Wednesday, November 6, 2013

NYC Midnight's Flash Fiction Challenge 2013... Round 1, Part 2.

1,000 words max.  Written over a weekend.  Had to be action/adventure in a blimp with a tombstone.

Mary

Mary paused and cradled her bulging belly.  She leaned her shoulder against the corridor wall and let her satchel fall to the floor.  The stone walls wept and the moisture dampened her green frock, darkening it nearer to the jet of her hair.  Her face was full and florid.  She could hear footsteps down the dank hallway behind her.  The echoing footfalls compelled her forward.

Mary was being followed, no doubt, by members of the Mayor’s all-female security detail.  They were coming for her now; for her and her unborn child.  She knew this Mayor.  She knew his sour temperament and knew the folds of his chins and prodigious gut.  She knew his sour scent and his eminent brutality.

Mary saw light creeping into the hallway in the distance and was less afraid.  It was early morning and the really bad things only happened at night.

Mary poked her head out into daylight and felt the sun warm her neck.  Ahead of her stood a cavernous building perched on the side of a stone precipice.  It was built from corrugated metal with the Mayor’s seal, a coiled purple viper, painted on the side facing Mary and the city-state on the hill.  The viper was a warning.  People may come, but no one leaves.  Above her the sounds of the citizens beginning to rouse were audible.  They awoke at their leisure.  That was the trade-off; a life free of hard work in exchange for complete political subjugation.  With no one in sight, she ran.

The metal edifice contained a tremendous purple balloon with a white gondola attached to the bottom.  Two massive duct fans splayed out from either side of the gondola.  A door to the cab swung open and a dark-skinned woman gestured for Mary to join her rapidly.  The woman helped Mary up into cab and swung the door closed.  “They are coming!” cried Mary as she found the open seat.  Again she cradled her protruding belly.  A third woman sat behind the controls in a cockpit seat and started flipping switches in rapid succession.

A low growl sounded from the engine as the fans started to turn.  The great balloon’s skin stretched taut and it lifted from the ground.

The rear door of the hangar swung open violently and slammed against the metal wall, sending reverberations through the space and through the blimp.  The three women all turned to look out the rear window.  “Guards!” Mary yelled.  A dozen women armed with blades of varying shapes and sizes had spilled into the hangar and were running towards the airship as it lumbered off the ground.  The driver pressed a button above her head and one whole wall of the building began to fold down from the top, accompanied by the noise of metal scouring metal.  The guards drew closer as the dirigible gained clearance from the ground.  Its rise was halted with a snapping jolt.

The pilot unbuckled herself from her seat and stuck her head out the window.  “The tether!  The tether is still on!  Someone has to get it.”  The dark-skinned woman swung the door open.  She laid flat on her stomach and reached over the edge.  She stretched as far as she could but couldn’t quite reach the rope.  “I can’t get it!” she yelled.  “Mary, can you hold my ankles?”  Mary slid off her chair and pinned her legs to either side of the door, knees bent.  She hoped her legs and arms could support the other woman’s full weight.  Mary grabbed hold of the woman’s ankles and let her slide further out the door. 

The guards had just reached the ground under the blimp.  They swung their weapons angrily.  The dark woman hung precariously from the door of the gondola, reaching with both hands for the underside of the coach where the tether attached to the blimp.

The front wall of the hangar was now fully open, revealing an expansive view of the densely populated land below.

One of the guards slashed at the dangling woman as she lengthened her arms and body to the extent physics would allow.  The leading edge of the guard’s small axe made contact and sheared the woman’s hand clean off.  Her scream echoed through the hangar and through the whole of the valley below.  The downward pressure on the airship released and it resumed its ascent as the tether had also been severed.

Mary pulled the injured, shrieking woman back into the cab and laid her prone on the floor.  She stared at the place where the woman’s hand should have been.  Blood spurted out in iambic meter.  Short, long, short, long. 

Mary took her bag off her shoulder and dumped its contents onto her vacated seat.  She found the scarf she was looking for and tied it tightly around the elbow of the bleeding woman, now silent from the shock or the pain.  Mary pushed herself back against the wall, trying to keep from looking at the gaping wound.  She focused her gaze between her own legs at one of the vials that had rolled from her satchel.  It was hand calligraphed: pennyroyal and blue cohosh.

Mary grabbed the vial and turned to the open window.  She dropped the bottle from the gondola and watched it fall into the makeshift cemetery at the base of the cliff.  It shattered onto the tombstone of one of the Jumpers.  Behind them several dozen guards stood at the edge of the crag and watched the airship make its way slowly upward; their impotence due to the Mayor’s own fear of guns. 


Mary allowed herself to envision her unborn son for the first time.  She could almost see his face and hoped he would be neither as fearful nor as brutal as his father.


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