Tag: short-story

  • Winchecombe Way

    Winchecombe Way

    A Short Story by Keith Nelson

    Bird song whistled faintly from the woods by the well-worn footpath. Peering through the trees, nothing was visible but the shadows of the branches; opposite the woods lay a pasture of grazing sheep. They stood staring at him dumbly. He stopped, staring back at them. They judged him.

    It’s been about an hour,” he thought, uncomfortable from the blank expression of the sheep. “I should turn around before it gets too dark.” He broke the staring contest and headed towards home. The path he walked was very familiar. He and his father always walked it before dinner, talking typically about very important things like the weather, books, or about the dog’s behavior that day.

    “I don’t get it; she comes up to me begging and whining to go out. I walk her, we go back inside, she starts it right back up,” his father chuckled as the latch clicked shut on their old English cottage. The dog’s whimper could faintly be heard from the door.

    “Maybe she just likes walking. You could always bring her with us,” Floydsaid to his father as he turned toward the pathway across from the house.

    “Oh no, I couldn’t do that. See those berries there? When she was just a five-month-old puppy, I tried walking down this very path while having a conversation with your mum, just as we are now.” He smiled, “The whole time I thought my walk training was paying off… no pulling or stopping; turns out she had been nipping berries right off the bush the whole walk! Face all blue and red from the juice…” His father chuckled to himself.

    Stuck in his memory of the past, Floyd walked mindlessly over the roots and rocks below his boots. The air around him cooled down, and the sun now reached over the hills at eye level. It felt unnatural to walk alone. Dad always insisted on Floyd walking to his left. But not anymore. He could only insist on what he had written in his will: to take care of his dog, which now slumped forlornly on the floor at home with Mum. Floyd couldn’t bring himself to even look at it. It reminded him too much of his father. He knelt, picking a blueberry off a nearby bush.

    “I wouldn’t eat that blueberry, looks much too sour.”

    Floyd shot up at the sound of a voice that wasn’t his own, looked for the source, but none materialized. He dropped the blueberry and continued his walk, a little hastier than usual. Floyd’s expression hardened.

    “Why are you running away? You clearly need my help.”

    He continued walking, keeping his eyes focused on the dirty path ahead.

    “I am perfectly OK doing everything myself, thanks. I don’t need you trying to fix it up again, not after what happened last time.”

    The sun had finally decided to begin setting on the English countryside, its orange rays touching the clouds above and covering the grassy hills. The beauty of the surroundings and the warmth of the sun clashed with Floyd’s cold tone.

    “You prayed for wisdom and growth. I answered, just not the way you wanted.”

    Floyd was silent, trying to get back home as quickly as possible to avoid any conversation.

    “I see your friends and the way they treat you at school. Why do you give them any thought?”

    “I like hanging out with them,” Floyd quickly retorted. “They like me as well. It’s fine, and I enjoy it; I don’t want you messing that up.”

    Floyd continued walking; his gaze now focused on the sun-kissed fields to his right. He had only given a partial answer to the question. Because without them, I’m alone. What kind of person wants to be alone?

    “You know you’re not alone; I hope I’ve made that clear. I won’t leave you.”

    “I’m afraid of what happens when it’s just me. When I get back from class, the first thing I try and do is distract myself.”

    “Hear and believe what I say—I won’t ever leave or forsake you.”

    The promise was too much to bear.

    “I don’t know if I can trust you. I know I have in the past, and that was great, but now? I feel far from you… and I don’t mind either. I just can’t trust you. I can’t see you.”

    They continued walking together for some time. It had grown significantly dimmer, and the air had a chill permeating it. Floyd kept his jacket unzipped.

    “Not to be rude, but I’m not sure how much closer we can be right now,” he smiled, “I live inside of you; that’s got to say something. I know everything about you. All your insecurities, anxieties, your past, your future, your family, your eternity.”

    “I don’t care, just let me focus on myself.”

    “Right. Just keep focusing on yourself. And what about your dad’s dog? Should he keep focusing on himself too?”

    Floyd ignored the question, focusing on the previous sentence. Your family. His heart leaped. Family. That means a wife…A FUTURE.

    Suddenly, a large black crow let out a piercing CAW, initiating a dive bomb from a tree up ahead and making a beeline for Floyd’s head, interrupting his daydream. Aggravated from the bird’s sudden interruption of the pleasant thought, he ducked, throwing his hand up at it.

    “Stupid bird.” 

    “Your situation is very specific to my plan. In fact, you must go through this now, instead of later. I just need you to trust me.”

    Floyd continued to walk, noticing they were nearing the village. My situation. Right. You take my dad, and that’s what you call your “plan.”

    The dirt had turned to gravel and cracked beneath his boots. He tried to remember what idea was gripping him before the crow had rudely interrupted.

    “Just think about what I’ve said. Take it one step at a time.”

    Floyd looked up.

    “What’s that supposed to mean?”

    Gone. Floyd threw his hands into his jeans and walked up the street, back home for dinner.

    “Hey, how was your walk?” Floyd’s mother asked in a cheery tone. She sat at the table, a rather heavy book in hand, waiting on the oven.

    “I went far down Winchcombe Way, right by Dr. Cain’s sheep.”

    She closed the large leather book shut. The golden pages shimmered in the light of the fire.

    “That’s great! Dinner will be ready in about 20 minutes. I cleaned up your room; I noticed it had gotten a bit messy.”

    “Thanks, Mum,” he said from the stairwell, trudging up the stairs. Opening the door to his room, he looked around at the clean environment. The clothes that had been building up, the food and plates, the trash stacked in the corner—everything had disappeared. The only thing that interrupted the now sterile room was the big white dog lying in the middle of the floor. The dog perked up at Floyd’s entrance.

    “Hey,” Floyd said, scratching the scruffy fur of the golden retriever. Its happy face looked at Floyd. One step at a time. It was obvious. The next step had nothing to do with him. He jumped up to his feet and patted his leg at the dog.

    “Hobbes? Care for a walk?”

  • A Warm Walk

    A Warm Walk

    A Short Story by Keith Nelson

    “I’ve never been on this street,” Floyd thought, zipping up his Barbour jacket. The icy wind of the Edinburgh winter was something he could never quite get used to.

    “I have, many times…in fact ,I created it. Take a left up here.”

    Floyd watched as his boots crunched the snow beneath him.

    “I get nervous sometimes… what if it gets worse? Harder than it is now? Couldn’t you just take me tonight?” Floyd paced himself up the hill.

    They took the left and walked down a street by the park. The tall pine trees covered up some of the street lights, casting a dimmed aura onto the dark street below.

    “I could take you tonight, but I don’t want to. You have so many amazing things I’ve created for you that I want you to experience.”

    Floyd continued to walk. The snow below his feet had turned to wet sidewalk, and he could feel the sole of his boots thump thump against the stone.  

    “I’m tired of these walks.”

    “Why is that?”

    “Because every time we have this walk, it means something has gone wrong and I need your help. I have to come to you. Doesn’t it make me weak? Wife, kids, job I love, and I still can’t do it.”

    The wide street’s cobblestones glistened as the lamps shone down on it. On the left lay nice shops with warm flats above them. Snow sat piled up on the overhangs, and the shops stood tired and silent from the long day of holiday shopping.

    “Well, that’s why I’m here. To be your helper. Anytime, anywhere, I will be here for you. You need to trust that I can strengthen your weakness.”

    “I know that when I’m weak it creates more dependence on you. I’m just tired of being so weak all the time.”

    “Maybe that’s because you’re not depending on me enough.”

    A door opened from the pub ahead. An older man came backing out carrying parcels far too heavy for someone his age. Floyd jogged up to him.

    “Here, let me help you.” Floyd reached out to grab a parcel, but the old man resisted, twisting away from him.

    “I don’t need your help, I’m doing fine, thank you very much,” spat the old man. He hobbled off, his back arching from the strain.

    Floyd stood by the door, stunned.

    “That was rude,” he spoke out loud. Turning to resume his walk, he looked around and realized that he was suddenly alone.