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: