Submitted to: Contest #308

Sack of Bones

Written in response to: "Write a story in which the natural and the mystical intertwine."

🏆 Contest #308 Winner!

Drama

This story contains sensitive content

Content warning: brief mentions of child abuse and domestic violence.

I can’t tell if the yowling’s for the dead or the heat. It’s cicada hiss and lawn mower growl hot—so hot, it’s disrespectful. But as Dad shovels dirt over Papa, I’m cold. I can't cry, and it feels like sin.

“It's alright to grieve,” Aunt June whispers. “Ain't no shame in it.”

She fans herself with a program as tears drip below her sunglasses. She means it's shameful not to cry, especially for your own. But I can't put on grief like wide-brimmed hats and pearls and black dresses. Can't wear it if I don't mean it.

“Who’s catering?” I say. “I'm starved.”

“Lawd!” June scowls and whacks my shoulder with the program.

Bone-white laurels punch through the dirt like defiant little fists. My uncle stomps over their petals, a banjolele slung over his shoulder. A stringed thing torn between a banjo and ukulele, mourning and joy. He stops beside the gravediggers and smiles.

“For Papa,” he says, and strums. The bluegrass starts low but swings lighter, too cheery. Feet thump against dirt. A few hips sway. The song almost turns Papa’s funeral into a shindig, like we can't decide whether to celebrate or sob. At least, I can't.

I don’t hate Papa. Just never knew how to like him. War, whiskey, and whatever else made him mean. A monster most days. But human, somehow, when he told stories.

The man could lie like a Craigslist landlord. But a few of his tales were true, like how his Pops made him wait outside town shops, too ashamed of the darkness of his own son's skin. He also told war stories. Well, started them. They ended like his altar boy stories, in a grunt, silence, and another bottle.

Last time I saw Papa, a few months before he died, he slumped in that ugly olive recliner, its guts spilling out the side. Cancer made him thinner, weaker, but no less angry.

“He still flies off the handle over nothin’,” June muttered. She told me Papa had been phoning friends and bragging to the neighbors about how his grandkid got into college—akin to an Olympic gold medal in our small Appalachian town. So he hugged me when he saw me and stuck a cigar in my palm, even though he always said smokes weren't for girls.

We rocked on the porch and talked, smoking as the sky turned from gold to dusky purple. Fireflies sparked in the weeds. Papa slapped his knee when I told him how I aced my first exam, and asked all about school more than he'd ever asked me about anything.

Dad and his siblings didn't make it through high school, and my cousins spent more time behind bars than out 'cause they couldn't keep away from dope. Papa didn't get boys to brag on. He got me.

“There's a spirit in these woods,” Papa said. He told me the legend of a lost soul who whistles past the willows, only in summer, near graves. He carries the bones of his father in a sack over his shoulder.

“He just keeps walkin’, bones clackin’ like ice in a cup, lookin’ for a place to lay it down. But never does.”

“Why not?” I asked.

Papa scratched his beard. “Some things can’t be put away, no matter how hard ya try.” He went quiet for a moment, then shouted at June to bring him a beer. She took too long. When she finally handed it over, he tossed it at her and shattered it against the brick, just shy of her head.

June still kept his meds organized, drove him to appointments, even helped bathe him when his legs started to give. She looked after him, and that's how he thanked her.

Papa asked if I’d come back soon. I said maybe, but lied. To him, women were maids and half-brains. But even my half a brain knew to get out before he made me into June.

Now, past the freshly buried casket and teary crowd, willow trees line the graveyard. They're bent and mournful. A brief gust makes the boughs drift slow and ghost-like as Papa’s voice echoes in my head:

“Only in summer, by the graves. He carries a sack of his father’s bones. Looks for a spot to bury ‘em. Never finds one. Can’t let go.”

But I don't see a spirit by the willows. Just Dad standing stiff, shoulders tight. No ghostly whistle, only sniffles and wailing from the people Papa hurt most. As if he didn't flick his family away like a cigarette out of a car window.

Dad stares at me and marches over. I see that tiny patch of dark skin on his left arm, still there from when Papa stuck a lighter to him after he “stole” a pack of gum as a toddler.

Dad waves a hand in front of my face. “It's hotter than the hinges of hell out here. Y’alright?”

I nod.

It's not a lie. Papa’s gone, and I'm fine. Cold. And that feels worse than being sad. Makes me feel like a beast, like I belong out in the woods on all fours more than in a dress and heels.

Finally, everyone shuffles back through the grass, to a narrow path leading to the church. It's a white stoned building, sticking out of our godforsaken town like a diamond in dirt. I’m glad it’s almost done—the wails, the fake condolences, the platitudes.

They say Papa lit up every room, but don't say how. They don't admit he doused it in gasoline and struck a match—just say he had a nice smile. Like most of his stories, his eulogy’s a tall tale. One I'm tired of hearing.

We step past a wrought-iron gate screaming at the joints. A heavy silence makes my body tense. Even the birds hush. I walk beside Dad, no noise except the crunch of gravel beneath our feet.

June stops at the open church doors, dabbing her eyes, and waves us over. But Dad doesn't follow the crowd inside. He nods to the parking lot and I follow, until we plop onto his truck bed. The metal sears through cotton into my thighs. I don't move.

Dad doesn’t say anything as he passes me a steaming water bottle buried under a towel, hands shaking a little. Mine shake too. I want to ask if he’s glad Papa’s gone, but the question feels wicked.

Does Dad feel the same? Is he…relieved? Ashamed? Done with this funeral, too?

“Think you'll miss him?”

Dad doesn't answer right away. Doesn't look at me when he does.

“I’ll miss who he coulda been.”

I nod and squeeze my hands together tight.

“I'm proud of you, you know that?” Dad says. “Hell, you’re the only good thing about me.”

I force a smile. Dad’s never been good with feelings. Neither have I. But if I’d been raised by Papa—never told I was loved, hit instead of held—I’d be worse. At least I got more than he did. I got scraps, but Dad got starved.

And I know Dad cares. I see it in his eyes, and in the way he calls on my breaks to ask if I’ll come visit.

He looks like he wants to say more, but sighs and picks at a hangnail. I want to ask if Papa ever told Dad he was proud, but I already know.

Dad yanks out a cigarette and marches toward the tree line. He leans against a trunk, folds his arms, and whistles.

A tear burns down my cheek, and I'm relieved. Maybe flesh beats behind my chest instead of granite after all. But I don’t cry for Papa. I cry for Dad.

Just ‘cause you bury a man doesn’t mean the hurt goes down with him. Maybe Papa learned that from his Pops, Dad learned it from Papa, and I learned it from Dad. I pray mine won't learn it from me.

If Papa were here, what story would he tell? I’ll never know—and maybe that’s best. As Dad finishes his smoke, I head for the church. Sun whips my skin. My tears are already dry as I walk on, quietly carrying his bones.

Posted Jun 25, 2025
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99 likes 97 comments

Mary Bendickson
14:11 Jul 04, 2025

Congrats on your win!🥳 Lots of lines that tell a picture.Well done.

Reply

Rose Brown
20:34 Jul 04, 2025

Thank you Mary!

Reply

Jack Kimball
17:12 Jun 28, 2025

My personal story is close to this so it rings true. I suppose there are exceptions, but in spite of all the pain, a kid always loves their father and grandfather, I guess for what they "couda been."

Some great nuggets:
"But I can't put on grief like wide-brimmed hats and pearls and black dresses."

“He just keeps walkin’, bones clackin’ like ice in a cup, lookin’ for a place to lay it down. But never does.”

"But even my half a brain knew to get out before he made me into June."

“Hell, you’re the only good thing about me.”

Reply

Rose Brown
20:35 Jun 28, 2025

Thank you, Jack. I’m really touched that the story resonated with you (I’ve found that, too). I really appreciate your feedback and you taking the time to highlight those lines. It means a lot.

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Rohit Pruthi
14:12 Jul 06, 2025

Sometimes, the reader cannot see the setting, not the words only the tale. The narrator fades away, the stage melts and the characters come alive - it becomes magic. This for me is magic.

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Rose Brown
17:13 Jul 06, 2025

Wow! Thank you, Rohit. What a compliment. I'm so honored the story resonated with you that way

Reply

Derek Roberts
12:55 Jul 05, 2025

You can't see the writing. All we can see is the funeral and the bones in the invisible sack she caries. Remarkable story. I learned a few new similes and metaphors. Just a natural voice telling a story that is made most important by the universal complexity of cruelty and love.

Well done.

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Rose Brown
15:20 Jul 05, 2025

Thank you so much, Derek. That’s such a kind compliment. I really appreciate it!

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Derek Roberts
16:27 Jul 05, 2025

It's a great story. I should thank you.

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Nicole Moir
12:00 Jul 04, 2025

Congrats on your WIN!

Reply

Rose Brown
12:36 Jul 04, 2025

Thanks Nicole! I'm shocked!

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Wilbur Whateley
22:19 Jun 28, 2025

Loved this story, Rose.

My favorite part: But even my half a brain knew to get out before he made me into June.

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Rose Brown
23:12 Jun 28, 2025

Thanks Wilbur! I really appreciate it

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Sean Price
19:12 Jun 28, 2025

Earthy and poignant. Very well done.

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Rose Brown
20:36 Jun 28, 2025

Thank you Sean! That means a lot

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Brian Torquay
21:33 Jul 18, 2025

I’ll miss who he coulda been………🔥

Reply

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Chuck Thompson
00:02 Jul 12, 2025

My favorite line: Fireflies sparked in the weeds. That was a wonderful image. Many of us carry too many bones; your imagery hit the nail on the head for me.

Thanks and congratulations!!

Reply

Rose Brown
17:56 Jul 12, 2025

Thank you so much, Chuck. I really appreciate it! So glad you liked it.

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Maxwell Pacilio
12:00 Jul 10, 2025

A very serene and beautiful story about death and our complex relationships with parental figures that wronged us. Well written and congrats on the win

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Rose Brown
14:16 Jul 10, 2025

Thank you, Maxwell! I really appreciate it

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Chloe Nkwanzi
10:58 Jul 10, 2025

I need you to publish a novel or a collection of short stories :) Everything about this piece is impeccable!

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Rose Brown
14:09 Jul 10, 2025

Thank you, Chloe! That’s so kind and encouraging. I actually just finished my first novel, so your words mean the world!

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Chloe Nkwanzi
05:19 Jul 12, 2025

Congrats, Rose! I'm pleased to learn of your accomplishment! You should be super proud :)
Also, I'd love to read a novel by you some day!

Reply

Akos Brenya
02:35 Jul 10, 2025

I love your writing style. It's a bit more unique to me than others I've read and just feels absolutely perfect for the story. The only problem I had with the story was the fact that it took me till half way through the story to realize that "Papa" was referring to grandpa.

Reply

Rose Brown
14:13 Jul 10, 2025

Thank you so much, Akos! I’m glad the voice resonated with you. That means a lot. And I hear you on “Papa”! It can definitely mean different things depending on where you're from

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Jack Diedrich
02:03 Jul 10, 2025

I am blown away. The imagery is incredible. The way the characters have ticks. The way the bones are given a strict symbolic meaning, and the living are burdened with the bags. truly incredible writing.

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Rose Brown
14:15 Jul 10, 2025

Wow! Thank you so much, John. I’m so glad the imagery and symbolism landed. Your comment honestly means a lot

Reply

Charlotte Waldo
18:44 Jul 09, 2025

WOW! This is so beautifully written in so few words. I love how seamlessly you incorporated the setting through descriptions--before you even mentioned the small Appalachian town I knew where this was set based on the accents, descriptions of weather, and imagery like wide-brimmed hats and dusky purple skies. Please keep writing! I could reads books and books of this writing style.

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Rose Brown
20:03 Jul 09, 2025

Wow, thank you Charlotte! What a compliment. I really appreciate it 🙂

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Silent Zinnia
18:18 Jul 09, 2025

congrats on the win rose brown🥳

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Rose Brown
20:04 Jul 09, 2025

Thank you so much!

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Silent Zinnia
21:45 Jul 09, 2025

anytime💖

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Story Time
16:32 Jul 09, 2025

"But I can't put on grief like wide-brimmed hats and pearls and black dresses."

So many gorgeous lines, but that one really stuck out to me. Wonderful job.

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Rose Brown
17:50 Jul 09, 2025

Thank you so much!

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Michael Alonso
02:59 Jul 09, 2025

Beautiful. Emotionally touching. The characters so vivid and the story told so well. Congrats on winning the contest. Well deserved.

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Rose Brown
17:50 Jul 09, 2025

Thank you so much, Michael!

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Tim Allister
01:49 Jul 09, 2025

Rose - this was excellent. Effortless, natural prose that felt so authentic. Really can’t wait to read more of your work.

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Rose Brown
17:50 Jul 09, 2025

Thanks, Tim! That really means a lot

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Mary Dietz
22:02 Jul 07, 2025

abuse of any kind remains in the family some way, sometimes cycle is broken if addressed. Not fully understanding abuse can lead to further damage.

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Rose Brown
22:44 Jul 07, 2025

Thanks for reading. The generational weight and the way abuse lingers (especially when not named) was definitely at the heart of what I wanted to explore.

Reply

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