Published Work
| Short Fiction by
VICKY GRUT
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ICONS
Out of the corner of her eye, Madeline saw a large figure manoeuvring from the interior of the cafe towards the exit, making its way down the narrow aisle towards them. ‘It’s about….’ Could it be? A vast torso swathed in green silk and black fur, a neat little head piled with red curls: that dead pale face, the sensitive mouth and jumping black eyes. Could it really be Dolli? After all this time? Madeline dropped the sugar cube and stood up. ‘Dolli?’ © 2011.Visit EtherBooks to download this story for iphones & other mobile devices. |
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CLIVE’S LEG
Clive smiled and toyed with his glass. ‘Softly, softly, dear girl. I was the same when I was your age. I came here with so many plans, but if Africa teaches you anything…’ ‘I heard you came to avoid charges of clinical negligence,’ she snapped. How could someone so small be so rude? It brought tears to his eyes. © 2011.Visit EtherBooks to download this story for iphones & other mobile devices.
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VISITORS
Richard Burton wore one of those tweedy jackets with his shirt collar open and a faint shade of stubble on his face. He was drunk — not bloated with beer like the local men, but high-class drunk, with a breath that would burn pure blue if you lit a match. Elizabeth Taylor slouched in a low-cut dress and simple woollen coat, and the two of them wove along together, matching their steps, pulling close and then apart again like gum. You could see they were crazy about each other.
Kate Pullinger (ed.), 2009,Waving at the Gardener, Bloomsbury Publishing.
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THE UNDERSTUDY
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STRANGER
He flung himself into a seat at the front. ‘That’s better,’ he said. Toby Litt & Ali Smith (eds.), 2005, New Writing 13, London: Picador; republished in Spotlight magazine in Germany and Austria in Nov 2005 |
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ESCAPE ARTIST
On the third day of the argument Corazón got tired of it. She’d forgotten why she was angry with Robert, if she had ever been angry at all. Surely it was time to celebrate by now? …………………………………………………... Alice Thomas Ellis (ed.), 2000, Valentine’s Day, London: Duckworth |
DOWNSIZING
The words he forgot to mention, Julianne thought afterwards, were ‘cheaper’ and ‘younger’. C Buchan (ed.), 2000, Reshape Whilst Damp, London: Serpents’ Tail |
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SHE LOVES ME, Yeah
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WELCOME TO THE WORKING WORLD
I’m walking in the park with Jackie at the weekend and I say, ‘Jackie, tell me if I’m dreaming or is there a dog up in that tree?’ ‘It’s a dog, Steve,’ she says. We stop and watch this great, fat, black dog lumbering from one branch to another. It’s an oak tree. There’s a woman with a wide mouth and a spreading waist standing at the bottom of it, clapping her hands and calling: Good boy! Clever boy! Laughing. Then she holds out her arms and the dog drops straight out of the tree into them. Elaine Palmer (ed.) 1997, Random Factor, London: Pulp Books |
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Awards for Short Fiction2009 – Asham Award, finalist; Narrative Magazine Spring Contest, finalist; The Binnacle Ultra-Short Contest, finalist 2007 - Fish Publishing One-Page story prize, one of 6 finalists 2006 – Chapter One Promotions, International Short Story Competition, first prize 1999 – Asham Award, finalist 1999 – Ian St James Award, finalist |
Magazines & WebsitesInterview with Vicky Grut (http://www.the-milestone.in 2010) Waiting (www.the-milestone.in 2010) Late Developer (the Binnacle 2009) ‘Two Brothers (The Fish Anthology 2007) ‘A Thing I saw’ (3am.com, 2006) ‘A Minor Disorder’ (pulp.net, 2005) ‘Debts’ (metropolitan magazine 1996) ‘3 Bloody Stories’ (metropolitan magazine 1994) |

‘The public health situation here is desperate,’ she said, wiping sweat from her neck. ‘Aids-related deaths are up to about 300 per hour. Did you know that?’
F
As soon as he stepped off the plane Marek started to sweat. It was only April, but already this place was far hotter than London. It did his hangover no favours. Inside the terminal building he found a drinking fountain, then sat down and waited until the crush around the luggage carousel had died down. He was one of the last to collect his bag and head out through the glass doors towards the buses and taxis.
A man in his middle thirties came stumbling onto the top deck of the bus, talking to everyone he passed as if he knew them. People looked up with dazed glances but as soon they understood he was a stranger they gathered themselves into their coats and tucked away their eyes.
When he was still Head of Department, back in the days when Policy and Evaluation still existed as a department, Martin used to like to hold forth on the future of work. ‘In the knowledge-based economy, we will ask people to work “smarter” not “harder”,’ he would say. ‘And until this old place catches on, it’s heading for oblivion.’
Linda sat by herself at break time looking out over the netball courts where the sun lay in merciless sheets over the tarmac. Behind her the six- and seven-year-olds played in the big, fluffy flower bushes. They hopped in and out, crushing the pink and white blooms underfoot, until a teachers came past and screamed that they were not allowed in there. The girls and boys scattered like spilled beads.
Nutters — the world is full of them.