Each year, hundreds of writers from around the Central Coast, state, country, and world roll up their sleeves and start writing. They click on keyboards. They scratch pens on paper. They hammer away at typewriters.


Then, they submit their tiny literary endeavors to the annual 55 Fiction contest, started years ago by founder Steve Moss at New Times in San Luis Obispo. A group of staff judges wades through the entries, scoring each one. At the end of the weeks-long marathon reading session, the stories with the most points are declared fit to print.
As summer slides out of June and officially settles into July, take some time to peruse these brief slices of wit, wisdom, murder, mayhem, folly, fun, foolishness, and more.
What you choose to wear while you read these works is up to you, but may we remind you: These stories are short, but other things donāt have to be. Weāre looking at you, Mr. High-Waters.
Ryan Miller is executive editor of the Santa Maria Sun and New Times. Send comments to rmiller@santamariasun.com.
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Windows of Thought
John hated looking through the dirty window. He had started to hate his existence. Day in and day out he was a slave to the working clock. Heād had enough. He opened the 50th story window and jumped through.
After he was inside, he told his boss that his days of window washing were through.
Kevin Davis
Hartland, Wis.
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Bad Choice
The gun was so close I could have stuck my nose in the barrel. Cold sweat mixed with warm urine that snaked between goose bumps down my leg. I ran; I ran until my lungs swelled and oozed. But I left her in the alley. She probably wonāt want a second date after that.
Ron Ingaway
San Luis Obispo
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The Doe
Father brought the dead doe into our backyard, strung her from the deck by the hooves, neck suspended, mouth open as if bleating. He was careful to separate coat from tissue; blood down her belly, legs. At dinner, I saw purple stains under his fingernails. Father, who flew me to bed, who checked bathwater temperature.
Leslie St. John
San Luis Obispo
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Ā Onward and Upward
She was nothing if not an accomplished rock climber.
Strong and lithe, she honed her considerable skills, each time setting her sights on ever-greater heights.
When she grew bored of scaling the local topography she gathered her things and headed off, traveling the world in search of new conquests, each diamond bigger than the next.
Pat Rigley
Woodland
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Ā Not Only in New Guinea
I step into the chicken coop. Nine pairs of beady eyes turn to me expectantly. The chickens race to the trough as soon as last nightās dinner is emptied. They begin pecking furiously. Black beans, churros, and arroz con pollo. They donāt know, my mother reassures. I insist itās trickery of the worst kind.
Mackenzie Morrison
Hartland, Wis.
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Ā What They Say is True
So … to make a long story short … she waltzed her way through most of life (all by herself) partly on basic (very basic) good looks and partly on a strong, healthy body. With time, the good looks faded and the healthy body weakened. Now sheās learning to tango. It does, by the way, take two.
Sybil Ashley
Los Osos
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Ā Five Lasagnas, One Call
She cooks lasagna when avoiding something she doesnāt want to do, something important, necessary, painful. Sheās made lasagna five times in the past two weeks. I savored the first one. The second one tasted better than the first. The third, fourth, and fifth I couldnāt swallow. Soon sheāll have to make the doctorās appointment.
Sue Ann Horan
Austin, Texas
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Ā A Cry for Help
Tony found the note slipped under his door:
Come tonite before he gets home.
My life may depend on it.
Margo
Such careless penmanship, the vulgarized ātonite.ā What were they teaching these days? Tony crumpled the paper, then tossed it into the wastebasket. Later while driving to work, he wondered who Margo was.
Paul Alan Fahey
Nipomo
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Sometimes, the Decision Just Makes Itself
āThink about our future,ā Jerome had begged her, and all through dinner, Janet did. Somewhere between his motherās disappointed, āWe had always hoped Jerome would enter the priesthood,ā and her delighted, āIām sorry, Dear, Jerome didnāt tell us you were a vegetarian,ā Janet decided.
āDidnāt Jerome tell you? I write porno novels. Iām Vivian Vavavoom.ā
Ron Pearson
West Hartford, Conn.
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Ā So Long, World
While walking along, eyes to the sky, I slipped, tumbling down this well. Fright came and went, but the dark stayed all day, until I came to embrace it. When offered a rope, I decided, saying, āNay, but do be a dear and bring me some wine and a woman with whom to enjoy it.ā
Mina Fada
San Luis Obispo
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Numbers
Sanjay was in the hospital on a defibrillator. He was the number one math genius in the world, and I, second.
I mentioned, āYour room is a dull number: 1472.ā
āNo,ā Sanjay replied. āItās the smallest number expressible as the sum of two cubes in different ways.ā
Unplugging his defibrillator, I said, āEnough is enough.ā
Michael T. Chambers
San Luis Obispo
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Free fall
His world became summer bright outside, winter dark inside, with no spring to bridge the two. Only tumbling in a perpetual fall. His life narrowed to a series of breaths floating in free fall, as peaceful as heād ever been, until the rope snapped taut and his feet came up just short of the ground.
Edward P. Morgan III
Seminole, Fla.
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The Search
They gloomily walked the streets of the little tourist town. They found chestnut tarts, goat cheese popovers, and marzipan muffins. When they stopped for a drink, she ordered a decaf caramel macchiato. He ordered a small coffee. āIs it unreasonable to want to enjoy my vacation?ā he said. āAll I want is a decent donut.
Holly Frank
San Luis Obispo
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The Helper
Eunice fidgeted as her sister continued.
āNo one ever tells me anything. I could have helped with Dad, but didnāt know heād fallen.ā
āWell, Jenāā
āAnd I only missed the funeral because George got pneumonia. You know Iām happy to helpāā
āJen, I called because Momās got Alzheimerās and needs constant care. Itās your turn.ā
Rob Weibe
Rocky River, Ohio
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Abode
I hate my place. Itās so small, and it leaks every time it rains. Shoddy workmanship. But itās the bugs. Theyāre the worst. I canāt seem to escape them. I canāt exactly call anyone, though. Even if I could, exterminators wouldnāt come near the place. Really, though, the blame is mine. I couldāve chosen cremation.
Bill MacAulay
Hartland, Mich.
This article appears in Jul 2-9, 2009.


