
Here’s another very short story I wrote this morning. It might be somewhat true. I simply had to get these words out of my system. Names have been changed to protect the guilty.
A MIRACLE ON SIXTH AVENUE
by Richard
John walked slowly toward his parked car. Sixth Avenue was just another street in the city.
Without thinking, he searched the sidewalk with downcast eyes. Cigarette butts, rotting food, a discarded bottle, a dead cockroach, bits of toilet paper. Disgusting stains, crushed things.
A plume of smoke up ahead caught his attention.
As he neared, John noticed a crowd of people had gathered close to the rising black smoke. Excited faces were staring down at the freeway from an overpass.
A van was on fire below. Traffic on the freeway had been stopped by a police car with flashing lights, and two firemen with a hose were getting ready to put out the flames. The empty van, alone on the concrete, simply burned, nothing more.
At least forty people on the overpass leaned forward to stare down at the freeway. More were arriving, drawn by the smoke, as ants are drawn to sugar. Every person in the crowd held up a phone, carefully framing a photograph. A photograph of an empty van on fire.
The people checked their phone, appeared unsatisfied, changed the angle, held it higher. Needing to capture destruction, meaningless and distant. They watched with perfect fascination and took a second and third picture. A hundred identical photographs.
John kept walking. He’d never before felt such a wave of disgust.
That night he couldn’t sleep. He couldn’t purge from his mind that crush of people. Gawking, predictable, animal humanity, eagerly recording flames and black smoke, because flames and black smoke seemed exciting. Why? For what reason?
People were shallow and disgusting.
But what in the world is new?
And so John walked from his parked car up Sixth Avenue the next morning, a remnant of that dark shadow in his mind.
The sun was up. At the overpass there was no smoke. Cars passed in a blur on the concrete below. The incident was erased. Time swallows everything. Just different trash on the sidewalk.
“Good morning,” said an approaching person. The stranger’s eyes were wide, directly meeting John’s own eyes. A sincere, friendly smile was on the stranger’s lips.
“Morning,” John half-smiled.
And the passing person was gone.
The sun rose higher.
A small miracle had saved everything.
…
To read more stories like this, visit Short Stories by Richard.
You might also want to check out my Foolyman Stories blog, for some creative writing that’s just plain silly!
I like this a lot..so true that we gravitate to destruction and violence etc. Well said and good for you for writing.. I want to do so more often too..
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Thanks! Let the words flow!
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I tend to get stuck but will keep trying.. And you too!
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To get unstuck, sometimes it helps just to write anything that pops into one’s head!
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I need to work on doing that.. Thank you for the suggestion..
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I took a look at your “foolyman stories.” Interesting tidbits. So, are you going to write a book?
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I suppose anything is possible…
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Oh yes, it’s about being open to the good & hopeful, as well as the bad & embittering…
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Life is complex. It’s bittersweet.
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