www.storymania.com
Storymania Logo

 

 

Short Stories




The Rivals by Michael Harris Adrian Belfast, a young and aspiring author, chances upon the works of one Lucas Slaughter, a person... [5,415 words]
Aletha by Randall Barfield . [330 words]
The Loan by Jack Linton Jimmy Camp is about as down and out as he can get until he takes out a loan from Beze's Emporium. [6,026 words]
Burning Sulfur by Michael J Musto Man Kills and old friend. Story is about his actions he takes as the police arrive. The words in... [454 words]
Yonder Ridge by Ramon Collins The Indian Territory (Oklahoma) of the western U. S. in the late 1880s harbored survivors, both Wh... [553 words]
Will It Ever Stop Raining? by Neil Southern Nothing to do with the UK floods [119 words]
Whispers On The Wind. Hopes Quest by Jessi Whispers on the wind, tell stories of many. Heroes, villains, kings, peasants... [577 words]
Waiting For Thetake-Off by Pankaj M Prasad Neale Steade An experience of waiting to take off. [674 words]
Torture On The Tortuous Rode by James L Palagar A young boy encounters trouble after walking home from a trip to the hospital; a p... [4,679 words]
The Way Things Are by Corey Moon a story I wrote recently about how my life is at the moment, and how it was in the past. It ... [452 words]
The Wasp by Antoine Louis A Young Man's struggle against a Diverse Inhabitant of The Insect Population [1,424 words]
The Sun Dried Monogramed Towel by Natalie Pierpont Short story about two people, their relationship, and the beach. [136 words]
The Silk Pajama by Amit Shankar Saha - [1,866 words]
The Sadist's Pain by Matthew Kelly My very first effort. A little vignette into the life of an upper class sex worker. Set in To... [758 words]
The Portal Of Venting by Kelly Tagaban A fun loving story of a day in the life of a wanna be super mom and grand old granny. How... [1,840 words]
The Connexion Of Khayaddi Cura by Nicholas Robb A story about a guy that finally gets to meet his siblings. [1,783 words]
The Caregiver by Erasmus Lion A middle-aged man wakes up in a hospital room under peculiar circumstances to face his own death ... [2,402 words]
The 13th Victim by Heather Burke Sadie May is on the run but from what is the question. When she meets Slade a dark stranger wit... [1,974 words]
Take Care by Matt Lenox Taking care of a dog is not so easy? [2,134 words]
Soliloque by Abhijit Sarma Barua A raalisation of an well established man that it is no use to exhibit luxurious celebration, in view ... [2,702 words]
Soldier & The Insurgent by Kabbash Kidnapped soldier confronts his Abductor [1,147 words]
Singing The Thirteen Year Old Blues....B.B King Ain;T Got Nothing On Me by Kelly Tagaban My youngest daughters journey from grad... [1,129 words]
Sacred Slaugher by Kobra An experiment consisting of poetry elements and a short story. I like the way it turned out. [343 words]
Roll Tide Roll by C L T Clement Le Tallec Steve's teacher offend's his passion for Bama Crimson Tide [255 words]
Return To The Wild by Matt Lenox Civilization takes a few steps back back for one, while it goes forward for the other. [1,037 words]
Remembering Amma by Vaishali Shroff She's fun. She's loving. No one can make pickles better. She's Amma. [617 words]
Reasons To Be Beautiful by Reed Alexander "Most men live a life of quiet desparation". Most of us live in our own personal soap o... [6,094 words]
Rainbow -Between The Storm And The Sunshine by Jessi Big fat raindrops dripped off my nose. Ew. Well he got what he want... [660 words]
No Child Left Behind by Matt Lenox Lack of attention can be a dangerous aspect in certain situations! [3,747 words]
No Angels Or Devils by Michael Potter A short story about an avenging angel radio play, no angels or devils, just us. [638 words]
Near Miss by Sally Chase Well this is just a piece, of a short story actually. Don't know, how I feel about it, since it's not... [382 words]
Nathan's Last Call by Jake A Potter The title is still a work in progress but i have the main idea figured out i just need some ... [895 words]
Just A Ride by Natalie Pierpont A young girl tries to find herself through rediscovering her childhood. [781 words]
Judged For The Past Am I Cherokee.....I Sure Think So by Kelly Tagaban Delimas we sometimes face as a devided race. Being of Iri... [1,497 words]
If Silence Was Ever Lucky� by Pandian Chelliah - [762 words]
How She Stirs Not At All by Gregory Novak - [319 words]
Home, For A Funeral by Christopher E Nolen - [2,272 words]
Herman Telesco by Bryn Lovitt this is the story of a very very lonely man. [526 words]
Going Home by Giroux a young boy being forced into what his parents think will be a great future decides to take a trip a... [2,240 words]
God Force Reverses Time by Michael Potter A short fable about the end of war. [842 words]
Genie No More by Vaishali Shroff It's not the ice age. But definitely the end before you begin. [612 words]
For Louise by Kay Arnold For, and about, a wonderful loved woman [1,165 words]
Fireworks By The Water by Bk Kinsel - [116 words]
Confessions Of A Sad Mind by KumarR A love story. [1,361 words]
Charlie's Monkeys by Sara E Johnson Charlie buys 200 monkeys for five cents a piece...must read! [500 words]
Brief Encounter Of Love by J E T Riley True love and regret [751 words]
Angel Dolls by Chelsea Schneider - [454 words]
Alexi's Fine Exquisite Meals by Matt Lenox A restauraunt review that no chef wants [707 words]
Again It Begins by Michael Potter Abstract doodle about the end [130 words]
A Childs Story by Harvey Cheatham About a child that was abandoned by his mother [1,474 words]
The White Asteroid by Michael Potter Space miners make a curious find. [222 words]
Wwii: A Soldier's Experience by Wanderer Bass This is a piece of writing I un-earthed from the depths of my room that I wrote aw... [556 words]
Worlds Apart by Gregory Novak A series of piggybacking streams of consciousness, effectively stages of one man's reflection on t... [1,595 words]
Who Will Feed The Cattle? by Fiedler A young man with problems with his town sheriff is wrongfully accused of a crime. [2,333 words]
Unseeing Eyes by Golda Velez Short futuristic 'what-if' about opening the eyes of a young hotshot. [1,714 words]
The Summer by Bk Kinsel A part of a short story that I am writing. [173 words]
The Oddest Couple On Earth by Konstantinos Tzikas Strange, short piece about a dysfunctional couple. [1,440 words]
The National Anthem by Deis Innovant The twelve-year olds of a Primary school are forced to sing their national anthem over and ... [901 words]
The Monsterboys by Jimmy Mason This is a story not to be read by those who are easy to offend. A gritty story of a group of fr... [5,298 words]
The Mad Diarist by Gregory Novak The first fragments of a diary have been discovered buried beneath the dust of an old condemned... [347 words]
The Little Ketchup Incident by Brandon D Christopher This is an excerpt from my just-published first novel, 'Dirty Little Altar Boy.' Av... [1,922 words]
The Crash!!! by Brady Kalt This is a story about when I crashed. [142 words]
The Cat And The Shotgun by Bryan King Just read. its good. [787 words]
Strong Enough For A Man by Eric Bridges Can life get worse when you smell armpits all day? It may when you have a pothead room... [1,066 words]
Stranded At Dusk by Gregory Novak I've labeled this as a short story, although my original intent was to develop this into a lon... [1,690 words]
Something Wrong With Jonny by Mark Evan Dark, twisted tale about a boy with OCD and his bullies. [2,939 words]
Searching For Hope by Jessi She wasnt rich. She wasnt extremely intellect. She wasnt completely beautiful. But she was k... [488 words]
Rochester Love Story by Hoffmeier A walk into the past [1,289 words]
Reverend Mattew by Bryan King Revised and edited. [1,229 words]
Reflections On A Sunrise by Gregory Novak A very old fable I stumbled across that I had written some years ago. I still reading ... [1,037 words]
Pop by Lukas The world goes pop. New Orleans, two possible affairs and a flight across continents brings everything to ... [888 words]
People Aren�T Built For These Lonely Times by Kay Arnold A young couple is drifting in space, drifting apart [1,354 words]
Narcissistic Fairy Folk by Jimmy Mason A tale of the darker nature of fairy folk [1,824 words]
Magnolia by Liilia Morrison A young woman finds out what a magnolia smells like [1,208 words]
Lucky Day by Kay Arnold Revenge- The only excuse for inventing a cell phone with a camera [1,225 words]
Kaveri - A Short Story by Suryaprabha Easwar Dedicated to The Girl Child of India [1,682 words]
Judgment Day In Eden Hills by Jimmy Mason Hell on earth, starting in a small town. [3,733 words]
It's About Time
Iron Beak by Thomas Lee A crazy duck attacks a person and is sent to prison. Poor Emerald. Inspired by actual events. [2,442 words]
In Search Of The Missing Website by Rainier Wong Felecia was working on her client's website when it suddenly vanished. Joe and... [910 words]
I Think You'd Like Her by Gregory Novak A soliloquy of sorts, we find a young man reflecting on a love now lost. [1,440 words]
I Had Another Dream Last Night by Neil Southern Continuing a quest for reality [147 words]
Hells' Populous by Wanderer Bass This is chapter one of a comic idea that got turned into a story. It's about types of troops de... [439 words]
Guitar Man by Brian J Hankins A wonderful short story about Willie and his flattop guitar. [485 words]
From A Macaroni Of Doubt by Sean Joathan This is an excerpt from a novel. [3,455 words]
Frank's Sports Shop by Scott Edward Clark Walker A man named Frank is just trying to run a small sport's shop in a world overrun by music. [1,479 words]
Ephraim by Randall Barfield - [443 words]
Doctor Trek - Cracked by Ian Kidd When Ian Kidd and Ace are attacked by Ogrons, and Ramsay Street is nuked, Captain Who fea... [10,028 words]
Djinn by Jay Phillips This story is, at least in my opinion, one of the best stories I have ever written. It is a new take on a... [1,427 words]
Curiosty by Kristopher K Starliper Alex regrets his curiosity. [209 words]
Chain Reaction by Aamanrah - [1,473 words]
Bloody Bones by Jay Phillips This story is a new take on many of the old legends which have been passed down to me through the ... [2,257 words]
And The Winner Is by Liilia Morrison A summer camp sports competition has a surprise ending [1,132 words]
A Trip To Grandmothers House by Brian J Hankins A cute story for the whole family. [1,017 words]
A Soldiers Recount by Corey Moon This is a made up story that is based off a battle in WWII. [1,829 words]
A Resubmission Of 'an Audience With The King' by Ann Gordon This is a piece of last years work which seems to been deleted of... [662 words]
20 Dollars To Fear by Jimmy Mason This story hold a special place in my heart. A story of a strange night in a bar [1,437 words]

Go to page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 [13] 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
TITLE (EDIT)
It's About Time
DESCRIPTION
Ups and downs in the world of quantum physics
[1,475 words]
TITLE KEYWORD
Humor
AUTHOR
Liilia Morrison
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Writer and artist living in South Florida
[August 2016]
AUTHOR'S OTHER TITLES (22)
A Thousand Camels (Poetry) A caravan of long ago [173 words] [History]
A Treat For Heinke (Short Stories) A girl finds hope during wartime [1,028 words] [Spiritual]
A Werewolf? (Short Stories) A man entrances a woman in Miami, or is he a werewolf? [1,492 words] [Mystical]
And The Winner Is (Short Stories) A summer camp sports competition has a surprise ending [1,132 words]
As It Comes (Short Stories) A discarded, ragged notebook found on the sidewalk brings impressions and thoughts to the person who found it. [756 words] [Drama]
Down In The Country (Short Stories) The end of the line ain't what it's cracked up to be. [840 words] [Drama]
Endangered (Poetry) A love goes bad [45 words] [Romance]
Garlic, Ginger And Golden Seal (Short Stories) An old woman's recipe for a long life [1,868 words] [Mystery]
Grandma, I Love You (Non-Fiction) Memories of my maternal grandmother [1,027 words] [Biography]
How Lizard Lenny Svaed My Life (Short Stories) A woman escapes life under the El thanks to a man called Lizard Lenny [1,255 words] [Relationships]
Just Another Joe (Short Stories) A gumshoe takes it as it comes [1,096 words] [Health]
Kylie (Short Stories) Success is not always what we think it is. A girl chooses between fame or love. [1,700 words]
Magnolia (Short Stories) A young woman finds out what a magnolia smells like [1,208 words]
Ode To Wayne Dyer (Poetry) A light roast of self-help books [262 words] [Humor]
On Turning Seventy (Essays) A woman ponders the march of time [717 words] [Motivational]
Ovidio Gets A Smoke (Short Stories) A party turns sour but Ovidio ends up sittin' pretty. [1,160 words] [Suspense]
She Saw It All (Poetry) Statue of Liberty Saw 9-11 [190 words]
Teacups And Time (Poetry) A troubled, cold soul finally finds warmth [151 words] [Spiritual]
Thank You For Not Sleeping (Short Stories) Thoughts go all over the page during the night [1,257 words] [Mind]
The Mysterious Gypsy (Short Stories) Among old photos of Northern people, an exotic gypsy's photo appears. Who is she? [1,457 words] [History]
Tom's Moon (Short Stories) A little doll makes a difference [857 words]
Too Late For Coffee (Short Stories) An old man's last days with an angel [1,489 words] [Spiritual]
It's About Time
Liilia Morrison

�Time travel is impossible.� Dr. Bleczy said. The professor of quantum physics spoke in a heavy accent, probably Central European. Hadley Hall, largest of the university�s three auditoriums, was packed. Ninety percent of the audience, however, was not physics students. Most were unaware of the energy formula, black holes or the concept of big bang. They were there because of a name. That name was Dr. Bleczy.

Who was this man and why this crowd? On an ordinary Tuesday morning lectures in Hadley Hall were attended by a handful of dedicated students. These men and women would graduate to major scientific contributions. The rest needed this course to pass the curriculum. Skidding by during finals, their goal was not knowledge, but a degree. With that piece of lambskin, doors would open to jobs and careers, often with the help of family or friends.

Why, then, did so many students jam the hall today? The regular professor, Dr. Hausleiter, was in Bern. Most of the class had no idea where Bern was. To their relief, it was in another country, another continent. Not many people liked or appreciated Dr. Hausleiter. It was hard to hear him. He mumbled his way through a lecture, scribbling illegible notes on a giant green board. He often blew his nose. Living in an abstract world of formulas and theorems, the man was oblivious to heckling, jeering and the flight of spitballs from higher rows.

This university had clout. Its president had been a world leader. Front-page news for years, he spent his prime in the public fish bowl. Now, seventy-six years old, he seldom came out of his office. Few knew where his office was.

The president had made a call. He did not physically make that call. It was the chief aide in his well-staffed office who made that call, in the president�s name.

�The president would like you to present a guest lecture during the university�s science symposium.� Formal words and salutations were exchanged. The little doctor, for Dr. Bleczy was only five foot four, gladly agreed to fly to this major university, all expenses paid.

As in world affairs, so in lesser forums, public relations can make or break an institution. The warp and woof of knowledge, so important to this university, had fallen prey to the mercy of public opinion.

�A bum, what a bum.� People buying the morning edition stampeded the paperboy. The headline blared �Bolensky full of baloney.� Bolensky, a distinguished member of the faculty, was caught using his laptop to answer a detailed question for a radio show. A jealous friend had turned him in. Bolensky had to return a large amount of prize money. Of course, his career was ruined.

The president had weathered much worse storms in his career. It was a major crisis, nevertheless. Without its image of credibility and high moral values, the university�s list of donors and charitable contributions would dry up as quickly as Bolensky�s career had. A good offense is the best defense, the president reckoned. Bring in names, names the public loves. Make a big splash. Invite the public. They will put the Bolensky disaster in the back of their minds. History showed how keeping the public happy with various entertainments kept many a kingdom from falling apart, no matter how tarnished it may have been.

Why then, did the president invite Dr. Bleczy to speak on campus? Why did Dr. Bleczy cause sleepy, unmotivated students to cut other classes and fill Hadley Hall this Tuesday morning, not to mention hundreds of local residents?

The answer lay in part with the wife of Dr. Bleczy, Ann Gorgen.

Ann Gorgen, brilliant writer and entertaining speaker, had for years been number one on science fiction bestseller lists. Of late, her stories were turning hackneyed. She was out of ideas. On a dare, she pursued the professor sitting at a table in a ski lodge in Zermatt. Dr. Bleczy, drinking coffee after a difficult symposium on the Hadron Collider, was delighted to meet this attractive, well-endowed woman. He was lonely, she, bored.

Her literary coterie referred to him as Mr. Gorgen. Since their liaison, most her ideas now came from Dr. Bleczy�s scientific ramblings. She spent hours in his library questioning him, soon turning this information into pseudo-scientific tales.

An easygoing soul, Dr. Bleczy ignored indirect barbs about this marriage. These soon became obvious insults. One day, he put his papers down and walked to a nearby lake. Something had to give. His was popular. He was not. Her income was larger than his. Her latest book sold to larger audiences, now including scientists marveling at her revolutionary insights.

But that wasn�t it. He threw small pebbles onto the lake�s smooth surface, watching them skip over the water, feeling like a boy again. He heard gulls cawing overhead. Then he knew.

Even in their intimate moments, which by now were rare, she dominated him. At a particularly tender moment, she would �Admit it. You�re wrong. Admit it.�

He knew she meant his theory about time travel. �Yes, dear,� he would say.

That was a lie. Time travel, by all his calculations, was impossible. He had sacrificed everything, to prove it. Yet, Ann�s writing now made a point of proving him wrong. Her masterpiece, released last year, was �Captain, I�ll See You Yesterday.� Its sequel �Captain, I�ll Always Remember Tomorrow,� just came out, swamping bookstores.


The captain, dripping with animal magnetism while negotiating difficult voyages in space and time, would search through millennia for his great love, who uncannily resembled Ann.

At that moment Dr. Bleczy resolved to stop the nonsense. She was, after all, his wife. He rushed back to his study. He threw aside the article on pi mesons he had planned to present to that university. Instead, he pulled out his prize article, the one he had hidden from Ann in the past.

Then he compiled a list of international journals, mailing off the same article. It proved conclusively the impossibility of reversing or advancing time. Of course, past and present were quite dependent on coordinates. Of course, they could be played with and had already been, depending on the axes chosen. That�s where the difference was.

His entire concept had one axis � the point where z crosses x and y. What was it? Homo sapiens. That was the revolution. To his knowledge, he was the only scientist who put pragmatism into quantum physics.

Now he was ready to tell the world. Once the world surrendered to his brilliance, he believed Ann would, too. His obscure Germanic roots now called. He was warrior man, she, weaver man. That was the difference. She would return to weaving twisted tales around her warrior, succumbing to his great sword of scientific knowledge.

A question arises here. Why would the physics hall be packed when Mrs. Bleczy, that is Ann Gorgen, was nowhere in sight? After all, it was her name and fame that by osmosis made Dr. Bleczy a celebrity, too. He had never won a science medal, had barely been approved as doctor of philosophy on the strength of his thesis, nor would he ever make a tenth of the money his wife made.

As rumor had destroyed Bolansky, so rumor could revive the image of this university. Not only were people whispering that Ann Gorgen would make a surprise appearance after her husband spoke, but she would hand out free iphones to all in attendance. Afterwards, there would be a giant barbecue in the plaza. All buildings of the university sprawled it, like rays of the sun.

This event eclipsed the Bolensky incident. Images of people eating ribs and flicking their new iphones filled the media. The university was the good guy again.

Epilog: Bolensky�s caper was soon forgotten. New scandals of much worse magnitude, soon occupied the public mind. He became a successful salesman of cell phones.

The president, pulling many favors from his past, as well as creating some new ones, including a large bill from the cell phone company, turned the university into a credible place again. With greater public awareness, endowments tripled.

The Bleczy�s marriage improved. Ann decided her husband had more entrails that she gave him credit for. Nor had any other man put up with her ways and she was not getting any younger. Her books are now relegated to obscure thrift shops, replaced on book lists by more sophisticated, less ego driven writers.

Two Japanese and one Peruvian scientist shot down Dr. Bleczy�s theory two years after it hit the scientific world. It is now a quaint pit stop in the journey of quantum physics. Surprisingly, a phrase the professor said in a less than notable interview, caught on with the public. Today, this phrase is on everyone�s lips. It brings much comfort and inspiration. Few know its author. Those who do, smile when they say it, remembering the little professor who only stood five foot four inches.



 

 

READER'S REVIEWS (2)
DISCLAIMER: STORYMANIA DOES NOT PROVIDE AND IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR REVIEWS. ALL REVIEWS ARE PROVIDED BY NON-ASSOCIATED VISITORS, REGARDLESS OF THE WAY THEY CALL THEMSELVES.

"awesome" -- Matthew Mark, USA.
"Yes, I agree." -- Barfield.

TO DELETE UNWANTED REVIEWS CLICK HERE! (SELECT "MANAGE TITLE REVIEWS" ACTION)

Submit Your Review for It's About Time
Required fields are marked with (*).
Your e-mail address will not be displayed.

Your Name*     E-mail*

City     State/Province     Country

Your Review (please be constructive!)*


Please Enter Code*:

Submit Your Rating for It's About Time

Worst     1     2     3     4     5     6     7     8     9     10     Best

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
© 2007 Liilia Morrison
STORYMANIA PUBLICATION DATE
July 2007
NUMBER OF TIMES TITLE VIEWED
1964
 

Copyright © 1998-2001 Storymania Technologies Limited. All Rights Reserved.