My 750 word (including the title, but not this message) contribution to our genre. No dialogue, no names, no editor and I'm not even one hundred per cent sure this actually meets the definition of a story. That said, I hope you enjoy it. Feedback, as ever, greatly appreciated.
Revenge by a Thousand Cuts
My revenge started, changing numbers in her phone. Transposing a digit, just a digit, one per person. A small thing, barely noticeable, ephemeral. Turning a contact into someone she couldn't contact. These days she deletes her messages and the call log from her phone. With access to her Facebook account and LinkedIn Profile, links were unlinked, friends were unfriended. Old connections were severed. Excised out of her life, whilst her attention was turned to new relationships.
Her books fled our marital home for the sanctuary of charity shops. Each time I strolled into town, one of her favourites would accompany me. We walked together frequently in the early days of our relationship, hands welded to each other. Now something of hers would come in her place. They would stay, as I made my way back home. The empty slots on the bookshelf filled with books I resurrected from the attic. Old friends, neglected and forgotten, but now returning back into my life. Forgiving me, as good friends should, for my absence.
Once, gardening was important to her. A favourite way to pass time. As a couple we would visit gardens for inspiration, garden centres to buy plants or just spend time in our own creating a pleasant space for us. I helped her garden slowly die. Plant after plant succumbed, one by one to my tender ministrations. Sometimes daily blanching with scalding water, others drank urine, brine or bleach. Chemical warfare exacting a high death toll. Others trampled, casualties of murderous violence masquerading as accidents. The garden of love, literally deserted.
Photographs capture visual, split seconds of time, impossible to recreate. Reminders of our relationship that give succour as we age. Flammable pieces of paper; deletable digital files. Cherished memories becoming memento mori for our time together. Happy times now only recalled through imperfect recollections. Slowly, lovingly dispatched; the good times together disappearing. New ones no longer being created to replace them.