Taking the Wife Along

roger

PHOTO PROMPT © Roger Bultot

If you like my work, buy me a virtual cup of coffee at Ko-Fi.

It was just before 5 a.m. The apartment Demetrius borrowed from its owners had a view of the Brooklyn Bridge if you didn’t mind the house plants and tattered shades. Real estate was so expensive here.

“Will you kill him?” The hologram of his wife projected from a chip in his brain haunted him like Jiminy Cricket.

“If you must know, the reward is dead or alive with a bonus if he’s still breathing.”

“What about the family who lives here?”

“Once he gets home, they’ll be set free, okay?” She was just as annoying dead as she was alive.

Once again it’s time to participate in the 23 June 2023 edition of Rochelle Wisoff-Fields’ Friday Fictioneers.

The idea is to use the image above as the inspiration for crafting a short story or poem up to 100 words long. My word count is exactly 100.

I took my “Demetrius Lauer” bounty hunter character from Hunter and inserted him in this week’s wee tale. I’ve also used him in a drabble I submitted for actual publication (no word back yet), one in which he has preserved his murdered wife’s personality in a memory chip in his brain.

As we see here, not all married couples get along.

For other stories based on the prompt, visit inlinkz.

To read more of my published fiction, consider Ice.

ice

At the end of time, the world is hot and men travel the vast oceans in merchant sailing ships. Captain Ki-Moon Yong of the Star of Jindo has discovered a new horror at the bottom of the world. Can he and the Star escape disaster long enough to warn a disbelieving world?

25 thoughts on “Taking the Wife Along

  1. I like the idea of ‘dead or alive,’and she will always be the wife we all have. Although, we can’t all go around killing them off.

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    • Actually, she was murdered by someone he was hunting. The only way he could “save” her was to preserve her in a computer program. Guess she ended up being a little too real.

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      • Now, it’s impossible to tell from such a brief glimpse as this one, but its impression upon me seemed as if the marital relationship was static and frozen on prior interactions flavored with adversarial antagonism. It made me wonder if this simulacrum he preserved of his wife was not a full AI capable of continuing development. If it were, there might be hope of improving the relationship to a more supportive advisory one, one of comraderie.

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  2. Haha, I’m not sure many men would choose to keep their wife’s vocie in their head as a conscience! Interesting premise, I can definitely imagine it as part of a longer piece.

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