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Everyday Drabbles #391: Marooned

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They were stranded on a desert island, put ashore by the mutinous crew and left to die.
The captain fell into dispair on the second day, and on the third, the bosun awoke alone, and found the pistol missing.
He rushed to the beach and wrestled the gun away from him, but it went off, striking the captain in the meat of his thigh. The bosun bandaged the wound as best he could, and dragged the captain back to their makeshift camp.
They were going to survive, the bosun promised himself. They both were. Not for revenge, but for love.

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Everyday Drabbles #390: Warning Signs

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The physicist was surprised to be called to an emergency meeting, and was even more surprised when she found Anti-Graviton, from the Justice Sorority, sitting in.
“First, I want to say that your work has been exemplary, and—” Her boss said.
“We’ve got our eyes on you,” the heroine interrupted. A folder floated across the conference table. She opened it.
“Wait, are you putting me on a watch list because of my freaking name?” the scientist asked, indignant.
Dr. Lucy Deville grumbled as she stalked back to her lab. She’d show them how good she was. She’d show them all.

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Everyday Drabbles #389: Ghost Story

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She loaded the shotgun. and tied it to the horses’s saddle. She patted the huge black creature affectionately. He was going to get a lot of exercise tonight. She checked her makeup and dress one last time. Everything was ready. All she had to do was wait until dark.
The ranchers and the miners, the outlaws that were stealing everything they could get their hands on out here in the ‘lawless frontier’ wouldn’t see her, she told herself.
They wouldn’t see the old farmhand’s daughter. They would see La Llorona. And she would be the last thing they ever saw.

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Everyday Drabbles #388: Clutter

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The priestess glanced around the wizard’s chamber and sighed theatrically. It was a total disaster. Robes lay strewn about the floor. Forgotten bowls half-filled with snacks and cold cups of tea crowded the desk. Grimoires lay tossed about, casually left open to pages of lore best forgotten by gods-fearing mortals. She tried not to look too closely at any of them.
“This place is a mess. How do you ever find anything?” she asked him.
“I have a spell for just that purpose!” The wizard patted his pockets, then looked helplessly at the piled scrolls and spell books. “Err, somewhere.”

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Everyday Drabbles #387: The Ambassadors

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I was assigned to the ambassador’s entourage for the day, and they were very excited to visit the Earth they had seen from so many captured and upscaled broadcast signals. They had even dressed for the part based on their favorite dramas of the period.
Their planet is a about one hundred lightyears from Earth, so I wore an old-fashioned suit to the meeting. I wasn’t expecting the 8-foot tall, baby-faced extraterrestrials to show up in late 20th Century Los Angeles gang clothing, complete with antique firearms.
Only my quick intervention before security forces saw them prevented an interplanetary incident.

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Everyday Drabbles #386: The Swordsman

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When the lake filled with poison, the knight looked at his sword in disgust. His sole duty was to protect his lord, his kingdom, his family. He had failed.
He felt like a vestigial organ, unable to defend against this new attack. His weapon and his ideals were relics.
He allowed his grief to move through him, and when it passed, his sword waited for him. It couldn’t cut the poison from the water, or raise the dead. But he could find the men responsible, and show them that slow poison is no match for a quick and determined blade.

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Everyday Drabbles #385: The Bluffs

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The bluffs overlooked the vast lake, carved over thousands of years of glacial erosion. He’d visited them often as a child and he wanted to climb them again while he still had the strength.
As he looked out at the horizon and felt the wind on his face, he couldn’t help but feel a little disappointed about how much smaller they’d become. He’d always known they would fall to wind and wave, but seeing them diminished still hurt him.
The dunes were towering formations in his youth. Seven-hundred years seemed too short a time for them to change so much.

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Everyday Drabbles #384: The Last Circus

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The last circus touches down on the lunar surface in a cacophony of zoological discomfort. The caged animals hate microgravity, but the return to stable gravity, even the moon’s reduced pull, is even worse for them.
Once we’re green, I clean out the cages and get them ready for transport into Armstrong City. I’m brushing down one of the lions when I see a line of scar tissue under his mane. I ping the owner.
“Boss, Leon’s got cell degradation. You’d better call the cloners.” I pet the lion and stare up through the dome at the lifeless, ruined Earth.

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Everyday Drabbles #383: Unfinished Business

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The villagers called her “The Widow.” She could be seen along the bluffs, or sometimes, on dark and desolate nights, a ship would spot her on the beach, with her lantern held high and her tattered black dress rippling against the wind.
There was some debate over who the ghost had been in life, and several likely candidates were proposed from the many widows who waited for sailors who never returned over the years. All were deemed unlikely.
The apparition continued to appear, watching the ships come and go. Someday her package would arrive, and then she would be free.

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Everyday Drabbles #382: Superweapon

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The prototype superweapon was nearly completed. The Space Forces needed something big to strike against the Earth Armada.
The lead designer was nervous as he led a team of dignitaries through the assembly floor. Finally they came to the machine. It stood on two massive legs, a giant robot over a hundred meters tall. It was painted fire-engine red, and it bristled with gun placements and spikes. Some rocket launchers were welded on for good measure.
The others stared up at it for a moment, then burst into peals of laughter. He knew he shouldn’t have made his 12-year-old co-designer.

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