Tag: business of the afterlife

  • White Collar

    Employment ads on the internet were not to be trusted, Ted thought as he stood outside the strip mall. The sign that said White Collar wasn’t what he expected for a tax office and the blacked out windows gave no indication what was going on inside. Looking at the ad on his phone, he wondered if he got the location wrong, but how many places in town would have that name.  Times were lean for a man with a MBA and he couldn’t afford to be picky.

    It was after five, like the ad specified applicants arrive and inside there were people everywhere. It took a few minute for his eyes to adjust but when they did he thought he might have walked into the wrong doors. Music was playing loudly overhead and the flickering of the fluorescent lights matched its rhythm. Ere was one main stage and two side stage, both with people crowded around them waiving dollar bills.

    “Welcome sir, can I help you?” said a perky blond approaching Ted. She wore no shirt, only a well positioned pair of suspenders  to hold her ample breasts in place and a pair of glasses on her nose for decoration only.

    “I’m here about the job.” Ted tried to keep his eyes focused above her chin. (more…)

  • My Only Human

    Everybody has a death. When a person is born, one of us is born, too, and we stay close to them their whole lives, making sure they stay on the path to meet us in the end. It’s a little like having a guardian angel, I suppose. I like to look at it more as a love story. I am very anxious to meet my human.

    It will be soon.

    I watched her grow from the tiniest baby, to the most adorable toddler, to the sharpest little girl, to an ambitious teenager, then a driven young woman. She’s very successful in her career, although lately she seems lonely and has been trying to find love. She wants a little girl of her own. I can understand. I try to steer her away from those choices, though. I know how hard it is for humans when they have to leave loved ones. She will be with me soon—sooner than I think she’d like—and I wish her to spare the worry of someone missing her. (more…)

  • Old Mother Nitala

    Old Mother Nitala crouched comfortably on her sun-warmed rock, as she had since almost the beginning of days, and prepared to great the next soul. This one approached tentatively, staring about her with wide eyes. When she saw Old Mother Nitala, she stopped.

    Old Mother Nitala gazed at this one thoughtfully. She was dressed in white cloth from neck to her bare toes, and clutched a square brown object to her breast. A “book,” Old Mother Nitala had once heard a spirit call it.

    “Hello?” the woman spoke. “I don’t seem to know where I am.”

    “You are dead, my granddaughter,” Old Mother Nitala informed her.

    “Dead?” Relief bloomed in the woman’s face. “Then I must be on my way to Heaven!”

    Old Mother Nitala nodded gravely. “First you must travel this path and be judged.” She gestured at the trail behind her.

    The woman frowned dubiously at the muddy path. “I’m sorry, but I was expecting something a little different? Saint Peter? Pearly Gates? A host of angels?”

    Old Mother Nitala shok her head. “Down that path lies only your judgement.”

    “How does it, um… work?”

    Old Mother Nitala sighed. “There are three trials, my granddaughter. The first is through the marshes. If in your life you have shown wisdom, you will pass freely. If you have been a fool, the crocodiles will eat you.

    “The second trial is through the forest. If in life you have been generous, you will pass freely. If you have been mean or unkind, the wild dogs will eat you.

    “The third trial is through the plains. If in life you have been brave, you will pass freely. If you have been a coward, the lions will eat you.

    “Pass all three trials, and you will return to the World to guide your children’s children’s children as a beloved ancestor.”

    “WHAT??!!!?? That’s not how it is supposed to work!” the woman shrieked. “I taught Sunday School for years! I know my Bible!” She shook her book at Old Mother Nitala. “There’s nothing in here about crocodiles!”

    “Look,” Old Mother Nitala said patiently. “This was all very clearly explained in the songs of your Mothers.”

    “My mother taught me songs about Jesus, thank you very much, and the Lord our Father who created the world…”

    Old Mother Nitala cackled. “You think a man could have given birth to the world?”

    “Of course! The Bible says it, and I believe it! You’re just a… a… an old witch or something sent to test my faith at the last moment! Lucifer sent you! Well, I’ll show you!” The woman stalked down the trail to the marshes, indignation in every stride.

    Old Mother Nitala shook her head, hoping the woman wouldn’t give the crocodiles indigestion.

    The next soul approached. This woman had shaved her head, and was draped in bright orange cloth. When she saw Old Mother Nitala, the woman put her palms together and bowed respectfully. “Can you tell me where I am, Grandmother?”

    “You are on your way to judgement, my granddaughter.” Once again, as she had since almost the beginning of days, Old Mother Nitala explained the three trials.

    “Oh! So there is no Great Wheel of Transmigration? I cannot be reborn as either mouse or man?”

    “No, my granddaughter.”

    “It seems as though I’ve been wrong my entire life! This is very interesting! You said it’s down this path?” The woman bowed a final time and walked into the marshes.

    Old Mother Nitala smiled. That one would do well, she thought.

  • Shop Girl

    The bell above the door chimed as it opened, letting in a scorch of heat. It hung open for several long minutes and Phoebe considered yelling “in or out” before a robed figure entered. He made a beeline to the clearance rack where last season’s robes hung in a tidy row.

    He held up one robe against his frame, shook his head and shoved it haphazardly back onto the rack. Phoebe slumped against the wall behind the register counter. He was going to be one of those customers. She watched with increasing despair as he pulled robe after robe off the rack until finally he held three options bunched in a sweaty palm and approached her.

    “The fitting room?”

    She gestured to a neon green sign that pulsated over a curtained off room to her right that clearly announced the presence of the fitting room. “No more than four garments at a time,” the words came out long and sullen. “It’s the rules.” (more…)

  • Honour The Dead

    “Emaline! Duck!” Her mother screamed, and she dropped to the dirt without a second thought. Paper thin wings whooshed over her, but their claws missed. A blast of ice chilled her as her mother flung the magic into the beast.

    “Mother!” Emaline cried as she watched the woman fall to the ground as the moth shattered into red shards.

    Her mother’s veins pulse briefly with a faint glow, and she knew that Sheena would never wake again. She knelt next to her mother, and pulled her into her lap.

    “You shouldn’t have done that. The battle was nearly done. If you had just warned me, I could have defended myself. Foolish woman. We could have both made it through this.” She sat with her mother while the last few blasts exploded around her. A few people wailed their grief in the post-battle stillness.

    “Sheena too?” Waldomar’s voice rumbled next to her.

    “How many did we lose?”

    “Four including Sheena.” (more…)

  • The Resurrection

    Hezakiel was agitated about something again. Volesteus could tell because she was pacing in front of his desk. She had also bent her halo from a circle into something resembling an infinity symbol.

    Volesteus sighed and closed his minesweeper window. He’d reached the maximum time limit already and still couldn’t decide which of the last two boxes hid final mine. He hated when they all exploded.

    “What’s eating you, Hez?”

    “Have you read the news?” (more…)

  • Market Crash

    9:45 AM. Wall Street. A legendary location, where fortunes are made and lost in the blink of an eye, where the fates of millions are up for grabs. Where greed is good, compassion has no place, and if you lose your edge, dozens of others will jump to take your place. Boldness is rewarded and hesitation loses fortunes. Bright computer screens lined every wall, floor to ceiling, numbers and letters flying by faster then I could comprehend, the shouts of buyers and sellers on the floor jumbling together into an indistinguishable roar. By the end of the day, the strong would be rich, the weak would be poor, and we would all get together tomorrow to do it again.

    I was not on Wall Street, but the same rules apply whether you are buying shares of companies or shares of lives.

    9:50. Numbers and values were inundating the salesfloor. Most of the buyers were jumping on the news that birth rates were up in the Southern Hemisphere. It was a good opportunity to get in on the ground floor for cheap. Other’s were frantic over increased tension in the Middle East, buying speculations and hedging bets, just in case a new oil war broke out. I was ready to jump in on the next wave of action, but was distracted by my phone buzzing in my pocket.

    9:53. I received a text, number unknown. Curious, I opened it. It was a simple message. “Earthquake. 10:13 AM. SE Asia. 200,000+ dead.” I looked around, as if the sender of the text would be visible, maybe staring at me trying to catch my eye. Instead, everyone around was occupied in their own little world, utterly oblivious to my new information. I checked the clock. I didn’t hesitate to trust the info. You hear stories sometimes of anonymous tips, and no one knew who or where they were from. Maybe from a higher power? We are money people, the big G word doesn’t come up very often, but I knew at least one guy who thought it was God himself. And who am I to disbelieve? There was no time to disbelieve or question. No time for “why me?”

    (more…)

  • June Stories at the Confabulator Cafe

    We had an amazing turnout for our May stories. So many cases of mistaken identity! We’re back with another awesome line-up for June.

    We’re turning our attention to something a little more otherworldly this month. We’ve decided to explore the age-old question of what happens after death. Although perhaps not in the metaphysical or religious sense, exactly.

    Our prompt was “the business of the afterlife.” This can be anything from the mundane to the magical, but all of these tales touch a bit on what the afterlife might look like.

    We’re also pleased to welcome another brand new guest author, Amanda Hadley! We’d also like to welcome back August Baker, another long-time Confabulator who is back with us this month.

    We hope you enjoy our stories. Here is the schedule for June:

    Thursday, June 2: “Market Crash” by August Baker
    Monday, June 6: “The Resurrection” by Emily Mosher
    Monday, June 13: “Honour The Dead” by Anita C. Young
    Thursday, June 16: “Shop Girl” by Eliza Jaquays
    Monday, June 20: “Old Mother Nitala” by Aspen Junge
    Thursday, June 23: “My Only Human” by Sara Lundberg
    Monday, June 27: “White Collar” by Amanda Hadley
    Thursday, June 30: “Working for a Living” by Neil Siemers