My Words, My World

First drafts – A few pages in the large wilderness of the world of writing

Archive for the tag “Fiction”

Lost for words

Welcome to the Advent Calendar Story Train, where you can read through 24 stories under this year’s theme, “Lost”.

Nick sits at his desk; elbow bent and his face in his hands. The once-steaming cup of coffee has now cooled but he ignores it, or forgets about it.

The calendar above his head has a large, Stabilo-pink ring around the 20th. He used to love the thrill of the challenge of producing work for deadlines, now he just feels a knotted stomach. His computer screen shows a document page. Empty.

            With a sigh, he withdraws his face from his hands and stands up, finally noticing the coffee, which he drinks, ignoring the fact that it’s almost cold. He walks over to the Advent Calendar and opens the little window. Inside, there’s a picture of a candle blazing. He sits down and takes his diary.

December 10

Brain fog. Clouds in my brain clouding my brain. I feel like a rowing boat without oars with no idea where or if I’m going. The calendar above my head is a weight on my shoulders.

            Fingers swarm over keys and the keyboard taps away. He stops and looks up at the screen, eyes moving across the page. He looked down at the one key that mattered. He pressed it and watched the words disappear. The short story for the year-end anthology remained unwritten. And time was closing in.

December 12

I feel like a literary eunuch, I’ve been castrated and my words fire blanks. Mr No-Nuts is at the keyboard again.

A paragraph, flat, lifeless and automated, empty words about a lonely Christmas on a lighthouse in the middle of a raging storm. Who gives a toss about lighthouse keepers at Christmas, when everyone’s on the sauce and wrapping presents? His new-found friend, the Delete key, came to the rescue. Whatever he wrote no longer seemed to be his. The thought was like a splinter: I have forgotten how to write like me.

A soft chime startled him. An email, from his editor, Annie. He read the subject line: Checking In – December Story. He opened the mail and read the rest. She was her usual bright and breezy self, something he had once adored about her but now her enthusiasm felt like a punch in the stomach.

Nick got up and walked around the room. He needed a distraction and found it in the box he’d brought down from the loft; decorations from Christmases past. It was time to throw out the old, and since his parents were no longer, he decided now would be the right time.

He opened the box; a couple of old Christmas cards, mangy tinsel, baubles scratched dull. And the manger. He hadn’t thought about that for years. The little wooden manger passed down from grandfather to father to son that used to sit on the mantlepiece. Except, there was no manger. He tipped the box out on the table. Nothing. It wasn’t there. All thoughts of the story deadline disappeared as he raked through the contents of the box laid out on the table. His grandfather had made it while being held as a prisoner of war and now it was missing.

            With shaking hands, he threw everything back in the box. Eyes wide, he staggered from the room and climbed into the loft. There were other boxes, all marked with their contents. Kitchen, Nick – Baby, Books. He opened every one. He sat in a growing pile of family history as he inspected each box. Desperate, he reached the last one, Odds and sods. His hand pulled out scraps of cloth, paper glue and anything else his mother used for her bricolage hobby. He rummaged through the box.

            His hand closed on a familiar shape.

            With care, he pulled his hand from the box. He held the manger, discoloured, scratched and missing a few details, up to the light of the window. Forgetting the mess around him, he went back downstairs and placed the manger on the mantlepiece, where he’d always remembered it. As he lifted his fingers, the little wooden roof of the manger came off. He turned it over in his fingers, looking at the broken joint. Under the roof were three words, carved under the harshest conditions.

            NEVER LOSE FAITH

            The message was not lost on Nick. He had made a career from his writing, earned money from his words and now, here he was, a blank page for his efforts.

            From a drawer he took a tube of glue and repaired the manger’s roof before placing it on the mantlepiece. Then, with a sense of calm, he started clearing away the mess he had created, one ordered box at a time, until everything was back in its place.

            He took one look at the blank screen, closed his eyes for a few seconds, then turned the computer off.

December 15

That strange sense of calm of doing bugger all, even when the clock is ticking and there is expectation. This mad mariner tale no longer interests me. I hope a seagull shits on his head for Christmas.

December 16

I do nothing, except laze around the house, read and sometimes look at the ornament.   

December 17

I keep analysing my grandfather’s message scrawled into his creation at a time when faith was probably the only thing he had. Faith in who, or what?

December 19

Dear diary, thank you for being there. Grandad’s message never leaves me and here I am with, selfishly, only faith in myself. Not in my empty words but in my diary pages. It’s me in there. I’d lost me, myself.

He opened a new document and typed the title: An Advent Adventure.

No lighthouses or lonely Christmases, he wrote about the fear, pain, and loathing on a blank page, and purpose found among lost things. The story was short, imperfect, heartfelt, and his.

The next morning, deadline day, he read it once and pressed the Send key.

A scratched message, like the scratch of a pen on paper, gave lost words a voice.

The end

Thank you for reading today’s story. The next story will be available to read sometime on the 19th December, titled “Lost Project. This link will be active tomorrow when the post goes live.

If you missed yesterday’s you can go and read it here.

99-word story: The Empty Chair

This week’s 99-word story is called The Empty Chair. Why? Well, that’s for you to decide.

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You know the worst thing about an empty chair? It rhymes with “no one there”, or worse, “where?”.  

There’s a place at the table where normally there’s a place mat, napkin, cutlery. Maybe a glass for the wine. 

Instead, just a piece of table cloth with nothing on it. 

No sitting down to grace, not that we ever did. No talk about the day, the weekend or whatever. 

The habit of turning my head, forkful of food in mid-air and talking. Now I just stare, straight ahead. And wonder.

You see, it’s not the empty chair. It’s the waiting.

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99-word story: The Last Train

The rain, diagonal in the light, drums on the station roof. 

One man sits apart from the others, suitcase on his lap. The station clock ticks off another minute. He checks his watch and taps his foot. 

A distant horn sounds and a light appears. 

Looking around, he opens the case again, stroking his hand over the contents. He closes his eyes, then the case. 

The tracks hum to the approaching train and the people get up, ignoring him. 

When it departs, only a child looks back. The man sits alone, suitcase still on his lap. Another minute passes.

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99-word story: The book

He closed the door and stood with his back against it. His head thumped as the voices on the other side became muffled, as had so much recently. He crossed to the table and sat down.

The book lay flat on the table, its thick binding rising off the surface like a construction. His trembling hands paused before they stroked the cover. He took a deep breath before his fingers gripped the cover and turned.

His fingers hovered over the photograph on the first page. His head dropped as he sat, staring, and the silence pressed closer around him.

Another attempt at minimal, using Hemingway’s iceberg-theory.

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99-word story: The path ahead

I stand and wait, breathe in the wood, the damp soil and the moss on trees. The path is straight, like the paths I should have taken. Sometimes we have to meander. The trees change colour with the day’s fading light, just as we change and fade. I hear the wind in the branches but it passes me by unseen; and my hand grabs only air. I look up at the grey sky and follow the fall of the brown leaves as they pitch in the air, to and fro. I look up to see another season watching me.

This story was a challenge, laid before me by Esther Chilton (https://estherchilton.co.uk/). I couldn’t say no, even without an initial idea. The original photo was in colour, I just brought it down to the dark side. Thanks Esther, I hope you enjoy it! I’m still playing with Hemingway’s iceberg-theory.

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99-word story: Leaving

The two men sat at the bar. From the other room came the rattle of a fruit machine and the clink of dishes.

Their beers stood mostly full.

The older man stared at his hands. The younger one watched the traffic pass and shrink into the distance.

“You sure you’re ready?” the older man said.

The younger man rubbed his eyes with both hands.

“It’s not me that decides. The decision’s been made. Guess I’d better get used to taking orders.”

He paused.

“I just hope I make it back.”

The older man nodded.

“Me too. Your mother especially.”

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99-word story: The Stranger – episode 15: the final episode

‘They’ll find you eventually,’ she said.

Headlights flooded the car’s interior.

‘I think you mean now.’

The woman turned. The car behind them accelerated. 

‘Floor it, she said. ‘We can still make it.’

The Stranger shook his head.

Another car blocked the road ahead.

‘Or maybe we should stop running,’ he said. “You wanted everything.’

She handed him a gun.

‘After seven years of marriage to you, I deserved everything.’

She lit the envelope and left it on the seat. They stood back-to-back in the street.

‘We’ve never been so close,’ he said. 

She smiled, then the shooting started.

The end.

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If you haven’t read the previous episodes, you can find them here:

99-word fiction: The Stranger | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part IX

The woman slammed her hands on the steering wheel as she watched the taillights grow smaller. She cursed her stupidity. And the man’s desperate cunning.

Her orders had been clear; all of the money or the story of his dead body in the newspapers.

She knew the consequences if she failed.

She looked at the bag on the seat next to her. Half of what he owed – and enough for her to disappear.

The engine roared as she accelerated out of the car park, the car fishtailing as she struggled to keep it under control.

She had decided.

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If you haven’t read the previous stories, you can find them here:

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part VIII

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part VII

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part VI

99-word fiction: The stranger – part V

99-word fiction: The stranger – part IV | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part III | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part II | My Words, My World

99-word fiction – The stranger | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part VIII

In the light of the open door, two men shook hands, turned up their collars, and ran for their cars. The rain was unforgiving, but the opportunity wasn’t.

The Stranger waited, then slipped between the two cars, lights off. Now she would have to move.

Brakelights flashed as the first car sounded its horn. Her engine idled, smoke curling from the exhaust.

Then the third car blared — longer, impatient. For the moment, he was hidden.

With a screech of tyres, she reversed back into the car park — just as the three cars peeled away into the dark wet night.

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If you haven’t read the previous stories, you can find them here:

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part VII

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part VI

99-word fiction: The stranger – part V

99-word fiction: The stranger – part IV | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part III | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part II | My Words, My World

99-word fiction – The stranger | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part VII

The Stranger took shelter in his car, and listened to the rain pound the roof; he could barely hear himself think. For now, the way out was blocked.

She wouldn’t be able to stay there all night, someone had to leave. His only chance was to switch cars.

Out in the street the cops rolled by and he slid lower in his seat. She was bad — the cops were worse. One meant death, and liberation; the other a lifetime behind bars.

I just need to get that money, he thought, just as light spilled from the open bar door.

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If you haven’t read the previous stories, you can find them here:

99-word fiction: The Stranger – part VI

99-word fiction: The stranger – part V

99-word fiction: The stranger – part IV | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part III | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part II | My Words, My World

99-word fiction – The stranger | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part V

With one last look at the barman, the Stranger nodded and opened the door. His eyes adjusted. He scanned the car park — just darkness. He knew she hadn’t left. He knew she was waiting for him, out there.

She had his money and a gun. He had a hire car from a company that had all his details. Bad odds. Bad night. His sweat mixed with rain.

In her car, the woman watched, waiting to see which car he took, her telephone in hand. They had half already. They could do without the rest. They could do without him.

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If you haven’t read the previous stories, you can find them here:

99-word fiction: The stranger – part IV | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part III | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: The stranger – part II | My Words, My World

99-word fiction – The stranger | My Words, My World

99-word fiction: A day of rest

“What do you mean you have no words? You’re a writer. Find some. 99 to be exact.”

I’d made it difficult for myself. A week of 99-word stories and now the muse demanded more.

He sat there tapping his fingers on the desk, his face and neck red. It was Sunday. I said I wanted a day off.

“A … day … off?”

He slammed his hand on the desk and his fountain pen jumped. I grabbed it and stabbed down on his hand. He screamed.

“Ouch! Ouch!”

“I’m going for a drink,” I said. “99 words on Monday.”

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99-word fiction – Animal instinct

Every evening the rat would come to my cell. Then I had an idea. It had taken time. I shared my food every evening, and watched the rat leave in the morning. One day I’d asked for a pencil, another day an elastic band, then a piece of paper. The guards had been stupid.

The little hole in the wall was the only way out of my cell and into the nearby market, maybe someone would find him; someone had to know where I was. I tied the note to the rat, watched him leave then said a prayer.

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99-word fiction – Voices

I sit down on a stool at the bar. I order a beer. I watch the barmaid tilt her head as she tilts the glass.

Voices getting louder. Behind me, to the side of me but not in front where I can see where they’re coming from. I’m trying to understand if they’re talking about me.

They are, I can hear them. Now they’re trying to whisper but it’s too late for that. They’re provoking me. This happens everywhere I go and it always ends the same way.

I turn on my stool and look around an empty bar.

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Blood is Thicker than Ink

Welcome to the Advent Calendar Story Train, where you can read through 24 stories under the theme Surprise.

Jane sits at her desk at the front of the class. Following the expected high spirits before the Christmas holidays the class has now settled down and she can concentrate on marking their homework. She takes a moment to listen to the sleet lightly slap the window.

On her desk is a piece of A4 paper, its lines filled with neat, slanted writing in black ink, and the effect makes her tilt her head a little. In her hand is a red pen; and she doesn’t know where to start. She’s afraid to take her pen to the page, to leave ragged red scars and ruining the beauty of the writing.

But beauty is only skin deep, she thinks. It’s the content that counts.

Still her pen remains suspended over the page, as if defying her. She can’t understand where the problem lies; after all, everyone else had had little problem with the homework. At (almost, she tells herself) 16 years of age, the girl, Christine, should be more than capable of writing chapter summaries for The Grapes of Wrath. Spelling mistakes abounded and she still had problems with basic grammar. Jane thought back to her own childhood, how her mother had transmitted her love of English to her. A mother’s love. Even after what had happened, her mother’s love had remained constant. How she missed her mother. Jane sighs, then brings the red pen to bear.

The red pen stops its Bic blitzkrieg, and Jane thinks back to that chat with Christine earlier that term, just the two of them, and just after Jane had arrived at the school (There was only ever this school, she tells herself); teacher and student discussing the latter’s plans after leaving school.

‘I wanna be a journalist,’ the girl had said.

Jane is a great believer in optimism but concedes a limit must exist. The girl wanted to study journalism yet she could hardly construct a paragraph that didn’t require red biro butchery. She wouldn’t even get on one of the tabloids.

Jane had been digging that day and the chat had revealed more than anticipated. Christine was having a hard time of it at home. Being the eldest child, responsibility fell on her shoulders and she had to take care of the children while she should have been studying but her mother, (Mother!), was out and about and up to who knew what.

Looking down at the page, Jane too feels the weight of responsibility and wonders what she can do to help. A Christmas miracle, maybe, she thinks before making another note in the margin on the use of the apostrophe. Christine, we really need to look at the work you’re producing and how we can… improve it. There, that was tactful. Improve it.

Christina sits and writes, ignoring the class and the weather outside. She hates Christmas; why had she been born on Christmas Day? She couldn’t think of a worse day for a birthday.

The slap of sleet has given way to the patter of large snowflakes and the class, with their low ‘oohs’ and ‘ahs’ is now distracted. So is Jane. The only head that isn’t turned to the window is Christine’s, which is still down as she continues to write, which she does until the bell goes. Everyone is off their feet, with cries of “Happy Christmas, Miss” and out the door by the time Christine stops writing. Jane waits.

‘Christine, can I just have a moment, please?’

Jane walks over and closes the door. She comes back and sits on the desk in front of Christine and takes a deep breath.

‘Look, when you come back in January you’ll be in your last term before your exams.’ She hands Christine the homework and lets her read her comments. ‘If you can’t get these basics right, you’ll…’ “Fail” was too strong a word. ‘You’ll struggle in the exam. This is the one subject you need to have in the bag if you want to go on to study journalism, Christine.’

Christine looks up from the wave of red scrawl.

‘I will study journalism. I have to. I can’t fail. I won’t fail.’ Her shoulders sag and her head drops and rests on her upturned hands, elbows on the desk for support. She chokes back a sob. ‘I just can’t find the time to study.’

Jane wants to reach out and offer comfort. She needs to be practical.

‘So, let me help you find the time to study. Let’s say two hours a week.’

Christine’s head, still down, shakes a little.

‘I can’t. When I don’t have to look after the kids I work at the café twice a week. I can’t even afford to lose the pittance they pay.’

‘I know,’ says Jane, and Christine looks up, frowning. She opens her mouth, but Jane holds up her hand. ‘How much do they pay you?’

Christine’s eyes widen.

‘How much?’

Stung by the question’s directness Christine drops her stare. ‘Six quid an hour, four hours a week. Why? What’s it got to do with…’

Jane’s hand goes up again.

‘I’ll cover it. We’re more alike than you think. I too can’t fail. I won’t fail and you will pass this exam.’

‘But why would you do something like this for me? Why would anyone look out more me like that?’

It’s now or never, thinks Jane and her hand reaches across the table. At first Christine’s hand is reluctant but then surrenders.

A mother’s love. Her mother’s love. Memories come flooding back. The affair, his arrest, the sacking, his career lying in tatters. Jane the 15-year-old, pregnant by her English teacher, forgiven by her mother and finally giving birth on the day her classmates were at home unwrapping their presents. A mother’s love.

‘On Christmas Day, it’ll be 16 years that I’ve been looking out for you.

The end

Thank you for reading today’s story. The next one will be available to read on December 17th, titled “A Disappointing Surprise“. This link will be active tomorrow when the post goes live.

If you missed yesterday’s you can go and read it here.

Blood is Thicker than Ink

Welcome to the Advent Calendar Story Train, where you can read through 24 stories under the theme Surprise.

Jane sits at her desk at the front of the class. Following the expected high spirits before the Christmas holidays the class has now settled down and she can concentrate on marking their homework. She takes a moment to listen to the sleet lightly slap the window.

On her desk is a piece of A4 paper, its lines filled with neat, slanted writing in black ink, and the effect makes her tilt her head a little. In her hand is a red pen; and she doesn’t know where to start. She’s afraid to take her pen to the page, to leave ragged red scars and ruining the beauty of the writing.

But beauty is only skin deep, she thinks. It’s the content that counts.

Still her pen remains suspended over the page, as if defying her. She can’t understand where the problem lies; after all, everyone else had had little problem with the homework. At (almost, she tells herself) 16 years of age, the girl, Christine, should be more than capable of writing chapter summaries for The Grapes of Wrath. Spelling mistakes abounded and she still had problems with basic grammar. Jane thought back to her own childhood, how her mother had transmitted her love of English to her. A mother’s love. Even after what had happened, her mother’s love had remained constant. How she missed her mother. Jane sighs, then brings the red pen to bear.

The red pen stops its Bic blitzkrieg, and Jane thinks back to that chat with Christine earlier that term, just the two of them, and just after Jane had arrived at the school (There was only ever this school, she tells herself); teacher and student discussing the latter’s plans after leaving school.

‘I wanna be a journalist,’ the girl had said.

Jane is a great believer in optimism but concedes a limit must exist. The girl wanted to study journalism yet she could hardly construct a paragraph that didn’t require red biro butchery. She wouldn’t even get on one of the tabloids.

Jane had been digging that day and the chat had revealed more than anticipated. Christine was having a hard time of it at home. Being the eldest child, responsibility fell on her shoulders and she had to take care of the children while she should have been studying but her mother, (Mother!), was out and about and up to who knew what.

Looking down at the page, Jane too feels the weight of responsibility and wonders what she can do to help. A Christmas miracle, maybe, she thinks before making another note in the margin on the use of the apostrophe. Christine, we really need to look at the work you’re producing and how we can… improve it. There, that was tactful. Improve it.

Christina sits and writes, ignoring the class and the weather outside. She hates Christmas; why had she been born on Christmas Day? She couldn’t think of a worse day for a birthday.

The slap of sleet has given way to the patter of large snowflakes and the class, with their low ‘oohs’ and ‘ahs’ is now distracted. So is Jane. The only head that isn’t turned to the window is Christine’s, which is still down as she continues to write, which she does until the bell goes. Everyone is off their feet, with cries of “Happy Christmas, Miss” and out the door by the time Christine stops writing. Jane waits.

‘Christine, can I just have a moment, please?’

Jane walks over and closes the door. She comes back and sits on the desk in front of Christine and takes a deep breath.

‘Look, when you come back in January you’ll be in your last term before your exams.’ She hands Christine the homework and lets her read her comments. ‘If you can’t get these basics right, you’ll…’ “Fail” was too strong a word. ‘You’ll struggle in the exam. This is the one subject you need to have in the bag if you want to go on to study journalism, Christine.’

Christine looks up from the wave of red scrawl.

‘I will study journalism. I have to. I can’t fail. I won’t fail.’ Her shoulders sag and her head drops and rests on her upturned hands, elbows on the desk for support. She chokes back a sob. ‘I just can’t find the time to study.’

Jane wants to reach out and offer comfort. She needs to be practical.

‘So, let me help you find the time to study. Let’s say two hours a week.’

Christine’s head, still down, shakes a little.

‘I can’t. When I don’t have to look after the kids I work at the café twice a week. I can’t even afford to lose the pittance they pay.’

‘I know,’ says Jane, and Christine looks up, frowning. She opens her mouth, but Jane holds up her hand. ‘How much do they pay you?’

Christine’s eyes widen.

‘How much?’

Stung by the question’s directness Christine drops her stare. ‘Six quid an hour, four hours a week. Why? What’s it got to do with…’

Jane’s hand goes up again.

‘I’ll cover it. We’re more alike than you think. I too can’t fail. I won’t fail and you will pass this exam.’

‘But why would you do something like this for me? Why would anyone look out more me like that?’

It’s now or never, thinks Jane and her hand reaches across the table. At first Christine’s hand is reluctant but then surrenders.

A mother’s love. Her mother’s love. Memories come flooding back. The affair, his arrest, the sacking, his career lying in tatters. Jane the 15-year-old, pregnant by her English teacher, forgiven by her mother and finally giving birth on the day her classmates were at home unwrapping their presents. A mother’s love.

‘On Christmas Day, it’ll be 16 years that I’ve been looking out for you.

The end

Thank you for reading today’s story. The next one will be available to read on December 17th, titled “A Disappointing Surprise“. This link will be active tomorrow when the post goes live.

If you missed yesterday’s you can go and read it here.

In the corner

Following my recent negativity, two days ago I started writing a small fiction piece, something I haven’t done for a while.  I wanted it to be light, happy and, I suppose, a little seasonal, despite my humbug sentiments which came through in my last couple of (apparent) poems. I wanted it finished for today, for a reason.

________________________________________________________________________________

A small triangle of light fell across the boy’s face and he opened one eye, squinting.  He looked at the gap in the curtains.

He threw the covers back and stuck his head through the gap; pale blue greeted him and not a cloud in sight. A perfect day for playing football in the park or riding his bike, if he wrapped up properly and his mother would see to that.  He climbed off the bed, put on his dressing gown and picked up the comic he had been reading the night before, his feet finding his slippers as he shuffled out of the room, ignoring what lay in the corner.  His mother was waiting for him, a box of cereal in her hand. The curtains were still drawn.

“Good morning, sunshine.  You’ve a face as long as your dressing gown.  What’s up?”

She placed the box on the table. Billy was still wondering about the curtains. He sighed.

“It’s meant to be winter, Mum.  We still haven’t had any snow, it’s just sunny all the time.”

He didn’t notice her smile that appeared and disappeared while he poured milk on his breakfast.

“You should be happy.  You can go out to play.”

He shrugged.

“Dad said it was going to snow at Christmas, and it didn’t.”

“He’s not the weatherman, love.”

“Then he said it would on boxing Day.”

“He must have heard it from somewhere, Billy.”

“It’s now New Year’s Day and it’s still sunny.”

She picked the tea-towel from its hanger just as the cat jumped through the cat-flap, shaking herself.  Billy didn’t notice.

“So, you looked out of your window?”

He spooned the last of the cereal into his mouth and finished chewing before he answered, to his mother’s delight.

“I do it every morning and it’s always the same.”

“Your little window, in your room at the back of the house?”

He scratched his head and wondered if she’d been at the sherry, like she had on Christmas morning.  He opened the comic where he’d finished the night before. She turned the light off.

“Mum. I can’t read in this dark.”

“Open the curtains then, love.  I’ve got my hands full.”

He frowned.  Well, he supposed she did have a tea-towel in her hand. She was definitely acting strange.  He put the comic down, walked over to the window and opened the curtain.  His surprise was audible.  Grey sky greeted him and the first flakes of snow were already falling.

“But how…?”

“It’s been threatening a while but your little window looks out in the opposite direction.”

He stood, hand on the curtain, smiling as the snow became heavier.  The grass on the lawn was changing colour.

“Mum, it’s starting to set.”

“You’ll soon be able to throw snowballs and make snowmen.”

Laughing, he left his comic on the table and ran upstairs, throwing open his bedroom door.  He looked in the corner where his prize Christmas present, his new wooden sledge, waited for him.

Where do all the words go?

So you start writing and you continue, word by word, one after another: 5,000, 10,000, 20,000 and then…you turn your head away and BANG!, you hit the buffers, nowhere to go, no more forward momentum. You open up the story; it’s been two weeks damn it, not two years but when you look inside it’s like taking a straight razor and cutting yourself to see what comes out.  20,000+ words and there they sit, destined for the file marked ‘In progress’, along with half a dozen other 20K’s that came to the same end.  It’s like trying to build a Lego house but someone’s blocked up the holes in the bricks.

The penultimate day of the year and I sit, devoid of ideas and inspiration.

Am I destined for a life of flash fiction and off-the-cuff poetry?  Fuck.

 

 

Sunrise (I wanna sleep)

“The sun’s coming up.”

“What?”

“The sun’s coming up.”

“It does that, in the morning.”

“Wanna take a look?”

“No, I want to sleep.”

“You should see it, the colours and everything.”

“Pink.  It’s bound to be pink.  Go to sleep.”

“How do you know what colour it is?”

“Because it’s always pink.  Clear sky, pink clouds, pink sunrise. Pink.”

“I’ve seen sunrises that aren’t pink.”

“I’m happy for you, really.  So, get up or go to sleep, either way I don’t care about the pink sunrise.”

“You should you know.  After all, it may be your last.”

“What?”

“Well, we don’t know, do we?”

“Well that’s a cheery fucking thought.  Thanks for that. How am I going to sleep now?”

“Just think, it could be your last sunrise and you’re missing it because you want to stay in bed and sleep.”

“So then just think, it would also be my last sleep and I’m missing it watching a bloody pink sunrise.  Go to sleep!”

Hats off to Raymond Chandler

“Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery that mediocrity can pay to greatness.” So said Oscar Wilde.

While I hope my work isn’t mediocre, I can understand the sentiment behind the statement.  We who doff our caps at others are acknowledging something which we appreciate and would probably like to do or achieve.

I have a weakness for reading Raymond Chandler.  Every once in a while I’ll return to any one of a number of books on my shelf.  A great writer.  By all accounts a greater drinker also, but that’s neither here nor there.  I’ve always loved reading Chandler and, not so long ago, as an idea to ‘unblock’, I wrote a small, Chandleresque sketch. It only runs to 68 words but after doing so I found a new impetus to my writing.

I hope you don’t find it too mediocre…


She offered me a coffee.  I took it like a man.  Black, no sugar; like my mood.  I don’t know which discount supermarket she’d bought it from but even with hot water added it was as dry as a Saharan wind.  I managed to drink it without pulling any expression except appearing concentrated on what she was saying, which wasn’t much.  Her words flowed like an uphill stream.

50-word story

“It wasn’t me.”
“What do you mean, it wasn’t you; you were seen.”
“By who?”
“Someone.”
“Who?”
“Did you do it?”
“No.”
“Do you have an alibi?”
“No.”
“I’m gonna have to take you down.”
The accused raised two stumps for wrists.
“But you said she was strangled.”

On your own

He couldn’t remember how long he’d been walking. he remembered coming out of the sanitary-white hospital ward, the stench almost too much to bear. The place was littered with bodies, beyond stiffening, and the buzz of flies seemed like a road-drill in the silence. As he left the building he caught a glance of himself in a shattered window. MacQuade was 28 years old. He’d had black hair when he entered the place, now an old man looked back at him, or what looked like an old man. White, fluffy hair stood up from his head and beneath it a face, as white as the hair, drawn and gaunt.

The scene in the ward was replayed outside, but on a much grander scale. Vehicles crashed in the road, bodies on sidewalks, on grass verges, on the road itself. Whatever had happened had happened with a suddenness that took everyone by surprise. Most car doors were still closed, meaning the occupants hadn’t even had time to stop and get out.

“Hello? Hello?”

MacQuade’s voice croaked in his ears but it was the only sound he could here on the four-lane boulevard which lead past the hospital. He stopped and walked over to a grass verge, ignoring the bodies which had been walking instead of driving. He stooped to look at what else lay on the grass. Sparrows, pigeons and even a crow, its eyes open and as cruel in death as in life. Wholesale human and animal fatalities and yet, here he was, alive, here on this green verge, the grass still healthy. The Rhododendrons in the flower beds still full of colour, roaring pink and fuchsia.

That evening he’d found tins of food in a supermarket but everything else had gone over. Christ! How long had he been out? They’d operated on his wisdom tooth on a Wednesday, the 28th July. He’d gone in search of a calendar. Someone had marked off the 28th on the one in the supermarket office. He just had no idea what day it was now. The bodies were skin on bone and that didn’t happen overnight.

He’d found a bottle of whisky in the store and got right into it immediately after the can of tuna flakes. Halfway down it he remembered his wisdom tooth no longer caused him pain. He smiled until he looked out of the window.

The end of his tether

He’d often wondered about his tether and the end of it.  Until he picked up a dictionary only a week before he hadn’t known what a tether even was.  Now he knew and now he thought he’d reached the end of it.

He was glad it was winter.   He didn’t mind the cold and the snow and, in happier times, he’d always been an enthusiastic skier.  In happier times.  Yes, he thought, he didn’t mind the winter with its snowy peaks, white crystal frosted fields and the smell of mulled wine in the market square and steaming paper cups warming hands in the cold.

He looked out of a window to the outhouse.  The cold.  The cold was good.  It killed off many of the pests that hung around in warmer climates or even down in the valley, although now other pests had found him and disturbed his peace.  Footprints and a strange indent in the snow crossed the yard, as if a sack of firewood had been dragged.  Yes, he’d reached the end of his tether, and the bodies mounted up in the outhouse.

Dry

The old man stood with a length of coiled rope around his shoulder and spat into the dust.  The sky was cold and clear.  He looked at the sky every day but the clouds still avoided him.

“Giovanni, what’s the latest?”

“January, papà.”

In November they said early December, then it was going to be mid-December, then Christmas.”

“No one really knows, papa.”

“No one knows?”  The old man spat into the dust once again.  He took a leather pouch from his jacket pocket and started to roll himself a cigarette.  “My father could tell what the weather was going to do, a week before it did it.”

“You know as well, papa.”

The old man flicked a match.  He scuffed his boots in the dust, kicking up a little cloud.

“I did once.”  His rummy eyes looked up again at the clear blue sky.  “This year is different.”

From their lofty position on the lower slopes of the mountain, where the pastures lay brown and dry, they could see the distant Monte Rosa.  Even from that distance they could see its barren slopes; only its vague glaciers flickered white in the sun.

“There’s no tourism yet.  Tourism’s suffering and we’re suffering with it, Giovanni.”

“The snow will come papa, it has to.”

“Do you think?  When was the last time it rained, son?”

“October.”

“It drizzled for a couple of hours, Giovanni.  It hasn’t rained in anger since July.”  He flicked his head in a backwards movement.  “Those woods are a tinderbox.”

Giovanni nodded his head.  “The weather channel put the area on high alert for forest fire risk.”

The old man crushed his cigarette carefully under his heel.  “It’s about the only thing the weather channel has got right this year.”  He lifted the rope from his shoulder and placed it on the old trunk of a walnut tree that served as a chopping block.  He nodded down the slope.  “I want to get that fence in the bottom field repaired.  If the snow does come at least the animals will be contained.”

This last comment fell like an axe blow between the men.  They’d already lost a few animals, sickened by the drought conditions; they couldn’t afford to lose any more, there dwindling finances couldn’t take it.  They’d lost the annual orders from the surrounding ski resorts, whose slopes were bare and car parks were empty.  In his 72 years the old man had never known anything like it.  He was almost glad his wife had passed away the previous spring and didn’t have to see what the farm had become.  His son brought him back to the present.

“Five months ago we were enjoying a beautiful summer and everyone said we’d pay for it, that the winter would come early and the snow would be heavy.”

“Yeah, and I was one of them, telling the same thing to anyone who’d listen.  Now I’m just the foolish sheep farmer who can’t tell the direction of the wind even if I wet my finger and hold it in the air.”

“Come on papa.  This year’s caught everyone out.  It’s not just down to us anymore.  Think of all those satellites out there and they still can’t give us an accurate forecast.”

“Any farmer worth his salt should be able to mind his own, without the need for satellites or weather channels, son; just like my father and grandfather used to do.  Maybe the people are right; maybe I am just a foolish sheep farmer that prophesises ‘red sky at night’.”

“Enough papà.  Come on, let’s get the fence fixed so I can go to Cristina’s with that firewood.”

Giovanni looked into his father’s face.  This autumn had taken everything out of him.  His face was drawn and his eyes sunken and dark-ringed.  The quick smile was no longer there, replaced by a stare which admitted defeat.

“We can do the fence later, son.  Take the wood over to Cristina; if her father’s down in town, you’ll have to unload yourself, it’ll take time.”

Giovanni considered this.  It was true.  All the while the weather held, and it looked like holding for a fair while still, the bottom field fence wasn’t a priority.  The nights were cold and Cristina needed the wood.  He took the pick-up keys from his jacket pocket.

“Get some rest papa.  I’ll be back in a couple of hours, three at the most.”

“Give my regards to Cristina and her father, if he’s there.  I guess you’re right, I could use a little rest.”

“There’s nothing more any of us can do papa, at least until this weather shows signs of breaking.”  He got into the pick-up truck and the electric motor hummed as the window rolled down.  “Get some rest papa.  How about we go into town for a couple of beers this evening; it’s been ages since we’ve done that.”

“About the last time we saw any money coming through the door, son.”

The truck engine revved into life and Giovanni waved through the open window.  His father watched as the brake lights flashed once before the car drove out onto the road.

With a final spit into the dust, the old man looked once more at the sky.  With his head bowed, he heaved the coil of rope onto his shoulder and walked slowly to the still-empty barn.

She was free

His heart sank.

It happened while she was watching.  She supposed it had always been coming; in fact, she knew it had been.  It was all he’d had to give.  For months; ever since it had happened.  They’d gone through so much together; then the accident, but he’d held on.

“My heart will always be yours,” he’d said, “until the day it sinks so completely and can never rise again.  When it does, you’ll be free”.

Six months had passed since he died.

She stared at the heart at the bottom of the jar of formaldehyde.

She was free.

Hell’s kitchen

The Sous-chef was on the floor. I left the knife where I found it, in a red puddle beside his foot. Its blade pointed towards the door, as if indicating the escape direction of the guilty party. The stainless steel worktop dripped and I noticed more splatters up the wall, behind the sink. A saucepan had overturned, spilling its now-smoking contents over the hobs.

A constable came in. “We have him sir; he was outside the rear entrance, behind some dustbins,” his face registering shock as he looked around at the scene.

“Where is he now?”

“In the car, sir.”

“Keep him there.”

The constable backed out slowly as I turned around, taking in details. A handprint, red and smudged, hailed me from the fridge door. I felt something drip onto my left shoulder. I knew what it was even without looking up, but I looked anyway – curiosity is like that. Then I heard a muffled voice behind me.

“Yes!”

Knee joints clicked as the Sous-chef rose to his feet, a look of triumph on his face as his arm withdrew from under the fridge with his prized wooden spoon, a gift from Keith Floyd apparently.

“So much for Hell’s Kitchen eh, officer?”

“What happened?”

“Well, when the Maître announced Gordon Ramsay’s arrival the chef became agitated, to say the least. Then, while he was plating Mr Ramsay’s Penne al Pomodoro, I happened to mention he’d forgotten the basil and then …” He waved his spoon around the kitchen.

Bukowski: the morning after the night before

I got up. I couldn’t sleep, I just lay there sweating, tossing and flapping like a freshly-caught fish. Booze does that to you. You think it’ll knock you out; that you’ll sleep like a kitten for the night but then you awake on a sweat-wet pillow, and then it’s finished.

I lay in bed an hour or so, unable to shut my head up. The room was dark but in my head someone had flipped a switch. Transitory thoughts, each following the other down the fuddled highway of my mind, flickered on and off, on and off. What I had to do today. What I had to to this week. What? Whatever.

I got up, grabbed my book, made a coffee and made myself comfortable on the cold leather sofa, and lost myself in story.

I had a heavy chest and a cough that wouldn’t come, my airways blocked by too many cigarettes accompanying too many drinks throughout a drunken evening with drunker friends and a happy barman. My mouth was layered from beer, from wine, from gin, from the back shelf where no one sober goes.

The coffee steamed on the coffee-table (what if I drunk tea?) but I drank it, hoping to change the thick, stale, toothpaste-on-alcohol taste in my mouth. My throat burned but something moved. My chest moved. I coughed: it sounded like Tom Waits singing. That was an improvement.

Early morning coffee with Bukowski. I finished the first short story and stared at the page a while before closing the book and closing my eyes.

The Most Beautiful Woman in Town had just died.

Morning mist

Waiting for the kettle to boil I took my usual 5-minute breather on the balcony, around 5.30am.  It had rained heavily the night before and the morning found itself under a heavy grey cloak.  I always enjoy standing out there; breathing, observing, listening and thinking.  The mountains wore skirts of cloud.  I came in, tea in hand and sat down, with just the first sentence in my head.  Strange how things go off on a tangent as they develop.

___________________________________________________________________

The cloud clung to the sides of the mountain.  Beyond it, the sun had risen but the day had dawned pale and would remain that way.   Water from last night’s rain clung to everything.  Hidden blackbirds chattered in the trees and every now and again a crow would raise its voice above the drip, drip of the water.  Pine scent filled the air, which was clean but sombre.

It was time to move.

There was now enough light to get a helicopter in the air and heat imaging would see through the cloud.  He was sure he’d heard dogs in the valley below, and the rain wouldn’t cover his scent for long.

He grit his teeth as he tipped a little schnapps from his flask onto the blood-soaked gauze on his thigh.  The schnapps was the only thing between a usable leg and infection.  In this humidity gangrene would take hold soon if he didn’t find the help he knew was waiting for him.

Four miles to the border.  Four miles till the forest sloped down on the other side of the mountain.  He put all his weight on the pine branch he was using for a crutch and placed his holed leg forward.

It was time to move.

Goldfish

I move, I breathe.

Outside there are two large forms which move around, making noises.  They continue to make these noises; one very low, the other higher.  I keep moving.

Now I see another one like them, yet smaller.  He’s sitting on the big thing they all sit on sometimes, looking at the big box with light.  He’s doing something with that small furry thing that sometimes comes to see me when the others are not around.  Sometimes it makes strange noises, different from what the others make.  I don’t know what’s happened but the small furry thing has just made a strange noise and now it’s run away from the small form.  I keep moving.

Outside there are two large forms which move around, making noises.  They continue to make these noises; one very low, the other higher.  I keep moving.

There’s something outside.  It looks like that small furry thing but, it’s huge.  I keep moving.  It follows me.  I still move.  It still follows.

Outside there are two large forms coming in my direction.  They’re not making any noise.  I keep moving.

The huge furry thing is looking at me and it follows me everywhere I go.  Now what’s it doing?  Above my head there’s a splash, and a big furry foot with sharp edges reaches down.  I keep moving, near the bottom.  There’s another splash.

The two large forms are very close.  One of them is pointing at me.  Now they’re making different noises.  They look happy.  There’s another splash.

I’ve stopped moving.

 

50-word fiction – The footpath

Lost in the forest, I wandered paths now forgotten by men, and remembered only by ghosts of those now long passed.  Restless spirits watched, powerless in the light of day and waiting for the darkness, by which time I would be gone and away from there.

Then the storm came.

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