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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 31, 2017 13:17:27 GMT -6
I love fairy tales and fantasy because of their haunting beauty and magical strangeness. They are set in worlds where anything can happen. Frogs can be kings, a thicket of brambles can hide a castle where a royal court has lain asleep for a hundred years, a boy can outwit a giant, and a girl can break a curse with nothing but her courage and steadfastness. ~Kate Forsyth Yes!! I do love fantasy.
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Post by QueenFoxy on Jul 1, 2020 17:42:54 GMT -6
Out of Work by Jack Coey What he thought he knew, and would come to know, was he would never be enough. She was dissatisfied with him, and he was out of work. He was careful, tentative, around her. He worried about being good enough. He hoped when he got a job it would be better. It was late at night, after a party, and she said, I donāt think Adverb likes you. Really? Do you care? Actually yes. I watched you together, and she was trying to get you to see her point of view about something. Gosh yes, she was going on about Split Infinitives. She got into bed, and turned out the light, and he felt her anger toward him. Weāll never have any lower cases at this rate, he thought. He returned from the store the next morning, and she was in the shower. Heād met her in a story about a family going to California written by John Steinbeck: she was the pronoun for Rose of Sharon, and he was the pronoun for the Preacher. They both made a lot of money from that gig. She came into the kitchen with a towel wrapped around her, and asked, Did you get cheese? How was I supposed to know that? No need to be defensive. I think thereās some in the refrigerator. Damn, she swore after she found no cheese in the refrigerator. I remember telling you, she accused. I donāt recall, he countered. Iāll have something else. Thereās no milk either. What the hell? She went into the bedroom; he thought about following her in, and decided against it. He sat at the kitchen table and read the want ads in the paper. Heād lost his last job for being a typographical error, and he claimed it was the editorās fault. He wanted to try something in poetry, but she scorned him, saying he didnāt have the eloquence. He went into the bedroom; put on a tie, and she asked, Are you looking today? Of course. Good luck. Why, thank-you. Thank-you very much. Thereās a writerās conference at the college next week. Andre Dubus is the featured speaker. Iāve heard Dubus is not good to work for. He expects too much for too little pay. I always thought he sold well. Oh, he does, but he doesnāt give it to his pronouns. Adjectives do well with Dubus. I see. Iāll see you tonight. He gave her a kiss on the cheek, and left the apartment. As he walked to the unemployment office, he ran into a pronoun who was famous for being in The Old Man and the Sea. He was shocked at his appearance. He was unshaven, gaunt, and his hands shook; his coat was dirty with holes in it. Couldnāt handle success, he thought. As he continued on the street, he saw there were mostly pronouns and conjunctions out, not too many adverbs or adjectives. When he was younger, he used to envy adjectives, but heād outgrown that. He entered the unemployment office, and stood in line to speak with a counselor. The counselor sadly looked at him. Sorry no work today. He knew every morning they gathered at The Evening Sentinel for day work, but he was too late. He thought about his friend who got a job in a telegraph, and spent two weeks in France. Stuff like that never happens to him though. The athletes get the sports page, and the lonely females get the advice columns, and the math nerds get the financial page. He was getting older; his ink was not as black as when he was younger. He needed some luck. He walked the empty, sighing streets. He didnāt want to tell her; again, he had no job. Hey wait a minute, he thought, I can sell myself to the flesh trade! He hurried to a phone booth, and looked in the phone book, and found: Hot Flesh Press. He walked to the address, and the office was a flight up over the Hot Flesh Dirty Book Store. He pounded on the office door, and the door was opened by a fat, cigar-smoking, bald-headed, sweaty man who growled, Yeah, whadda ya want? Iām looking for a job, he said. Leave your clips with the secretary. I aināt got time now. Would there be a better time? Listen Gramps, Iām a busy man. You look a little old to me. You know you would have to work with no ink on. If you can stomach that, then, come see me tomorrow. What time? Tomorrow, tomorrow, I said, and the door was shut in his face. He didnāt say no; he could tell her he had a lead. That was something. He went back home at the end of the day, and she was at the kitchen table, and he could tell she wasnāt happy to see him. He told her about the lead, and she was tepid. He knew then she would never be happy with him; that what she really wanted was a noun. š¦
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Post by lostineternity99 on Jul 2, 2020 6:36:07 GMT -6
I like this personification of parts of speech, clever writing
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Post by QueenFoxy on Jul 2, 2020 16:59:17 GMT -6
So it was, Rick.
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Post by QueenFoxy on Jul 2, 2020 17:13:35 GMT -6
Daughter of the Moon by David Tell Jensen The moon cast its pale glow over the forest of Fenlock illuminating the eyes of the creatures that dwelled within. Mist intermingled with the trees giving moss just enough moisture to creep over every surface in the wood. Unsettling noises broke the silence of night in the trees, but seldom was there anyone around to hear it. Tales of the forest of Fenlock were well known to any folk living even remotely near the region. Everyone had heard of the disappearances, the anomalies, and terrors that seemed to inhabit the trees. It was common knowledge among all the children who lived near never to venture into the trees. No one was ever caught in the woods after dark or in the woods at all, except for this night.
A woman of middle age traipsed along the pathway at a brisk pace casting quick glances from side to side then around. Her breath could be seen in the moonlight. This woman had long black hair beneath the cowl of a traveling cloak. Her lips were full and a harsh red compared with the fair skin of her face. Her eyes were a vivid green suffused with fear; fear for the snoring bundle wrapped tightly in her arms. The woman pulled back the cotton flap and looked at the cherubic pink face of her daughter. Her tiny little fists were tucked under her chin, and only a wisp of warm air escaped from her mouth when she breathed. Just beneath her lower lip was a birthmark, a perfect circle. The woman ran her thumb across the childās chin and smiled as she pulled the bundle to her protectively.
When the baby began to stir and fidget the woman pulled the cotton flap back over her childās face and continued on her way throwing more glances around the area. Her steps quickened as she stepped onto the stone path she had been searching for. The path twisted and turned, winding ever closer to the center of the ancient wood. At last she came to a circular clearing, overshadowed by looming trees that reached out to grasp the two fugitives, for they were fugitives. She was a mother who could not give up her daughter as she was expected, and the baby who was born on the second full moon of the year. Always a baby was born on every second full moon of the new year, a child touched by spirits they say. Strange things happened around these children, they say, odd occurrences, unnatural things that shouldnāt be. When they tried to take the child away, of course the woman couldnāt let it happen. She wouldnāt allow it. Didnāt allow it. So she stole away with her child into the night followed closely by the light of torches and angry shouting.
She stepped up to the stone outcropping in the center of the clearing laid her little girl on the flat top of the stone, and knelt. She pulled her cross out from around her neck and held it between her clasped hands as she prayed to God. Tears dropped silently as she rocked back and forth as she plead. As the shouts grew nearer behind her she started to weep, little whimpers and gasps escaped her, but she only continued to pray. She rested her clasped hands next to the little bundle on the stone outcropping and leaned close to the little girl to whisper, āNo voy a dejar que te tienen, a mi hija.ā From behind her came angry yelling as men entered the clearing holding weapons of unspeakable horror.
A whistle of wind and a soft thump silenced the woman. She gasped and fell in a heap on the ground, but as she looked up a bright shining light had appeared. And she wept on the ground at the beautiful sight. She closed her eyes, laid her head on the ground, and was no more. A pool of blood surrounded the woman an arrow protruding from her back. The man standing nearest the woman dropped his bow and fell to his knees.
The men stood astonished and wide-eyed staring at the beam of light before them. The light seemed to kneel beside the woman for a moment. Then it stood and stepped over to the kneeling man and his bow. The light leaned close to the man and whispered something to him in a language unknown to the man. The light then began to grow brighter and soon even brighter lighting up the entire clearing around them. Then it was gone. And so were the little girl and her mother. Never to be seen again, and never again was a child born two moons after the new year.
All the men in the clearing asked the man with the bow what the light had said to him, and he told them. āNever again will I let you take a child of mine. A daughter of the moon.ā The End š¦
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Post by lostineternity99 on Jul 3, 2020 8:06:38 GMT -6
From tragedy to mystical rescue, I love it Brave
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Post by QueenFoxy on Jul 3, 2020 14:11:34 GMT -6
Me too, Rick. My kind of story with a beautiful ending.
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Post by QueenFoxy on Jul 3, 2020 14:32:57 GMT -6
A Light Bulb Called Tink by Jade De-Terville āThis is more than just a bloody mid life crisis,ā Karen said clutching a tattered red book, until her knuckles started going white. She savagely threw the book onto the chequered dining cloth, and ran her hands through her untamed hair.
āOi, mind the biccies,ā her best friend, Tina, said.
āI donāt know what to do anymore; he spends all his time in the garage doing, God knows what.ā
āHeās making a rocket,ā a small voice said behind her.
āWhat?ā Karen turned to find her ten year old son, Robert, sipping a large glass of orange juice.
āDadās building a rocket to take him back home. Apparently, you get to stay young forever there,ā he continued.
An irritating, screechy noise erupted from Tinaās throat; she was laughing, and Karen had heard enough.
āRobert, go to your room and stop listening to my conversations.ā
āThatās so unfair! When the rocket is built Iām going with Dad,ā Robert stamped his way out of the kitchen and up the stairs.
āWill you shut up Tina? It wasnāt that funny.ā
Tina stopped immediately. Tears of frustration were on the verge of spilling from Karenās eyes.
āIām sorry, Karen. Come on. Itās not that bad. My Barry tried to get his penis tattooed like a snake when he went through his mid-life crisis, but the pillock couldnāt stand the pain and didnāt get it finished. I used to like doing it with the lights on but, God, I just canāt stand to see those scales and that one beady eye stare at me. It puts me right off.ā
The tears began to fall down Karenās cheeks. āI wish it were as simple as a tattooed penis.ā
Tina got up and crouched by Karenās side, placing her arm around her shoulders.
āBabes, what is it?ā
āI think Peter is cheating on me,ā Karen began. āThis morning his phone rang. I saw the name Wendy flash on the screen. I saw it! But when I asked him about it he said it was Dave.ā
āThat doesnāt prove anything.ā
āOf course it does, sheās even in that stupid book.ā
Tina picked up the red book and began to flick through the pages.
āKaren, this is just a story. Thereās no such place as Neverland.ā
āItās real enough to Peter and he wants to be there with her.ā
āYou canāt do this to yourself.ā Tina said āCome on, whereās his phone? Weāll find out once and for all who this Wendy, is.ā
Tina looked around the kitchen and spotted Peterās jacket sitting on the counter. āMy Barry always leaves his in his pocket.ā
She picked up the jacket and waded through bits of paper until she found it. She pulled it out and held it up for Karen.
āDo you want to do it?ā Tina asked.
āYes, I think so,ā Karen replied, reaching for the phone uncertainly.
She began flicking through the phone, āHeās called her three times today. I told you, heās cheating on me.ā The tears began streaming down her face once again.
āCome on, the old Karen wouldnāt sit here crying. Sheād call up this cow and give her a piece of her mind.ā
Karen stopped snivelling, āYouāre right.ā She dialled Wendyās number. After three rings a man answered.
āGood afternoon, The Henry Residence.ā
āPut Wendy on,ā Karen said.
āWould madam care to tell me who is calling?ā
āKaren Panā¦Panciana.ā
āWonāt be a moment.ā
āWhatās going on?ā Tina asked.
Karen held a finger to her lips.
āHello,ā a dainty voice said on the line.
āHi,ā Karen replied, āAre you sleeping with my husband?ā
āIām sorry, Mrs Panciana,ā Wendy said confused āIām afraid I donāt know you, or your husband.ā
āMr and Mrs Peter Pan.ā
āOh.ā
āYes oh. So are you screwing him?ā Karen was getting more and more confident.
āI think you should speak to your husband.ā
āI canāt, heās in the garage building a rocket so that he can fly back to Neverland.ā
āNeverland?ā
āDonāt try and change the subject. Admit that youāre sleeping with Peter.ā
āIām not sleeping with him; heās just an old friend.ā
āThen why has he phoned you three times today?ā
āHe needed someone to talk to; heās going through a tough time.ā
āA tough time?ā Karen scoffed, āI donāt call playing with Lego and talking to a light bulb called Tink a tough time.ā
āI think you should talk to your husband.ā
āI donāt need your advice.ā Stay tuned....it's gettin' good. š¦
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Post by lostineternity99 on Jul 4, 2020 6:20:30 GMT -6
Peter Pan and Wendy make this one worth staying tuned for
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Post by QueenFoxy on Jul 4, 2020 6:32:21 GMT -6
LOL!! I knew that.
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Post by QueenFoxy on Jul 4, 2020 6:55:26 GMT -6
āI donāt mean to be rude, but youāre calling me asking if your husband is cheating on you.ā Karen was lost for words and suddenly she felt like an insecure fool. āYouāre right,ā she said after a couple of seconds. āIām sorry Mrs Henry.ā āDonāt apologise,ā Tina cried but Karen ignored her. āThatās quite alright,ā Wendy said and then added hesitantly, āTry listening to Peter, his childhood was different from most and heās just trying to reclaim a little of it.ā āYouāll be telling me Neverland is real next.ā Karen said. Wendy laughed politely and said, āIām afraid I have guests to attend to. I must go, Mrs Pan.ā āOf course.ā When Karen hung up, Tina looked at her āWhat was that?ā āSheās not sleeping with him. Peter and I need to talk. I think you should go.ā āFine, Barry wanted his corns sorted anyway.ā Karen gave a disheartened smile as she led Tina to the door. Karen watched as Tina tottered across the road to her house, in her four inch leopard print heels. She took a deep breath and turned to head to the garage but was stunned to hear a large explosion that shook the house and left her ears ringing. āWhat was that?ā Robert shouted, running down the stairs. Karen didnāt answer; she ran into the utility room and saw black smoke seeping out from beneath the door to the garage. Karen opened the door and found half of the garage swarmed in flames; two legs were poking out from behind a car-sized, rocket. āPeter,ā Karen screeched, running to help him without giving a second thought to the flames searing the sides of her face. āRobert, call 999.ā Robert stood in the doorway eyes wide and glazed. āRobert!ā Karen screamed. She had Peter by the legs and was slowly pulling his unconscious body out of the garage. Finally, Robert snapped to attention and ran to call for help. When Karen got Peter into the utility room she collapsed with a mixture of fatigue and oxygen deprivation. The black smoke was slowly crawling through the house, engulfing everything with its suffocating presence. Karen heaved choked breaths and looked around with bleary eyes. An angel appeared at her head, wearing leopard print heels, her hair littered with rollers. Karen smiled and began to feel at peace until she felt a sharp whack of pain sear across her face. The angel had slapped her. āStay with me you silly cow,ā Tina shrieked. Barry appeared by her side. āGet Peter out, Iāll sort Karen,ā Tina wheezed. Karen stayed conscious long enough to get out of the house, hear the applause of the waiting crowd and the wail of emergency sirens, before everything went black. When Karen came to, she had a pounding headache and a drip in her arm. āMum, youāre awake,ā Robert exclaimed. Karen smiled through cracked lips, āAnd youāre alive. Howās Dad?ā āHeās alright; do you want to go see him?ā Robert asked. āAlright, go get that wheelchair.ā Robert quickly went to go get it and Karen dragged her body into the chair, sliding her bandaged feet into the footrest. āLead the way,ā she said to Robert. āI think itās this one,ā Robert said stopping in front of a set of curtains. Karen gulped then eased her way forward and drew back the curtains. There he lay, bandaged from head to toe. His arms and legs held up by wires suspended from the ceiling. Karen wheeled herself to his side, laid her head on his chest and began to weep. āPeter you idiot,ā she wailed āOh Peter, please donāt die.ā āI wonāt,ā said Peterās voice. She lifted her head and peered into the holes where the bandaged manās eyes were. They were closed and the person had jet black eyelashes, Peterās were russet brown. She jumped as she felt a hand on her shoulder and turned, finding herself staring at a handsome face with deep brown eyes, pointed ears and slightly charred skin. The man was also sat in a wheelchair. āPeter,ā she exclaimed and opened her arms into his extended embrace. He kissed her gingerly on her cheek at first and then again and again until he was finally kissing her on the lips. āUrgh,ā Robert said behind him. āWill you stop that? Youāre embarrassing me.ā Peter and Karen pulled away from each other smiling. āIāve been an idiot,ā Peter said looking at Karen. āOh shush, it doesnāt matter now,ā Karen replied. āYes it does,ā he said taking her hands in his āI-I used baby powder instead of pixie dust to make the rocket fly. You see Tink and I had an argument and-ā āI donāt want to hear it. I thought after the fire youād have changed, but youāre just as crazy now, as you were before.ā āThe only thing Iām crazy about is you,ā he said, before continuing in a softer voice, āI know the rocket is destroyed now, but I even made your chair extra cushiony because I know you get bad back when you sit down for too long.ā āDad, are you going to build another rocket, for us to go to Neverland in?ā Robert asked. Before Peter could answer Karen snapped, āNeverland isnāt real.ā āBut Dad saysā¦ā āBut Dad says nothing.ā āBut Tinkerbellā¦.ā āBut Tinkerbell nothing. The only thing inside that box is a light bulbā, Karen said, reaching up and snatching the box from Peterās lap. āCareful,ā Peter warned, but Karen paid no attention, she snapped the lid off the box and her eyes widened when a faint glow streamed onto her face. Karen finally found her voice, āWhere did you say Neverland is?ā she asked. Peter pointed to the window, āSecond star to the right and straight on till morning.ā The End š¦
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Post by QueenFoxy on Jul 18, 2020 12:27:17 GMT -6
Area Twenty Four and a Half by April Winters I, Jim Roberts, got fired today. I didnāt realize Mr. Kerr, my boss, was standing behind me when I referred to him as Kerr-mitt. He failed to see the humor, and now I have no source of income. Looks like my journalistic aspirations are out the window. I swear, I can catch a cold faster than I can catch a break. Now I find myself sitting on one of the large chunks of cement at the local landfill.
Itās the only place I can go to clear my head when I have a lot on my mind. The stench alone works wonders.
The landfill is like a giant bowl, filled with defunct appliances, tires without tread, and papers of every kind and color, etc. The cement is on the bowlās rim and gives me a view of the entire landfill. No one is supposed to be here after hours, so I park outside the gate and duck under. As far as I know, there are no Landfill Police, so Iām not worried. Besides, Iām not stealing junk or adding to the debris.
This place fascinates me. Rumors have flown for years that itās a mini version of Area 51. All I know about aliens is that when Drew Barrymore let out that high-pitched squeal during Spielberg's E.T., I nearly peed in my Superman Underoos.Not a manly thing to do, but I was seven at the time.
Hereās my life in a nutshell: I'm no longer gainfully employed, Iāve got $22.19 in the bank, and on the drive over here, my car made a sound I didn't appreciate. I swear, nobody in the entire universe could have a life that sucks more than mi . . . what the hell? Is that a . . . oh my god, that's a spaceship! And I haven't done drugs since that time in Kindergarten when I accidentally got high on the fumes from rubber cement. Wait . . . am I getting Punk'd?
Maybe Iād better hide behind the cement, just in case this is for real. Think Iāll turn on my recorder, too; I want to have proof when I tell The National Enquirer!
Well, I guess itās just me, the stench, and the spaceship. Speaking of which, it seems to be stopping. Yes, itās hovering a few yards above the landfill. Wait a minute. It looks like a door's opening; yeah, and now some sort of a, I guess it's a plank is extending out of the mouth of the craft. Now I'm watching space guys walk the flippin' plank! They sure are weird looking. The one in front, the bluish guy with so many appendages an octopus would be envious, is waddling way out to the tip of the plank. Now he's turning around while the other two, both red in color with single appendages, are hanging back. Is that a weapon the bigger of the two red ones is pointing at Blue Boy? Yeah, yeah, that's what it's got to be. Big Red hands it to Little Red who resumes pointing it at Blue Boy. Now Big Red pulls a scroll out from God knows where.
Okay, I'll be the first to admit I'm no linguist. In fact sometimes I don't even enunciate as well as a washed up boxer, but I swear I understand every last word Big Red is yelling as he reads that scroll. The gist of it is that Blue Boy is hereby exiled to Earth for being, and I quote, "a multi-armed, blue Thingie" and he's never to show his "ugly mug" on their planet again or he risks on-sight extermination. Wow, and I thought we humans had a low tolerance for tolerating tolerance. Now Little Red's doing a shuffle march down the plank, demanding that Blue Boy, "Turn around and face space, Mister!"
Are you kidding me? He ju ā¦ Little Red just kicked Blue Boy in the seat of the pants ā well, where the seat of the pants would be if he were wearing any. Oh no, Blue Boy's gone airborne! He's spiraling downward where he bounces off a box spring mattress, does a Triple Lindy, and floats to the ground. Big Red proceeds to fold a scroll, stamped Your Copy, into a miniaturized version of our F-16 fighter jet. It's a slow process since he's only got the one arm. Finally, he aims it over the side. Big Red watches intently as it glides in Blue Boy's general direction. It looks like it's going to miss Blue Boy by at least three mattress lengths, but the wind shifts. The scroll veers to the left, hesitates a moment then zooms downward where it not so gently pokes Blue Boy in the eyeball.
"Owww," Blue Boy yells. Several of his hands flap, flap, flap into each other, jockeying to cover the injured eye. The Reds then give off a piercing squeal and attempt what looks like a high five, but these guys couldn't hit a two hundred pound duck on a sunny day. They give up then flip Blue Boy what I can only assume is Earth's equivalent to the bird because it certainly doesn't look like any salute I've ever seen. Then it's shuffle march, march shuffle, and both Big and Little Red are back onboard where one of them reels in the plank and off they go into the wild dark yonder.
Two thoughts occur to me: as far as I know, Blue Boy is the one true resident alien in America; and, itās apparent that the Reds consider banishment to Earth as some sort of torture.
Gee, and I thought my life reeked. The End š¦
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Post by lostineternity99 on Aug 18, 2020 7:33:36 GMT -6
I like the Peter Pan story best of these two
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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 18, 2020 9:55:45 GMT -6
I was sure you would favor Peter Pan.
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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 18, 2020 10:05:21 GMT -6
Crimson Snow by Jeremy Szal 16th Day of Regon, Year 455 of the First Dawn I could feel the cold as we climbed higher, the chill reaching into my bones. The wind whispered across the grassland, flapping my black hair over my face. I wanted to lie down. I wanted to sleep. I wanted to dream. But I couldnāt. Not with the Kingās Guard after me. I was going to have to push onā¦ 19th Day of Regon, Year 455 of the First Dawn The sky was clear, but the air was no less cold. I had never ventured so far north before. If I werenāt in such a hurry to get out I would have nicked warmer clothes. Some old lady gave me a little bit of food today. She asked for nothing in return, but I gave her some gold anyway. I had too much. Even now it wore me down. Her eyes glazed over when I asked her where her husband was, and her smile seemed to curdle like sour milk. āOff to war,ā she said. That was all I needed to know. I finished the stew and took my leave. I just hope she didnāt see the rune carved into my palm. The last thing I need is for an old woman to be boasting about how she had a mage in her very kitchen, eating out of her bowl. Gods, if I do that again Iāll get caught for sure. 26th Day of Regon, Year 455 of the First Dawn I came across a town today. Despite the cold wind half of the huts were ablaze. I could see it for miles. My guess was that it was just another unfortunate town caught up in the war. Iāve seen it all before. But Iāll never get those screams out of my head. The sounds of the dying. Burning, burning, burningā¦. 2nd Day of Farreach, Year 455 of the First Dawn My mare died today. She fell on a slippery rock, grazing her skin and twisting her ankle. Hours later I could still hear her dying screams as they bounced around in my head. Even after the stain of hot blood was gone from my hands her suffering refused to leave my head. Maybe thatās a good thing. I donāt know. All I know is that Iām on my own now. 8th Day of Farreach, Year 455 of the First Dawn The snow covered the grasslands and hills like a white blanket. An icy, cold blanket. I donāt know how much longer I can do this. I tried to make a fire, but I couldnāt find a single piece of dry wood. My boots are soaked, and it wonāt be long before my clothes are so wet I wonāt be able to wear them. Godsdammit, why didnāt I bring more clothes? 9th Day of Farreach, Year 455 of the First Dawn The wolves came out of nowhere. I was trudging through the thick, white mush when I heard an ominous growl behind me. Next thing I knew I was surrounded by the ugly bastards. I was too tired to use magic, so my steel sword came to my aid once again. The first wolf leaped at me, filthy claws stretched out to tear my throat apart. But I cleaved him in half right in the middle of the air like a hot knife through butter. His brethren refused to retreat. I was fine with that. My sword shimmered in the dying light, bathing in wolfās blood as they died, died, died. By the time I was finished at least a dozen corpses surrounded me, their blood soaking into the snow. There was my dinner. If I told myself that if I couldnāt make a fire I wouldnāt eat. Mages were forbidden to eat raw meat. But my stomach and mouth betrayed me. Gods forgive me. If anyone else is reading this, forgive me as wellā¦. Continued... š¦
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Post by lostineternity99 on Aug 19, 2020 13:20:03 GMT -6
This is such a stark story so far.
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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 20, 2020 10:26:38 GMT -6
15th Day of Farreach, Year 455 of the First Dawn It was the first town Iād seen in almost a month. According to the map it was Luven. I donāt know where I am anymore. All I knew that was I was tired. And hungry. Tiredā¦so tired. I gave them my coin and collapsed on the bed. It was hard and the feathers were mouldy, but I slept soundly anyway. Too soundly, for when I awoke all my possessions were gone. Iām just thankful they couldnāt find my sword that I had hidden under the bed. Now Iām starving and I donāt have a single coin to my name. 16th Day of Farreach, Year 455 of the First Dawn I found the thieves. It wasnāt as hard as I thought it would have been. It just took a few questions and me threatening to castrate an innkeeper to get my answer. They were holed up at The Ragged Tavern, drinking away from cups of fine wine with whores on their laps. To my credit I gave them a few seconds to give my possessions back, and a few more seconds to allow the whores to get out of harmās way. It was a brisk but bloody fight, leaving three of the five thieves dead and the other two with severed limbs, shuddering in their own pool of blood. One of them was desperately trying to shove his entrails back into a gaping hole in his stomach, quietly crying for his mother. After taking back my possessions I left. Too late I noticed my clothes were stained with blood. 19th Day of Farreach, Year 455 of the First Dawn I came to Riverend, looking for a place to sleep and eat. Before I took one step in the town bounty hunters were at the ready. Apparently I have a price on my head that is double the usual bounty rate for mages. I casted poison and summoned a spectral wolf to tear them apart. In the confusion I escaped. I wonder how long this can go on forā¦ 25th Day of Farreach, Year 455 of the First Dawn Thereās nothing around me but a frozen wasteland. Gods, does it ever end? I had a sudden urge to head south, but that would be foolish. I have to head to Markrim in the northwest where mages are welcomed. I just hope I can make itā¦.. 3rd Day of Cray, Year 455 of the First Dawn I didnāt think it would be possible to get any colder. But it did. Now entire lakes are frozen and my piss freezes halfway in the air. Iām just thankful that I have my clothes. Iād be dead without themā¦. 7th Day of Cray, Year 455 of the First Dawn Just when I wanted to give up I found a cave. A warm cave. It was occupied by an angry bear, but that bear is now being roasted over a spit. Just the smell makes my stomach growlā¦ 14th Day of Cray, Year 455 of the First Dawn Iām nearly there. Markrim is a mere few days away. As I bought some supplies from a miserable looking innkeeper I asked him why the inn was empty. He just laughed. āOnly the mad venture this far north,ā he said. I guess he was right. 19th Day of Cray, Year 455 of the First Dawn I can see Markrim in the distance, coated in a white blanket of snow and ice. My feet were almost stuck fast in the ice, and itās a miracle I could take one more step. I canāt bring myself to leave the tiny fire I made, but I have to get there. The snow is smothering the flames as I pen these words. Itās cold. So, so, so coldā¦ The End š¦
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Post by lostineternity99 on Aug 20, 2020 11:51:45 GMT -6
And this ... fun story comes to an end
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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 20, 2020 12:58:23 GMT -6
So it does.
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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 21, 2020 23:23:01 GMT -6
Pockets Full Of Wishes by BJ Neblett āDonāt put your hands in the pockets!ā Jimmy looked at his sister. It was just a winter coat, a used one. It was all his parents could afford. But it was his. He picked it out. Now he stood proudly before the store mirror admiring the blue denim coat with the thick, soft fleece lining that reminded him of grandmaās comforter. But it was the many zippered pockets with their long fancy fobs that caught his eye among the other used clothing on the racks. He toyed with one of the chrome fobs, āWhy not?ā āBecause, silly, thatās where people keep their wishes. And youāre not supposed to let the wishes out.ā That winter saw endless days of below freezing temperatures and long, bleak nights of snowfall. The blue denim coat with the thick, soft fleece lining and many zippered pockets kept Jimmy warm on his mile long walk to and from school. It kept him dry as he sled down steep hills and built great forts and engaged in heroic snowball fights with other ten year olds. And it kept him company as he brought in firewood and performed his other daily chores. Late one afternoon, while he played alone in the woods, it began to snow. Jimmy knew he should hurry home but within minutes the snowfall became a blizzard. Everything turned white. Then it grew dark as night folded over the forest. Try as he may, Jimmy couldnāt find his way. The snow continued to fall. Jimmy became frightened and cold and hungry. Huddling under a fallen tree, Jimmy cupped his hands and breathed into them. āI wish I hadnāt forgotten my gloves,ā he cried. Without thinking, he unzipped the right side pocket and inserted his hand. He felt something soft, familiar. It was the woolen gloves he left sitting on the mantle. They were warm and dry and felt good around his freezing fingers. āI wish it would stop snowing,ā Jimmy said, idly unzipping the left side pocket. Seconds later the blizzard stopped. His sisterās words came back to him: Thatās where people keep their wishes. The boy smiled broadly. He understood. Carefully tugging on the zipper which sealed the breast pocket, he called out loudly, āI wish I wasnāt lost!ā As the metal teeth on the zipper parted, the thick cloud cover opened. Soon a bright full moon lit the snow blanketed forest. Jimmy jumped up and laughed and began to run about. The old blue denim coat with the thick, soft fleece lining and many zippered pockets had saved him. As he rushed through the dense brush in the direction of his home, one of the coatās long fobs caught on a branch. It pulled the large zippered bottom pocket open. Jimmy stumbled, landing in a deep snow bank. Digging himself out, he heard a loud growling. He looked up. A huge, hungry wolf with burning red eyes and long sharp teeth stood over him. Jimmy tried to think. What else had his sister told him? Youāre not supposed to let the wishes out. The great wolf leaped. Jimmy reached for the zipper and tried to pull it closed. But it was too late. š¦
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Post by lostineternity99 on Aug 22, 2020 7:00:37 GMT -6
So much hope and then wham! A dark surprise ending Dragon1
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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 23, 2020 12:31:52 GMT -6
Ponytail (Happy Birthday Kristin!) by BJ Neblett Her ponytail bounced and shimmered in the late afternoon summer sun, a soft, honey brown flag of independence. He paused to watch. Honing in on her target with crafted accuracy, she sprinted away from him. She ran with grace and ease; purpose and determination. An involuntary smile pulled at the corners of his lips. Suddenly, as if a bird returning to its nest, a softball descended from the powder blue sky and landed securely within the cracked leather folds of her well worn glove.
In one natural, fluid motion she retrieved the bright yellow ball and tossed it effortlessly to the infield.
His smile grew.
āThatās no ordinary girl.ā
The insight was obvious. But something told him the words now playing over in his mind spoke of more than just a talented ball player. āNice catch,ā he called, as she returned to her position in left field. āAnd very nice throw!ā
She looked up, matching his smile. āThanks.ā
It had been years since heād felt his body melt this way; his brain slowly turning to hot mush. Heād almost forgotten the sweet, tell tale sensations. āNo, this is no ordinary girl,ā he said softly. He moved towards her. āHi, I havenāt seen you here before, have I?ā
Her hand slipped into his, warm and comfortable. āNo, this is my first time, I just moved here.ā
A glint of sunlight twinkled in her sparkling hazel eyes. It brought to him bitter sweet memories of another time; another place.
āWhatās the matter with you, girls canāt play baseball!ā
āAhā¦ heās gone all goofy for her!ā
āYeahā¦ all mushy inside!ā
The taunts from the other sixth graders continued. He didnāt hear them. She had kept her promise to come watch him play. Only she had showed up wearing shorts and a T shirt, and carrying an old worn glove. Her ponytail poked out from under the Phillies cap heād given her at Christmas. It bounced and shimmered in the late afternoon summer sun, a soft, honey brown flag of independence. Darting out onto the field, sheād stolen a deep pop fly from the surprised left fielder. As he watched from the pitcherās mound, an involuntary smile pulled at the corners of his lips.
āCāmon, get her off the field!ā one of his friends called out.
āYeah, we got a game to play!ā
In one natural, fluid motion she retrieved the leather clad baseball from her glove and tossed it effortlessly to the infield.
āNice catch,ā he called. āAnd very nice throw.ā
She looked up, matching his smile, a twinkle in her sparkling hazel eyes. āThanks.ā
It took some fast and fancy talking to convince his friends, but they had spent the summer together playing baseball on the same team. And then she was gone.
āHey, are we gonna play some softball or not?ā
The comment shook him from his thoughts. āYeahā¦ okā¦ letās chose up sides.ā
They spent the summer together playing softball on the same team. It was now late August and the season would soon be over. And then she would be gone. From the pitcherās mound he watched with unspoken love and affection as she gracefully trotted out to left field. An involuntary smile pulled at the corners of his lips.
āThatās no ordinary girl,ā he said softly.
Her ponytail bounced and shimmered in the late afternoon summer sun, a soft, honey brown flag of independence.
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Post by lostineternity99 on Aug 24, 2020 13:25:46 GMT -6
This is a feel good story with a memorable final sentence.
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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 25, 2020 0:07:04 GMT -6
The Boy Who Called The Naga by Michael Schaper
When Vanchay was born, the old village shaman declared him unusual, one to look out for. A boy who could call naga. The boy's mother looked at him, puzzled and a little frightened, but proud as well. She lay on the small birthing bed whilst below them the mighty Mekong rushed by, and for a minute she thought she could hear the water serpent move below. "He will be the boy who called the naga?" she asked, her heart filing with a fierce, early pride. "No," said the old shaman, shaking his head and walking away, "that's not what I said. He is a boy who can call naga." What's the difference?, Vanchay's mother asked herself, and went back to nursing the newborn. She was sure something else continued rustling underfoot. ****** Vanchay was a boy of many special skills and strange habits. Animals of the forest drew close to him and often followed, if he were of a mind to have them do so; so too did the birds above. As a little boy, it was a skill which earned him great admiration from others. Often, when their lessons were over, his classmates would sit in awed silence in the schoolyard dirt as he called forth a rat that had gone into hiding underneath the building. Or he could seemingly summon a handful of butterflies that would dance around his head, a kaleidoscope of colors in the dusty heat of summer. Once a wild monkey - rare indeed in these parts - found its way into the rafters of the local wat and only Vanchay could induce her to come down and be lead quietly into a cage, destined now for a life as a chained pet. Sometimes he would take his friends down to the pier in the gathering twilight. Having assured themselves that there were no adults around, they would sit on the wooden boards with a delicious sense of impending terror as Vanchay concentrated deeply. The waters below would swirl. Huge bubbles would appear. The jetty pier would shake violently until it seemed the whole thing would break apart and send them all tumbling into the black below. Then, at a nod from Vanchay, it would usually stop. Other times he would find a pile of fish, usually so fresh they were still writhing in the heat, sitting on the banks below the family hut, and trails of slimy ooze leading back to the river itself. Sometimes they were whole; other times a mess of bloodied flesh. None of this surprised Vanchay. You couldn't always control these things. When the river flooded, as it did every year, he would sit and watch it rise, keep an eye out in case one of the villagers ever fell in. Occasionally someone did, and most times they were found, miraculously, washed up and safe, Vanchay by their side. He shrugged; it was his village and his gift and, therefore, his responsibility as well. "I am the boy who can call the naga," he told them all, and the villagers shuffled their feet uneasily. Only the old shaman scowled. "You are wrong, still wrong, and always have been," he reprimanded. But the temporary novelties of childhood faded as he grew older, and what was once amusing became strange, unusual even. A boy who spent so much of his time alone, by the water's edge , and who was so different, became - in the way of all teenagers - someone to avoid and mock. Vanchay would take himself off, out of the village and deep into the riverside forest. Here there was only the silence, the buzzing of insects and the call of birds. The heat so intense that almost matched the boiling anger in his veins. At least there was no one to taunt him. "Life is not easy for you, is it?" the old shaman asked one day, bursting in unannounced. Vanchay shrugged, a mixture of admission and confusion. How did the old man know where to find him? "That's what makes me wise," the shaman said with a laugh, "because I do know things." He looked around the clearing. "And I realise you're unhappy." Silence. They stared out over the riverbank together. "You have a gift, but you don't know how to control it. And you don't fully understand it. Until you can do that, it will be more of a curse." This wasn't helping. Vanchay could feel the fury getting worse inside. "What would you know?" he exploded. "Well, actually, I know a lot of things, many more than you realise. You're not the first person in the village ever to be in this situation. And I know today that you need to master the skill that has been given to you." "I've mastered all I need to know." And they, those ungrateful villagers, didn't appreciate it, he told himself, not even this fool. "But have you? Think about every time you couldn't save someone's life, every time your childish jetty games almost ended in disaster. Do you really think you've control?" "Of course I am. You said it yourself, long ago. I'm the boy who can call the naga." The old man shook his head. "I never said that. You are wrong, still wrong, and always have been." "Am I? Watch." Vanchay shouted angrily, looking out over the river. "See this. Am I still wrong?" The water behind him began to roil. A wave rolled itself up along the bank and suddenly the serpent was there, meters and meters of black lustrous shiny scales, halfway up the bank, nestled up against the boy, eyes expectant, obedient. Vanchay leant down, stroked the scaly snout fondly, tilted his head in the old man's direction and whispered in the serpent's ear. The shaman looked at them in surprise. He hadn't expected this, thought the boy would have been willing to listen to him, to learn. He squinted, concentrating, as the great long beast started to make its way across the clearing to him. Then, in a flash, it was over, as an even bigger beast, this one all brown and smooth, leapt out and swallowed the both of them, Vanchay and his serpent, in one quick take. The old man shook his head. "I always said you were a boy who could call naga, Vanchay, but not the naga. I never said that there was only one naga, or that you were ever the only boy." š¦ END
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Post by lostineternity99 on Aug 25, 2020 7:21:10 GMT -6
Vanchay received what he deserved; cool story
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Post by QueenFoxy on Aug 25, 2020 10:22:41 GMT -6
Yes, Rick. I liked it too.
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