Contest #272 shortlist ⭐️

35 comments

Horror Suspense Fiction

You’ve chosen a good time to pay me a visit. I’ve pulled up some pretty decent leeks this morning, got some lovely onions in the store and a rosemary bush that is totally oblivious to all the nonsense that seems to have befallen our world. My garden really has been my saviour, my little farm. I can grow what I need and get by very nicely on what my garden supplies.


I do wish I’d had a better crop of carrots. I used the finest bone-meal fertiliser, but they were a total bust this year. My soil is a little too heavy for them, too much clay, but it’s the carrot fly that really did for them. They said our biggest enemy was the sickness, then they tried to say it was the foreign governments, then it was all about misinformation and the enemy within, but I survived because I knew all along, my only real enemy is carrot fly!


When the gas supply was cut off back in ‘25 I opened up an old fireplace so I could cook on an open flame indoors. Not a pretty job, no power tools, naturally! So, me and Axe had to do most of the heavy work hacking out the wall they’d used to gag the old hearth. I like it though, the exercise, solving problems, working out a plan to get me to the next crop. Most of the stuff we’ve lost, I didn’t care for anyway.


You’re lucky today with the weather, it gets too smoky and hot indoors, even with the chimney. No, on a day like this we cook al fresco. Something lovely about doing my cooking in the place where I get most of my food. I’m a man of nature, that’s what I am.


You saw my roses on the way in, didn’t you? It’s the roses and the raspberry canes that bring people to my garden. I took part of the fence down so people can see them more easily, so they can come in and explore. Fancy that! In times like these, someone actually taking part of a good strong fence down. Well, there’s method to my madness. I like to have visitors. Brought you here to me today, didn’t it? Relax, enjoy the sun.


Would you like some water? I’ve got plenty. Since the neighbours have been thinning out, I’ve been using their houses’ guttering as well as my own to collect the rain. Been able to grow in their gardens too. That’s why I’m doing so well in these tough times. That’s why I can afford to lose a few raspberries to curious, hungry bypassers. Waste nothing and work hard, that’s me. Do whatever needs to be done. Please, have some water.


But how is he going to cook out here, you ask? A very good question. Let me just remove this old tarp, and, ta daaa! An old enamel bath. Not as common as they once were, but this beautiful old iron roll-top was in my neighbour’s place. He was a lawyer in the old days, fat lot of good that did him. Must have cost a fortune. Weighs a ton! I convinced them to help me carry it here in exchange for some food and water and here we are, those old claw and ball feet holding it up above my fire, an antique bath sitting on my lawn in the shade of my willow. Heaven.


You look a bit concerned. Don’t worry about the staining on the sides of the bath, that’s inevitable when you cook with direct heat like this. It looks dirty, but it’s not. It’s just well-seasoned from all the grease and juices. I’ll just get this fire lit. Thank you for gathering all of this wood, by the way. Told you I’d trade you for water and the raspberries, didn’t I? I’m a man of my word.


We’ll need a couple of buckets of water for the tub, and what else? I think today we’ll have a couple of these leeks, no carrots though, curse you, carrot fly! And I think we’ll have a big dirty handful of the fresher stems from my gnarly old rosemary bush. Don’t worry, the heat will kill the germs. I’ll use some of this too, take a look. It’s a pot of fat, my grandma would have called it dripping. You must keep this stuff, it’s more valuable than gold, literally, these days! I preserve it whenever I cook, it’s full of calories and protein and goodness. It keeps for ages; I’ve got a cupboard full of it. This is from the last few rabbits I cooked. It’s a bit of a cocktail to be honest, rabbits, rats, squirrels, street rats, raspberry thieves! Only joking, they weren’t thieves, you’re not a thief. I can spare a few raspberries. I’m going to get this beautiful stuff nice and hot, then get the leeks in there, then the water and the rosemary.


Axe, get over here, you big lump! He looks brutal, but I keep him sharp enough to chop the leeks. Look, he’s bright as a sushi knife. I can use him to shave. Look close, there now, a slice of leek you can see through. That will just melt in the fat. My mouth is watering. 


Did you hear that? I love that sound, that sizzle. The popping twigs under the bath, the first chunk of leek sliding around in there in all that greasy goodness, hissing and cackling. The sun weeping through the old willow, no more horrible planes over head, no traffic, no more reports about all the doom and gloom, no more sirens, just a sizzle and a pop and the waft of home cooking on the late summer breeze.


Potatoes! How could I forget potatoes. I sometimes think I’m losing my mind. Not many of this year’s crop left, but this is the best way to use them. They add body. Oh, that was unintentional, sorry! Please don’t be upset. Poor taste has no place in my garden.


Well, I must say, it’s been nice to have someone to talk to other than Axe. It has been a while. The raspberries will be dying off soon, and the roses won't last for much longer after that. I suspect I’ll be getting fewer visitors, but never mind. I’m going to have plenty of provisions to keep me strong over the winter, and there’s still blackberries out, so you never know. I’ll be fine in the house, sleeping in the cellar with Axe. Anyway, looks like we’ve got a rolling boil going here, so sorry, but it’s bath time. 


October 16, 2024 15:32

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35 comments

18:08 Oct 19, 2024

Excellent! I know how difficult it is to write in this style from my attempt with Aka. Need to roll out all the creative tricks to keep it sounding natural while also showing what is going on without any narration. You nailed it.

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Chris Miller
21:00 Oct 19, 2024

Cheers Derrick! I was thinking of trying to write 2nd person, but just veered off into an odd monologue. Hopefully it does make the horror feel relatively personal.

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John Rutherford
15:32 Oct 25, 2024

Congratulations

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Chris Miller
16:00 Oct 25, 2024

Cheers John

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Trudy Jas
15:21 Oct 25, 2024

🍲🤙😄

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Paul Littler
10:58 Oct 24, 2024

Great fun, reads like a staged monologue with really clever character insights throughout. Enjoyed it, thanks.

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Chris Miller
11:38 Oct 24, 2024

Thanks very much, Paul. Cheers for reading.

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Robert Egan
21:33 Oct 19, 2024

Nice descriptions of the ingredients and prep! My mouth was watering along the way in spite of the inevitable. "The sun weeping through the old willow" triggered a cascade of memories for me—I've never cooked someone in a tub before, but my childhood backyard had a beautiful weeping willow. Axe was a cool curveball along the way.

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Chris Miller
22:05 Oct 19, 2024

Cheers Robert. I've always liked willows. They must be in the top ten most literary trees. Thanks for reading.

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Mary Bendickson
18:06 Oct 16, 2024

Too many cooks spoil the pot. Congrats on the shortlist.🎉🎉Need I say 'well done? As was the stew. Thanks for liking 'Fair and True Love'

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Chris Miller
20:59 Oct 16, 2024

Thanks Mary. This is a pretty spoiled pot!

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S. Hjelmeset
17:04 Oct 16, 2024

Oooh, I could just see him having a rib cage for a dish stand!

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Chris Miller
21:02 Oct 16, 2024

That definitely sounds like the type of thing he might have inside that house. Thanks for reading.

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Kevin Keegan
13:54 Nov 11, 2024

A really well written and enjoyable read. Well done.

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Chris Miller
18:28 Nov 11, 2024

Thanks very much, Kevin. Glad you enjoyed it.

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Jennie Mika
16:02 Nov 08, 2024

Ha haa excellent

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Chris Miller
16:13 Nov 08, 2024

Thanks Jennie. Glad you enjoyed it.

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17:49 Oct 29, 2024

That was fun! And I agree with Derrick M Domican. It sounded very natural. :)

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Chris Miller
18:03 Oct 29, 2024

Thanks very much. Glad you enjoyed it.

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Story Time
14:58 Oct 28, 2024

I really enjoy when authors take on the monologue approach, because it offers so much possibility. Really savory piece here, and edited well. Great job.

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Chris Miller
17:18 Oct 28, 2024

Thank you. Yes, the one sided conversation is great for implications and giving things a creepy tone. Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment.

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Michelle Oliver
08:30 Oct 28, 2024

I knew it was inevitable, but the tone of the narrative here is so perfectly matter of fact, with mundane descriptions and just enough hints to be uncomfortable, until the bitter end. Well done on the shortlist.

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Chris Miller
08:40 Oct 28, 2024

Thank you, Michelle. I wasn't sure whether to try and disguise it for longer, it is pretty obvious what's going on very early on. It was a fun one to write though. Pleased the tone comes across. Thank you for reading.

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Jerry Borich
00:09 Oct 28, 2024

Quite the imagination in this story. I really liked it.

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Chris Miller
07:25 Oct 28, 2024

Thanks very much, Jerry. Pleased you enjoyed it.

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Deborah Sanders
19:08 Oct 26, 2024

I really enjoyed your story. It flows well and builds suspense. You develop a cunning character who has crafted a new way of life in difficult times, and the plot contains sinister tones as it draws near the end! Taking down the fence was a good trap.

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Chris Miller
20:09 Oct 26, 2024

Thanks Deborah, really pleased you enjoyed it. Thanks for reading.

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David Sweet
18:13 Oct 25, 2024

I figured it had to be a raspberry picker once he was cooking in the bathtub. That would be a helluva lot of stew for one person. Second person is hard to write in but it makes sense for this story. I'm sure he also talks to axe too like Tom Hanks character talked to Wilson in Castaway. Poor lawyer probably received the first dunk in the bath. Congrats on your shortlisting.

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Chris Miller
18:26 Oct 25, 2024

Thanks very much, David. Yep, I think the lawyer probably went for an early bath and got the staining started.

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Trudy Jas
18:01 Oct 25, 2024

Congrats on the shortlist "Well done!"😄

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Chris Miller
18:02 Oct 25, 2024

Thank you very much, Trudy.

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Faye Wikner
16:42 Oct 25, 2024

Really enjoyed this!

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Chris Miller
16:56 Oct 25, 2024

Pleased to hear it. Thanks for reading, Faye.

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Alexis Araneta
16:35 Oct 25, 2024

Stunning work here, Chris. The monologue format was so fresh and unique. The descriptions were literally mouthwatering. Lovely work !

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Chris Miller
16:57 Oct 25, 2024

Thanks very much, Alexis.

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