He was the kind of person who, while chopping onions at a friend’s party, proceeds to cut off his own finger—knuckles and all—and immediately, with thought to nothing else, worries how the host might react to the mess. The mess, a threat to his standing, an affront to his self-respect, the blood proof of his inability to do a simple task without injuring himself to the point of needing medical attention. The partygoers outside would soon find out, the festivities would end, and he’d be the cause. The stump could heal, but a wound to one’s status was stubborn, and his status was already suspect, what with the elimination—just two months before—of the position and career he hated, the one he needed for occasions such as this, where financial success was proof of one’s worth. He was now broke, and thus irrelevant. But there on the shale tile, as he stood alone in this beautiful, rational kitchen, sink pink with his blood, he gloved his hand with a towel, sat down, and called the medics, leaving the growing mess to someone else, someone not bleeding, maybe the host, who was currently discussing a recent trip to coastal Spain, and who was the kind of person who committed his life to having a massive, elegant headstone, etched with noble words, words that wouldn’t be read by anyone past the grandchildren, yes, yet another person who did good things to the right people and saved up for a killer grave. The kind of person he himself had been until this very moment, when he lost something valuable to find something important: a dead finger, unattached, in the sink, pointing at him.
-
Submit to Five South
- Submissions are open for flash, poetry, long fiction, and non-fiction. Read our submission guidelines.
-
Recently Published
- Night Elf Bildungsroman by S.C. SvendsgaardI played a male Night Elf druid named Siladan Wintersinger.
- The Mother-in-Law by Angela Sue WinsorThey wanted to get married. Something very small. They imagined what they were planning was modern and subversive and uniquely romantic, as if couples haven’t been rushing to courthouses every day for decades and decades.
- Second Winter Solstice During an Epidemic by Marianne WorthingtonWhen my dog and I look at the sky we see haloes and fuzz, our sight clouded by a sameness.
- Robert Fleming Warps Reality by Adam CamioloTo our benefit, it is an imperfect mirror, covered in scratches and slightly shattered.
- Beautiful Generative Machine by David Fowlerthose humans came from different jobs in different cities in different decades of my life
- Night Elf Bildungsroman by S.C. Svendsgaard