said Dr Amery. They turned back to the screen. Stella was becoming agitated. She started to moan, and then to shout, and to squirm on the couch. The Voice spoke quietly, his words indistinct. After a while she calmed.

“Come back,” said the Voice, “when you are ready. I shall count to five and you will awake, refreshed.”

She did awake but her eyes were staring, and she was sweating.

“What did you see?” asked Merriweather. He sounded concerned for the first time.

“I was at the water’s edge, where the jungle comes down to the sea. The sand was brilliant white and the water deep blue and the trees were full of birds – macaws, parrots? – parakeets.” She blinked. “I was with others. We weren’t wearing much. We did not need to. It was warm.”

“Were you happy?”

“I think so. We were busy. We planted vegetables and yuca, and fished, and the men hunted. We had enough to eat. But then things went wrong.”

“What went wrong?”

Columbus greeted by Arawak Indians (Theodor de Bry/Library of Congress)

“The strange canoe came. With the big cross on its sails. And these odd men waded to the beach and one fell to his knees and waved a smaller cross.” She was silent for a moment. “They came to see us. They took some people away. The men they made to work and the women…” She was silent for a moment, and seemed to be breathing heavily. Then: “They wanted gold. Sometimes cloth. Then the sickness came. Fever. We were exhausted and could hardly move. Our heads hurt, and our backs. Vomit. Then red spots. Then blisters full of pus. We died.”

Eyes wide, she was looking at the camera yet did not see it. Then she screamed. The sound pierced the room. Bill the Brief sat ramrod-straight, rigid; Peter covered his ears; Dr Amery her eyes. The screams continued. Merriweather could be heard trying to calm her.

“Stop it! Stop the tape now!” yelled Jake. He grabbed the remote from Peter but instead of stop, he pressed pause and Stella’s frozen face filled the enormous screen, a distorted rictus of horror and terror. After a moment Dr Amery took the remote and put the screen to sleep.

“Smallpox,” she said. “Stella described smallpox.”

*

The next morning, the weekly editorial conference was underway around the same table.

“Dammit, we need fresh new features pages,” Jake was saying. “I need ideas from you buggers.”

“Wildlife?” ventured someone. “Cute creatures?”

“We could tag an otter and follow it week by week,” said someone else.

“You can’t interview an otter,” said Jake, who’d had enough mustelids for one week. “Can’t we uncover people-smuggling in Parliament or something?”

“When’s Stella the Slag back?” asked the art editor.

“God knows,” said Jake. He looked troubled. Then he brightened.

“I got it, guys. I got it. This past-life regression thing. Why don’t we put someone through it every week?”

“Great,” said the chief sub. “But you’re gonna need volunteers.”

Michelle swayed in with Jake’s coffee.

“Michelle,” said Jake. “Would you like a reporting assignment?”

“Oh yeah!” Her eyes opened wide. She nearly spilled the coffee.

“Jake,” said the art editor, “are you sure this is a good idea?”

When they’d all gone Jake paused to drink his coffee. On the table was a proof from the previous week, a double-page spread with Stella’s last feature. There was a picture of an expensive SUV outside a hotel in some African city and another of two elegant Nigerian fashion models. Third World, Stop Your Whining, read the headline. Colonialism did you no harm. Your Countries Are Fine.

Stella, thought Jake, you were the best.

Hypnotherapy is a legitimate form of treatment that can be helpful to some individuals. Not all patients are suitable and in Britain the NHS warns against it if you have psychosis or some types of personality disorder. It also recommends selecting a hypnotherapist with care through a body such as the National Counselling & Psychotherapy Society (NCPS) or the National Hypnotherapy Society (HS). Past-life regression is a specific form of hypnotherapy and Is not recognised by all professionals. For further information, see Willin, M. (2016): Past Life Regression in Psi Encyclopedia  (London: The Society for Psychical Research). It is available online here.

More short fiction from Mike:

A Train Journey When one's sister comes to visit
Time after Time When you have to tell the children
Fashion Subversion. With style
A Time of Darkness It doesn't repeat. But it rhymes
Another Time A tear in the fabric
Evolution The world is turning
When Time Stands Still A hurricane lashes Pershing Square
A Man For All Seasons Net zero.The Stranger's Bar. And a three-line whip
A History Lesson Why do we study it?
Parallel Worlds Heat pumps and lentils. And a nice glass of Marsala
The Creatives Meeting a tech bro
Homecoming A sort of love story
Solitude A Cold War memory
Rhodri Hactonby's Maps A question of social geography
Hiraeth A yearning…
Strange Places A spirit in the sky 
A Sideways Journey Things might have been different
Displaced Encounter on E94th Street
Belonging Do you? Where?
Leaving Home A house has memories

Mike is now also on Substack at https://mikerobbinswrites.substack.com/

Mike Robbins’s latest book, On the Rim of the Sea, is now 
available as a paperback or ebook. More details here.

Tuesday, 14 October 2025

Flash fiction: A Train Journey

One’s sister comes to visit

“I say, my man,” said Desmond. “When will the 4.10 from Worcester arrive?”

“About 4.10, sir,” said the porter. He ambled off down the platform, scratching his armpit.

“Dammit. Everyone’s so unhelpful nowadays,” said Desmond.

“Darling, do sit down.” Daisy guided him to the nearest bench. “You know what the doctor said about not stretching the wound.”

He was about to say something rude about the doctor in reply, but decided to enjoy the afternoon instead. It was an early-summer day with not a cloud in the sky. Here and there a swallow flitted. The sole other sign of activity was a small grimy tank engine that had steam up but seemed disinclined to do anything with it.

Édouard Vuillard (1868-1940), Woman in a Blue Cloche Hat (c1930)

At length a plume of smoke and steam appeared on the horizon. The 4.10 arrival from Worcester Shrub Hill approached with a loud, self-important whistle, the engine’s green livery resplendent in the sunshine. It hissed to a halt; few people got off. “There she is!” said Daisy. Desmond’s sister stepped slowly down. She carried The Times and The Sketch, but neither looked read. Her cloche hat was pulled down rather low across her brow, but he could see a livid bruise around her eye and on her cheekbone.

“Dammit, he’s given her a shiner,” he whispered.

The porter brought her luggage from the guard’s van on a handcart. To Desmond’s surprise, there were several cases and a steamer trunk; he realised that she expected to stay for some time. He tipped the porter a florin, and kissed his sister on the cheek.

Then there was a sharp pain from the wound in his leg. “Would you mind if I sit down? Just for a minute,” he said. He sank back onto the bench. There was a loud hiss and the pulsing of steam as the train left the station. The quiet of the summer afternoon returned.

“Did you have a good journey, darling?” Daisy was asking. She spoke quickly, and was brittle. “You must be tired. We’ll go straight home. It’s a lovely afternoon, isn’t it. Cook is laying the tea in the garden and we can – “

Her husband interrupted her. “What on earth has happened, my dear?” he asked his sister.

“He hit me. He was drunk,” she replied.

“The bounder!” he exclaimed.

“Not really,” she said. “I mean, none of you are all right any more, are you?”

“No,” he said. “No, I suppose not.”

“It’s all right, dear,” said his wife. ”It’s all right.” She sat down beside him. “Let’s go home for tea. Cook’s done a lovely Victoria sponge and we’ve got a saddle of lamb for dinner.”

He felt the soft kid leather of her glove close around his hand.


More short fiction from Mike:

Remembered Time The past is a dangerous place
Time after Time When you have to tell the children
Fashion Subversion. With style
A Time of Darkness It doesn't repeat. But it rhymes
Another Time A tear in the fabric
Evolution The world is turning
When Time Stands Still A hurricane lashes Pershing Square
A Man For All Seasons Net zero.The Stranger's Bar. And a three-line whip
A History Lesson Why do we study it?
Parallel Worlds Heat pumps and lentils. And a nice glass of Marsala
The Creatives Meeting a tech bro
Homecoming A sort of love story
Solitude A Cold War memory
Rhodri Hactonby's Maps A question of social geography
Hiraeth A yearning…
Strange Places A spirit in the sky 
A Sideways Journey Things might have been different
Displaced Encounter on E94th Street
Belonging Do you? Where?
Leaving Home A house has memories

Mike is now also on Substack at https://mikerobbinswrites.substack.com/

Mike Robbins’s latest book, On the Rim of the Sea, is now 
available as a paperback or ebook. More details here.


Saturday, 20 September 2025

Flash fiction: Time After Time

When you have to warn the children

John heard the clack of heels as she came down the stairs. He stood to open the wooden door at the bottom of them. “Mind your head,” he said. She ducked as she stepped out into the living room. “I’m sorry, a 17th-century cottage isn’t really practical at a time like this, is it.”

“Not terribly.”

“How are things?”

“Well, I think you know. I’ve just spoken to your daughter.” She was efficient, bloodless. “Jess is your daughter? Or daughter-in-law?”

“Daughter.” John made as if to escort her to the door, but: “I’ll see myself out, don’t worry.” She stalked down the drive to a clinical white Audi.

Jess was coming down now. “Did she say anything useful?” he asked her.

She shook her head. “Not really. Just checked the IV drips and everything. She said, 48 hours at most. So it could be today. Any time really.” Her eyes had dark rings. He could hear the day nurse clumping around above.

Then an argument erupted in the dining room.

“Give it here! It’s mine!”

“No it isn’t! Nanny gave it me!”

“Liar! Liar! Pants on fire!”

She strode to the door of the dining room and he heard her yell, “Shut up! Both of you! Just SHUT UP!” She half-fell back into the living room. “God almighty, the pair of you!”

John peered into the dining-room to see the two of them sitting on the floor and staring at the door open-mouthed. The toy car they’d been arguing about was upside-down on the carpet.

He glanced outside and saw that the rain had stopped and there were cracks in the clouds.

Chris Morgan/Creative Commons

“Go and get your welly-boots,” he said. “We’ll go down to the river and give Mum some peace.”

“Thanks Dad. For pity’s sake get them out of my hair for an hour or two,” she said.

“They’ve been cooped up a bit,” he said.

“And Dad… I’ve done nothing to prepare them, really. Can you try and talk to them? I’m sorry.”

“I’ll try.”

So he chivvied them out of the house, down the street past the church hall and left into the bridleway that led down to the water meadows. The rain clouds had mostly cleared away and the patches of blue were spreading, but the ground was soft underfoot and there were lots of puddles and the children jumped in them, trying to splash each other. Soon Paul jumped into an especially deep puddle that seemed to have contained cow dung. The resulting slurry spread over his cords and his sister’s jeans. “Ow!” she cried. “You beast!” She was about to begin a run-up to a puddle of her own when John intervened. “Stop that, Ellen,” he said, his tone a little sharp. ”Don’t make more work for Mummy. Not now.”


He caught them both by the arms and pulled them towards him. “Do you know what kind of path this is?”

“Dad said once it’s called a hollow way,” said Paul.

“That’s right. Look to either side. The hedges are very high, aren’t they? And the fields are above the level of the path. Do you know why that is?”

“It’s because lots of people came down here for years and years and years,” said Ellen.

“A thousand years,” he said. “Since before the Normans. Peasants with their simple tools and later with their ponies and then with the great shire horses. We saw one of those, didn’t we? At the County Show last year.”

“It was HUGE, wasn’t it, Grandad,” said Paul. “Its hooves were like – like Mars landers.”

He thought about this. Yes, I see the analogy, he thought, then had a vision of a Suffolk Punch descending slowly to the surface of the Red Planet, whinnying quietly. Out loud he said:

“I wonder how many people have walked down this hollow way before us. Did you know that the world’s population is 8 billion? But about 117 billion of us have walked the earth? That means 109 billion people have gone before us. So for everyone alive today, 13 have passed before.”

“Wow,” said Paul. “I wonder what happened to them all?”

Geoff Charles/National Museum of Wales

“Well, they’ve died.” John paused for a moment, then said: “Do you think they’re somewhere watching us? After all, they came down here time after time after time for ten centuries or more. They marched up here to go to Waterloo, the Transvaal, Passchendaele and Agincourt. Can they really just have gone away?”

“Has Barker just gone away, Grandad?” asked Ellen.

“I think he’s in dog heaven, dear,” said her grandad. “I expect he’s chasing lots and lots of rabbits.”

“But if that’s dog heaven, isn’t it also rabbit hell?” she said, wide-eyed.

“Not if the rabbits are in on it,” said Paul. “He never caught one, anyway. Or a squirrel. Of course, we do know Barker’s dead, don’t we? I mean, we never saw his body. Dad just lifted him into the hatchback ’cos his back legs didn’t work anymore, Barkers not Dad’s, then he didn’t come back from the vet’s.” He thought for a moment. “Have you ever seen a body, Grandad?”

“Yes,” said John. “When I was in the Army.”

“Ooooh,” said Ellen. “Where was that?”

“In Northern Ireland,” he replied.

“What did it look like?” she asked.

“Not very nice,” he said. He patted her on the back. “Wars aren’t very nice, you see.”

“I bet that’s what’ll happen to Dad,” said Paul. “The doctor’ll put him in the boot and drive him off to the vet.”

“That’s horrible,” said Ellen, and started crying. She was pummelling her brother with her fists and he was laughing. “Off to the vet! Off to the vet!” he said.

“Paul,” said John, “that’s enough. Ellen, come here. Have you got a hanky? You haven’t have you?” He dabbed her tears with his own handkerchief.

“Is Nanny in heaven, then, Grandad?” asked Paul.

“Oh yes, I think so,” he said, after just a second’s hesitation. “I expect she’s sitting with Great-Aunty Mavis now, and they’re complaining about my habits. And I bet they’re drinking lots of sherry.”

“Does everyone believe in heaven though,” said Paul, frowning. “Mrs D came to tea once and said there’s no hell either and it was all silly nonsense to frighten people and make them give the Church lots of money.”

There is a hell, thought John, and it’s tea with Mrs D. Out loud he said:

“Lots of people believe in different things. Some religions believe in reincarnation.”

They had come to the end of the lane and Ellen was climbing the gate into the water meadow beyond. “Ellen, climb near the hinge,” he called out. “You’ll put less strain on it.” She dropped down onto the other side. Together they walked across the water meadow, lumpy and rough with thistles.

“Reincarnation’s when people come back as someone else, isn’t it?” said Paul.

“Sort of,” he replied. “Different faiths see it in different ways. To Buddhist people sometimes, you don’t exactly die but your spirit merges back into a big life force. Other people do believe you can come back though, and if you’ve been good you’re something nice and if you’ve been bad you might be a dung beetle.”

“Paul’ll be a dung beetle,” said Ellen. “Not that he’d smell any better.”

“I bet you’d be a rat or something,” said Paul. “A plague rat. Anyway, I shan’t be a dung beetle. I’m going to go back in time and be a Goth, and I shall sack Rome.”

“A Goth?” Ellen wrinkled up her nose. “Like Dina from the Old Rectory? With black lipstick and that funny nail through her nose.” She frowned as she tried to imagine Dina with a sword, hacking away at slaves in togas.

“Not that kind of Goth, silly.” He looked at his grandad. “They were big warriors, weren’t they, with long pigtails and lots of armour.”

John was about to answer this but his phone vibrated. He knew what the message was before he checked. He didn’t say anything for a moment.

“Grandad?” said Ellen.

“We’d better go home now,” he said.

He crouched down in front of them. “Listen, you two. The world is changing, every moment of every day, and people enter it and they leave it, and we don’t know what happens to them but we know it’s nothing bad. Those of us who stay, we feel sad but we’ll be happy tomorrow. And one day someone will walk along the hollow way and wonder who we were, and it’s all right. Do you understand?”

“I think so,” said Paul.

“Come on then,” he said, but before they left the water meadow he turned and looked back across the tussocky grass at the river beyond. The sky was more blue now and the sun shone between grey clouds that had brilliant white edges; the river, more a stream really, was lined with trees and the raindrops still glistened on the leaves, caught in the afternoon sun. There were oaks, and here and there a young wych elm, fighting back after the disease that had devastated them when he was a young man. I imagined we’d never see them again, he thought. I suppose everything changes; everything goes but then it comes back – yes, like people, time after time after time.


More flash fiction from Mike:

Remembered Time The past is a dangerous place
A Train Journey One's sister comes to visit
Fashion Subversion. With style
A Time of Darkness It doesn't repeat. But it rhymes
Another Time A tear in the fabric
Evolution The world is turning
When Time Stands Still A hurricane lashes Pershing Square
A Man For All Seasons Net zero.The Stranger's Bar. And a three-line whip
A History Lesson Why do we study it?
Parallel Worlds Heat pumps and lentils. And a nice glass of Marsala
The Creatives Meeting a tech bro
Homecoming A sort of love story
Solitude A Cold War memory
Rhodri Hactonby's Maps A question of social geography
Hiraeth A yearning…
Strange Places A spirit in the sky 
A Sideways Journey Things might have been different
Displaced Encounter on E94th Street
Belonging Do you? Where?
Leaving Home A house has memories

Mike is now also on Substack at https://mikerobbinswrites.substack.com/

Mike Robbins’s latest book, On the Rim of the Sea, is now 
available as a paperback or ebook. More details here.

Saturday, 26 July 2025

Flash fiction: A Time of Darkness

It doesn’t repeat. But it rhymes

I hadn’t thought about that day for a while. But I’d never forgotten it, or what he’d said. I knew so little of him, then in a few sentences he told me everything – and just for a moment he showed affection, something he never did.

I told Mom about it and what he’d said, not then but a month or so later, when he’d left us, as we all knew he would.

“That’s quite something for your father,” she said. She emptied an ashtray and a little ash landed on her black mourning dress; she flicked it away. “Put those paper plates in the trash, please, honey. How did folks make such a mess in here, you’d think they’d be tidy after a funeral.” She picked up an empty Schlitz can. “Jesus, how many of these did your damn cousins drink?”

“Mom, we’re German,” I said. “Sausage and beer. It’s how you get through a Lutheran funeral.”

She chuckled. Then she frowned. “He never showed emotion.”

“Never?”

“Never.” She looked out the window at the tall trees and the darkening sky. “They had no tears left, you see. They shed them all early.” She turned towards me. “What did he tell you?”

“About Vinnitsa,” I said.

“Oh,” she replied.

*

So anyway.

It’s 43 years later and I ain’t 17 anymore; I’m 60 with grey hair, love handles and sagging tits, and I’m sitting in the same spot on the back deck of our house amid the wreckage of my life.

I’m a medical billing specialist. Well, that’s what I was this morning, anyway. I drove down to the office at Main and 14th like I always do – well, did – and parked on the empty lot next door, and went up to my desk on the third floor. It’s by the window. It’s the envy of the others, who work in cubicles and get no natural daylight, just the fierce glare of the striplights. “You got a great view here,” someone said once and I guess I did, right out over the carwash, Luigi’s Pizza on one side of it and the sleazy fried chicken joint on the other. Luigi’s is OK. I get takeout from it now and then. I’ve got to know the guy who owns it. “You Luigi?” I asked him once. “Nah, the name’s Vladimir,” he said. “Vlad’s Pizza ain’t got the same ring though.” I’ll give him that. The pizza was good though and they had loads of guys working in back. The chicken joint was busy too but I never went in there. “What do you get with your chicken wings in there?” I asked someone. “Salmonella,” he said. I passed. But now and then I used the carwash. Not the automatic rollers. I’d leave the car with them and three or four small, nuggety men with dark skins and high-pressure jets would fall upon it and clean it within an inch of its life and vacuum the inside and get rid of the dust and candy wrappers and empty Cheetos packets that I’m too big a slob to remove.

U.S. Customs and
Immigration Enforcement

Well, this morning I sat down at my workstation and switched on my PC and checked my phone and my email for messages. Nothing from my Ashley. I was hoping she’d come by soon, haven’t seen her for a month or two, but she’s kind of busy, she’s a single mom like I was and the father’s a useless P.O.S. just like her own was before him. I texted her. And I texted Maria. She hasn’t shown up now for two weeks and the house is a mess. I don’t know where she is.

Then I started processing a claim. Appendectomy. We have a list of cost codes and it’s just been updated. I open up on screen and start adding everything up. A day and a night in hospital, and it comes to $7,776. I gulp and go back through the figures and then I pick up the phone to my boss.

“Bob, I got an appendectomy and the wound dressings come to seven hundred bucks,” I say. “Are we kidding them?”

“Gimme the CPT code.”

I do.

“Nope,” he says. “We’re not kidding. Charge it up.”

“Is that OK? Who’s gonna pay?”

“Relax. His health plan will pay,” he says.

“Someone pays in the end,” I say.

“Yeah, I know that, you know that, all God’s chillun know that. How long you worked here, Greta?”

Too damn long, I think. I hang up. I look out the window and the sun is quite high already. I work on through the billings, checking the CPT codes, changing some here and there to lower the bills a little. Now and then I check my phone. No Maria. No Ashley. The buildings I can see through the window are a series of concrete cubes and neon signs, baking under a pale blue sky. I long for my back deck and my garden and an ice-cold beer.

I’m still looking out the window and daydreaming when a bunch of black cars pull up. Big ones, Ford F150s and Ford Explorers and a Suburban, all with tinted windows. They screech to a stop outside the car wash and Luigi’s Pizza and the Salmonella House and these guys in flak jackets and combat pants leap out and they’re armed and they’ve all got ski masks covering their faces. Jeez, they must be hot in this heat is my first thought, and then I see the letters ICE on their jackets and realise what they’re doing.

“F**k,” I yell out. Everyone looks round. Bob and several others are standing by my desk looking down at the street. “Go get ‘em, guys! Go! Go!” Bob yells. “Send ‘em to f**kin’ Salvador.”

They’re through the doors of all three places now and folks are streaming out and running, it’s like someone kicked an anthill. I see two ICE guys jump on a middle-aged woman and bring her down on the road and one’s got his knee on her back. There’s a short, thickset young man in a T-shirt and a reversed baseball cap and I see he’s the one who serves me pizza sometimes and now and then he gives me a wink and sticks on some extra topping. They’ve got him against the wall of Luigi’s. An older guy is marched to one of the SUVs, hands pinned behind his back, and kind of thrown in through the rear doors. Bob’s whooping like a lunatic. His secretary’s got her fists clenched and is punching the air and yelling Yeah! Yeah! like she was having a f**king orgasm. “You sick f**ks,” I yell but they don’t hear me. Then one of the guys from the carwash runs this way and I see him darting through the street door and the ICE men see him too late but they give chase, and two minutes later the door of the office bursts open and he’s standing there panting, looking around with his face set in a sort of rictus of horror and I remember father’s phrase from long ago, hunted – hunted and haunted, eyes blind with terror. Bob pushes past him to the door and yells down the stairwell He’s in here, come’n git him and he’s grinning and two of us shut the door and turn the catch, but the ICE agents are hammering on the other side and yelling Open up! United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement! We are a federal law enforcement agency! and the door bursts open and they grab him and drag him away. And I sink down into my seat.

“Bob,” I say, “you are a f**king creepazoid.”

*

It wasn’t going to end well, was it.

The HR lady sits me down in her office. “I gotta ask you, Ms Hauer. You called your supervisor, Mr Burdon, a – “ she mouths the profanity – “creepazoid?”

“I guess it was a bit mean to creeps, eh?” I say. She blanches a little. She’s very young, I reckon mid-20s, perfect makeup, a well-cut suit and just the right amount of jewellery, and I’m 60 with saggy boobs and sitting there in a tee shirt with my purse on my lap and I’ve just realised my stash tin’s poking out of it.

“Mr Burdon says there’s been long-standing performance issues,” she goes on.

“That’s because I won’t cover up for his crappy record keeping,” I say. “Or the way he tries to touch female staff. He has a thing for Latina girls, you know that? Trust me, he’s a major-league creep. You should get a life. How much did you pay for that suit?”

“I beg your pardon?”

“When I was your age, I’d flunked out of college, got knocked up at a party and had two DUIs already,” I say.

She frowns. “DUIs. I can’t see any traffic violations those on your file.”

“Oh God,” I say, and then I lose it. I tell he to go f**k herself, then do it again but sideways, then do it on the kitchen table. She blanches a bit more and tells me my health insurance will end at midnight. She takes my ID and has security see me out the building.

*

So it’s the end of the afternoon. I’m sitting on the back deck, about where I was that warm afternoon 43 years ago. I’m looking at the garden, it’s grown over with long grasses, not as he’d have had it – my God, every flower, every twig knew its place; I swear he made them parade in the morning. But I like it more like this. I saw a possum last night and there’s a family of raccoons too, and I hear their skirring in the mornings.

Nothing from Maria. But we can guess why now, can’t we.

Nothing from Ashley.

I roll a joint. It’s a big one. It’s a very big one. I’m gonna get as baked as a damn brownie.

I’m just about to light it when the deck creaks and I look around and there she is, in her denim shorts and a bikini top with her tattoos and her piercings and her bare feet and her dirty-blonde hair tousled like she just got out of bed and I wouldn’t be surprised if she just was in bed, though who knows who with. Ashley doesn’t tell me everything.

“Seriously, Mom?”

“What?”

“That’s not a freakin’ spliff, it’s a California redwood.”

“I’m celebrating. I just got terminated.”

“Oh, Mom. What did you do this time?”

“ICE raided the pizza joint and the carwash and Burdon was dancing around with glee and I called him a f**king creepazoid and he is because he’s a nasty little MAGA piece of s**t and…” I become aware that I’m crying, and I take out my handkerchief and wipe my face and blow my nose and it’s full of tears and snot. “What are you doing here anyway?” I say. “I’ve been texting you for days. Where’s Carla?”

“Guess I sensed trouble,” she says. “I got this little switch in my brain that tells me. Momma’s f**ked up again, it says. So I thought I’d come by. I got Carla a sleepover with her friend Ellie. She’s fine.”

“Well now you’re here, you can go to the fridge and get me a f**kin’ beer,” I say.

She nods, but hesitates, just for a moment, and looks at me, and her hand seems to be reaching out towards me. Then she turns and goes into the kitchen and comes back with two ice-cold bottles of beer and we crack them open and we sit there and for a few minutes we say nothing, passing the spliff back and forward.

“I did a great job with you,” I say after a while. “I raised a slutty stoner, just like myself.”

She grins. “Nah, it’s in the genes.”

“It isn’t. You never met your Prussian grandfather.”

“Grandma said he was kind of cold. Not unkind. But not much small talk.”

“He never showed much affection,” I say. “Except – there was this one time. When I was 17. A month before he died.” I get up and walk two yards or so into the garden and turn back and look at her. “I came in about this time, six maybe? – before dinner. And he’s sitting in a folding chair, right about here.”

*

This is what I told Ashley then.  About Dad. And what he told me that afternoon, in the garden, when I was 17 and had acne.

I’d been hanging out with the gang at the mall and when I came in, Mom was busy in the kitchen and I asked to help but she said, “It’s OK, honey. Go sit with your father in the garden. He likes it when you do that.”

“Does he?”

“Yes,” she said.

It was a warm day but he was wrapped in a blanket; he was near the end and very thin, and his cheekbones stuck out and his nose was like a beak and of course he’d lost most of his hair because you do, though there were a few wisps left below the crown. I sat on the edge of the deck, waving my legs to and fro.

“Where you been?” he asked. He had this gravelly voice and his accent was still strong, after 30 years in America.

“At the mall,” I said.

“What do you do at the mall? Never do I understand,” he said.

“Hang out. With friends.”

He grunted. I figured Dad wasn’t really that interested in what I did at the mall. Then I coughed, several times, loudly. “Sorry, Dad,” I said. “It’s one of those summer colds. I guess I mustn’t give it to you.”

He smiled slightly. “I do not think it makes much difference now.”

I winced. He seemed to see that he had hurt me in some way and cast around for something to say. “I nearly coughed myself to death once,” he said. “And my lungs filled up with fluid. I had pneumonia. I survived.”

“When was that?”

He frowned and I thought for a moment that he wouldn’t answer, then he said:

“The first winter after the war.  The English kept us in open-air cages. In Belgium.”

He’d never talked about the past. Somehow I’d known not to ask.

He didn’t seem like he’d say any more, so I asked him: “Were you a prisoner of war, Dad? How long did they keep you?”

“They kept me a while,” he said. “They didn’t believe my story, you see. I was a Gefreiter, a corporal, when they captured me. I was near Lübeck when the English took it. I got very sick in the cage and they moved me to a hospital. An English officer saw me there and said, he’s no corporal. He had recognised me. ‘I saw him in Heidelberg before the war,’ he said. ‘He was a student there. I am sure he is an officer. He has put on a corporal’s uniform to disguise what he has done.’ So they classified me as a C, a Nazi. And put me in a camp in the far north of Scotland. With all the Nazis.”

“Sounds like you had a blast,” I said.

I saw the ghost of a smile again.

“I got them to check my story. They transferred me to a better camp and I was even allowed out to work. Then they released me in 1947. I went back to Germany. But our home was in the East. And even in the West there was only rubble.”

“Why were you a corporal, Dad? Our family was kinda upscale, wasn’t it?”

“Yes, we had a small estate in Pomerania. Everything was lost when Germany collapsed.” He looked at me directly then, and I flinched a little, as I always did when he did that, right to the end. “I was not always a corporal. I was a lieutenant. An Oberleutnant. But I was – zum einfachen Soldaten degradiert… How do American soldiers put it?” He frowned. “Busted. Down to corporal.”

He stopped again, but I knew there was something that I needed to understand. I looked at him; he was trying to draw the blanket closer around him but his hand was thin and weak, and I did what I never did and touched him, pulling the blanket around his shoulders. I sat back on the deck.

“What happened, Dad?”

“I refused an order.” He looked at me again, and there was that faint smile. “A German does not refuse an order.”

“What was the order?”

“I should tell you, shouldn’t I.” For a moment he seemed almost to be talking to himself. “I should tell you. You must know of these things.” He seemed to be fighting for breath, then he said:

“It was near Vinnitsa in the Ukraine. We caught a family of Gypsies in the woods. My comrades decided they would have some sport, and got some horses from a village they’d burned. Then they released the family in the woods and told them to run and if they escaped they could go free. And they hunted them on horseback.”

I must have looked appalled. He looked at my face and continued.

“They got the children and shot them in the woods. The mother they captured and made to dance without her clothes, then they killed her. I wouldn’t join the hunt. So when they caught the father and brought him back to our quarters, the Major told me to kill him. I refused.”

I guess I was sort of stunned. I said nothing. After a minute he said:

“I saw his eyes. Hunted – hunted and haunted, eyes blind with terror.”

We sat in silence for several minutes. The sunlight retreated behind the tall trees and I could see him shiver slightly. Then I said:

“And they busted you, Dad?”

“Yes, they busted me. They didn’t say ‘demoted for not murdering’, of course. It was said I had shown weakness in the face of the enemy.”

He seemed exhausted and I sensed he didn’t want to say anything more. Then he said:

“Go and help your mother with the dinner.”

I stood up, and started toward the kitchen, then I heard him say: “Come here.” I did, and he pulled me gently towards him and he kissed me on the cheek. He never had before. He never did again. I drew back and saw his eyes were glistening a little.

“How could they do these things, Dad?” I asked him.

“You can’t understand,” he said. “Not now. It was a time of darkness.”

*

We’re sitting on the deck still. It’s getting dark. We’ve finished the joint and Ashley has her arm around my shoulders.


The Gypsy Girl Mosaic of Zeugma
Gazientep Museum of Archaeology


More flash fiction from Mike:

Remembered Time The past is a dangerous place
A Train Journey One's sister comes to visit
Time After Time When you have to warn the children
Fashion Wokeness and subversion. With style
Evolution The world is turning
When Time Stands Still A hurricane lashes Pershing Square
A Man For All Seasons Net zero.The Stranger's Bar. And a three-line whip
A History Lesson Why do we study it?
Parallel Worlds Heat pumps and lentils. And a nice glass of Marsala
The Creatives Meeting a tech bro
Homecoming A sort of love story
Solitude A Cold War memory
Rhodri Hactonby's Maps A question of social geography
Hiraeth A yearning…
Strange Places A spirit in the sky 
A Sideways Journey Things might have been different
Displaced Encounter on E94th Street
Belonging Do you? Where?
Leaving Home A house has memories

Mike is now also on Substack at https://mikerobbinswrites.substack.com/

Mike Robbins’s latest book, On the Rim of the Sea, is now 
available as a paperback or ebook. More details here.