The Pumpkin Hunter

Flash Fiction inspired by Writober Prompt: ISOLATION

Photographer Unknown

Every year I carve a single pumpkin, a sugar pumpkin for Halloween and I leave it on my porch.

I like to carve sugar pumpkins because they do not yield easily to my carving knife.  Sugar Pumpkins put up a fight. They make me work if I want to change them. If I want to put a scream on their mouth, terror in their eyes, if I want to give them a new hairline or fangs I have to use a mallet or a hammer.

Despite their light and fluffy name, Sugar Pumpkins are tough.

That’s ok in my book. I’m up for the challenge.

Jamie Wyeth

After I’ve completed my carving, after I’ve put a tealight in my Sugar Pumpkins empty shell I take my pumpkins out to my porch and as I stand on the top step deciding where to place my pumpkin, sometimes one of my neighbors who may be out walking their dog or ‘getting in their steps’  will call up to me and ask what I’ve got there in my hands.

Of course they don’t really care what I have in my hands. I could have the Mona Lisa in one hand and a still beating and bloody heart in the other. People only ask what I have in my hands because they think they should ask. I’m standing there. They’re standing there. It’s just a thing that neighbors who don’t really know or pay attention to do.

I hold my pumpkin up and I smile.

” This year’s victim.” I call back cheerily.

” What?” They will ask, like they do every year as they stroll by,  ” What did you say?” they ask without really expecting an answer.

” My Halloween Pumpkin. ” I sing back.

They laugh.

I chuckle.

They smile without looking really looking at me or my sugar pumpkin and as they wish me a Happy Halloween and as they walk away,  sometimes I put my sugar pumpkin on the bottom step and sometimes I stand there with my re-purposed Halloween decoration- by that I mean a severed head that I may have harvested from the old cemetery outside of town and I think to myself- decorating for Halloween is fun.

I enjoy it because I am at peace with the fact that  I’m only ever doing it for myself.

It’s not like anyone ever notices.

Freddie and Fern

I was born two minutes before my twin sister and tradition be damned, even though I was female I was the first born my Dad insisted that I carry his name.

There were  five Bertram’s going back and my Dad saw no reason to break with that record because I was female.

My Mother said, ” are you out of your mind? I am NOT naming our daughter Bertha. Chose another name. ”

He refused, in fact he told her she might as well name ‘the other one’ while she was at it because she was apparently far more gifted in  the name chosing department  then he was.

Mom was fine with that assessment.

She  named my sister, ” Federika  ” and my name is Fern.

Like the plant.

I’m not sure if the name thing is what did it to any relationship I could have had with my Dad, but the the thing of it is. We never had one. It’s like he decided that on the day I was born, if I couldn’t be Bertha, I couldn’t be anything at all.

If that sounds like a jerk move- it was.

Me and Freddie are identical twins. We sound alike,  we look alike, we have the same hair style and we have the same little brown speck in our left eye just where sclera meets the iris.

I’ll bet you know where this is going- Freddie was our Dad’s favorite child.

He bragged about her grades ( much like our faces, those were identical ) he went to  “Freddie’s ” dance recitals ( we are both in the same classes so we always danced in the same recitals ) and he attended all of ” Freddie’s ” soccer games.  We both played offense for the same team, but whatever.

Freddie didn’t like the way our Dad treated me anymore then I did.

I may have seethed in quiet fury over the way my Dad treated me- but Freddie’s anger was truly epic.

When we were  kids she stole money from our Dad’s wallet, when we were thirteen years old she  took his new car out for a joy ride and ran it into our neighbor’s house and straight into their living room where they were watching TV with their dog at their feet.

Their dog died.

Freddie actually felt bad for the dog. If that dog hadn’t died the look of ‘remorse’ all over her face when she went to court would not have been there and she probably would have ended up in Juvenile Hall for the remainder of her teenage years.

Instead she was ordered to go to counseling. I think anti-psychotic drugs were involved in her treatement. I honestly don’t remember, anyway, after court and we got home,   Dad started to yell  at  Freddie before the living room door swung shut.

He went on about the horrible way she treated him, she would insisted it was nothing compared to how he treated her and he  threw his hands up and yell back that he guessed giving her the blood in his veins wasn’t enough. She wanted the marrow of his bones too.

Our Dad  started to stalk off and of course he  ran right into me becase Freddie and I were always around each other.

Dad looked at me like I was a wad of dog poo that he had just discovered was stuck to his shoe and he told  tell me to get my good for nothing useless ass out of his way.

Freddie watched him stomp off and she said to me, ” You’re not useless Fern. Swear to God. ”

After we grew up and moved away Freddie never went over to our Parent’s house again. I was would go over to see our parents when I had the chance because I knew it drove my Dad bonkers  that he would have to see Freddie’s face and hear Freddie’s voice and he would be brutally  reminded that Freddie had written him off.

Freddie was right when  you think about what she said that day after court. I had a purpose. I was her revenge.

Our Mom died when we were in our late 40’s.

I went home just before her funeral and I found our  Dad sitting on the couch with the tv remote in his hand.

He was aimlessly  flipping through the channels. When he was done he looked up at me and said, ” You know Freddie, she never forgave me for the way I treated Fern. That’s how she left this world. Hating me for the way I treated your sister. That’s the only reason I think she stayed with me. She wanted me to know, without a doubt for every single minute of my life that she truly, truly hated me. ”

I said. ” Really. ”

” Yes. Really. ” his voice sounded tired and old. ” But I’m glad you’re here Freddie. You’re the best. You always have been. ”

I went into the kitchen to make us some coffee and I wondered if, after I dusted rat poison into his coffee  and he started to die the horrible death that rat poison promises it’s  victims,  he ever  realized I was Fern.

Or if he died thinking it was Freddie who killed him.

On the one hand, I really did hope he would think I was Freddie because that really would  have hurt him-

on the other hand the truth  may have been even worse for him.

Did he go to his grave  knowing  that inside of  my dark heart I was more of his twin then my Sister’s and that even though my Mom had named me Fern  I really had been his Bertha all along.

For Writober Prompt: REJECTION

My Dark Room

Flash Fiction inspired by the Writober Prompt: FEAR OF DARKNESS

Photographer Unknown

I don’t go upstairs to my attic very often. I don’t keep much up there.

By not much, what I mean is, I keep a mirror at the far end of my attic, it’s resting on the floor and it’s face is turned to the wall . Sometimes when it rains water from a crack in the ceiling drips down from the roof and onto it’s back like a zipper sewn onto it’s back by a not so skilled surgeon.

My mirror used to hang at the end of the hallway near my living room.

People used to like to look into it and fix their hair or straighten their ties before we would visit, Everyone loved to use that mirror. I think it had something to do with the lighting, or maybe seeing yourself framed in golden stars and  crowned by the Sun   made you feel prettier- or maybe even a bit God like. It didn’t just feed your ego. It stuffed it to bursting.

Sitting next to my  mirror in my dark attic is a shovel.

The shovel’s step is caked with gray dirt and a fine coat of dust and it’s blade is rusty red.

I don’t know where that shovel came from. It just turned up one day, someone knocked at my door and when I opened it the shovel was leaning under my door bell. I looked up and down my street before I grabbed it and took it inside.

I tried to run upstairs with it, but my legs were shaking and I couldn’t take a deep breath. I felt liked I  drifted in slow motion  up each creaking step. When I got to the landing I tip toed into the attic. I stared at my mirror across the room from me and when I was sure it was in the same exact spot it has always been in, I walked with a little more purpose in my step to the mirror and set the shovel next to it.

My attic is cavernous, but that shovel and the mirror seem to take up every square inch of it.

Photographer Unknown

I took my mirror up to my attic, two days before Halloween- I’m not sure how many years it’s been.

It was late the night I moved it upstairs. I had spent a solid week emptying my attic of old furniture and boxes books and record albums. I moved  trunks of clothes and household items. What I couldn’t fit down into my basement I put into one of my guest rooms.

It was late, like I said when I finished cleaning out my dark room and just when I thought I could not take another step I went to my mirror and took it off of the wall without looking directly into it,

I carried it to the  attic stairs in the dark.

When I got to to my attic, I reached through the doorway and snapped the light off. I walked to the back of the attic- where it was always dark even when the light was on and I put my mirror down.

Then I looked into it.

I saw my face, I saw my shirt covered with dark maroon droplets standing out upon a mist of red.

I saw a smile on my reflection’s mouth, I could see my shovel leaning against the wall behind me.

I whirled around and of course the shovel wasn’t there. It was in a dumpster behind a restaurant  twenty miles from my house. When I turned back and looked down into my mirror for the last time, I saw my face- it was dusty and sweaty, my shirt wasn’t covered in a mist of red it was covered with cobwebs and dirt.

I turned my mirror  away from me, but I will be honest I don’t think it matters.

That face I saw in it, the secret it captured  is still  there staring at my attic wall

 

Photographer Unknown