Day After Day – 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:

Day After Day

Time passes, immeasurably.
The darkness is beyond words.
The only suspicion of light is when rations are delivered.
There seems to be no regular schedule, and no obvious logic, to these.
I mean, it’s not three square meals a day, it’s an apparently random provision to an apparently random prisoner.
There are ten cells within this underground blackness, with one person in each.
We – seven guys and three women – all talk to each other, try to work out who he is and what he wants.
But there is friction, jealousy and animosity, largely because of how the food is distributed.
The boy two cells before mine, number eight, not long ago received two successive supplies, with no one else getting anything.
He is now despised by everyone.
You see, only one person is fed each visit, and there are, we reckon, three or four hours between them, so in a best case scenario each of us gets food every thirty hours or so.
There have been discussions about sharing, but there’s not enough trust for anyone to be first.
Each of us has been taken, alone, blindfolded, hands and feet shackled, from the dungeon into the corridor.
There are two doors, one impassable, the other opening onto a fifty-foot drop onto the sea-sprayed rocks.
I begged for mercy, said I’d do anything to see my mother again.
That’s the last time there was light.
He shone a torch on her dead face.
Served on a plate.

Unknown's avatar

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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20 Responses to Day After Day – Unicorn Challenge

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  2. Lindsey's avatar Lindsey says:

    my goodness. Another CE psychopathic special. Great tension.

  3. Liz H-H's avatar Liz H-H says:

    Egads, Man! This flash is so horrible, it’s good. Very good. Glad I’m reading in daylight.

  4. clark's avatar clark says:

    So, like I’m at line “There are two doors, one impassable,” and my Comment is forming along the lines of ‘all this world of possibilities in 250 words.
    then I read the last line
    damn! tricked again!

  5. Oh my goodness, you tell dark stories now and again but this one has taken darkness to another depth! It’s absolutely delicious though!

  6. Sally's avatar Sally says:

    Oh. My. Goodness. Psychopathic evil — the stuff of nightmares. You write it so well.

    There’s this part of me that wishes to understand how your mind works. Then, there’s this other part that thinks better of it.

    • ceayr's avatar ceayr says:

      Funny you should say that, Sally, there’s a part of me that wants to understand my mind too, and this other part that just says ‘Run!’

  7. Hmm. Tempting but I’ve already eaten.
    Check please!

  8. Pingback: Cat-aclysm – Tales from Glasgow

  9. jenne49's avatar jenne49 says:

    With the change of POV this captor gets even more satisfyingly psychopathic.
    And the poor lad learns the lesson of ‘Be careful what you wish for’.
    But a clear insight too into the role food plays in our lives – and in our sense of justice.
    Gruesomely good story.

  10. Pingback: Cat-astrophe – Tales from Glasgow

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