TaraIsabelZambrano

DARK: Four micros

Living so closely

When the girl falls off a cliff, a few people hear a shriek, see a black dot with flailing arms. Thereafter, fear colors their ohs and ahs, as they talk about her, the color of her dress, her hair, even her eyes, aimlessly staring at the fogged-up windowpane in front of them, their hands pressed on their chests until their breathing is even. Afterward, they sit quiet like a rock in a valley, while her red scarf stuck on a crumbling log in the dark-snuffed creek, recedes like a worn-out heart.

Off season

Every Fall, for a night, he comes to my bed, his neckline smelling of dirt, bug sap, roots stuck on his tongue. Together we milk the night, grind against the jawline of the moon, his breath a hot wire extended across the length of my body, a hint of early love. Through the dark, life keeps bleeding through. Come morning, I scrub his body, place him under a fallen trunk where mushrooms and yearning spore. When the ache gets too big to live, I lean in, curl to the earth’s breathing while the sunlight whipped to a peak, falls and falls.

 Larger things

It’s an ordinary night when the earth feels juvenile, skips hours, splinters on its surface. It grinds its arctic teeth, wobbles in and out of its orbit, as if it has given up waiting for answers. It’s only a few billion years old, fossils peeping from its underbelly. She rests her head against the periphery of unfamiliar. The stars down and above, shoot aimlessly in the leather of night, looping into themselves like spun sugar, sucked into their gravity. Light years pass by. When the solar system opens its jaw, the moons and the oceans fall out, dimpling the dark, each planet a snuffed-out flame, with nothing to give.

Cosmic eyes

The space station is a cold, white skeleton in the abyss. The astronaut breathes between manuals, operating instructions, muscular atrophy and fluid shift. Samples of moon dust, pieces of meteorites. He imagines his wife standing next to their toddler, pointing to the sky. The code written inside each of them, bodies, dust, rocks, even gravity. Cells from his bone loss floating in the thermosphere, each time less and less of him makes it to home as if the dark is keeping a piece of him, staring at it. 

Tara Isabel Zambrano is a South Asian writer and the author of a short story collection, RUINED A LITTLE WHEN WE ARE BORN, by DZANC books upcoming in Fall 2024. Her work has won the first prize in The Southampton Review Short Short Fiction Contest 2019, a second prize in Bath Flash Award 2020, been a Finalist in Bat City Review 2018 Short Prose Contest and Mid-American Review Fineline 2018 Contest. Her flash fiction has been published in The Best Small Fictions 2019, The Best Micro Fiction 2019, 2020 Anthology, Wigleaf Top50. She lives in Texas.

Submit Your Stories

Always free. Always open. Professional rates.