I told my friend to write me a short story, the only prompt being that the events took place within an hour or less. She posted hers on her blog. Here’s mine in return.
drop.
In the same second of the same hour of the same day, everyone dropped what they were holding. It was a second in time, no more, just long enough for whatever anyone was carrying to go crashing to the ground. Only for those lucky enough to be alone in their houses with nothing in their hands did the moment go by unnoticed. For everyone else, it was remarkable. Thousands of people in restaurants dropped their forks, halfway to their mouths, as the trays of food from thousands of waiters dropped onto their heads. Money changing hands fell onto counters, ice cream cones fell into laps, expensive china shattered on floors, touchdown runs turned into fumble scrambles, bullets missed their marks, and marching bands marched over their fallen instruments.
In some cases, it was hardly noticed. A writer dropped her pen and picked it back up. The only customer in the bookshop apologized and put the book back on the shelf, the sound still resonating. In some places it was amusing. A silent classroom burst into laughter as all of their pencils hit the floor at the same time. Co-workers on their smoke break looked at each other in puzzlement when they all dropped their cigarettes. People passing the salt apologized sheepishly. In other cases, the effect was more pronounced. A dog on a leash held by nothing ran away. Bowling balls fell down on to the holder’s feet, or backwards as bowlers were mid swing. A dinner party dropped their expensive champagne glasses full of expensive champagne mid-toast. A best man at his best friend’s wedding dropped the wedding rings. Listeners at a symphony, leaning forward in suspense as the crescendo was building were jarred from their meditative states as all of the instruments fell to the ground with a dissonant crash. A woman walking with her baby to the car dropped the car seat. An old man dropped his cane only to find he could stand without it. A boy dropped the last puzzle piece to his puzzle. Movers carrying a heavy couch dropped it on the new hardwoods. Two lovers dropped what they were holding and bent to pick up that of the other.
The second passed in the blink of an eye, where before the blink everything was one way and after the blink everything was another, the event taking place behind closed eyelids. After the second passed, everything went back to the way it was before, except, of course, for the unusually high number of items laying on the ground.




