Here are the results of our annual contest in which we ask readers to write a micro storyโexactly 95 words long. We get hundreds of entries for this contest every year. But every year is a little different. This was a year of extremes. Some of the stories were exuberant and upliftingโbut at least one of the other stories was so downcast and disturbed that one of the younger, more impressionable members of our editorial staff felt compelled to ask, in a hushed and concerned whisper, โDo we need to worry about this person?โ
This year had some of the funniest stories weโve ever read. And some of the saddest. Some of the sharpest. And some of the most confusing. Some of the very best and some of the very worst. (And donโt worryโeven if your story didnโt get published, weโre not referring to you. Your story was one of the very last ones we cutโmostly just because of space limitations. Donโt worry about it. Youโre fine. Doing great work, actually. Keep it up. It was somebody elseโs story that was so bad that we needed to rip it to shreds with our bare hands in a frenzy of rage. Youโre cool.)
The bad stories have been banished to the recycling bin of history. The best stories are right here.
First place
That Didnโt go as Planned
I poured my ex-husbandโs ashes down the front of my one-piece bathing suit. Jumped into Lake Tahoe. The idea was as I swam the ashes would dissipate, drift into water. Little pieces of Jordan, floating away.
I climbed an outcropping of rocks, expecting my suit to be empty. But the bulk of the ashes remained and had turned to mud. I opened the leg of my suit and pulled out globs of ash, like wet cement. Shook it loose. Hunks splat onto the rocks. Good God. Jordan was going to end up looking like bird poop.
โLaura Newman
Laura Newman is a several time RN&R 95-Word Fiction winner, including one story that resulted in the Catholic League calling for a boycott of the RN&R. Sheโs the author of Parallel to Paradise and the forthcoming Franklin Avenue Rookery for Wayward Babies.
Second place
Misunderstand โLuckyโ and You Donโt Get It
He eyed my stack of tickets. I nursed my cosmopolitan, waiting for my number.
โIt doesnโt matter how many entries you haveโmy buddy had only two entries, and he won $2,000.โ
Of course it matters. Itโs probabilities, you statistical mis-calculator.
โAnd when weโre playing poker, he wins every time.โ
Canโt win every time, you selective rememberer.
โWhen he goes to bars, he always posts photos with the sexiest lady.โ
You donโt understand social media, you observer of highlight reels.
โDo you think we could make something magical here?โ
Probably not. Youโd need more entries.
โAndrew Wise
Andrew Wise and wife Johanna moved to Reno after 30 years in the Bay Area. Following his motherโs advice to get a degree that would put food on the table (business instead of English), heโs excited to rekindle his fiction career.
Third place
Apparent
We sat on our sonโs Cruce Street porch in Norman, Oklahoma, bemoaning the summerโs humidity, sipping Jack and Cherry Coke slushies, and counting fireflies playing tag in twilit forget-me-nots. I turned to my wife, smiled and softly, sappily said, โSweetheart, I watched you during our recent Route 66 road trip and realized you are smarter than me.โ
She immediately doubled over, and with eyes glistening, snorked slushie. Covering mouth and nose, she blindly found my knee and gently, if not condescendingly, squeezed it twice.
Well, Boy Howdy! It was quite apparent she already knew this.
โKeith Froslie
Keith Froslie was raised in Reno and graduated from the University of Nevada, Reno. Heโs a retiree of the U.S. Air Force and the Washoe County School District. Froslie finds happiness in writing, midnight revisions and showers with his wife.
Honorable mentions
The Jimmy Choos
He tripped over her shoes. For the third time.
He picked up the right Jimmy Choo and threw it against the wall. The other he heaved in the opposite direction.
The phone rang and he picked up, annoyed. โWhat,โ he barked gruffly.
โItโs me. Whatโs the matter? You sound upset.โ
โWhy would I be upset, Lonnie? You disappear for three days and then let me know, via text message, that โweโve grown apart.โ Whatโs upsetting about that?โ
Silence.
โWhat do you want?โ
โI was just wondering if I left my shoes there. The Jimmy Choos?โ
โDavid R. Lee
American Fuckup Supreme
He leaned over and wretched, thought of how close his face was to the rim of the toilet, and wretched again. He spit away the awful taste and stood, faced the mirror and adjusted his tie. Pockets of late night tequila were still burning through his system so he ate an unhealthy combination of antacids and aspirin and opened the door. The echo of cheers sounded like thunder below him, but before he could shut the door again, a firm hand grabbed his arm and pushed him into the open air to accept the nomination.
โBill W. Morgan
Goodwill
At Saint Vincentโs, she lifted the box out of her car.
A voice came from the street. โGot any menโs clothes?โ
โNo, sorry.โ She barely looked up.
After dropping the donation, she parked, and headed inside.
Time to shop!
She nabbed a cribbage board, a skirt, and flannel pajamas, then hesitated.
Rifling through, she spotted itโthick, gray, V-neck, nearly new.
At the register, she had to borrow a dollar when the sign read cash only.
Once outside, she searched for him.
โHere, take this. Itโll be warm.โ
โLady, Iโve never owned anything cashmere before.โ
โCatherine Schmidt
Untitled
Does no one else hear that sound? Itโs so subtle, yet pervasive.
Itโs the sound of fifth grade in the โ70s. The sound of a boy named George trying to sneak up behind me to put gum in my hair. The sound of the group of popular girls walking the hallway making fun of me for budding pimples and greasy hair. Itโs the school cafeteria line waiting for fake cheese pizza.
The sound makes adult me both uncomfortable and nostalgic.
Swish swish. Swish swish. All day past my office door.
Corduroy is back in style.
โL.M. Staton
Untitled
I dial the numbers slowly, my heart beating faster and faster.
โHello, is this Susan Kauttz?โ
โYes, it is.โ
I realize that I shouldโve thought about the words. How do you tell a woman her deceased husband possibly fathered an illegitimate child and never told a soul?
โMy name is Ramona, but I was born in Vietnam, and my mother gave me the name Bich-Ly.โ
I wait for a response, and then she says something I did not expect.
โOK โฆ I think I know where youโre going, but I want to hear you say it.โ
โRomona McGinnis
Rescue
A Reno ditch-fed pond will always be at risk. Dry years leave it smelling, well, funky.
But Lake Park is named because of the lake. It canโt be filled in.
On a hot July day, we meet to #SaveLakePark. Walking home, somethingโs moving yards out in the murky water.
Instinctively I call, โCome here, birdy.โ
Well, damn, if it doesnโt start swimmingโtoward us. Cupping my hands, I lift it out.
The neighbor helpfully, โIโll get a box. I think itโs hurt.โ
But, no.
Phelps, the parakeet, is a thank you gift from the pond.
โCatherine Schmidt
Untitled
The surgeon stood at the sink, washing his hands.
โJoe? You OK?โ
โIโm fine, Bob.โ
โYour hands are shaking?
Joe looked down. โMy first big case.โ
โYou got this Joe. Youโre good.โ
โI hope youโre right.โ
Bob turned toward him from the next sink.
โThe team thinks youโre great. You have to think the same way.โ
Joe nodded and walked toward the operating room.
Joe now walked down the hallway toward the waiting room. โJackson family?
They turned. Upon seeing the smile on Joeโs face, they were relieved. Joe felt good. He would be OK.
โArnold Klein
On the Playa
โHi, neighbors! I must have been asleep when you came in overnight. We usually have the whole playa to ourselves this time of year, just us in our Winnebago. Thatโs quite a rig youโve got there. You guys must be Burners. Youโre a couple months early. Burning Manโs not until August. Where are you fellas from?โ
โWeโre researchers from Central Galactic University, here to collect specimens.โ
โUh, huh. Well, nice to meet you. I hear the missus waking up. โฆ Gotta go. โฆ Honey, thereโs a couple of Burners out here. Their rig looks like a spaceship.โ
โSteve Recchia
Untitled
โTwo months, maybe three. Itโs inoperable. Iโm sorry, John.โ
โJesus. Two months.โ
โYes, I suggest you get your affairs together, spend time with your children.โ
โI donโt have any, anyone else, for that matter.โ
โWell, do you have any questions?โ
โNo, not really.โ
โOK, please stop out front and settle up with Christine.โ
โThanks. Goodbye, doctor.โ
โAh, the doctor asked me to speak to you.โ
โYes, how do you want to settle your bill? After insurance, your responsibility is $42,000.โ
โHow long can I stretch out the payments?โ
โOnly six months, Iโm afraid.โ
โThatโll work.โ
โJerry Wager
The Furniture Makers
Sadness spilled out of Mohamedโs eyes, as they drove near his familyโs old wood shop on the edge of Mogadishu. โWe made furniture there when I was a kid,โ he pointed, โbut the clans destroyed everything.โ
Worst thing to ever happen in Muldoonโs high school shop class was a classmate that cut off his own fingertip using the band saw. โI made my mom a table,โ Muldoon said, โcut the drawer dovetails by hand, with a chisel and a mallet.โ Ali Ga โal nodded. Muldoon felt grateful and angry, all in the same powerless breath.
โCarl Moulton
Untitled
โWhat! They got away? How?โ She said, nursing her swollen cheek.
โThey had a car outside, and with the hoodies and masks, we got nothinโ to identify โem,โ the cop answered, shrugging.
โTake me to the hospital right now,โ she said, handing him a small baggie.
โI blew one of them,โ nodding toward the baggie, โand fucked the other one. Two shots of semen.โ
โJesus!โ he said looking at the baggie.
โIโm a hookerโitโs what I do.โ
โSon of a bitch. If theyโre in the system, weโll get โem. Promise.โ
Turns out they were.
โJerry Wager
Jason Morris Sells the World
Had the strange looking fellow not stopped him at the door, Jason would have used his last dollar on a cheap quart of beer.
โSell me the world and Iโll buy you the best beer, cases of beer.โ
โShit yeah!โ Jason said with a handshake.
The next day, Jason saw the same man on TV. He was yelling and pointing to the odd collection of spaceships in the sky. He was claiming ownership of the world, like in some cheap Hollywood movie.
Jason watched with a fresh beer, excited to see what would happen next.
โBill W. Morgan
College Reunions by Anonymous
โAA is soooo American,โ quipped her old college roommate, an X-pat, married to a corporate โMad Man,โ fingers wrapped around her wineglass like a gun pointed to her clavicle.
โSo is jazz, baby, soโs jazz. And look how that changed the world,โ she replied.
โTouchรฉ โฆ but โฆ youโll be back.โ
They laughed, thick as old thieves reunited.
โWhat goes on in AA meetings anyway?โ
โWe run around naked on hot coals.โ
More laughter.
But to herself she says: โI pray I never go back. And call me if that loaded wine gun ever goes off on you.โ
โEileen Driscoll
All the Fashionable Girls
The air was soft, gently brushing her bare skin. She waited, grateful for the husband who drove home for a sundress and, unprompted, her pocket angel of hope, her lip balm. โIf Iโm ever in a coma,โ she would half-joke, โmake sure someone applies it every hour.โ
A carload of teenagers stared at her. Or possibly at the catheter hose that looped below her dress, a new temporary reality. Oh, boy, she breathed, then called to them: โItโs what all the fashionable girls are wearing these days.โ And turned so they couldnโt see her smile.
โDarlynne Vrechek
Untitled
She was climbing my neighborโs door. That encounter would not go well, so to collect herโ
Quart jar, said some inner voice.
A jar? I asked.
And that folded newspaper.
She ducked her head and prayed. I held the jar, brushed the paper toward her side, and she โฆ climbed right in. She pressed her spines against the glass, looking at me with wide eyes.
I carried her outside to the stars and crickets, listening to her clinking steps inside the glass. Delivered safe, she turned her long body, squaring up to me. Pray tell, mantoptera.
โJenny Pickerell
The Package Deal
Why did it always go like this?
She wanting more โฆ so much more โฆ and sooner. And the guy just coolly offering his services to the next in line like she didnโt even matter.
It hurt that she didnโt matter. Oh, but she would matter.
Heโd look at her and see her like heโd never seen her before: NOT all sweet, and so ready to receive his handsome half smile and rehearsed comments, like he really cared about her day โฆ and her life?
She swore right then that she would never, ever patronize this P.O. branch again.
โSharon Colley
Roughinโ It
My aunt got bilked out of all her credit cards and life savings by a con man who told her she inherited a bunch of money from Sweden. So it got me thinking when Iโm really old Iโm going to bilk myself out of a fortune by staying in posh hotels and getting daily room service and massages and tattoos. Iโm saving the best part, though. Iโm finding a really big RV parked at a scenic overlook, getting in and driving the piggish monstrosity off the edge. Because thatโs not camping and everyone knows it.
โJane Addington
How to Hold the Rope
She had to show the old man how to hold the rope, hard when you wonโt speak, but he understood and she smiled. Before she turned back to the chair at the center of the crowd, she made sure, with a shake of her forefinger and a playful look of warning that he knew to hold on.
She climbed the chair and mocked putting the rope around her neck, tightening it until an involuntary choke escaped. The man felt the imaginary rope shift in his hand and before anyone could argue, the mime stepped off.
โBill W. Morgan
