🏆 Contest #278 Winner!

Fiction Suspense Drama

This story contains themes or mentions of physical violence, gore, or abuse.

Content Note:

This story contains references to physical violence and implied gore. These elements are presented in a darkly comedic and absurd context, focusing on the moral and emotional implications rather than explicit descriptions. Reader discretion is advised.


The hospice smells like antiseptic and failed dreams. A Christmas-themed air freshener dangles from the IV stand, swaying in time with my father’s mechanical wheezing. It smells like cinnamon. And regret. The fluorescent lights hum, drowning out the morphine’s slow drip.


Hi, I’m the man who never amounted to anything. The trophy-less disappointment. If life is a race, I’m the guy who tripped in the first ten feet and never got back up. Thirty-five years old, still renting, and my most significant contribution to society is a viral video of me accidentally setting fire to a microwave burrito. That’s me. Proud owner of a pile of unwashed dishes and a credit score so low it could run for public office.


I sit slouched in the corner, watching my dad suck on life like it’s a particularly stubborn milkshake. He’s enormous—round face, round belly, round everything. A human snowman melted into a hospice bed. The kind of guy who built his whole life on being likable. For thirty years, he played Santa Claus at the mall. Not just any Santa, mind you. He was the Santa. The one people drove four counties over to see. His face still pops up on Christmas cards across the Midwest. A local legend. A walking, jolly Norman Rockwell painting.

And me? I’m the guy who gave him a $10 Amazon gift card for Christmas. You’d think that’s why he’s dying, the look he gave me when he opened it.


He beckons me closer, his hand shaking like a rusty wind-up toy. “Come here, kiddo.”


“Yeah, sure,” I say, dragging the chair closer. It screeches against the linoleum, like it’s legs are fighting with the floor. “What is it this time? Another story about how you single-handedly saved Christmas at the mall in ’93?”


His laugh comes out like a wheeze caught in a blender. Then he stops, face turning deadly serious, eyes boring into mine. “I’ve got a confession, kiddo. Something big.”


I lean back. Here we go again. "Oh great. Did you save Christmas again?”


He laughs, shakes his head. His smile, faint but still there, cracks like old plaster. “No. Listen to me kiddo. I killed people. I was a hitman.”


The words hit me like a sucker punch to the ribs. His eyes twinkle with something far from Christmas cheer.


For a second, I couldn’t breathe. Not because I believed him, but because some part of me wanted to. Like even in death, Dad had to be bigger than life. Then the ridiculousness hit me, and I laughed. Hard. Too hard. ‘Jesus, Dad. Did the morphine knock your last screw loose?’”


“You don’t think a guy with fake snow in his eyebrows could carry out a clean kill, do you?” Dad’s grin spreads like butter on burnt toast, his cheeks wobbling like he’s auditioning for Jell-O’s next ad campaign.


I stare. Words feel stuck somewhere between my brain and my tongue, like traffic on the I-5 during rush hour. I’ve got a list of things I never expected to hear from my father. “I love you.” “I’m proud of you.” “There’s a secret trust fund hidden in the walls.” But this? This takes the cake. And then assassinates the baker.


“You’re messing with me,” I finally manage. “Is this one of those morphine fever dreams? Should I call the nurse? Blink once for yes.”


Dad coughs out a laugh, deep and phlegmy, shaking his head. “No joke. I was good at it too. Seasonal work was the perfect cover. Everyone sees Santa as a big, harmless teddy bear. No one suspects Santa Claus of carrying a nine-millimeter Glock.”


I blink. Hard. He’s lost it. The man’s gone off the deep end, dragged the Christmas tree, the reindeer, and the inflatable snowman with him.


“I had a code,” he says, his voice dropping to a low rasp like he’s auditioning for The Godfather. “Never moms. Never kids. And no one who liked Christmas.”


I rub my temples. “So you’re telling me all those ‘business trips’ to Reno weren’t about fixing mall contracts?”


“Nope.” He pops the ‘p’ like he’s proud. “They were about fixing people. Your old man was a regular Mr. Clean.”


“And you expect me to believe this?”


He leans forward, a Herculean effort given his state. “Remember the upstairs neighbor at our old place? The guy who played techno at 2 a.m.?”


I nod slowly, stomach sinking. “You said he moved.”


“I moved him.” His grin widens. “To a landfill. Permanently.”


“You’re not serious,” I whisper, but my voice cracks. Oh God, he’s serious.


“Go to my apartment and look for a box labeled ‘Santa’s Naughty List,’ top shelf of my closet. See for yourself.”


I’m halfway to the door when the heart monitor gives up, the line going flat like it’s tired of pretending he had time left.


******


Dad’s apartment is a shrine to Christmas. Not the classy, Pottery Barn kind of Christmas—this is the Walmart-on-clearance kind. Everywhere you look, there’s a red and green assault on the senses. Tinsel dangles like garish cobwebs. A nutcracker army lines the windowsill, their paint chipped like they’ve been through a war. Fake snow dusts every surface, not sprinkled but dumped, like he’d been trying to recreate a blizzard indoors. I kick a pile of it near the couch. It puffs up, glittering.


The closet, though—that’s where things get creepy. Rows of Santa suits hang in perfect order, sorted by decade. The 80s suits are polyester atrocities, faded red like tomato soup left in the sun. The newer ones are lush, rich velvets. There’s even a Santa pimp cane leaning in the corner, because of course there is.


And the smell? That weird, mothball-meets-candy-cane funk. It clings to your clothes. Gets in your hair. I’d need three showers and a priest to feel clean again.


That’s when I see it: a box on the top shelf, labeled in sharpie, “Santa’s Naughty List.” My stomach drops. No way this is real. No way.


The box creaks as I pull it down, years of dust exploding in my face.Inside, the first thing I see is a pair of cracked glasses. Thick, Coke-bottle lenses, scratched to hell. Still smeared with something. A fingerprint, maybe. Or worse. Intrigued, I pick them up gingerly, like they might bite.


It had a Christmas gift tag hanging from it reading — The neighbor who played ABBA on repeat.


Next, there’s a gold wedding ring, heavy, engraved with Forever Denise. This one has tag dangling from it that reads — Hired by Denise to take care of her abusive cheating husband. She gave me fresh baked cookies still warm from the oven, too. 


The box bulged with trophies, Christmas tags swinging off them like tiny, glittery alibis.


At the bottom, a mall Santa hat, its white fur trim stiff and crusted with something dark brown. Blood? Hot chocolate? Both?


My hand hovers over it like touching it might connect me to him, but I jerk back. My heart pounds in my ears. This is insane. This is nuts. This is… impressive?


Turns out Dad wasn’t just a professional at making kids smile. He was a professional at making people disappear.


******


The thing about secrets is they’re sticky. Once you hear one, it clings to you like gum on a shoe, no matter how much you scrape. Dad’s confession isn’t just sticking—it’s metastasizing. The more I think about it, the more I see his life wasn’t two separate halves. Santa and hitman. Jolly old saint and silent assassin. It’s all the same guy.


And now, I’m the one holding the bag.


He’s dead. The town’s favorite mall Santa, gone to that big workshop in the sky. Kids will cry when they hear. Some mom will bring them to the mall next week, hoping to see his stupid twinkly eyes and hear his gravelly laugh. Instead, they’ll get some substitute in a cheap suit, the kind who smells like whiskey and regret. That’ll be Dad’s legacy—a hole in the lives of every snot-nosed kid who sat on his lap.


Unless I tell the truth.


If I do, it won’t be crying kids. No. The whole town will lose its collective mind. Imagine this headline:

BREAKING NEWS: KILLER KRINGLE CAUGHT DEAD.


The local paper will have a field day. They’ll dig up every photo of him grinning in his red suit, surrounded by smiling children, and slap it next to words like “MURDERER” in bold, block letters. The tabloids will pick it up. Every dumb podcaster with a microphone will start calling him the "Silent Santa Slayer."


And me? I’ll be the idiot who ruined Christmas for the whole town.


******


The funeral smelled like peppermint and formaldehyde. Someone decided Dad’s last ride should look like an after-Christmas clearance aisle. Red and white draped the lid, as if trying to sugarcoat the whole thing. And of course, the mall workers showed up in elf hats. Because nothing says “we respect your dead father” like polyester and jingling bells.


The service started with a speech from Jerry, the guy who managed the mall. Jerry had a voice like a dying accordion and the charisma of wet cardboard, but he tried. “He wasn’t just Santa,” Jerry said, his words wobbling. “He was Christmas. He saved Christmas.”


Saved it? Like he pulled Christmas from a burning building? You mean he sat in a chair for eight hours a day while toddlers screamed in his face.


Then came the slideshow. Dad with kids. Dad shaking hands. Dad eating cookies that probably came with handwritten death requests. And now it was my turn.


I stepped up to the podium, clutching my notes. My palms were slick, my mouth dry. Every eyeball in the room locked onto me like I was the halftime show. Here lies Santa, the town legend. And here comes his loser kid, fumbling for words.


I cleared my throat. “Dad was… unforgettable.”


A safe start. Too safe. My hands shook. I glanced down at my notes, then up at the crowd. Their faces blurred. My brain buzzed.


“Because, you know…” My voice cracked. “He was Santa… and a hitman.”


The room froze. A collective gasp sucked all the air out. Then Jerry laughed. The kind of laugh that makes you wonder if someone’s choking. “Santa? A hitman?” More laughter erupted. “Next you’ll tell us Rudolph ran a dogfighting ring!”


I blinked. The crowd thought I was joking. Thank God.


I faked a chuckle, the kind that burns your throat on the way out. “Yeah, I guess he really killed it as Santa, huh?” The groans at my pun covered my slip-up, and I pivoted. Hard. “But seriously, Dad was the most unforgettable Santa this town ever had.”


They clapped. Some people wiped tears. And me? I stared at the casket, wondering what was worse—burying the truth with him or walking around with it lodged in my head forever.


The funeral was barely over when he found me. Grizzled guy in a trench coat, the kind of face that looks like it’s been carved out of driftwood. He shook my hand, his grip hard and dry, and said he knew my dad. ‘Frankie,’ he said, like I should already know who he was. “An old associate of your dad’s.”


Associate? What kind of associate? Did Santa have a union? A reindeer mafia?


“Sorry for your loss,” Frankie said, not sounding sorry at all. “Your dad was a legend. One of the best in the biz.”


“The biz?” I asked, the words tasting like sour milk.


Frankie smirked, like I’d just failed some kind of test. He opened his trench coat—not for a gun or a bomb or a flashing incident, but for a business card. The font was a little too cheerful, a little too Comic Sans for what it said:

Kringle & Associates. Holiday Solutions for Your Problems.


I stared at it like it might bite me. “This is a joke, right?”


Frankie leaned in, breath heavy with something cheap and lethal. “Your dad wasn’t the only one,’ he said, his voice like gravel rolled in honey. He pulled a candy cane from his pocket, twisting it between his fingers. ‘Seasonal work… it’s got its advantages. Keeps things clean.’ He paused, watching me, waiting. Like there was something I was supposed to say. It’s the perfect cover.” Frankie smiled, teeth yellowed like a dog just pissed in the snow.


He straightened up, sliding his hands into his coat. “Your dad always said you’d make a great Santa. You’ve got the look.”

My dad spent my whole life teaching me things I didn’t realize were lessons. How to lie with a smile. How to disappear in a crowd. How to keep secrets. I always thought he was preparing me for life, but maybe he was just preparing me for this. Frankie’s words hung in the air like cigarette smoke, clinging to my skin.


I opened my mouth, but nothing came out. Frankie tipped an imaginary hat and walked away, disappearing into the kind of fog that makes you doubt he was ever really there.


I looked at the card again, the words staring back like a dare. Kringle & Associates. Dad always said to find a job that suits you. But some jobs? Some jobs find you.


In the distance, I heard bells. Maybe wind chimes. Maybe the Salvation Army guy packing up. Who knows? What I do know is that I hate kids, I love cookies, and I could probably pull off the beard.

Posted Nov 30, 2024
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160 likes 177 comments

Marilyn Flower
00:03 Apr 08, 2025

Spooky! Like father, like son. Love the sinister ending, Mary. Did not see that coming. Hard shoes to fill in many ways, right? Christmas will never be the same again. Some memorable lines: The hospice smells like antiseptic and failed dreams. And, I sit slouched in the corner, watching my dad suck on life like it’s a particularly stubborn milkshake. the line going flat like it’s tired of pretending he had time left. And, I’d need three showers and a priest to feel clean again. such vivid and imaginative writing. Bravo and congratulations!

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Mary Butler
11:49 Apr 14, 2025

Thank you for reading! I am glad that you enjoyed my silly little tale of a not so jolly Santa!

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Helen A Howard
09:20 Apr 05, 2025

I realised I never commented on your amazing story. It really stood out because it was unusual and very original. I love originality. Made for an intoxicating read. I can see why it won. 🏆

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Mary Butler
11:50 Apr 14, 2025

Thank you Helen! It was a fun story to write!

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Alina RAMSEY
17:00 Apr 01, 2025

Wonderfully written and descriptive! Very creative twist! Loved it!

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Mary Butler
11:58 Apr 14, 2025

Thank you for reading!

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Natasha Hall
21:50 Mar 28, 2025

We definitely need a pt2

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Mary Butler
15:20 Mar 29, 2025

Haha, thank you, Natasha! I’ve been toying with the idea of a sequel—clearly Santa has more secrets up his red velvet sleeves. Stay tuned 👀🎅 I may possibly drop one this week since a few of the prompts would line up nicely for a Part 2!

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17:17 Mar 27, 2025

Well written, Mary. Your metaphors again mingled in. A psychopath story avoiding the blood and gore. Well designed.
I have been assembling an anthology of my stories, adapting them to "The life and times of Barney Defanfaler."
I sincerely believe you could, if you have not already done so have an anthology hit.
Barney

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Mary Butler
15:23 Mar 29, 2025

Hi Barney, thank you so much for the kind words! I’m really glad the story landed for you—especially the metaphorical layer. That's always something I ave fun weaving in. Your anthology project sounds fascinating—please be sure to let me know when you have published it. I truly appreciate the encouragement about putting together an anthology of my own. Maybe it’s time I seriously consider it!

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00:44 Mar 25, 2025

What a fun and surprising story! Perhaps you could do stand-up, but this sort of story is much more enjoyable. Really like the voice of the son, and the fact that the father "checks out" early in the story allows us to become convinced, by the end, that the son is a chip off the old block. You could probably also write for something like SNL....

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Mary Butler
15:25 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, Anne! I’m really glad you enjoyed the story—and wow, the SNL comment totally made my day. I had a lot of fun playing with the son’s voice and walking that line between grief and absurdity. I appreciate you noticing the structure, too! The idea of the father “checking out” early was intentional, so it’s awesome to hear that worked for you. I love leaning into dark comedy, horror and mystery! Thanks again for the kind words and encouragement!

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Graham Kinross
01:42 Mar 22, 2025

Thanks for bravely exposing the dark underbelly of the Mall Santa business. Your investigative journalism posed as a story will open eyes and hopefully move things in the right direction.

There’s a reason he wears red.

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Mary Butler
00:23 Mar 23, 2025

Haha, thank you for recognizing the hard-hitting journalism behind this piece! The world needed to know the truth about the real North Pole operations, and I was just the humble vessel. Who needs a Pulitzer when you have glittery gift tags doubling as criminal evidence, right?

And YES—there’s a reason he wears red! Not just festive... but practical for, you know, cleanup purposes. Santa’s got layers, Graham. So many layers. And most of them are velvet and morally questionable.

Appreciate you reading and joining me on this sleigh ride through holiday horror and heart!

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Graham Kinross
02:34 Mar 23, 2025

Santa brings the gift of death. Maybe they’re one and the same and he gets to wear red for a season.

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Mary Butler
11:31 Mar 23, 2025

Exactly. He sees you when you’re sleeping… and when you’ve crossed someone who knows a guy who knows a guy named Frankie. The gift of death, wrapped in tinsel and plausible deniability.

Honestly, the red suit is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Festive and functional. It’s like Santa moonlights as a stylish grim reaper for hire—12 kills of Christmas, anyone?

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Graham Kinross
13:56 Mar 23, 2025

He can always get into the house and the worst thing is the kids don’t realise they’re being used for blackmail. The presents are just to remind us he can come at any time.

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Mary Butler
10:02 Mar 24, 2025

You're right The cookies? Tribute. The letters? Surveillance data. The kids? Tiny, giggling informants. And every toy he “gifts” is just a reminder that he knows where you live and how to bypass your security system like it’s a wrapping paper obstacle course.

It’s not a chimney—it’s an access point.

Honestly, we’re not writing fiction anymore. We’re building a case file. Let’s hope Kringle & Associates doesn’t come knocking. Or jingling.

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Nehemiah Giles
06:53 Mar 03, 2025

I loved this story. This is the kind of story I’d read in a book first, and then go watch the movie! The details and descriptions of the characters were terrific. I could read this out loud with ease and in the dramatic monologue voices and tones. I truly enjoyed reading this! Amazing work!

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Mary Butler
00:25 Mar 23, 2025

Nehemiah you just made my whole day—thank you! Honestly, if this ever did become a movie, I’d insist you get first dibs on doing the dramatic voiceover. I can already hear you nailing the “hot chocolate or blood?” line with full cinematic gravitas. 😄 Seriously though, I’m so glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for reading and for the kind words!

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Thomas Wetzel
22:44 Jan 20, 2025

"The hospice smells like antiseptic and failed dreams."

You basically could have stopped right there if not for the 1,000 word (technical) minimum. That sentence said more than one thousand words. I'm just going to assume your parents were Hemingway and Gellhorn at this point. You are seriously oozing with talent, Mary. You are moving to Hollywood sometime soon, right? If not, I am kidnapping you and bringing you to all the major studios for pitch meetings. (I get 15% of your gross income!) The world cannot be denied of your gifts. I won't allow it.

Btw, are you allergic to seafood or peanuts or anything like that? I really don't want to fuck this up. Please inform me of any dietary requirements. Thanks. It will be a fun road trip! Ever been to an In-N-Out Burger? So good...

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Mary Butler
00:20 Jan 21, 2025

Thomas, you have officially made my day! Hemingway and Gellhorn as my parents? I mean, that explains so much, right? Although in reality, my dad was a conductor for Conrail (train whistles and all!), and my mom was a stay-at-home superhero raising 10 of us. Yep, I’m number 10. They’re amazing parents—always let me be my quirky self, which is probably how I ended up writing stories about homicidal Santas in the first place. 😂

Now, about this Hollywood kidnapping plan… I’m flattered, slightly alarmed, and 100% in. Let’s roll! Just a heads-up for the snacks: I’m vegan, so no burgers for me, even the magical ones from In-N-Out. And while I don’t eat anything that used to have a face (or whatever you’d call a sea cucumber, because I’m not eating that either), I do love nuts—peanuts, cashews, almonds, macadamias, you name it. Maybe I’ve eaten so many, I’ve become a little nutty myself? 😉

So, where are we pitching first? Netflix? Amazon? Or are we going old school with Paramount? Wherever it is, I’m ready for our road trip adventure… just make sure to stock up on vegan snacks, or I’ll get hangry, and no one wants that. 😅

Thanks for the love and encouragement—it really means the world to me. Let’s make that 15% happen!

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Thomas Wetzel
01:20 Jan 21, 2025

No way. You are the youngest of ten? Do you know all of their names?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djrH9GR9xO0

Who doesn't love Minnie Driver?

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Thomas Wetzel
01:36 Jan 21, 2025

I think of Hemmingway and Gellhorn as a tragic combination of talent and love and passion and conflict. A beautiful modern-day Tristan and Iseult.

Okay, on to more depressing topics. Veganism. I fully respect your choice and I am going to hang with you on that for this road trip but you have to show me the ropes. What the hell am I going to eat? Teriyaki string beans and tofu with rice? I mean, sure. For lunch one day. But then what? Nothing that ever had a face? Not even a squirrel? I don't know. What if I kill it myself? Not even with my gun but what if I just use my car? Not sure if that makes it any better. Let me know. I'm new to this. Can I eat a cat? (Just looking for loopholes here.)

We will start off at Hulu and tell them that Netflix is drafting an offer, then we will go to Netflix and tell them the same thing. We will convince one of them to put us up in a pair of suites at The Chateau Marmont and after breakfast the next morning (I know...no ham and eggs for you) we will call them both to say that Paramount and MGM are in a bidding war. We will get paid by lunch and you will be eating steak tartar.

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Mary Butler
13:05 Jan 21, 2025

Love that movie and love Minnie Driver! I do know all their names....Alvin, Arlene, Bill, Richard, Debbie, Mark, Rodger, Char and John.

Veganism isn’t depressing—it’s an epic quest. Think of it like Middle-earth, except instead of destroying a ring, we’re out here discovering how many ridiculously tasty things can be made from plants. Sure, it’s a learning curve (and no, it does not involve cats, squirrels, or roadkill—though I admire your commitment to finding loopholes). Don’t worry, my friend, you’re going to survive. In fact, you might thrive. By the end of this road trip, you’ll be weeping into a vegan burger, realizing it’s the best thing you’ve ever eaten.

Let me assure you: it’s not all tofu and teriyaki string beans (though tofu, cooked right, can slap harder than a soap opera villain). We’ve got vegan ice cream, vegan donuts, vegan pizza, and nachos that could make even your meat-loving alter ego shed a single tear. And no, you cannot “accidentally” run over a squirrel for snacks—it’s not that kind of adventure. Cat isn’t happening either, unless you’re angling to pitch some kind of dark Netflix horror-comedy. (“Roadkill Café: A Love Story”?)

Speaking of Netflix—your Hulu-to-Netflix-to-Paramount chess move? Absolute brilliance. By the time we’re done, we’ll be sipping oat milk lattes at The Chateau Marmont while agents wrestle for our signatures. And steak tartare? Pass. But lion’s mane mushroom tartare? Now that’s a plot twist I can get behind.

To help you get started on your plant-based hero’s journey, here are a few of my favorite vegan wizards on YouTube and TikTok. These folks turn kale into magic:

Some YouTubers I like have killer vegan recipes!

https://youtu.be/gmLQB_nL1aE?si=B2LvnnyPZM_psAXn

https://youtu.be/u-TnpiDS4fU?si=zoHkuyr0QynQG_ej

https://youtu.be/rhPQIzZeVPs?si=POJDit_sSaDw96Ed

https://youtu.be/pOCp87I6ZZE?si=LJluBL8pYzqFgsvE

Plant Based Brandon on TikTok also has amazing recipes!!!

https://www.tiktok.com/@_plantbasedbrandon?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc

Let’s do this. Bring your appetite, your best negotiating voice, and maybe a bib for all the vegan snacks I’m about to blow your mind with. Hollywood won’t know what hit it—or us.

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Thomas Wetzel
13:17 Jan 21, 2025

You know what's funny? I have actually been thinking about going vegetarian, or maybe just pescatarian, lately. It's not so much a moral thing, but just a change in dietary preferences. I love the miso soup and salad and sushi from the restaurant just down the street. It's kind of the only thing I want to eat now.

And speaking of bibs, we will bring my 20-pound French Bulldog (the fearless Margot) with us to all of these Hollywood pitch meetings. She has a black coat with some brown brindle and a white bib and she is adorable, but trust me when I say she is the most ferocious creature on the planet...a pack of T-Rex wouldn't stand a chance against her for more than 15 seconds, max.

We will get a signature on that contract and you will be paid handsomely. And I, of course, will collect my well-earned 15% commission.

Nobody should ever bet against Margot. It's a sucker's bet. You'll lose every time. She is indomitable.

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Phil Huston
22:45 Jan 16, 2025

Really great story, told in a straight line, which is always appreciated. Any critique would be - More simile than three Raymon Chandler novels and a couple of repeaters on the olfactory descriptors but a hell of a good tale. Frankie. Who'd a thought? Congrats!

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Mary Butler
13:13 Jan 18, 2025

Thanks, Phil! I’m thrilled you enjoyed the story, straight-line storytelling and all! I’ll admit, I might have gone a little ham on the similes—Raymond Chandler would probably roll his metaphorical eyes at me from his noir heaven. And as for the olfactory descriptors, well, I guess I just wanted everyone to smell what I was cooking. 😂

Frankie was a fun curveball, right? He just kind of sauntered into the story, trench coat and all, and demanded to stay. Appreciate the thoughtful critique and the kind words—means a lot!

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Sandra Lord
01:22 Jan 09, 2025

I am now an official Mary Butler fan. I'm glad I kept reading after "Plotford." Just one request from an old-timey editor: Write two to three thousand words WITHOUT using the word "like" OR write a similar submission with "like" in EVERY sentence. Stretch those mental muscles.

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Mary Butler
11:20 Jan 09, 2025

Sandra, thank you so much for giving one of my stories another chance—it truly means the world to hear that you’re a fan! I’ll admit, I hadn’t realized how heavily I relied on filler words until Trebor and Veronica pointed it out in their comments on Page Turner (Plotford). Their feedback inspired me to revisit the story, allowing me to refine it and learn valuable lessons for future projects. As a new writer, I genuinely appreciate constructive feedback like this—it helps me grow and strengthen my craft. Thank you for your support and for giving me the feedback to improve my craft!

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Sandra Lord
17:23 Jan 23, 2025

Thanks. Looking forward to reading lots more of your work.

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05:31 Jan 08, 2025

The whole premise of this story is really fun and creative. It's sharp, crisp and full of witty similes and metaphors.

I particularly like the first line "The hospice smells like antiseptic and failed dreams", when the narrator watches his dad "suck on life like it’s a particularly stubborn milkshake", and the one about secrets clinging to you like gum. Sometimes it felt like there were possibly too many, but they're funny and clever and if that's your style, I like it.

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Mary Butler
15:26 Mar 29, 2025

Hi Amy, thanks so much for reading and for your thoughtful comment! I'm really glad you enjoyed the premise—and those metaphors in particular. I definitely have a tendency to lean into that style, and I may sometimes go a bit heavy on them. It’s very helpful to hear that feedback framed in a kind way. Appreciate you taking the time to share your thoughts!

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M. M.
14:00 Jan 06, 2025

Well done, clever, witty, dark and convincing. Not exactly a christmas read i would choose but i read this and congrats on the win. It was actually refreshing and surprisingly a good read.

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Mary Butler
15:27 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, M.M.! That means a lot—especially since this wasn't your usual kind of Christmas read. I'm really glad it still pulled you in and left a good impression. I had fun writing something a little offbeat and dark for the holidays, so it’s great to hear it landed well. Appreciate the kind words and the congrats!

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Bonnie Clarkson
18:22 Jan 04, 2025

Congratulations. I strongly prefer more upbeat stories, but you did a good job.

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Mary Butler
13:03 Jan 05, 2025

Thanks so much, Bonnie! I really appreciate you reading the story, even if it’s not your usual cup of cocoa. I understand the preference for upbeat tales. Thanks again for the kind words and the congrats—it means a lot!

Since you prefer more upbeat tales, you might enjoy last week’s submission, Cancel Me Softly (https://blog.reedsy.com/short-story/rb06l3/). It follows Brynn Star on a heartfelt and uplifting journey that’s sure to brighten your day.

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00:14 Jan 04, 2025

Such a beautiful, well-written story! You definitely have special talent and know how to play with words. Amazing!!👏

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Mary Butler
15:29 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, Ayten! That really means a lot to hear. I'm so glad the story resonated with you—and I truly appreciate your kind words and encouragement. Comments like yours keep me inspired to keep writing! 😊

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B DZ
23:22 Dec 21, 2024

this was hilarious! well done

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Mary Butler
01:03 Dec 22, 2024

Thank you, B DZ! Glad you found it hilarious—my dad always said if you can’t make them laugh, at least leave them questioning your sanity. Looks like I nailed it!

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Tina Harden
22:07 Dec 19, 2024

If this is how you write all the time then you do have a natural gift. The vivid descriptions in the narration, and using minimal words to achieve your goal...Bravo.

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Mary Butler
15:30 Mar 29, 2025

Wow, Tina—thank you so much! That really means a lot. I try to be intentional with every word, so hearing that the minimalism still painted a vivid picture is incredibly encouraging. I’m really glad the story resonated with you!

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Ana M
11:34 Dec 19, 2024

Great story, very well written.

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Mary Butler
15:19 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you!

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Brodie Milne
15:32 Dec 18, 2024

This is a really good example of how story don;t have to be long to be amazing and engaging

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Mary Butler
10:50 Dec 19, 2024

Thanks, Brodie! I’m thrilled you found it engaging. I like to think of it as a story that’s short but sharp—kind of like a candy cane shiv. 😊 Appreciate you taking the time to read it and leave such a kind comment!

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Deb Dobbins
11:12 Dec 18, 2024

Excellent title and story. The way it is written, reminded me of and old Sam Spade novel. Very inventive. Keep up the good work and the enjoyment you get from it.

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Mary Butler
13:10 Dec 18, 2024

Thanks so much, Deb! I’m thrilled you enjoyed it—especially the comparison to a Sam Spade novel! I’m picturing my mall Santa in a fedora now, solving holiday mysteries between… other ‘jobs.’ Your encouragement means a lot.

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RBE | Illustrated Short Stories | 2024-06

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