79 comments

Funny Fantasy Fiction

“So, what’s the catch?” asked Wilbur, his mouth quivering in anticipation of the answer. He fiddled with his glasses with his left hand, and his wife Enid squeezed his right hand and beamed at the nice young lady sitting across the bureau.

Karen stopped typing, looked up from her PC, and blinked a couple times. “Um,” she said, blinking again. “Well, you’ll go to Hell.”

“Uh-huh,” Wilbur said. “What’s that look like?”

“Uh,” Karen drew out, and she glanced at the script on her monitor again. “Just a sec.” A couple clicks. “There. Okay, so what it means is, when you die, your immortal soul goes to Hell for all time.”

“Yes, we know that, dearie,” said Enid. “But what’s it like?

“What? Hell?”

The elderly couple nodded.

“Um… bad? It’s Hell.” Then after a pause, and with a single dire dip of the chin, “Hell.

Wilbur nodded and Enid motioned for Karen to continue, as though she were coaxing her youngest great-granddaughter forward on her trike. Karen let out an exasperated breath and turned to her computer.

“Okay, let’s see. Says here you’ll spend all of eternity by the Lake of Fire–”

“Ooh!” said Enid.

“Did you hear that, love?” said Wilbur. “Lakeside!” They huddled together in a giggle. “It’ll be just like that time we went to Cabo, I bet!” He turned to Karen. “So what’s the rent on something like that run?”

Karen started blinking so hard she had to pinch the bridge of her nose and close her eyes. “Rent? What – there is no rent. It’s Hell!”

“O-ho!” said Wilbur, with a dentury grin. “What a steal!”

“The Conners will be so jealous,” Enid said, tittering. “And they just bought that condo, too. Now, it’s really nice, sure, and the neighbours seem like good people, but I really do think they’re overpaying. Considering the size. And the age of the plumbing. Oh, and those carpets in the hallway. I don’t want to say anything mean, but they just don’t work for me at all.”

“You know, I really like that swimming pool they have though,” said Wilbur.

“Wilber, really! When’s the last time you went swimming?”

“Well I’m sure I would do so more often if I had a pool. I tell you, I’m really looking forward to this lake thing.”

“Oh, me too!” Enid said. “Just think of all the sunsets we can watch.”

Karen snorted. “No.” She stared up at the ceiling and then clicked madly on her machine. “No, no, no. I don’t think you guys understand.” She clicked a couple more times, so hard she risked voiding her mouse’s warranty. “We’re talking about Hell.” She swiveled her monitor so that they could see it. “There are no nice sunsets. There is no beach, or swimming, or whatever. It’s just an eternity of torture.”

Wilbur and Enid leaned in and squinted at the horrific photograph depicting indescribable atrocities. Periodically Karen clicked through the slideshow to the next photo, hoping – based on her clients’ scrunched brows – that maybe they were finally understanding the gravity of the situation.

“Golly,” whispered Enid.

“I know,” said Wilbur. He cleared his throat. “Look at all those bones! And how firm they are. I bet they have great healthcare. Karen, what’s the healthcare like?”

What?

“I mean, if we’re there for eternity,” Enid said, “seems like they’d probably have pretty good healthcare.” Wilbur nodded. “Especially for us older folks.”

“There’s no healthcare!” Karen snapped. “You’ll be dead! You won’t need healthcare!” She let out a white-knuckled growl, her exasperation petering out to a flaccid whimper. “I need you to understand the gravity of this: you’ll go to Hell. This is an eternity of torture. That means: for ever.”

“Well,” Wilbur drew out.

“Forever!” She stabbed her monitor with her finger. “This, this right here. This horrible little machine. You see how the people are screaming? This will be you. It’s torture, unending.”

The elderly coupled leaned in again, and then shared a look.

“Well, dearie,” said Enid, “that doesn’t look so bad.”

Karen’s eyes widened, and she snapped from the screen to Enid, shivering with incomprehension. “How is it not bad? Do you see what’s happening to his legs? And the ears! Oh lord, the ears! The body does not spiral that way!”

“Oh, sure, it looks bad now, but… forever is a long time.”

“I don’t understand how you don’t find the prospect of this, forever, unsettling.”

“The thing is,” said Wilbur, wrapping his wife in a side hug, “with time, people can get used to pretty much anything. It’s like if you go to the bathroom at the game. Sure, it’s gross, and it reeks, and there’s all kinds of colourful bodily fluids everywhere. But if you stay there long enough, you kind of stop noticing the smell.”

“Yeah, take it from us, dearie. I mean, after nearly seventy years of marriage to this one–” Enid made an exaggerated thumb towards Wilbur, and he chortled “–I think we can weather a bit of poking and prodding.”

Karen shotgunned through her desk drawers, found a bottle of antacids, and took a swig. She closed her eyes as she chewed, going through some half-remembered breathing exercises. She tried to visualize a serene stream in the woods, and when she couldn’t, she tried to picture the breakroom instead. It reeked of microwaved fish even in her mind’s eye, and the floor was sticky, but all that was fine. At least it was a kind of calming oasis.

“You all right?” asked Wilbur.

When Karen’s eyes snapped open she found the world’s colours had shifted. “Why?” she asked. “Maybe this isn’t the best course of action for you. You seem like nice people. Why do you want to sell your souls?”

The couple glanced at each other. “We had a coupon,” said Enid. She dug around in her purse. “Well, somewhere here anyway.”

Coupon? Karen mouthed, not daring to breathe it.

“Besides,” said Wilbur, “what do a couple of old farts like us need them for anyway? Figured we’d get something for them and help our kids out. Watch the grandkids actually enjoy their inheritance, that kind of thing. Like a reverse mortgage.”

He squeezed Enid’s hand.

“Say now,” he said, “you don’t really seem to enjoy your work.”

“Nope. I ruin afterlives and my boss is literally The Devil™.”

“So why do it?” asked Enid.

A tremor rippled through Karen’s shoulders. Then another. Then she hiccoughed and buried a soggy wail in her hands. “What else can I do?” She sobbed. “Where else can I go?” Her breath hitched. “Nobody’s hiring, and the world’s going to crap, and everyone’s angry all the time, and, and, and–” Shuddering whimpers overtook her.

Enid patted her arm. “There, there, now dearie.” When Karen blinked away the wet, Enid passed her a tissue.

“Thanks.”

“Listen,” said Wilbur, “it’s just a job. I know it probably seems overwhelming now, but take it from us: there’s so much more to life. It might not seem like it right now, but like the old saying goes, it always gets worse before it gets worse.”

Karen flinched. “How’s that reassuring?”

“Well, then you have something fond to look back on. Your own Good Old Days when Things Used To Be Better. After all, at the end of the day we’re just memories, aren’t we?”

“I… suppose,” said Karen. She blinked away the last of her tears, still uncertain.

“Found it!” said Enid, proudly drawing her coupon from her purse and holding it high. Then she squinted at it. “Oh, shoot. It’s expired.”

Wilbur and Enid shrugged, got up, and took their leave.

March 08, 2023 00:29

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79 comments

Richard E. Gower
17:30 Mar 13, 2023

SO much cleverness in this story....channeling Stephen Vincent Benét with a riff on every poor direct-sales down-and-outer who arrived at the door flogging a deal on vinyl siding, all that and fall-on-the-floor funny, to boot.👍 Well done! RG

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Michał Przywara
00:52 Mar 14, 2023

Thanks, Richard! Yeah, some jobs get greasy. I'm glad you enjoyed it :)

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Darryl Roberts
01:24 Mar 13, 2023

Nice take on the deal with the devil trope, and I love how you put it into a modern setting.

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Michał Przywara
20:37 Mar 13, 2023

Thanks, Darryl! I'm glad you enjoyed it :)

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Susan Catucci
20:06 Mar 12, 2023

Now, this is MY kind of ridiculousness - a slice of realism, a cup of horror, an ounce of truth, sprinkled all over the top with humor, a dash of are-you-kidding-me and a huge dollop of how-will-it-end, all mixed together and properly baked (sometimes only half- ) and out pops a joyful concoction with plenty left-over to enjoy again. I hope you get my ridiculous way of saying I loved it, Michal. As per usual! Fun and well done!

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Michał Przywara
20:48 Mar 13, 2023

Thanks Susan! What lovely feedback :) As a fan of the ridiculous, it's good to know there's others out there. I'm glad you enjoyed it!

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Rebecca Miles
18:26 Mar 12, 2023

Now here's the deal Michal: every time you write sinister or serious I think they're your best genres; then when you do a poignant number, I'm convinced they're your modus operandi; a couple of weeks back you were on a dystopian run and I was right alongside you. But hell (operative word) here, then you blast out a funny and that also hits the sweet spot. Next week, actually probably week after as you've no doubt begun this week's, I set you a challenge to take three completely improbable genre tags and blow them out of the water. Because yo...

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Michał Przywara
20:39 Mar 13, 2023

I love your feedback, because it's a reminder to constantly keep pushing, keep trying new things - a reminder that experimentation pays off, even when it doesn’t. Weird combinations of tags are a great idea. Indeed, trying to combine any things that don't look like they fit together is a good challenge. I'll keep this in mind for future stories :) Thanks as always for reading, Rebecca, and for leaving your thoughts!

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Stevie Burges
15:01 Mar 12, 2023

Hi Michal, I honestly thought Retirement would be like this - just waiting to be transported to the Lake of Fire. Beautifully captured. Thank god my coupon was out of date too! Well written and entertaining - thanks, Michal.

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Michał Przywara
20:43 Mar 13, 2023

Heh, thanks Stevie! Yeah, it's not really "a good deal" if you didn't really need the product anyway. I'm glad you enjoyed it :)

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Marty B
06:41 Mar 12, 2023

And I thought Brandon trying to find page 998 had the worst job ever- but poor Karen! Her boss is the literal Devil, and she is trying to sell a lakeside property in Hell. If I was her Sales Manager- Leviathan (?)- I would tell poor Karen to stop being a Karen, and take that Yes for an answer!

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Michał Przywara
20:45 Mar 13, 2023

ABC - Always Be Closing, right? :) Thanks for the feedback, Marty :)

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Zack Powell
06:15 Mar 12, 2023

This reminds me of two other Pryzwara stories: "Employee of the Month" and "Page 998." Not because they're in any way related plot-wise (they're not), but because I think you really excel in workplace-related comedy. You always have the dynamics down of these 'overworked and underpaid' types of individuals, and as someone who relates to that dynamic, I appreciate the accuracy of your portrayals very much. Thanks for seeing the humor in those situations. What I like most about this story is how short it is. I think it'd be easy to run this k...

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Michał Przywara
03:23 Mar 13, 2023

Ha, you're right! There's definitely some overlap in the workplace stories. I don't know where they come from - probably, it's just that everyone has a work story or two, and jobs define so much of our lives and identities. And since jobs pretty much never line up with job descriptions, there's endless room for surprise and conflict. I'll admit I do like the capitalist dystopia though. Maybe it's not the best dystopia, but it's *our* dystopia. I actively sought a shorter story this week, and I'm glad that worked out. I've hit the 3k before...

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Rama Shaar
18:31 Mar 11, 2023

I read this out loud and I enjoyed every second of it! This was really wonderfully witty and utterly enjoyable! I think it was a wise choice to make it short and sweet. From high to high, ending on a high!

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Michał Przywara
03:06 Mar 13, 2023

Thank you, Rama! Yeah, it felt like it should be shorter, and honestly, it's a bit of a challenge to keep short stories short (for me, anyway). I'm glad you enjoyed it :)

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Kendall Defoe
01:57 Mar 11, 2023

Oh my zod... We actually used the same prompt, and had the same figures. Very impressed, sir. And I am very worried about my chances this week... :)

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Michał Przywara
23:58 Mar 12, 2023

Ha, you're right :) Same prompt, similar... hmm... commercial enterprise. Best of luck this week!

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Cindy Strube
20:11 Mar 10, 2023

Holding my breath, hoping they don’t insist on the deal! 😮💨 What a relief, in the end… The coupon is expired! This has great suspense, delightful details of a long-married pair, and a lot of expertly used language, as usual! (Dentury 😬) And—you’ve done your part in redeeming good Karens everywhere.

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Michał Przywara
21:40 Mar 10, 2023

Heh, yeah, the name's got a bad wap :) All it takes is one to ruin it for everyone. Definitely don't want to "speak to the manager" in this story though. I'm glad you enjoyed it :)

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Cindy Strube
22:00 Mar 10, 2023

Ha! Nope.

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Trevor Caswell
04:53 Mar 10, 2023

This is so witty and fun! Thanks for taking us down the rabbit hole this week. There are some people out there that can be frustratingly optimistic and clueless at the same time. Yet, I envy them for their outlook despite not knowing all of the truth. Maybe we could all use a dose of Wilbur and Enid's happy-go-lucky attitude in the face of hell itself.

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Michał Przywara
21:44 Mar 10, 2023

Thanks, Trevor! "frustratingly optimistic and clueless" - true enough. On the other hand, what's terrible for one person might not be for another, and what's horrible today could be just a memory tomorrow. I appreciate the feedback!

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Jack Kimball
00:39 Mar 10, 2023

It's just not fair Michal. This much talent and you just flaunt it out every week unmercifully. And now this. Holy moly. I think I'll just go eat some worms. Who is Bhabotosh Chakraborty?

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Michał Przywara
01:42 Mar 10, 2023

Thanks, Jack! That's kind of you to say, but it's funny - I'll see the stories others post each week, and I'll think, "Damn, what am I even doing here? I don't stand a chance against that." I'm not sure who Mr. Chakraborty is, though a quick google suggests an indie author. But I'm not familiar with his work.

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Jack Kimball
02:16 Mar 10, 2023

If you search ‘Bhabotosh Chakraborty Michał Przywara’ on Amazon a kindle book comes up selling ‘Hey Streamer’ for $200. Not just you, but many writers on Reedsy. My story ‘Henkins Mellified Honey’ also, as example.

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Michał Przywara
02:40 Mar 10, 2023

Oh! That son of a. Thanks for the heads up, Jack. Not the first time it's happened, and probably won't be the last. I think Amazon has a reporting tool.

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Jack Kimball
02:43 Mar 10, 2023

I’ll report it, but the more people who report it the better in my view.

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Michał Przywara
03:04 Mar 10, 2023

Yeah, I just logged a violation. Looks like you can only do it for work you hold the rights to, or represent, so unfortunately it doesn't look like we can just do a blanket "flag this thief". But if enough writers bring it up, maybe the end result will be the same.

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21:14 Mar 09, 2023

Michal, this was so original. I think what I love about your stories is that they are VERY unique, and I never know what's going to happen! I was intrigued by how the couple were willingly resigned to whatever fate helped them achieve their goals, even one that most people would be horrified by. They seemed determined to encourage themselves about the matter, and their ideal of becoming "numb" to difficult situations was very interesting, and made me think a lot about what we tolerate day to day, simply because we've experienced it for so l...

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Michał Przywara
22:30 Mar 09, 2023

Thanks, Hannah :) "what we tolerate day to day" is endlessly interesting to me. We have this idea that people in the past lead miserable lives. No doubt some did, but in general? They probably weren't any more or less miserable than we are now, even if they might not have had things like healthcare, electricity, or stores loaded with food. Even today, there's a lot of inequality, but you find satisfied and miserable people all over. I think we're just very adaptable as a species. I appreciate the feedback!

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Mike Panasitti
14:01 Mar 09, 2023

Michał, I've just made a decision that has me feeling like I've sold my soul, or at the very least, sold out, so this story hit a nerve. Perhaps having described the deal in the coupon, "get the price of three souls for two, if you're a happily married couple," would've added a little extra kick. Thanks for sharing.

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Michał Przywara
21:54 Mar 09, 2023

Hopefully that decision works out! When I've been in those situations, it always feels so greasy. That's not a bad idea, describing what the coupon's for. I had originally seen it as a bit of a mystery - and just the absurdity of having a coupon for soul commerce - but perhaps I'll have to revisit this. Still have a bit of time. I appreciate the feedback!

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Unknown User
15:29 May 19, 2023

<removed by user>

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Michał Przywara
18:19 May 20, 2023

Thanks, Joseph! I'm glad you enjoyed it!

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