Butterflies

# Butterfly

Aquamarine landed silently on the leaf next to her father, her wings beating softly in the warm summer air. She loved flying on a night like this, when the heat that had baked the ground during the day was released in wave upon wave of warmth. It was the whole world breathing out, lifting her on its breath.

But that was the way that Aquamarine saw things, and her father considered her a frivalous creature.

“Father?”

Aquamarine’s father did not turn his eyes away from the battlefield. “Captain,” he replied flatly. He would only ever address her by her rank here on the field of battle. She would have traded every breath the world had just to hear him call her by her own name again.

“How goes it?”

Aquamarine’s father lowered his viewing glass. He looked weary, and his wings were drooping and gray.

“The grass continues its onslaught against the tree’s territory. The earthworms have broken through the northern sea shell barrier, there are slugs on the march …”

Aquamarine grabbed her father instinctively as he stumbled forward, his legs suddenly to weak to support him. His wings had turned a deeper gray, with barely a trace of their original bold red to be seen.

“When did you last sleep father?”

“I will sleep when the garden is secure, when our people are safe.”

Gently lowering her father down, Aquamarine rested beside him on the leaf. Beneath them, the sounds of the garden raged. The leaf trembled, and Aquamarine’s wings fluttered instinctively.

“Fly,” her father gasped. “Fly while you still can.”

“Shhh, there’s plenty of time. I’m only at my third moon.”

“This war has run for more than a hundred moons, child. My father fought, his father, his father before that. What are we fighting for, if not the freedom to fly?”

Aquamarine smiled. “Sometimes, father, I think you fight because you like it.”

“Hah,” the old man laughed. His wings flared with colour for a moment, an explosion of red and crimsons. Blood colours. Soldier’s colours. He struggled to his feet. “I suppose I might have one or two more moons in me yet, Captain.”

“Sir,” replied Aquamarine, and snapped off a clumsy salute before taking once more to the skies. The warm air bouyed her up over the field of battle and she thought, just for a moment, that she her father take his eyes away from the war that raged all around them to watch his daughter fly.

It was a war worth winning, she agreed. It was a war for the freedom to fly.

Football Town

For the #fridayflash crowd, and a little limbering up before doing some “stunt fiction” at the British International Comics Show.

As always, I started off with some random factors from http://shortstoryideas.herb.me.uk. Today’s kicker was “A School is the location, anticipation is the theme. A deckchair is an object that plays a part in the story.”

From this we get … Football Town.

He had been at the school as long as anyone could remember. Some people in the town even joked that he’d been out the field, already shouting at some long forgotten quarterback, as they built the school around him. Some people didn’t even know his real name. He was simply “Coach”.

But this was a football town, and being called “Coach” was second only to being called “God”.

This year however, had been different. The team had been knocked out of two cups already and had had to resort to friendly games just to fill the schedule and keep the people in the bleachers on a Sunday evening. This was a football town. It’s team didn’t get knocked out before the quarter finals, and they didn’t play friendlies. Ever.

Some people in town were starting to say that maybe, just maybe, Coach was past it.

That was why the team was out on the field for the sixth night in a row, running drill and drill, with Coach sitting in is quirky old deck chair, shouting instructions through a rusty megaphone. The voice of God commanded, but the flesh of his flock was undoubtedly weak.

“Come on you weaklings!” he roared, the megaphone crackling. “Pick your feet up!”

Bryce, the new quarterback, fumbled yet another throw and tripped himself up running to pick up the lost ball. The Coach sighed.

It was true, he had been here a long time, maybe even too long, even by his standards. He had to admit though, he loved football, and he loved to win. He had hoped this year that he might be able to do it without calling in any favours, but another crop of weaklings like these and he would be finished. Thankfully, second to coaching, the other thing that the Coach was good at, was favours.

“Come here, Son,” he said, a rare note of compassion entering his voice as his no-star quarterback limped to the touchline. “You know what kind of life you could have, with a football scholarship? You know how they treat a star quarterback in this town?”

“Yes Sir!” replied the boy.

“Then tell me,” asked the Coach, getting out of his deckchair, “What you give to have that life?”

“Coach,” the boy replied, “You know I’d do anything. Anything …”

“Good,” said the Coach, “Then I think we can make a deal.”

In this town, being called “Coach” was second to being called “God” …