ABYSS & APEX

 

image of a moth in a spider's web

The Difference Between Fiction and Life

Bruce Holland Rogers


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Current Issue:

Forces of Nature
Editorial

Issue 16:
Fiction

The Dream of Rain
by Constance Cooper

Sumo21
by Daniel Braum

Zeno's Duet
Introduction
by Wendy S. Delmater
Zeno's Last Paradox
by Tony Pi
The Relativity Prison
by Igor Teper

American Gothic
by Douglas W. Clark

Flash

The Difference Between
Fiction and Life

by Bruce Holland Rogers

Poetry

The Man Who
Held Infinity

by Mikal Trimm

untitled scifaiku
by Mark Gilbert

Black Holes
Hold Their Breath

by Mike Allen

Family One
by Mark Gilbert

The Wizard
Gets a Haircut

by Jon Hansen

Gingerbread
by Constance Cooper

Greening
and
Sequences in the Evolution
of Form

by Jennifer Crow

Internal Waves
by David C. Kopaska-Merkel

Dear Yourself
by Yoon Ha Lee

Walking Through the Village
at Twilight

by Robin Pommier


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I watch the struggles of a moth trapped in an abandoned spider web. It flutters without resting. August sun bakes the air. What is thirst to a moth? In the geometry of the tall window, the length of my arms, and the spare furnishings of my borrowed room, I see no way to free it. Perhaps in a closet somewhere, I would find a broom. I don't look for one. I watch.

What is waste? What is a moth uneaten by the absent spider?

I think of a tiny corpse, whole nations of bacteria, rich soil. But a new character, more urgent than the sun, enters the story. A yellowjacket flies erratic orbits, spiraling in. Each time the hunter closes with its prey, the moth wings buzz. The yellow jacket goes away. The moth flutters. When the yellow jacket returns, flies tight circles, tries to land, the moth wings buzz again. The yellow jacket flies off. When it re-enters the scene — as if insects knew that stories come in threes — it finally alights between the fluttering exhausted wings and clutches the moth.

They are one dark silhouette together in a corner of bright sky. Does the hunter sting? Does the moth die? Their weights combined break the web, and their tiny bodies fall the length of the window, straight down. The web holds only a fragment of wing.

I hurry down the stairway, outside, around the corner of the house. I stand where gravity alone would have drawn them. I search the grass, the bare earth, but the end of the story is not here for me to find.



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Stories by Bruce Holland Rogers have won a Pushcart Prize, the World Fantasy Award, and two Nebula Awards, among other honors. He teaches fiction writing for the Whidbey Writers low-residency MFA, and also teaches writing seminars in Greece (www.write-in-crete.com) and Italy (www.write-across-europe.com). Subscribers from all over the world receive his newest stories by e-mail. See www.shortshortshort.com. Rogers lives in Eugene, Oregon.


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Story © 2005 Bruce Holland Rogers. All other content copyright © 2005 ByrenLee Press