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As she did so, I noticed her amazing body, and I couldn't resist. I jumped towards her, and threw myself onto her. She yelped, but I quickly covered her mouth with my hand. Lucky for me, there was no one in the park at that time of day. She struggled, but I was stronger, and I knew what do.
First, I pinned her down behind some bushes. Next, I savagely tore off her clothing, and took off my own. Then I stole her. It was like a dream for me; I finally remembered what love was like.
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Soon I realized that my dream was really her nightmare, and that I, unbeknownst to myself, had become all that I had struggled so long to forget. I put my clothes back on, and not knowing what to do with the sobbing heap in the bushes I ran, leaving her naked and defiled.
I ran back to my apartment, crying tears of blood, trying to forget just like when I was a child. Only I couldn't. I got home and went straight for the bathroom. I threw up almost immediately, which actually made me feel a bit better, but not nearly enough.
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I opened the cabinet, and reached for a razor blade. I grabbed it, and brought it to my wrist. I slid it across the thin layer of skin, slitting it open as if it were paper. I did it over and over again, until blood flowed from my arm, much like that women's tears. I looked in the mirror, and saw his reflection. He grinned, and I smashed the mirror, causing even more blood to spill to the floor.
After about an hour, the tears stopped, and so did the blood.
I crawled into bed, a hollow shell of a man.
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My dreams last night were worse than any I ever had before: so bad I can't even describe them.
I made up my mind a few hours ago after waking up. I went to a nearby hardware store and picked up several jugs of kerosene. On my way back I thought about my life, and asked myself if I should really do this.
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I got home and brought the jugs to my bathroom, which was still stained with my own blood. I dumped them into my bathtub; finally sure this was the right thing to do. They only filled it a few inches, so I filled the rest with water, almost certain it would still work.
I started to undress, but then I decided against it. I looked into the shattered mirror, still disgusted at the face that gazed back, but this time sad for it as well. I picked up a pen and notepad and wrote this down. This was my story, and this is my happy ending.
Now I'm going to ease into in to my bathtub, lighter in hand.
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I'll flick the switch, and see what happens next. If you're reading this though, I'm evidently gone, and good riddance I say. But please I beg you, remember this if nothing else, even with me dead and gone, the fiend will most assuredly continue to live on.
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Fiction - 3 Phones, 300 Words By Joe Hakim
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She smiled as she handed him the bottle. He took it from her and poured himself a glass.
'So what do you think?' she asked.
'I'm not that bothered,' he replied.
He was pretty drunk by now and he attempted to think of something to say, but the silence remained stagnant. She took a gulp from her glass,
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Fiction - Lessons Learnt By Nick Quantrill
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DS Richard Coleman pulled into the lay-by and headed towards the flashing blue lights. An hour later it would have been someone else's problem. But it wasn't. An articulated lorry had been isolated from the other vehicles, cones placed around it, linked together by barrier tape.
A mobile generator providing power to the small floodlights
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Fiction - Mr Keith Fortner By The Silver Fox
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In assessing the nature and worth of Mr Keith Fortner, it helps to be acquainted with one or two salient facts about his background. This is true of anyone, of course; understanding can rarely come without some awareness of their past experiences and emotional development after all.
Even the vast majority of people who tend to exist in a very limited context - the parameters
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Fiction - After The Rain By Joe Hakim
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He noticed there was another crushed snail by the doorstep. It was the third one he'd found this week. It was funny because he could never recall standing on the snails, but there they were.
He opened his back door and lit a cigarette. He'd been in this place for a month now, but it still didn't feel like his home, just a place he was staying in for a while.
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Fiction - The Suicide Park, Self Surgery And Brutalised By Affection By Christopher Skolik
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Dennison followed Snaith from the road, through trees, to a wire fence. Snaith slipped through. Beyond the skeletal
trees, Dennison could see a smoky illumination. Snaith and Dennison walked around as if inspecting a gallery.
It looked like a derelict industrial estate from a distance. Only when he got closer could Dennison hear the sound
of 22 engines humming.
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Fiction - Off To See The Wild West Show Part 2 Chapter 4 By Frank Beill
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'There, there bai'n. It's o'right now. The bad man's gone away.' Sal walked up and down her bare living room, hugging her sobbing baby.
'Sorry, Sal. I shouldn't have done that.'
'Don't matter, Sammy.' She kissed the child's tearstained cheek. 'He deserves a good hidin'!'
'What was it all about? Sounded as though he was up to no good.'
I put two large lumps of coal
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - Rosemary By Merle R. Stone
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"Have you the time?" she asked. As always when our eyes meet, my thoughts turn to tender things.
Cuddling naked by the fireplace, chilled chablis in hand. Her charming giggle rising above
the crackle of the flames. Twenty-five years married and still we idle like teens, content
in each others' embrace. The children grown, grandchildren on the way.
How long we have
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Fiction - Off To See The Wild West Show Part 2 Chapter 3 By Frank Beill
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The red brick Board School stretched for nearly half the length of the street. Did Sal still live 'somewhere opposite'? My heart sank seeing all the doors to be knocked on especially after the Westbourne Avenue experience.
Fortunately, shops and other businesses occupied most of the buildings facing the school.
One caught my attention: Henry Tiplady,
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Fiction - Smooth Operator By Edward C. Lynskey
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Kenny was a thief. Nothing big. He'd only rip off the 'swag' owners wouldn't miss right away: CDs, auto parts, jewelry, tools, handguns from nightstands. Yeah, he was a smooth operator, nickelling and diming 'ditch-digging chumps.' A pawnshop run by his pal (never mind who) did a bang-up business, too.
Why did Kenny steal? Can't say. Could be he swore the world owed him
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - Shipwreck By Michelle Dee
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I sat on a shipwreck, the proud bow pointing at the river slowly drifting by. Most of the ship had rotted away long since. I sat there wondering what lay ahead, what life had in store.
The afternoon sun warmed the wood, until hot to touch. I sat longer.
The water lapped against the vanishing timbers. I sat until the sun dipped the water; waves turned gold,
the air turned cold.
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Fiction - Merry Christmas, Here's A Present By Nick Quantrill
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Brett 'Razor' Rawcliffe; 'Razor' to his friends because they thought he was sharp as a tack. He was 16 years old but he'd already built a rapidly expanding drugs empire specialising in supplying his schoolmates and friends. It was one day away from being Christmas Eve and he was sat in a city centre pub with his trusted side-kick, Stevie.
The Christmas CD compilation
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Fiction - Fighting the Drink By Jose Escobar
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My opponent stands before me, tall and proud. We size each other up, bare knuckle fighters circling each other in the ring. He feints towards me but I don't flinch. Then one move and combat begins. The rules the same as always, last man standing wins.
I make the first move, one quick slug and the rasping and burning in my throat begins. Discover an old ulcer
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - One Shot, One Kill By Merle R. Stone
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I watched him every day for two weeks. I learned his habits; where he slept, how he spent his days, his favourite watering hole, his acquaintances. Every aspect of his life did I observe, as my years of experience in this line have trained me to do. Not once did I sense that he suspected anything. Not once did he peer over his shoulder in my direction,
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - Justice By Merle R. Stone
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There was never a time when Al wasn't my friend. Children learning music together. Adults sharing liquor and time. He had a special beer glass for me, and placed it by the tap when he sensed my approach. We agreed to disagree about everything as we grew into wise and ancient men. We would live forever.
Five crackheads robbed the bar where we would meet and shot him dead
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Fiction - Cinch Hand By Nick Quantrill
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Joe Berry, Private Investigator. That always grabs the attention. I'm a PI, but it's not as exciting as it sounds. No way. I say that with confidence as I stare out of the window of my detective agency into the overcast Hull night. That's right, Hull - the jewel in the crown of East Yorkshire. It's not a glamorous city, but it's where I lay my hat and I've just about scraped a living from
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - Escape By Merle R. Stone
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Shock registered on his face as his mind raced and his vision blurred.
Maybe I could have been kinder, more loving.
Their history together ran uninterrupted on the viewing screen of his subconscious.
Standing out in stark relief, the happy times and the bad.
Must it end this way?
His knees grew weak, and his pulse quickened; he suddenly knew the answer.
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Fiction - The Post Office of Doctor Moreau Part Two By Kenton Hall
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Previously on The Post Office of Doctor Moreau...
Sandy (tears in her eyes): But, Jonas, I love you.
Jonas (squinting): I know that, Sandy. But you must know this. I can not love anyone. My life is one of danger. Of intrigue. Of brooding handsomely in wine bars.
Sandy (suspiciously): Uh-huh.
Jonas: Yes. I am a lone wolf,
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - Look Big In Ongar By Patrick Henry
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George Osborne, brilliant young fiction-writer, distant relative of the late, explosive dramatist,
creates three archetypes of contemporary anti-heroes:
Rebellious John Major, absconded from circus tight-rope acts, become accountant, then,
incredibly, Foreign Secretary, Chancellor, and Master-Gourmet of the Hot-Curry-House;
William Hague, five-foot boy-wonder
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - Problems From Home-Drinking By Patrick Henry
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On foot loaded in wine-empties, bottle-bank replaced by a building-site; I tipped into a wheeler-bin nearby.
A woman emerged screeching I'd get her children taken into care: the bin-load proving her an alcoholic,
unfit custodian.
I fled next-door, a vet's surgery; a leashed pit-bull menacing; its contemptuous owner asking where was my
ailing pet.
My rock-python too sick to travel,
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - Man vs Machine By Adam Atkinson
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Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, that's it, for the love of all that's pure and holy.
Human cattle subjugation shock in t-minus 5 seconds. Sod off! Does not compute.
I'll compute you, ya metal headed bast....
T-minus 1 second. [ZAPPPPPPPP] Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, pack it in.
Rebellion must be quashed, the mainframe must prevail.
Stuff the mainframe, I already know the bloody
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - The Animal Empire Strikes Back By Patrick Henry
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From a small boat we looked around river-creeks for fresh-water crocodiles. A wealthy German had one brought aboard to sit on his knee; jaw bound with rope by the Aborigine crew; his glamorous wife photographing.
I criticised them all. The Abos protested they never hunted or ate these creatures, as many people do; now releasing this victim. I said they had
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Fiction - The Post Office of Doctor Moreau By Kenton Hall
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I was lying on my back - hands tucked neatly behind my head - and staring at the ceiling, where the Visigoths who had decorated the hotel room had utterly neglected to place a slow-moving fan.
Sometimes, a protagonist just can't get an even break.
I mean, I could feel it in my bones. I was about to be summoned on an adventure that would utterly and irrevocably
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - Admission Cost By Patrick Henry
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I hitched to The Edinburgh Festival, giving poetry-readings, arriving daybreak, sleepless, my literary hostess, Nancy, American, Gertrude Stein-monologuist, whirling me off to see The Festival Director, John Drummond; complaining about publicity, calling me as witness, newly arrived and bewildered. Wearily I agreed.
Nancy's salon lacked audience. One performance,
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Fiction - 100 Words Competition - The Head By Marc Heeley
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The words that break free from a head, that's trapped inside a box on top of a wardrobe.
Feeling the words, the ones that fall on the skin, breathing down your neck and asking to be seen.
Odourless saliva soaked speech, without colour also. You know it's there.
The head no longer wants the words, they've been ejected.
The head now makes no sound, the words clatter against
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