Rules

Rules:
1. Read the writing prompt, but only the prompt. I don't want your writing to be influenced by my (or anyone else's) response.
2. Sit down and spend 15-30 min writing whatever comes to mind. Poetry, prose, whatever you want, just write something. Don't make it something you labor over. Write. Enjoy.
3. Share in the comments.
4. Please keep it PG-13 and under. Don't go all 50 Shades or Chucky on me.
5. There is a time and a place for constructive criticism. This is not one of them. This is a stretching exercise. Please remember the words of Thumper, "If you can't say nothin' nice, don't say nothin' at all."
***All material on this site remains the property of the original author. Do not copy or share without permission. Thank you! **


Monday, January 27, 2014

Jury Duty

I've been struggling to come up with a prompt this week. I think it's due to nervousness and stress. See, I've been called up for jury duty. (There is still a chance that the case may be settled out of court, and I won't have to turn up, but I won't find that out for two more hours ... sigh.) I'm anxious because I don't like the idea of determining someone else's fate. Yes, I realize if I am on the jury there will be eleven other people with me, but it still weighs heavy on my mind.

Rather than letting it get me down, I decided I'd just go with it for this week's prompt.

 


Prompt:  Jury Duty

Go ahead.  Get your John Grisham on. 

**********************************************************************************

My response:

I took advantage of the pause and stretched my fingers, then placed them lightly back down on the keyboard.  The middle aged man on the witness stand sighed and nodded.

"We require a spoken answer, Mr. Banks," the judge reminded him for the third time.

My fingers flew with barely a thought.  Fifteen years as a court reporter, and I joked with my friends that I could type out my dreams word for word, if only I could get comfortable with my laptop in my bed.

"Yes, sir.  Yes.  He did leave at ten thirty that night."  He shook his head remorsefully and dropped his shoulders forward, avoiding the glare of the defendant.

"In your initial testimony, you stated that Mr. George Fry stayed the whole night at your house, drinking two six-packs and passing out on your couch.  Why did you lie?"  Mr. Fairlie, the DA, stood facing the jury, as if he were speaking to them instead of to Mr. Banks, on the stand.  He always did that when he was trying to make a point.  I was just lucky his voice carried, since that meant he usually had his back to me.

"He's my brother, man!"  Mr. Banks spat out, a sob escaping his barrel-shaped chest, his rental suit straining at the seams.  "I know he and Carlie were having some rough times, but he never would have done what they said.  I know he didn't kill her."  He dropped his head into his hands, openly sobbing now.  "I know it, man!"

First, if he really knew it, he would have told the cops when his brother left and trusted them to figure it out.  Second, the way he was breaking down, he was trying to convince himself as much as anyone else.

My eyes slipped over to the defendant.  That one was guilty if I've ever seen one, and believe me, I have.  Leaning back in his chair in his orange jumpsuit, slouching and glaring like a teenage punk in the back of history class, he was the picture of guilt.  I'd bet he was mean even without two six-packs.

"No more questions, your honor."

*********************************************************************************

The case has not settled, so I'm going in.  Wish me luck! 

Monday, January 20, 2014

Classic High Fantasy

I was a fantasy nerd growing up - Anne McCaffrey, Piers Anthony, and Orson Scott Card were my favorite story tellers. But I somehow missed out on one of the most amazing sagas of the nineties - Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time.

I only came around to reading it now because of my obsession with Brandon Sanderson (brilliant author in his own right) who finished Robert Jordan's series. My husband read the book first and gave me a run-down on it, but I've only recently picked it up myself. My husband keeps asking me, "What do you think?"

Honestly? It's starting to make me nostalgic. It fits the "fantasy" model so beautifully (maybe because it was part of the original mold ...), and I'm loving watching the story unfold. There's the orphan, the spunky side-kick, a beautiful sorceress, dark, twisted creatures on the dark side, and shadowy figures with cloaks on dark horses. What's not to love?!

And so I feel inspired to do a high fantasy prompt.


Larger Image
So, there you go.  The prompt for this week is this dragon.  Enjoy!
**************************************************************************
My response:
Kiera led the pair of sheep across the castle green.  They shied and pulled skittishly on their ropes now and then, but they were docile creatures, and easily guided.  Almost, she felt guilty.  They trusted the shepherds and other people who had looked after them, and they saw her as no different.  But she was about to betray their trust.
Li'Aia was hungry, but she had the curtesy to wait until Kiera set the ewes into the small enclosure before descending on the beasts in a flurry of flapping wings and flashing jaws.  Skillfully, she pinned one kicking bundle beneath a claw while her teeth tore into the other.  In a matter of moments, it was over.
More? Li'Aia asked.
No.  Kiera shook her head sadly.  That is all they would give me today.
Kiera stretched out her hand and Li'Aia reached her scaly head, red in the fading sunlight, though she was more of a gold color, to meet it.  Kiera sighed, pulling a rag from her belt and started wiping at Li'Aia's muzzle, wiping the gore away.  Again she felt the nagging guilt tug at her.  She was no noblewoman with lands and herds to feed a dragon.  It had been arrogant of her to sneak into the hatchery to catch a glimpse of the dragon eggs.
Her thoughts were disturbed by the trumpeting of the heralds.  The castle doors opened, and a train of people emerged.  The women were dressed in sparkling brocades and silks, the men in fine suits.  Marching in the center was the Princess Adelaide.
 
In the next enclosure, the black dragon Markag fluttered his wings and preened.  Kiera couldn't hear his voice in her head, as she was only bonded with Li'Aia, but she didn't need to hear him to know he was calling to the Princess.  All for naught.  Princess Adelaide only crinkled her pretty nose at the smell of the dragon yard, then turned away, leading her ladies after her.
Markag always had enough to eat, and he sat his watch and flew his missions, but his bondswoman probably wouldn't have noticed if he'd disappeared.
No, but maybe you will catch some bandits tonight and be allotted another calf as reward? Kiera suggested. 
Maybe I will!  Li'Aia said.  And nevermind that you cannot buy me another lamb.  At least I don't have to clean my face with the straw after I eat.  It's very prickly.
Kiera laughed.  She'd never expected an egg to hatch while she was there, and she hadn't known enough about bonding to keep away until they had fetched a nobleman or noblewoman to bond with the thing.  But her regrets were not for herself, they were for Li'Aia.  Kiera, bonded to a dragon, was too valuable to allow to starve.  But Li'Aia, bonded to a peasant, had to settle for what the king allowed her for her service.

Monday, January 13, 2014

Narration

"Are you Nuts, or Normal?"

That's the question on the cover of the Reader's Digest sitting on the back of my parent's toilet.  It was an interesting article, but it didn't touch on the one thing that really makes me wonder if I might have a touch of clinical craziness in me: I like to narrate my life. 


Don't worry, it's not all the time.  The words never actually make it out of my mind and onto paper, and usually, it's when I'm doing the most mundane things, like brushing my teeth.  I wonder if it's a writer thing. 

When I thought about doing a prompt to narrate your own life, I almost brushed it off as too stupid.  I mean, what's so exciting about me cooking dinner, buying groceries, or feeding the rabbit?  Then I remembered a quote: "The day before your life changes forever just feels like any other day."  I heard it on Switched at Birth.  There is so much truth in that statement, not only in life, but also in writing. 

If you start your story in the middle of the action, your readers are lost.  They have no context for the scenario, they don't know the characters, and it's easier for them to simply put the book down than to try and figure it out.  BUT if you set the stage beforehand, with the day before everything changes, you can draw your readers, bit by bit, into your world, so when the action happens, they're right there next to you, reading as if their lives depend on it.

So, the prompt is:  Narrate a bit of your own life.

Don't worry that it's mundane.  Don't worry that it's simple.  Pretend this is the day before your life changes, and you're setting the scene. 

Go ahead.  Enjoy!

*********************************************************************

My response:

She sat in front of the sewing machine, a formless mass of crushed blue velvet in her hands, her legs crossed in front of her.  Her fingers worked the edge of the fabric, measuring, turning, pinning.  Then she looked up.  She eased her head to the side, as if trying to lie down on a pillow, and was rewarded with a pop.  Then the other side.  She rolled her shoulders.

Sighing, she looked down at the unfinished garment and laid it over the top of the sewing machine.  Her fingers found the switch and turned the sewing machine off as she stood.  Her eyes sought out the clock on the wall, and another sigh escaped her lips.  She always took longer than she planned when she sewed, and now dinner was late.  Rather than crossing to the pantry, she moved to the phone on the counter, where she kept her coupons.  There had to be something there.  She pursed her lips as she flipped through what she had.  Pizza.  Hamburgers.  More pizza.  Nothing healthy.  Nothing really worth spending the money.

With a resigned frown, she turned to the pantry.  Whole wheat pasta.  Thick, chuncky spaghetti sauce.  Even if it wasn't exciting, it would do the job.

(I'm actually remembering a book - THE LOST WIFE??? ... I can't remember the title right, and I didn't like it well enough to keep it, but it started almost just like this.  Except then her husband didn't come home that night and she went on a cross-country trek to find him.  And when she found him, she realized she didn't want him anymore.  Sad.)

Anyway, I'm excited to see what you guys come up with!

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Door

So, today I loaded up two boxes and a padded envelope and took them to the post office. Good, right? Well, what if I told you those two boxes were Christmas presents I hadn't gotten around to sending on time, and that padded envelope had been waiting for more than 6 months on my counter?

While I felt silly when I realized I forgot to post yesterday, I also realize that one day late is better than never (and Merry Christmas! to my out-of-town siblings - you'll have one more present to open). Without any further ado ...

I have a good friend who served a mission for our church in Italy.  I served a mission in Germany, and while the two countries are very different, there are many things that we remember about Europe that are the same.  One of those things is architecture.  Seriously, there are few buildings in the US that are as beautiful as some of the buildings you find on the other side of the ocean.  It's not just the cathedrals (although, those are marvelous, too), but common buildings like the post office, department stores, and small shops, are built with detail and beauty.  It's lovely.

So, our picture prompt for this week is a European type door.  Where is it?  (No, I don't mean really where it is, I know that, but that's not the point :-)  What's behind it?  Who's trying to get through it?  How long has it been since it's been opened?
 


Enjoy!

*******************************************************************************

My response:

Maybe because I'm in the middle of the Nicholas Flamel series by Michael Scott, but when I look at the door, the only scenarios I'm coming up with are contemporary fantasy type plot lines.  So, I'm going with it:

I crossed the square quickly trying not to look too conspicuous while realizing that I probably stood out more because I was trying not to.  Oh, the irony.  I'd walked these streets every day of my life, hundreds, even thousands of times.  From home, our apartment behind the pedestrian zone, to school, then crossing the square home again for lunch.  Then back past the pealing cathedral bells to school again in the afternoon.  Buying gelato on the way home and stopping by the riverfront to watch the boats ... none of it had made me feel self-conscious before.

But then, I wasn't the girl I was before.  I glanced down at my watch.  Three o'clock.  Had it only been a half hour?  It seemed like it would take longer for your whole life to change, but apparently not.  Only a half hour ago, Eve and I had left school, bought our ice cream and wandered down to the river bank.  Less than thirty minutes ago, three men stopped us and asked for directions.  Then all Hell had broken loose.  Literally.

I passed the cathedral and slipped around the side of the bank.  I'd never seen the black doors open.  They were a fixture in the city, just as much as the fountain in the square.  I never really paid them much attention ... until now.

I knocked three times before anyone opened.  Two beady eyes peered through the slit, the body still hidden in shadow.  I gasped at the rustle of feathers and looked up to see the grayish outline of two large wings sprouting off the shoulders of the small woman.

"Who are you?  What are you doing here?" a thin voice demanded.

"Michael sent me here ... he ... he said you could help me."  Please, oh please, let them be able to help me!  "You see ... I think ... I'm an angel."

The door opened slowly, and the old crone's eyes darted from my face to the faint shimmering behind me.  Michael had said not everyone would be able to see them, and it seemed he was right.  Honestly, I was hoping no one would see them, and I could get back to my normal life.  But the wide eyes of the crone as she stepped into the light herself was proof enough for me.  As she slipped out and the sunlight hit her wings, they disappeared to a shimmer, just like the cloud that had followed me across the square.

She took my hand.  Her old, wrinkled claw was softer than I would have expected it to be.  "Come in, child.  You have a story to tell me that I need to hear."