Death – Unicorn Challenge

Copyright Ayr/Gray

The Unicorn Challenge.

A magical new weekly writing opportunity from her – Jenne Gray – and me.
Visit her blog every Friday to see the photo prompt, and post your amazing story in her comments section.
Or on your own blog, and stick the link down in her comments.
The rules are:
Maximum of 250 words.
Based on photo prompt.
That’s it.

To hear me read my story, just click here:

Death

I’m afraid, very afraid.
I’m in ‘The Royal’, a Glasgow hospital, awaiting a minor operation and gazing across the Necropolis, a vast cemetery where Charles Rennie Mackintosh and William Miller, creator of Wee Willie Winkie, are memorialised.
I’m agonising over a recurring dream, graphically set in a war zone.
In it I see a dead child.
In waking life I’ve seen more corpses than I can count; this one is different.
She’s maybe ten years old, her body wrecked by what I guess were heavy calibre bullets.
She has clearly been dead for some time, judging by the state of her flesh, or what remains of it.
Flies, bugs and beetles crawl in and out of her eyes, nose and mouth.
Chunks of her are missing.
None of this is what makes her different.
In this war-ravaged country there are thousands of dead children in various stages of decay.
In this town alone there are hundreds of them rotting in the streets.
In this building, once a children’s hospital, there are probably dozens, some barely identifiable as human.
There are three on the floor between where I stand, trembling, and her scrawny, broken little carcass.
She’s just one more dead child, face contorted into something resembling a smile.
And with, as I say, one significant difference.
She’s walking towards me.
Each time she reaches out her hand, I waken, terrified.
I know if she touches me, I’ll die.
Now I’m about to be anaesthetised.
I’m afraid, very afraid.

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About ceayr

A Scot who has discovered peace in a small town he calls Medville on the Côte Vermeille, C.E. Ayr has spent a large part of his life in the West of Scotland and a large part elsewhere. His first job was selling programmes at his local football club and he has since tried 73 other career paths, the longest being in IT, with varying degrees of success. He is somewhat nomadic, fairly irresponsible and, according to his darling daughter, a bit random. So, nobody’s perfect.
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16 Responses to Death – Unicorn Challenge

  1. clark's avatar clark says:

    really liked the pacing, steady enough to trick the Reader into not giving up… until too late

  2. Chris Hall's avatar Chris Hall says:

    Good grief – that’s terrifying!! but awfully good though!

  3. This is one of the most horrendous things I’ve ever read at The Uni.
    I’m quite sure that sleep will not come easily to me tonight.
    Bravo, CE, for creating a terrifying masterpiece.

  4. What can I say? So often reality is the stuff of nightmares, in this case, sadly so.

  5. Margaret's avatar Margaret says:

    Oh wow. What a nightmare, so like what we’re seeing on our tv news reports all too often. The feeling you’ve built here shows the horror, and then the ending to bring it closer to home. Maybe not just a dream.

  6. Tessa's avatar Tessa says:

    Wow! I can feel his fear. Good one!

  7. jenne49's avatar jenne49 says:

    Jeez, so am I!
    For me, the dream setting at the beginning and end hold the story, fix it out of reality – well, for everybody except the Narrator!
    But I wonder how many other ex-combatants actually do have such dreams
    It’s a horrific story, but not any more horrific than the scandal of war which it describes so gruesomely well.
    The most powerful line for me?
    ‘None of this is what makes her different.’
    In a civilised world, that just should not be true.
    Powerful tale.

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