What Remains When the River Leaves
The boy’s blue balloon escaped at the fair, and for three days it floated—over wheat fields, a highway slick with rain, the chimney where it bobbed, hesitant, in the rising heat.
On the fourth day, it settled in the branches of a winter-bare oak. A crow pecked it once. The pop sent a dozen starlings skyward, their wings stitching the air like freed needles.
By Sunday, all that was left was a rubber scrap, curled like a comma between roots.
“Balloons don’t die,” the boy insisted. “They just forget how to hold their breath.”
Written for Micro-dosing Fiction, 100µg, Float 100 words. Some artwork is created using Midjourney AI, and is identified as such in the ALT text or captioned. Images are copyright and not to used without permission, which I willingly give when asked, and when not for commercial use. Imagery and poems/prose ©Misky 2006-2025.

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