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“A little early for Sukkot,” Brad chuckled to himself.
“Very funny.” Soshi winced at another of his jokes criticizing her Judaism. “We could use it as a sukkah, but it would make a nice outdoor playhouse for the kids.
“I don’t know.” He gazed upward. “It kind of looks like rain.”
“Just step inside and tell me what you think.”
Brad reluctantly walked into the center of the structure. Soshi quickly took a small remote out of her pocket and pressed the red button. Instantly, Brad was beamed into a different reality.
“Laugh your way out of that one, Brad.”
It’s Wednesday and once again time to participate in Rochelle Wisoff-Fields’ 10 May 2024 edition of Friday Fictioneers. The idea is to use the image above as the prompt for crafting a poem or short story no more than 100 words long. My word count is exactly 100.
Given certain world events lately, antisemitism seems to be on the rise with a vengeance around the world including here in the U.S. where I live. I don’t suppose families and marriages are immune.
My wife is Jewish and I’m a Christian. Actually, when we got married forty-one years ago, neither of us were religious. Long story short, I’m now Christian (it’s complicated) and my wife is mildly observant. These days she primarily does a lot of volunteer work at our local Chabad synagogue, but that’s also complicated.
Unlike Brad, I am totally okay with however she wants to express her being Jewish. In Brad and Shoshana’s case, she’d just about had enough of his teasing. For good or for ill, she found a rather unique solution to the problem.
Should she beam Brad back home after a suitable cooling off period or change reality so that she’s a single parent? If the latter, what will she tell Tommy and Becky, or would existence automatically adjust to the change?
Oh, read more about Sukkot HERE.
To read other stories based on the prompt, visit inlinkz.
My science fiction novelette “The Aliens” has just been published in the Starry Eyed Press anthology Galactic Treks. The tales therein are a callback to an earlier time in the genre emphasizing space operas, adventure, ray guns a’blazing, and the “final frontier.”
Also, Please support your friendly neighborhood indie SciFi author by reading the latest chapters in my 16-part science fiction serial “Our Legacy, The Stars: A Tom Corbett Adventure.” A new chapter comes out every weekend and you can read them for FREE! Press the “like” or “thumbs up” button (if you like what you read) for each individual “episode” and don’t forget to leave a comment for each chapter.
This past weekend, Episode 5: “Monolith on Mars” dropped adding to the suspense.
Visit Our Legacy, The Stars: A Tom Corbett Adventure and start having fun.


Yikes! If she decided she misses his snarky humor, can she blink him back?
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I believe so, but depending on where he went and how long he had to stay, he might not be feeling funny anymore.
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That wouldn’t be a bad thing 🙂
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LOL. True, Linda. Thanks.
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Well! I wasn’t expecting THAT to happen! I’m sure he wasn’t either. Laughed out loud! Thank you!
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Thank you, Kaila.
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That’s one dangerous machine and lady
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Hell hath no fury…
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Lemme tell you…. there are more than a few people I’d love to send out… Fun stuff, James.
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Thanks, Dale.
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Omg! That’s unfair…to get rid of him without letting him know. She should bring him back and talk it over. I liked the idea of the machine, though. Very creative.
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Thanks. Maybe she already tried to talk it over and it didn’t work. This was the last straw.
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Yikes! She’s yielding a lot of power. Don’t get on her bad side… 🙂
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Indeed, Angela. Thanks.
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How convenient would that device become I wonder for anyone who gave Soshi trouble?
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I think a lot of people would like to have something like this.
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Hey, my husband and I have been married for forty-one years as well. It does take compromise and acceptance of differences, but I’m glad I don’t have one of those remote thing-a-ma-giggies as it would be tempting … haha. Seriously, the state of the world is sad. There is an awful lot of hate. Thanks for sharing, James.
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Thank you, Brenda.
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There are ways of ending relationships, but that takes the biscuit.
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Thanks, Sandra.
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Good for her. Though I want to know where she got the device from? There’s a few people at work I’d love to zap up.
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Trade secret I’m afraid. Thanks, Laurie.
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Dear James,
She messed with the wrong Eshet Hayeel. 😉
Shalom,
Rochelle
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Indeed. Thanks, Rochelle.
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