4 Short Parables Revolving Around the Theme of Travel

by A.B. Goelman

Issue 0 :: Spring 2007 (stories)

I. Frequent Flier

When third-generation superhero Walter Bennett Remington III swooped down from the sky, supporting the 747 on his back, no one applauded. Not the people in the airplane, not their worried relatives on the ground. Everyone knew about the second law of thermodynamics. They weren’t sure of the details, but they knew the basics: all power has to come from somewhere. Each time power changes hands, you lose a little of it.

And they knew where the power that had Walter swooping in the sky, grinning and pirouetting, had come from. It had come from them. The passengers felt little—smaller than they used to—as they climbed down the stairs to the cement landing pad. One older man pressed his hand into his back. “I already had a slipped disc,” he told no one in particular, “but it hurts worse now.”

Walter pretended not to hear, although his super hearing made it impossible not to. Instead he flew off to his family’s Ski Chateau of Solitude in the mountains of Switzerland.

“The world doesn’t appreciate us,” he told his mother. She was halfway down the mountain on her new short skis, but she heard him just fine. She skidded to a halt, kicking up a plume of previously untouched powder. “Great skiing today, Wally,” she told him. “Really great. Pure powder.”

“Don’t call me Wally, Mother.” Walter flew past her to the highest mountain in the Swiss Alps. The view would have been spectacular for anyone, but with Walter’s super-vision it was incredible. He could see most of the inhabited world. Billions of humans going about their business. Working in factories, farms, offices. Sitting on the street begging for pennies and walking down the sidewalk in their business suits. And they all hated him, and the rest of his type.

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"4 Short Parables Revolving Around the Theme of Travel" is roughly 2400 words.

A.B. Goelman has published short stories in On Spec, the L. Ron Hubbard Writers of the Future anthology, and Dragon, Knights, and Angels. His next short story will be appearing in the Spring issue of Fantasy Magazine. He lives in the Pacific Northwest with his wife and the rain.

Table of contents

stories poetry reports art comics

Sundown
by Debbie Moorhouse

Painsharing
by John Walters

A Yellow Sun with a Purple Crayon
by Michelle Garren Flye

A Problem With The Law
by Neil Davies

Songs Of The Dead
by Sarah Singleton and Chris Butler

One in Ten Thousand
by Athena Workman

4 Short Parables Revolving Around the Theme of Travel
by A.B. Goelman

The Doctrine of the Arbitrariness of the Sign
by Shweta Narayan

The Infinite Monkeys Protocol
by Lavie Tidhar

Moments Of Brilliance
by Jason Stoddard

Cutting A Figure
by Charlie Anders

The Eternal's Last Request
by Joshua Babcock

Where Water Fails
by Rusty Barnes

Longs to Run
by David Bulley

Pepé In Critical Condition
by Tomi Shaw

Sown Seeds
by Errid Farland

She Dreams in Colors, She Dreams in Hope
by F. John Sharp

Chicken
by John Mantooth

The Tale that Launched a Thousand Ships
by Janrae Frank

Trying to Make Coffee
by William Doreski

Fade In Fade Out
by Beverly A. Jackson

As a Child
by Kristine Ong Muslim

No Motor Home
by Kenneth Ryan

Past Due: Final Notice
by Kenneth Ryan

Fortune
by Kenneth Ryan

Dialogue with the Hollows of Your Body
by Benjamin William Buchholz

Ah Those Letters in the Attics or Modern Lit
by Lida Broadhurst

The first day of the last day my face fell off
by Rohith Sundararaman

Invitation To Kaohsiung
by Allen McGill

Poetry Code
by Robert Peake

Gutmouth
by Konrad Kruszewski

Kmantis Hunch5
by Konrad Kruszewski

Cosmonaut's Last Day
by Jamie Dee Galey

Changing Destiny
by Fefa

Bird and Ghost
by Sarah Coyne

Media Hype
by Jamie Dee Galey

The Kiss
by Konrad Kruszewski

Having Fun at the Party
by Fran Giordano

Jack Rabbit
by Jamie Dee Galey

Belly Busters
by Bruce Boston and Larry Dickison


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