Saturday 20 December 2014

100 Words: Bug Tussles

The epic fight ended with the spider winning.  As a child, John (then, Little Johnny) had marvelled at such scenes, spending hours in the garden watching spiders gather and wrap trapped flies and bees; even capturing and trapping them on the web himself, gaining the occasional sting.

Now, grown and running a warehouse of boredom, he watched the spiders in his office and prayed they’d consume him. 

Perhaps they already had.  Or his soul at least. 

Last week he’d sent out an unusual salted meat to an abandoned location.

Until then he had felt like a fly in the organisation. 


Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt:

PHOTO PROMPT - Copyright = Douglas M. MacIlroy 
 PHOTO PROMPT – Copyright – Douglas M. MacIlroy


The last three stories I've written for Friday Fictioneers, I've other blogged too late: click the pictures below to see the stories... I cheated a bit with one, had too many ideas:

three_chairs PHOTO PROMPT - Copyright - Randy Mazie Claire Fuller (7)




Friday 19 December 2014

100 Words: Green flashes amongst the grey (Ideas 1 & 2)

Green flashes amongst the grey raise my head and my spirits.  I smile, my heart lifting a little, as I continue onward towards my wife’s grave.

I pause briefly, standing tall over her headstone, as I once did her own head, thinking of how I would look down into her beautiful eyes, before crouching to lay flowers.  Then I sit and talk, tell her about my week, about work, our families and friends; drinking tea together, often the precursor and underlay of our conversations. 

Then I leave, looking out again for the parakeets.

Next week I’ll tell her about her.


**

Green flashes amongst the grey raised my head and my spirits.  I stopped, smiling up at the bright invaders of an often grisly space.  I’d always liked it, though, hence why I always walked through it, even though doing so lengthened most journeys.

Looking down again I noticed the door to the chapel was open.  A man and a woman, each in Victorian dress, stood in the doorway beckoning me forth.

Only once inside did I notice the cold; and realise I didn’t know how I’d got there.

I’d been downtown... 

A man stepped forward and asked me my plans. 


Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the following picture prompt:

 

Tuesday 16 December 2014

100 Words: Fifteen to One

He always chimes in just before me; it’s so annoying.  As I go to answer, every time, he chips in first and takes the points. 

His reactions and thinking times (are they one and the same for him?) are too quick while mine are too dull.  I frustrated, I take it out on the buzzer, pressing ever harder.  And still too late.

Doomed from the start, though I wasn’t to know, I can only watch as my opponent creeps ever further ahead with answers I know but cannot remember quickly enough.

I started with a hope that’s quickly faded away.


Written for 100 Word Challenge #407 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Chimes.

 Additionally, I wrote a story for Challenge #404 but did not blog it in time to link it up.

Tuesday 2 December 2014

100 Words: Underminers

“The woods were destroying the house, sir, pushing the walls both up and out- that’s why the beams are there.  We aren't welcome here but we adapt and survive as best we can.”

They had their reason to be there.  It kept them, and the fight back, going strong.  The hearts of every other forest and wood had already been taken, the trees stopped.  This one, though, was proving trickier to defeat.

“But we are almost there, sir.  Our current shaft, though constantly under attack from roots, is even now burrowing up under the head tree.  It'll soon be over.”



Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the following picture prompt:

 
 Image courtesy of Wikipedia Commons, taken by Johann H. Addicks - addicks@gmx.net used under the Creative Commons Agreement

Note: Earlier rejected titles: The woods fought back and There will be sap

Monday 1 December 2014

100 Words: Last Stop

This is the only place before the Dales, we have no choice.

What else can we do? The car’s broken down.

No, it’s way beyond my experience.

Hello!  Anyone here?

Get back in the car, please.

What?  There’s nothing to worry about.

Creepy?  Hardly. 

Rust doesn’t mean a thing.

Nor that pile of junk.

Don’t worry, I’m sure people come here all the time, it’s just Sunday slow right now.

No, not Sunday dead, because they are murderers.

Well don't, “Just say.”  Look, here’s someone now.  Hello there, how are- Judy, he's-

Run, just bloody run, don’t look back; RUN!!!



Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt:

Claire Fuller (7) 
 PHOTO PROMPT – Copyright – Claire Fuller

 

100 Words: I shall marry a shapeshifter

Sardonically they told me that she had really gotten her claws into me now. 

If only they knew.

All they see is her gruff, shifty, exterior born from her concern of turning in public.  

They have never seen her softer side, the side I see at home, that made me fall for her. 

That’s why I let their feelings wash over me.  That, and this secret held between us.

It’s hard to date a shapeshifter who hasn’t full control; to be woken up by scratches. 

It is harder to be her, though, make no mistake.  Harder to be the one.



Written for 100 Word Challenge #404 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Claws.

100 Words: The magic of the library

Take a detour past the sleeping cyclist and enter the modern library.  It’s built on the same foundations as the old, and retains its vaults.  New and unassuming on the outside, it’s a cavern of wonders underneath.

But only whispers and rumours I know.  I was there as a work experience student but was not one of the lucky ones.  Another is still there, smug in his magical admin work. 

Every week I attempt a new ruse to admit myself.  Posing as a magical folk, a new way to sneak.  But I will never succeed, such places aren’t for me.

*

Take a detour past the sleeping cyclist and enter the modern library.  It’s built on the same foundations as the old one and retains its vaults.  New and unassuming on the outside, it’s a cavern of wonders underneath.

It was here, as a work experience student, I first entered the secret world of wizards that exists alongside ours.  In Europe, the Middle East and Asia (the Old World) these places are often either far grander or embedded within ancient hills.  Over here they are now often hidden below modern buildings. 

It’s here that magical wonders are created; and catastrophes avoided.

*

“Take a detour past the sleeping cyclist to the modern library,” I was told.  “For it’s built on the foundations of the old one, retaining its cellars and vaults.  New and unassuming from here, it contains a cavern of wonders underneath.”

So I was told. 

I never got that far. 

The chap on the desk misunderstood when I asked him how to locate the magic of the library.  “Well, for me,” he began, “It’s in fiction under ‘P;’” before proceeding to lead me there.

Minutes later I was leaving with Gormenghast tucked under my arm. 

I’ve never looked back.



Note: A bit of cheating this week through writing three similar stories as ideas evolved in my mind.  The last, though partially inspired by my own love of Gormenghast, was inspired Love Letter to Libraries: Chris Riddell on the Guardian Website.

Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt:



PHOTO PROMPT - Copyright - Randy Mazie 

Friday 14 November 2014

100 Words: Which Way?

At every place on the road that demanded a decision they pulled in different ways.  At every fork they argued and bickered about the route back home. 

The roots of it that day had been laid at breakfast, but went back further to an act some weeks before.  Now, still angry, they had little proxy fights whenever they spoke.

Until finally they went separate ways, unable to bear each other’s company; for the time being at least.

In time they would have to find a way together or else always move separately.  For now they would have days like this. 


Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the following picture prompt:

 

Wednesday 12 November 2014

George Joy’s Guide to Faerytale Creatures, No 17: Grassers and Carpeteers

Many creatures of This World, faerytale or otherwise, have existed in many different sizes and shapes through the years.  When Europeans first went to Madagascar they encountered gibbons as large as gorillas and as small as mice before killing off all the smaller and larger varieties.  Much the same is true of humans, with all but my own kind becoming the stuff of legend to most.

One of the smallest are the Grassers and the Carpeteers.  Each live among the fibres of grass or carpet that make up their world.  Once there were only Grassers, who, like humans, came in various sizes.  When humans introduced carpets, the smallest among the Grassers took the opportunity to escape persecution from their larger counterparts and shelter somewhere they could not be touched.

Both these proud peoples live lives much the same as ours, except that they live in either burrows in the ground or homes created beyond skirting boards [Carpeteers are much the same as the fictional Borrowers - Modern Editor].  However, they are quite different from one another.  Grassers hunt small creatures and eat wild fruit while Carpeteers steal all their food from humans, often struggling to survive if “their” humans leave the house unoccupied. 

Grassers and Carpeteers both, of course, have much to fear from larger animals and always travel in well armed groups to fend off creatures from the size of mice upwards.  Carpeteers often construct their own mouse (and rat) traps in the gaps between walls or rein down spears upon them from above.

Wars have been fought between these peoples and skirmishes happen often as Carpeteers seek to move between houses.  One such war was reported by a Kensington man who noticed one day tiny columns of smoke rising from different points on his lawn.  On closer inspection he found tiny people seemingly at war with one another and attempted to broker a peace.  In doing so he found that a war had broken out as Carpeteers sought to find a route between the man’s house and his garden studio, where a group from the house and founded a separate community.  The man was ultimately unsuccessful and so built a safe passage for the Carpeteers and helped both Grassers and Carpeteers to flourish on his property.

Such instances of interaction are extremely uncommon, it should be said, and most people are unaware of their Grasser and Carpeteer tenants.  However, I do myself leave food for Carpeteers and seek not to walk across my lawns too often.

Tuesday 11 November 2014

500 (and 49) Words: After the Fireworks

The last firework of the display was the loudest and the biggest, spreading out to form a huge chrysanthemum shape, its petals blurring against and then fading into the night sky.

Sated by the spectacle, and yet disappointed that it had come to an end, I shuffled my then-tiny feet around, took my father’s hand and began the walk across the park back to the car.

As we went I started off, still high on adrenaline, chatting excitedly about what I’d just witnessed, telling my parents which had been my favourite, imitating their sounds and throwing my spare arm around in demonstration. 

Before long, though, my gesticulations became less and my speech slowed until my father picked me up and I fell asleep in his arms, the excitement and the night finally catching up with me.

I came round as my father was strapping me into my car seat, then again as he lifted me out, and one last time as he tucked me into my little bed.  I was so happy then that I forgot all my apprehensions.  My father smiled down at me whispered, “Goodnight, little man,” and I drifted off for the night. 

Nothing was ever the same again. 

As I slept the monster came and changed everything.


My parents would later say that it was a miracle I didn’t wake while the monster arrived but I never really understood their relief because when I woke it was there and has never left.  It dogged my mother, clinging to her, keeping her from me.  I withdrew from her and then father when he also chose to ignore the monster’s presence, smiling at it and trying to me to draw near.

I lived a solitary life from then on, avoiding the monster at all costs by playing with my toys in my room.  With my parents in cahoots I could only hope to defeat the monster through my own childhood games.  Every so often my parents would look in concerned, try and coax me close to the monster but I stayed firm.

In time the monster grew, it began to crawl and then walk, leaving my mother’s side for longer periods of time.  Slowly I knew it would soon be time to strike, to win mastery over it, maybe even destroy it.


I made my move in the summer at the leisure centre.  The monster was toddling past me at speed in the shallowest part of the pool, excited in his disgusting little way about something stupid.  I put out my leg and tripped him.  He fell face first into the half centimetre of water and onto the tiled floor with a dreadful smack. 

As I saw the water redden and heard the monster’s cry I realised for the first time this creature was human.  For the first time I felt something toward it, helping it up, looking about desperately for my mother or father because I had done something bad and my brother needed help.


I still call him a monster, still even recall my earliest days with fondness, but I was never so cruel to him again and we managed to grow up to be great friends.  Probably because he was too young to remember the time I believed him to truly be a monster.



Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the following picture prompt:

 

100 Words: The Physical

When I joined the army I got a physical examination right at the start- we all did, all the new privates lined up together and displayed their own privates for inspection.  Not much fun but one thing did happen to lighten the mood.

The guy next to me had quite a large one and the doctor, upon seeing this, took out his pencil and lifted it for examination, clearly amazed at the size.

“Blimey,” he said, “I bet this fella’s been out of his cage a few times.”

“Aye,” replied the recruit, “But he’s never been on a perch before.”


Written for 100 Word Challenge #403 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Perched.

Wednesday 5 November 2014

100 Words: Demons cannot conceal their true nature

That table and those chairs remained empty for some time, as if they had been cursed by the events.  Few who were there would doubt such an explanation.

A fierce argument had taken place, secrets had been revealed- and not just those that were spoken aloud.

Many of those who turned their heads, either cautiously or without a care, to hear or to look saw it.  At the peak of the cuckolded man’s anger they saw his true nature and feared for the lives of the others.  One even claimed they foresaw the murders.

Demons cannot conceal their true nature.


Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt (but not blogged in time for the link-up (nowhere near, infact, yet it was finished in time!; sorry):

three_chairs 

100 Words: The feel of dewy grass

The feel of dewy grass under her feet was one of her favourites.  You could see from the look on her face, discovered later from the words that she wrote. 

She liked dolls too, feeling their faces, hair and clothes.   She preferred people really but it wasn’t considered decent to feel anyone and everyone all the time, so we settled on dolls.  She had many and kept them in pecking order.

Before we could formally communicate this is what we did; ‘was all that we knew.  We kept her, and ourselves, smiling by giving her the things that she loved.


Written for 100 Word Challenge #402 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Dewy.  I read about Helen Keller while writing, too; the wikipedia page helped in forming this story.

Tuesday 4 November 2014

250 Words: Shards

I stopped as shattered glass rained down ahead.  A short, sharp shower, its terrifying sound was interrupted by a worse one: the sickening thud-crack of a man hitting the pavement.

As others rushed to him I stayed still, a statue able only to think of himself and how close he’d come to injury.

I was told he’d died on impact, yet a glimpse of the dying man’s eyes snapped me back round.  Full of pain, both for what had just happened and all that had gone before, they bore into me and, expiring, the man mouthed, “You must find my medal; put me to rest.”  Only then did the pain and the life leave his eyes.


When I got home the next day, I set to work researching what he might have meant.  I remained in my bedroom for days until I found the answer in an old photograph. 

It took me back to the scene of the accident, where we’d planned to celebrate by diving from the cliff.  He “won” the toss but never made it to the edge because it took him away.  I dived forward but was helpless then as well.

The area got cordoned area, they wouldn’t let me retrieve his medal.  I screamed and kicked before slowly putting the idea away. 

Now it hangs on his gravestone.


Ever since that day my family had been nervous around me, more worried by each episode.  Only now, as I return smiling, will they be able to relax.


Written for entry in The Bridport Prize, 2014.

The Nepenthe Wards

One thing I will never forget is that trip to the Nepenthe Wards, the rooms and rooms full of those who had taken the drug.  All now rendered the same.  Each room seemed to be worse than the last, tough maybe that was because I was there to visit the final room.

The summons from the state hadn’t come as a complete shock.  I had lived to some extent in fear of it.  Now it had come to it, my first thought was why I had to be the nominated visitor.  Though later that evening I would become glad it was me.  And, as the coach took me from our estate through endless similar ones to the walled and imposing hospital that had been chosen to house the Nepenthe takers, I tried to prepare myself for what I would see.

Most of my fellow visitors were obviously supporters of the movement and saw this as a way to congratulate the taker, to pointlessly express their pride in person to them.  I was not in the same mood.

I saw Nepenthe as a blight, another way that had been found to ruin an otherwise peaceful existence. There had been other attempts to disrupt the state, of course, most recently the marches on the mounds, and normally they were quite rightly put down.

But this time it had resulted in a standoff between the state and the movement, each with their own hopes of finding the cure to end the situation.  I had instead spent the time hoping my brother would not become involved enough to join the hordes who no longer remembered they were waiting for the revolution.


An official met us at the entrance and told us the rules of the visit: not to leave the group, not to talk to any patients except the one we’d been brought to see, not to take anything, those sort of things.

We then followed inside and started to march past the beds in which the patients sat.  Through each room, bigger than the last, we walked while our guide told us what we already knew about the drug and its effects before telling us that, though it put a strain on the state, it was easily manageable.  “All these wretches do is hurt their families and friends while we find the cure to bring them out of their stupor so that we may punish them before sending them home.”

“Hear, hear,” I thought but, as I said, most of my companions seemed to be supporters and didn’t seem to be listening to what they were told, or, if they were, they rolled their eyes a lot and mouthed corrections to one another: the usual talk of people coming from the alleged empire to fill empty work posts and so on.


The wards smelled of disinfectant, they were very clean and most patients had a nurse or doctor with them as we went through.  You couldn’t fault the care of the state, though there were whispers, and then full blown conversations on the way home, that it was all for show.  Several people made claims that these “actors” were making simple mistakes but I don’t see how they could possibly know.  This was the first such hospital I had ever been in.  How any of them could be medical experts was beyond me.

Eventually we reached the ward our patients were staying on.  Though we each clocked our one straight away, we had to wait for our name to be called and for a nurse to take us to the appropriate bed.

Most went on cheerily, though one woman broke down the moment she saw her daughter.  I was somewhere in between, still in a neutral state, neither happy nor sad, and that didn’t change until I was at my brother’s side. 

I had hoped against hope that he would be differently affected.  That he might have held on to something as the Nepenthe took hold but he was as blank eyed as every other patient there.  He didn’t even look at me, he only stared across the room at nothing in particular.  I greeted him with a hug, told him who I was and got nothing in return.  Every spark that had previously glowed within him was gone. There was even less knowledge in him than when he had first been born.

Now I started to get angry but, as I walked back through the wards, I remained calm and, still in shock, I took in nothing at all until we were back in the entrance hall and our guide’s voice woke me up again.

He was again telling us, more loudly this time, about how these people were a blight on our nation, that the practice must stop and that they were working hard to cure these people to return them to us.

“And you can help,” he told us, “By volunteering to work with us to find that cure. If you do, you will spare your loved one any punishment. Just stay behind now, or think about it and let your local district representative know, and we can give you a new life away from the estates and the factories.”

Needless to say no one stayed and no one had ever volunteered.


That evening I went to see my sister-in-law.  Broken, her pretty eyes staring into her tea, she barely said a word.  I imagined my own wife, how she might cope, how I would be unable to cope, if this happened to us, if I or she took Nepenthe.

And my anger against my idiot brother built further up inside me.

How could he leave her and their children like this?

Yes, the state would take care of them, of course he didn’t need to worry about that, but that should not even have come into it: he should have thought about his family first and foremost before doing anything. And that thought should have stopped him.

His wife and children loved and adored him and, I thought, he did them. I don’t care what he believed in, how he felt about the country. No one should leave their family like this. Even if it was only meant to be temporary.


Filled with anger I went to have it out with the men who had put him up it.  Those who had taken him under their wing and led him to the movement.  Like all district leaders, ours was to be found in our estate’s pub: the only place, supposedly, that we are able to have something approaching “freedom”, the only place they say we are not watched.  Other than our homes, but we are not allowed to congregate in them.

We had known each other for some years- he and my brother had tried to convert me.  I had never agreed with their ideas about the world or believed in their stories of how things used to be: of choice, of freedom of movement and speech and democracy or that the mounds and plateaus had not existed before- that underneath them lay whole cities.  And I always ignored their name-calling (naive, gullible, etc) and got on with the life I enjoyed, desiring no more and no less.

Neither had I ever got into the whole “drink-to-forget-and-ignore” thing.  Drinking until passing out or screwing recklessly in the corner or the alleyway never appealed.  Me and my wife left that behind quickly and married early.

Curiously, after Nepenthe came into being, drinking dipped.  Instead people talk over only a few pints about the drug and the future.  Much in the same way as they did in the run-up to the marches and the massacres, they come together to discuss the future and dream about the man who would find the cure and lead us to the new world they claim we need.


I found my man in his darkened corner; hangers-on close by, whispering in his ear.

When he saw me, though, and the look on my face, he made them go away and ushered me to sit down with him.

I don’t remember the exact words but we spoke at odds for quite a while.  He stayed calm and collected, repeating the phrases I had heard so many times before as I got angrier and angrier at this fixed expression of composure and calmness. 

I remember I was first to break.  Upon seeing that I could get nowhere, I broke down and begged him for the cure, told him I would break into the ward, give it to my brother and then sneak him out, keep him hidden, safe.  On and on I repeated this request until I finally just sat sobbing at him.

And his expression then altered, too.  His face became downcast as well. And he reached out, touched my hand, told me to calm down.  And then he came clean.

I remember this part, word for word.  “We never meant for any of this.  After the failed marches and the killings, we survivors didn’t know what to do, what our next move would be.

“Then our leaders were given this drug.  They thought it would kill them and they all attempted suicide.  When the rest of us saw what it actually did we formed a new plan.  We never thought it would escalate like this, become a new- what’s that word they call it?  Re-li-gin?  All we can do is keep it up, hope for the best.  Believe ourselves.  If protest and fighting do nothing, what else can we do?”

And then.

“But there is no cure.  Not one we know of, anyway.  We have no way to find out what Nepenthe is, let alone find a cure.  I’m sorry, but your brother is, for the time being at least, lost.”

And with that I stopped crying, wiped away my tears, calmly stood, turned around, walked up to the bar and ordered vodka after vodka.

As I drank I thought about the information I had just received and slowly decided upon a new plan of action.  A plan I distinctly remember in every single detail.

I would return to the Nepenthe Wards and volunteer, help find the cure and make sure my brother was first.  By helping I would be able to secure his release and take both our families away from the estates and start a whole new life- something they had promised and I would ensure we got.

And I remember leaving the pub and that as I left I felt good and happy, hopeful that all would, in time, be fine.


I woke up in a white tiled room, my head pounding, reminding me why I did not drink.  Across the cell was an official waiting for me to come round so he could tell me why I was there.

He told me, smiling throughout, that I had strolled up to a policeman late the night before and, in my drunken state, had joyfully told him about my meeting with the movements’ district leader and my plans to conquer Nepenthe.

He then thanked me and let me go immediately.


I returned home to sleep it off, waving away the questions of my concerned wife.


Next time I woke it was at the hands of my wife. She told me that the government had backtracked on Nepenthe, that they had shot everyone who had taken the drug and that they would continue to do so.


Now there is more drunkenness than ever, now there is despair once more in every face. I will never forget these faces either.


Now, in my brother’s room, clearing away his belongings, I find a piece of Nepenthe.


This is my confession.

Written for entry in The Bridport Prize 2013.  Edited and posted for the Light and Shade Challenge to accompany the following picture prompt:

 
 

Tuesday 28 October 2014

100 Words: The first one up the stairs

In the cellar of a London school in 1963 it materialised, a shining white pillar of horror.  Taking in its immediate surroundings the creature inside the case started to roll forward, the greatest enemy of its people in its sights.  What glory would follow for them all with the death of this man of many faces. 

The Doctor turned and fled up the stairs.  “Once you would have been safe,” the creature thought, “But something inside me is new.“ 

As the Doctor found the door locked he turned back and saw the Dalek advancing upon him, floating up the stairs.



Note: A re-telling of the end of Episode 1 of Remembrance of the Daleks.

Wednesday 22 October 2014

100 Words: Thinking Bench

I sat there, on my last night before leaving the country, thinking about how it had changed for me. 

I used to sit in the same place as a child thinking about the life I had planned out in my mind.

Then I discovered there was a rest of the world and my country suddenly seemed very small indeed.

Following years of work and planning, I sat there contemplating my new and immediate future.

I wasn’t scared, I was excited, full of such gleaming excitement to leave for the wider world.

Now back, my wanderlust fulfilled, I wonder, “What next?”


Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt:

PHOTO PROMPT Copyright- The Reclining Gentleman 


Tuesday 21 October 2014

100 Words: Two Uses for a Staff

While living as an old man the wizard discovered the usefulness of carrying a staff.  “I shall have to share this at the next AGM,” he decided.

Chris had been in the Alps for some years, initially adopting the guise of an old man as a pretence for using a staff to help with walking up and down hillsides- something only the very old seemed to do.

This was before wizards went into hiding, when everyone would cheekily ask the root of their power.  Chris found people naturally began to believe it was the staff.  Very convenient it therefore became.


Written for 100 Word Challenge #400 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Staff.


100 Words: Maisie

The kitchen staff slept under the great heavy wooden table that ran down the room’s centre. For they had duties through the night, a fire to keep ever alight.

Maisie didn't mind, she learned to live with only a few hours sleep for she loved the time lying awake- precious time kept for herself.

Each night she would give stories to the stars, advancing her tales and adventures as time wore on.  One day she would recall them for her children but for now she would lie happily awake creating other worlds far away, full of mayhem, monsters and mischief.


Written for 100 Word Challenge #400 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Staff.


Monday 20 October 2014

100 Words: A Fear of Security

I used to shoplift out of necessity.  Before my eventual capture, imprisonment, and retraining, I sometimes set off alarms before running very quickly.

Now, as then, I’ve a fear of security gates- those tall thin sentinels still make my heart race, send shivers through me and make me sweat.  Even at the library, my books checked out and passed around, I still fear I’ll need to run, I still adopt a veneer of innocence.

These days, though, as I get older, I have the added fear that if I should set it off somehow, it’ll give me a heart attack.


Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the following picture prompt:

 

Image courtesy of Wikipedia Commons, taken by AlejandroLinaresGarcia and shared under Creative Commons

100 Words: I am not insane but I do dream the future

I’m not insane (I’ve been tested) but I do have a strange belief that I hang onto no matter how many people say they I am wrong.

You see I can dream the future.  I am absolutely certain I do.  Only small, inconsequential things that, when they then happen, I experience as a sort of extreme, incredibly lucid deja vu because I have already dreamed it.  And so, for a few seconds I know what will happen.  I tell people straight away.  That I knew already.  They think I am insane.  But I have been tested and I am not.


Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from a quote from The Big Bang Theory's Sheldon: "I'm not insane.  My mother had me tested."

Monday 13 October 2014

100 Words: Turning the tide

I chained up my horse and got on with it.  What else could I do?  When you’ve been blackmailed with your family’s safety you can be made to do anything.

Including turning the tide.

I was meant to shoot up the bank, being sure to kill the manager after forcing him to remove certain items from the vault. 

But I had a better knowledge of what was in the vault.  It wasn’t all money, jewels and deeds of a property nature.  There were magical deeds as well.

Upon casting the spell I sighed in relief and returned to my steed.


Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the following picture prompt:

 

Sunday 12 October 2014

Untitled (or, Stereoscopic)

A scientist picked up his new invention and handed it proudly to his colleague.  She took it by the handle, raised the lenses to her eyes and looked through, tilting it from side to side a little, taking in the 3D image it created.  

“Well, it’s good,” she pronounced, “But I’ve made something better.”

John was a genius, an inventor of some renown but he had the misfortune of having an even greater genius for a sister.  Every time he showed Jenny something he had come up with, John was praised and then informed that she had already thought of it and created something better.

“You have a better image than my Stereoscope, dear sister?”

“Of course - this is but a child’s plaything, John.  Come to my laboratory in two hours and I’ll show you.”  And, as ever, with that, Jenny turned and walked from John’s laboratory and home through the bustling London streets.


Two hours later, John was standing looking up at a huge photograph of an exhibit in an empty gallery at the British Museum (Natural History)- a dinosaur skeleton.  His sister handed him a pair of goggles and began to talk.

“You see, dear brother, a photograph is not just the reaction of a surface to light, it is the capturing of a single moment in time and space; and so, once I found the means to access that moment in complete fullness, I was able to create a means to develop a truly multi-dimensional photograph,” she said, waving at the enlarged picture.

“Imagine, John, being able to visit the British Museum, Natural History in this case, without the crowds!  To see the statues, skeletons and books without bother!  Well, here it is!  This is how!

“Put those on,” Jenny urged, nodding at the goggles.  “I’ve a pair too,” she added, removing them from a pocket.

Together the siblings donned their eyewear and looked up at the picture.  Immediately it he could see it was a far greater quality 3D image than he’d accomplished.  In fact it appeared as if an extension or alcove to the room.  John walked from side to side watching in amazement and admiration as the picture moved.. “as if it were real..” he said, voicing his thoughts.

“Because it is,” announced Jenny, “come on!”  And with that that she beckoned John on and walked into the picture.  He followed, the same disbelief on his face that would appear when in that room.

While investigating the skeleton close up, John had a thought of a particular photograph.  A chill ran down his spine and yet, with a sudden determination, he asked of Jenny, “Can I have one of these?”


As a child John walked to and from school alone through one of the spookiest parts of the city’s suburbs.  On his route lay an alley that seemed to be dark throughout at all times of the day and year.  Every day, morning and afternoon, John would speed up his walk as he went past that horrible place.

Always, though, he wished to be daring enough to go in.  Jenny would, he knew, but he never could.

Once, though, just once, John had been a little bit daring.  At fifteen, shortly after Jenny had bettered his attempt at creating a camera, John had taken his one with school and, on the way home, stopped at the alley, held up that camera and taken a picture.

Once developed, John kept it hidden, occasionally taking it out and daring to stare into the dark wondering what was in there, wishing he’d been brave enough to enter.

Well, now he could.  Once Jenny had set up the apparatus in his laboratory, John set about finding the negative created a new, giant, print.


John stood at the entrance to the alley, resisting the urge to turn and run away as he had run past during his school days.  He moved about, peering into the dark from different angles trying to make sense of it, trying to see if any light could get in and show him something.  The stalling tactic got him nowhere, though, so he walked quickly into the alley instead.

It was as pitch dark within as John had always imagined it so he put out a hand to trace along the cold brick wall to his right.  After a pace or two he did the same on the other side too.  Onward he walked, his fingers feeling the way, his breath the only sound.  

Before long John reached the end, instinctively predicting its appearance before smashing into the brick wall.  Smiling, he turned to go back, pleased to have finally beat what had haunted his imagination for some twenty years.  

“There’s nothing here,” he said to himself cheerily but before he could take the first step back toward his lab John was stopped by a rasping intake of breath.  

Then a voice from the darkness ahead of him, a voice that began sounding awfully ancient yet seemed to become younger as it spoke, responded, “Isn’t there boy?”  


The next day, while searching for her brother, Jenny took the same journey into the photograph, returning unharmed but with John’s body.

For the first time since hearing a certain story at school Jenny felt scared.  She remembered the tales now, tales of an alley over by the boy’s school.  The tale of a teacher who had locked girls in cupboards and left them there for days, a teacher who had also cooked girls in a kiln and eaten them for supper, a teacher who had eventually been expelled and imprisoned in that alley by the then headmistress, who the tales named as a witch.

Suddenly fearful, Jenny felt a cold run right through her before saying out loud, “Miss Gunness?”  After a moment she added, under her breath, “John, what have we done?”

The response, a young woman’s voice, came from the far corner of the room: “Saved me.”


Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the following picture prompts:



and 


Thomas Marlowe

Note: I wrote the first section to go with the first picture but did not finish it in time.  Which was fortunate, as the second picture, and challenge, allowed me to expand and extend the story, taking it in a completely different direction.

Friday 10 October 2014

100 Words: A Block and a Clearance

I sat staring at the keys, knowing there was potential in every note and setting, yet seeing nothing.

Ground down by too many bad films, I just couldn’t find the score for this one.  All I found was annoying looks on smug faces and all I felt was the urge to punch them.

I sat staring at the keys wondering how I had ended up in such a dead end world.

I quit and returned to New England, took jobs on TV, in theatres and returned at last to My Piece- finished it, had it performed by a school orchestra.



Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt:

Copyright-Rochelle Fields 



100 Words: I cloaked my grief in bricks and cloth

I cloaked my grief in bricks and cloth, hid myself away behind closed doors with curtains drawn, rooted myself to my bed and waited for that grief to pass. 

It wouldn’t leave me.  It kept me there- each day turning me slowly to stone, every day making it harder to move.

It was a child that saved me, a child crying out in pain as they lay, fallen, bleeding in the street.  No one else went and so, eventually, I did, unable to bare their grief any longer. 

Outside, in the fresh air, I found something in me I’d lost.


Written for 100 Word Challenge #398 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Cloak.

Wednesday 1 October 2014

100 Words: Time Thief

I’d lock up me bike, make sure it were secure, enter time portal at nine on dot.  On arrival at destination I’d find orders at me feet and get started.  Once I had it, whatever it were that day, exit portal’d open and I’d return at five sharp, place haul in locker, go home.

Such was my working life. 

I’m old now.  Such business was long ago ended, the individuals involved remaining a mystery.

And now look- we’re history in museum.  The world’s archives were scoured, many of my orders found.  Brings a tear to eye.  Ah, the wonderful memories.


Written for 100 Word Challenge #397 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Secure.

100 Words: In the school playground

I threw at him the nastiest looking thing I dared pierce with my spent lolly stick.  That would teach him, I thought.

I was six.  I didn’t think he would catch it and stuff it in my mouth.

That was the start of our ongoing battle.

Each day I would find some way to gain revenge for the day before.  And each day he would turn it round on me.

I became a tough little girl, often in trouble.

It petered eventually, the year we occupied different playgrounds.  And

Looking back, I remember my first attack but cannot remember why.


Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt:

unidentifiable on a stick 
 Copyright-Kent Bonham



Wednesday 24 September 2014

100 Words: The Inspector

It was on Turnmill Street as we approached Farringdon that we saw him stooped low, inspecting the wall brick by brick.  My friend and I stopped, both equally amazed by the scene and stopped to watch.

He ran his fingers over each brick lightly, his eyes closed, feeling, thinking.  Then, once decided, he opened his eyes, shook his head and muttered, “no,” to himself.  On and on he went as we remained quite transfixed.

Until he found his brick, the wall opened and he stepped inside.  Within the wall we saw another world and we’ve been inspecting it ever since.


Written for 100 Word Challenge #396 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Inspect.

Friday 19 September 2014

100 Words: She tried to escape alone

She tried to escape alone across the salt pans when they arrived with their kill lists and machetes.  She’d had no time to join up with others and, separated from her family, walked out of town and across those plains alone; away from civilisation turned feral and toward the unknown. 

As she fled she felt the presence of the assassins more and more as the heat and lack of water ground her down.  As she dropped to her knees she thought of her family, hoping their international connection would keep them safe and that this would be the last time.


Note: Written for Friday Fictioneers from the picture prompt below.  This photo reminded me of the story of a Rwandan Genocide survivor who, in 1991, three years before the genocide, was evacuated to Brussels during a Rwandan Patriotic Front Coup.  Her grandmother, however, sadly died while trying to avoid killings by attempting to walk to the border alone. 

©Tales_From_the_Motherland 
Copyright - Dawn Q. Landau 

Thursday 18 September 2014

100 Words: A Shaft

They stood looking down into the shaft.  It was filled with the deepest black they’d ever seen, that somehow extended to the rim, the sun unable to penetrate even the first few centimetres: when they dipped their hand, it disappeared from view. 

Then there was the moaning, the calling out for help, that started after a few minutes.  The voices that sounded like them, confirmed they were them; that warned them yet also transfixed them completely.

After the push and fall came the deja vu, the repetition of all they’d heard. 

As they got up to speed the horrors began.


Written for 100 Word Challenge #395 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Black.

Friday 12 September 2014

250 Words: The Acephalous Rider

Her hitched-up and ripped ballgown flowing behind, she thundered through the open gates, not daring to look back, hoping against hope she would not be followed.

Pushing her horse on through forests and fields, her immaculate hair fell slowly apart and itself took flight.  Her only thought was to keep on taking routes randomly while ultimately heading east, for the border. 

Her closest servants were to thank for this chance.  Feeling she was too innocent to face the mob’s blade they ushered her away from the party (slapping her into sense when she initially refused) and helped her onto a horse (ripping her dress and changing her shoes) before ensuring a clear path to the gate. 


She first heard them behind as her ride began to tire.  Louder and louder their galloping grew as hers lessened.  She looked out for a new route or solution but she’d taken a road that would only let her go straight on, swamps blocked all other directions but back.

As they drew up alongside she cursed the effects of the afternoon’s hunt before the sword swung and removed her head.

They stopped her horse, fixed the headless body in its seat and hung the head from her steed’s bit rings before thwacking its behind and sending them on toward her goal.


Now every night on that same stretch of road, each lost and lonely little toad will see her form once again in full flight, her complexion now and ever a bright ghostly white. 

Wednesday 10 September 2014

100 Words: A QUEST, sir!

“A QUEST, sir!”

“A quest, you say?”

“I do, I say a quest is what we need, sir.”

“Any particular kind, what?

”Monsters… princesses… a con-quest, perhaps…?”

“Not the latter, sir, I’ve no taste for bashing inferiors upon the bonce.  Give me monsters and princesses any day.”

“Good, good.  I hear the fair Gwendolyne has been imprisoned by the Brute Bear of Black Mountain.”

“Too easy- she’ll escape herself in time.

“No, I propose we tackle the Werewolves of Wanstead, sir, to win back and restore the Midnight Maid.  More danger.  More challenge.”

“A fine suggestion, sir.  Onwards; to Essex!”


Written for 100 Word Challenge #394 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Quest.

Friday 5 September 2014

Myths of our Solar System (13): Mars corrupted

Mars sat in a field, bored. Earlier that day he had overseen the planting of seeds for the
year. He had gone through the motions again because it was his job but it was not what
he desired anymore.

No, he wanted a life more exciting, of fast moving action, of life and death- not this slow,
seemingly eternal wait for growth and harvest. Once it had excited him but not for a long
time now.

Not since he had first smelled blood in the air and heard the distant clash of swords and
shield. Later he had found the remains left from the battle strewn across a field almost
ready for harvest. Rather than grow angry, Mars had begun to re-think his life.

And so Mars sat in a field, bored, and thinking back on that scene, he wondered about all
he had seen that day when an eagle landed close by.

“Greetings, Mars,” said the eagle, spreading its wings out and looking most regal.

“And greetings to you, sir eagle,” Mars replied impressed at the sight of these great bird,
its wings outspread.

“You yearn, do you not, for another life? One of glory and action?”

“I do. I’m so bored with this bollocks.”

“Even if it this activity is for it’s own sake and serves no purpose?”

“Oh, I don’t mind, escaping reason as well as duty sounds good to me.”

“Then it shall be so,” declared the eagle and it darted straight at Mars, attacking him, its
beak pecking and its claws magically clawing through his skull, leaving no trace upon
his head, but instead within it as the bird re-arranged his brain, changing his character
entirely, corrupting the farmer and turning him into something far different.

And from that day Mars was a warrior who sought the fight wherever he went. A
mercenary for the Empire, looking to extend it wherever and whenever. And he would
even caused rebellion afterward for an excuse to go back for more blood. It never
bothered him why or how the fight came about- he just wanted to be in the killing fields
every day, sunrise to sunset, and beyond if necessary.


Not written but re-blogged (aka cheated ;) ) for the Light and Shade Challenge ("Hang on, I've written a story about an eagle and a field before," I thought to myself) from the following picture prompt:

 


There are more Myths of the Solar System here.

100 Words: Shake well

Never give a psycho instructions, that’s what we learned that day.  Pinky did too- the hardest way.

Such a small, simple thing.  Full of excitement from the job he said, “You have to shake it before opening.”  He may have made it worse somehow.  I don’t know because I was already distracted by the look on our boss’s face.

They shook Pinky very well before opening him up.  He was sick so much in that concrete mixer that I was surprised there was anything else left inside to come out. 

Out it flowed, though, and no one spoke up again.


Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the written prompt, taken from a milkshake bottle: "Shake well before opening."

100 Words: At First Sight

The fire had me hypnotised in seconds.  Its movement, light, sounds, smells and warmth all combined to leave me staring while sitting on a log. 

I didn’t notice her sit down next to me, not until the fireworks started did I see her multi colored face and eyes.

Normally such tales would talk of an instant reaction yet I only had an internal shrug, distracted as I was by the display.

Its different now because so much is attached to that face but then, at that moment, there was nothing.

It was only later as we talked that I fell.


Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt:

Campfire 

Copyright – Rochelle Wisoff-Fields


100 Words: Homes, Sweet Homes

Gruff had always been a gruff man, not helped by people constantly saying how his name reflected his nature.  “You say it ‘Griff’, you English prick,” he would respond.

Sometimes Gruff wished he hadn’t moved moved so far from his home, west of the border.  Until he went home, where his wife and children melted his rough manners and changed him each evening.

Gruff could have been anywhere in the world when he was with them, no sense of dislocation did he feel in that bubble.  Gruffness was left at the door for another day each time he arrived home.




Written for 100 Word Challenge #393 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Gruff.

Friday 29 August 2014

100 Words: Upon the Boiling Sea

They still called him Youngster although he’d been aboard some five years and there were crew members much younger and less innocent.  He didn't mind, though, had never minded because he hated his real name.

Sailing the boiling sea was treacherous, their large ship was designed to roll very little, conduct no heat and keep the steam away from its crews’ faces.  Yet all feared falling in.

He had seen it once, heard the scream (there was only ever one), and knew he would never take a risk. 

The taste of the fallen, though… that was worth taking a risk.




Written for 100 Word Challenge #392 on Velvet Verbosity; the prompt was the word Youngster.

Desert Island Rules

He and Terry had been stuck on an uninhabited island for several weeks now hoping for rescue.  Terry was a man of structure and had begun to lay down the law early on.  John had always been less organised and this suited him as he didn’t really want to think too much about practicalities. 

And Terry’s rules had made sense for a long time.  It was sensible to ration what supplies they had been shipwrecked with, to explore the island together, to only swim with the other watching, to limit exposure to the sun, to take turns in testing the food found.

Now, with the food supplies from the boat gone, Terry was still insisting on rationing the food, despite there being more than enough coconuts and fruits and berries of various kinds on the island to keep them going forever.  And keeping the curfew going now they knew the forests so well seemed ridiculous to him.  John had lived for his midnight strolls back home.

After Terry forbade John to use the latrine immediately before him, he began to think about how long it had been since he had eaten meat.  They had had found no animals on the island, only fruit.  And Terry had not yet outlawed murder.


Once Terry’s remains had been laid to rest, John began to explore further and generally do as he pleased.  His life became a fine one of solitary pursuits in a tropical setting.

It was too late he realised Terry was too close to the water supply.


Written for the Light and Shade Challenge from the written prompt, "Your rules are really beginning to annoy me," taken from the film Escape from LA.

100 Words: The thing at the bottom of the garden

They found it at the very bottom of the garden and she instantly forbade them to touch it.  Then banned them from the bottom third.

Over the coming days her mind kept wandering to it, her head and eyes kept looking down the garden toward it, her feet strayed off path a few times, just for a moment, before she remembered her own rules.

On the ninth day, though, she gave in.

In a trance, she walked smoothly down the garden, her children watching from the window.  They were the only witnesses, no one ever really believed them. 

“She’s inside.”


Written for Friday Fictioneers from the following picture prompt:

WILD LIFE 



Wednesday 27 August 2014

250 Words: Stuff inspired by phrases picked out from 250 (Jumbled) Words, No 4: Remember pages

Remember pages,
Remember stages
Of my days of diary.

Remember pages,
Remember wages
Paid to keep my diary.


Forget the details,
Forget the fails
Listed in my diary.

Forget the details,
Forget the wails
Littered through my diary.


I remember they kept me prisoner for years, those leather bound volumes kept hidden away.  Each night they would call and I’d slave away with pencil or pen transferring my travails onto paper. 

I’d glue clippings too, and crudely drawn pictures of things seen, those loved; slogans, poems, quotes... 

I remember there were changes as time went by, as I moved between bands or pen preference, styles, magazines, newspapers; the whole epoch itself was divided into eras. 

It took its toll, though, ground me down as I wore the pencil’s nib or drained the pen’s ink.  I carried on because it felt vital to me, it carried me through.  I paid to crest along neatly.


Looking at them now, talking to others, I realise I’ve also forgotten much.  Wrongs committed are barely mentioned or not listed; the endless whining of inaction and the absence of real life: everything that made me stop, everything that makes me glad those days are done. 

And yet I fondly remember pages hidden in my diary and the release- the abandon that
was all the liberation I needed and desired.  My room was all the world, all the stage, I required.  I adored those times at the time, and I survived those times thanks to those pages.

FYI: 250 (Jumbled) Words - follow Jumbled tag for others from it, too.