Every Wednesday, the most generous Rochelle posts a photo-prompt and challenges writers from around the globe for their own 100-word take on the picture. This challenge is known across the world as the Friday Fictioneers.

PHOTO PROMPT -© Dawn Q. Landau http://talesfromthemotherland.me/
Along the tracks, in that wild envelope of green, Whitley could go five miles without remembering.
She could pretend that she and Beau were just on a hike, like those East Coast tourists used to do in their $300 hiking boots and their dryer-fresh socks. Laughing, taking selfies and imagining themselves frontiersmen.
There was nothing like that now.
On the highway, every other mile-marker fell to a tangle of kudzu and broken cars, the mummified drivers still propped behind the wheels. And those tourists? Rotting in their beds in their homes far away.
These days, she kept to the tracks.
—
Thanks for visiting!
Follow the blue frog button to view all the contributors or to submit your own:
PS: Microsoft Word counts hyphenated words as a single word. But does Rochelle? If not, I get two demerits.
I love the “Thanks for visiting!” at the end. You crack me up. This is one spooky hundred words. Nice work.
LikeLike
Thanks for visiting my spooky world mwah hahahahah
I do come off as awfully happy about all that doom and gloom.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Powerful imagery. Bleeding contempt in the second paragraph; proving it’s warranted in the fourth. Enjoyed this one… feeling the dark side this week.
LikeLike
Thanks Kimberly! Is it dark in here or is it just us?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Miserable Februaries will do that to a person. (I hope that’s all it is…?)
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh boy, me too!
LikeLike
A very good post-apocalyptic tale. The nostalgia for days gone by was very effective.
LikeLike
Thank you kindly and thanks for the visit Helena!
LikeLike
Really creepily well done.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good tale. I wouldn’t have expected ‘post apocalyptic’ from this prompt, well done,
LikeLike
That’s maybe because the only quality time I get with my teenage son is talking about Walking Dead. The railway tracks feature big in that. Anyway, I didn’t let any zombies in my post apocalyptic party. Thanks for visiting Sandra!
LikeLike
I love post-apocalyptic fiction, so I did a little secret internal squeal of glee when I got to that line about mummified drivers. I like this piece a lot.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I got a squeal of glee that it resonated! Thanks for the kind words.
LikeLike
Very eerie! I would like to know how she escaped the horror.
LikeLike
You have me wondering myself.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Post apocalypse done in a very subtle yet effective style!
janet
LikeLiked by 1 person
Whew. Keeping to tracks seems like a good idea in that world.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I hope they stay away from Terminus. I like the story, pretending to survive. Nice work.
LikeLike
Dear Karen,
It took me a couple of reads to realize this was post-apocalyptic. Nicely done and thank you for not inviting Zombies. We had a rash of them for a while and I don’t miss them at all.
The image of people mummified in their cars, however, is powerful.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow .. there are but few survivors afterwards.. really a surprising end..
LikeLike
if anything, these folks died what they loved doing.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh creepy. I love a good post apocalypse story. Thanks for sharing.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That is one spooky story. Five miles without remembering the mummies in the cars. I don’t think I’d be able to go 5 feet. And the big question why did she survive and for how long? Loved it.
LikeLike
Irene, your comments got me so intrigued I wrote another 300 words setting up the disaster and answering your questions. But it was so depressing and disturbingly plausible so I don’t want to say! Thanks for visiting 🙂
LikeLike
Nicely-rendered post-apocalyptic story. And in the attempt to answer your question, I think the hyphenated words count as one.
LikeLiked by 1 person
The hyphenated words seems-like-a-slippery-slope, but I’ll happily take it on this one. Thanks for reading and commenting!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Dear Karen,
Well imagined and expertly rendered. The story has legs and you might want to file it away for future development.
Aloha,
Doug
LikeLike
Thanks Doug! I don’t know if I’m up for the post-apocalypse but it’s something to think about 😉 Thanks for visiting
LikeLike
Very effective! I’d enjoy a sequel….
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh boy, it’s dark!
LikeLike
I’ve never tried writing any post-apocalypse stuff – too much John Wyndham force-fed to me by teachers who were trying to be trendy. Very boys’-own-adventures stuff I seem to remember.
Think this tale might inspire me to have a go. From that wild envelope of green to those mummified drivers and rotting (love that word!) corpses is quite a spine-tingling leap, but at the same time the whole piece feels grounded in a believable reality. Really like the walking to forget.
Ah, teenage sons… My son wasn’t into horror but I now look back quite nostalgically to those hours we spent watching the entire collection of Rocky movies.
LikeLiked by 1 person
MJ – You have me grinning imagining the days when I fondly recall zombie uprisings. You should give it a go in that post-apocalyptic world. I was surprised what I found there.
LikeLike
If I’ve learnt one thing in this life, it’s never turn your back on a mummified driver. Enjoyed the set-up you’ve done here of some sort of horrific, post-apocalyptic world.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I can imagine the scene so well, and the feeling of “normality” as opposed to horror when she’s on the tracks and can’t see the devastation and mummified corpses.
Great story – I just read the comment you made on my story and I agree, we are both watching too much “Walking Dead” 🙂
I use MS Word for my word count too and even before I did, I have always counted hyphenated words as a single word 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Just as I was starting to crave the smell of dryer-fresh socks, the scent of death began creeping in. The kudzu taking over reminded me of that series 100 Years After Man. Well done.
LikeLiked by 1 person
is it post WW-III? a bit chilling
LikeLiked by 1 person
I was thinking post-superplague, but there aren’t many around to know for sure. Thanks for the visit!
\
LikeLike