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Alone in a Room Thinking about All the People Who Have Died
Andersen Prunty


A man walks upstairs. It takes him years. Many of the stairs are broken. Some are missing altogether. He reaches the attic. It’s filled with boxes of memories in the form of manufactured debris. Why do people call these memories? They make him mad. He needs room to think. He shoves open the attic window and throws the first box out. It bursts into flame on its way down and lands on the ground with a small explosion, smoke blooming like a demon. The man likes this. In turn, he throws each box, every little thing he can get his hands on, out the window. They all burst into flame. Eventually there is a sizable fire beneath the window, threatening the house. The man sits down in the middle of the attic floor and thinks about everyone he’s known who has died. The number is substantial. The memories of these people are horrendous and devastatingly sad. He closes his eyes and curses himself for ever getting close to these dead people.

The fire roars. It’s closer now. The man is pretty sure the house is on fire.

He opens his eyes. While in his reverie, darkness has fallen. The fire paints the attic with orange and yellow air. Snowflakes flutter outside in the darkness and blow into the attic. The man wonders if the fire will cause them to melt before they reach him. He opens his mouth and sticks out his tongue. The first snowflake hits it and tastes like a tear. After that, they stream in. The man lets them assault his tongue.

The fire enshrouds the house, blackening it, curling it inward from the edges.

The man, with the taste of tears on his tongue, closes his eyes while the heat of his memories consumes him.


Andersen Prunty has run out of biographical information. He is currently on holiday in an effort to generate more Experience and thus gruel for writing about himself.