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Showing posts with label Master class. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Master class. Show all posts

Saturday, March 16, 2019

Master Class Writing Prompt

16 MAR 2019

Two posts today! Stephanie Ayers had a great writing prompt this week so I thought I'd give it a go. Here's my take on the prompt:

Master Class Writing Prompt

A fist slammed onto the wooden table. “Utter madness. I won’t allow it. I will not have you descend into your own dream!”

“He’s right you know. You’ll go mad,” Justin paused, assessing his words. “Well, madder than you already are! The human mind cannot handle being confronted by itself. It’s a proven fact. Zared tried it and you know what happened to him. They had to water him every day or he would scream bloody murder.”

I paced around the conference table. My right arm shot out of its own volition, my fingers danced lightly along the tops of the empty chairs and in the hairs and scalps of the seated as I passed each one. I used to know each one of these masters at the table, but their names escaped me at the moment. I was in desperate states indeed. “What other choice do we have? The Braxen is only targeting me! Me!” I twirled uncontrollably, the taste of the morning light on my lips. I turned to face the windows and opened my mouth to drink in more.

A balding man reached back and grabbed my arm. I stopped mid-gulp. “That’s exactly what it wants! They like brains lightly toasted and slightly swirled. Look at you! I bet your senses are already jumbled up. They must be practically salivating.” He looked around the room, as if he could see the ethereal beings.

Justin shook his head. “You’re not helping, Herb.”

“He’s already delusional,” another gentleman chimed in. He looked suspiciously like a flower. “What could it hurt now? Maybe there’s a chance he comes out of it fully sane and they leave him alone?”

“The chance of him going into his own dreams to confront the Braxen and coming out alive and sane are the same odds of us throwing him into a tornado with knives and a cow and hoping he comes out with a set of nicely dressed ribs ready to cook. It can’t be done.” Herbert stood up and gestured around the room, “Not by me, not by you, and certainly not by him. No offense,” he said, nodding to me. “If he’s lucky he’ll wake remembering how to pee.”

I don’t know if it was fear of what we were contemplating, or the sudden arrival of the Braxen in my thoughts, or the mere mention of urination, but as I nodded back I felt a warm liquid running down my leg…





Monday, November 19, 2018

Master Class & Old Classics

19 NOV 2018

One of my stories is featured over at Stephanie Ayers' Master Class! 

The Legacy, my short tale of murder among witches, is being used for the writing prompt this week. "She killed me first."

She killed me first? How does that phrase work? Well, with witches you don't always know when they're dead for sure. Magic works in mysterious ways. 

Here's the link to the prompt: Master Class: She Killed Me First

See what you can come up with! Good luck. Oh, I guess I should include the link to my short story: 



Go buy it and see what I did with "She killed me first." 

In other news, the Internet Archive has the Classics Illustrated comic books available to read online! The Archive is a wonderful place on the internet, lots to discover over there. If you've never dropped by there, go check it out. One of their latest additions are the Classics Illustrated comic books. I probably read only a few when I was young, but there are some good tales there in a format for struggling readers. The Illiad is there, Beowulf, and others as well that are not so 'classic'. 

Here's the link: Classics Illustrated comic books

And the picture for today is the Cover for Classics Illustrated version of the Arabian Nights











Monday, November 5, 2018

Tale of the Second Sun

05 November 2018

This is in response to a prompt over at Stephanie Ayers' Master Class. If you're looking for something to get you going writing-wise, check back with her once a week for something new.

This is a rewrite of a terrible piece I did a long time ago. It's still terrible, but it has improved over the original. Thanks Stephanie for giving me the inspiration to do some more work on this piece. It's supposed to be written in the vein of a fable. 


The Tale of the Second Sun


A chill breeze blew from the ocean as the chief spoke loud and true.

“Gather round the bonfires. Warriors and hunters, drag the boats high upon the shore, for there will be no voyages tonight and they must survive the highest tide. Tonight is the longest night of the year. It is time for all to hear of the darkest time in our history. As the weak and weary Sun dives into the western waters, each island will light the bonfires and lift voices to the heavens to remind the divine Brothers of how they saved the world from Darkness. If we do not, the Sun may never return. This is a high secret and a sacred duty of our people.”

Every islander was there to hear the tale and partake in the ritual, from the newborn babes to the elders waiting for sweet death to take them.

The high priest spoke.

“The Brothers Jamahi and Jaustus are known by all. But back in the Early Times they were known by a different name. They were called the Sons of the Sun, because their father, Houri the Sun, was in charge of making the days. During this time the Brothers had a mutual friend named Bachshi. He was the peacemaker between the brothers.

“One day the brothers were fighting, as usual, and Bachshi was trying to intercede, as usual.

“The brothers were fighting over who owned the moons. You see, in those days, there were two moons in the sky. One was a warm yellow and one was a luminous silvery white. And the two moons chased each other across the night sky, just as the brothers chased each other over the waters and the earth.

“It was set long ago by their father that the yellow moon was Jaustus’s and the white one was Jamahi’s. The brothers fought about many things, but as far as the moons went, everything was well.

“But then their father passed away, and Great Houri the Sun, who was a glorious and rich green then, went away to the Dry Lands.

“The world grew cold as the brothers mourned the death of their father, each in their own way. Jaustus cried angrily and Jahami grew silent and distant. They tried to mourn for the traditional forty days and forty nights but of course there were no more days and this made them mourn all the more.

“The people of the world appeared before the brothers. 'One of you must take your Father’s place in the sky, or many things in the world would die and Darkness will rule. There must be balance,' the people said."

“There was no question of which brother would take their father’s place. Jahami was the eldest. But he was cold and aloof, nothing like their beloved father. Jaustus, on the other hand, was full of rage, and he took his anger out on his elder brother. Jaustus accused Jahami of not missing their father. Jaustus had always been closer to their father than Jahami, who often took long trips away from home. And thus the brothers fought. Neither one was in a compromising mood. Jahami, as the eldest son, asserted his right to replace their father. Jaustus demanded that he was the better successor and set about to prove it by strength of arms and emotion. Their battle raged fierce and bloody.

“Bachshi tried to intervene. He showed them that while they fought, everything around them was dying. But that did not deter the brothers from fighting. Bachshi told Jahami that he should let Jaustus replace his father. Jaustus had a fiery heat in his heart, like their father. But the Jahami would not listen. He lost his composure and slew Bachshi in a rare show of anger. As Bachshi's lifeblood spilled onto the ground, the brothers stopped their fighting, adding their grief over losing their best friend with that of losing their father. Their lights dimmed and the world grew even darker.

“Many creatures died during that time of Greater Darkness. They are lost to us forever. For the sake of all living things and in memory of their father and Bachshi, the Brothers swore never to fight again. Jahami was still cold and distant, but he agreed. He gave up his position as eldest son and let his younger brother take their father’s place in the sky. So that the world would keep on growing, Jahami stayed in the night sky and let his brother become the Sun.

“So today the Sun is yellow and hot and there is one moon in the sky at night, cold and distant. Plants around the world are green, to honor the memory of Houri, the First Sun. Much time has passed since the great compromise was reached. The Brothers are forgetful sometimes and feel anger toward each other. When one is in the sky, the other is away. Seldom do they ever share the sky together. But they agreed long enough, thanks to Bachshi, to save the world.

“And this is the tale of the Second Sun, always told on the longest night of the year. It is also know as the Tale of the Second Son. And this is a high and mighty secret indeed.

“It is our sacred duty to remember and remind Jaustus to come back, to warm our days with his light. He is hot-tempered, but he wearies quickly. So we will tend the bonfires all night long, and pray that Jahami in the night sky sees that the yellow light is good for all. He must remind his brother not to tire, to honor the memory of their father and come back to us and keep the world from darkness.”






Picture for today: Sun and Moon chasing each other...




Monday, July 16, 2018

The Stone of Time

"Without the stone, she couldn't find the layers of time"

Fantasy short story time! My favorite time. The following all-new short piece is in response to a prompt (the quote above) over at Stephanie Ayers Author.com

****
He skipped a stone across the surface of the smooth, clear pond. Skip, skip, skip, kerplunk. Serene ripples sped forth from each impact. Dragonflies chased each other among the reeds. The man took a sip from the jug and waited.

"How will I know?" she asked. 

"Do not worry. You will know." He flung another stone. They both tracked its flight. Skip, ploop. 

She laughed. "Definitely not that one!"

"My arm is a little sore." He followed a vee of geese honking across the sky as he massaged his shoulder. "Want to trade?"

She shook her head. "Tempting. But you're doing such a great job!"

He bent down and picked up another handful of stones.

He looked across the water and flicked his arm hard. Skip, skip, skip, skip, splash.

"Four, wow. Great throw. Was that the one?"

He shook his head. "Don't worry. We'll find it."

He skipped a stone across the surface of the smooth, clear pond. Skip, skip, skip, kerplunk.

She perked up. 

He smiled. 

"Uh," she said. "There's one slight problem. I wasn't watching!"

"Damn." He tilted his head up to the heavens in silent prayer to whoever might be listening. 

"Sorry?"

Scowling, he waded out into the water, in the general direction of his last throw. About waist deep into the pond he turned around. "Well, don't just sit there. Help me look for it."

She stood at the water's edge and looked out across the pond. "What did it look like?"

"It was gray and flat. Just like the last fifty rocks I threw."

"Damn."

****

Picture for today to go along with the prompt:

Picture by Sean the Spook at English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7335791
Can you find the Stone of Time?

Thursday, June 7, 2018

Lights and Shadows II

07 JUNE 2018

Today's post is in response to a writing prompt over at:

Stephanie Ayers website - Master Class

It is also a continuation of a piece I wrote based on another prompt from the same webpage. Writing is good when it works out like that! This story has so much potential I decided to keep writing it and see where it takes me. So here it is in its entirety, so you don't have to go back to my other post to read the whole thing. For the sake of this week's prompt, the today's writing starts at the "No!" and the blinding burst of light about 3/4's of the way in.



An Adumbrance Betwixt the Light and the Dark
In a ghostly realm where shadows are formidable, and arguing influences of light and dark constantly dance, a beam of brilliance pierced through the ever-present cloud cover and hit the granite ground, which sizzled at the intense touch. The ghoulish patches of cropped grass wilted and burned. Nearby things of black and gray fled, yelping and howling as they galloped, dug, slithered and flew away from the harshness. One wrapped herself in darkness and joined the protective shadow of a nearby outcropping. Gray farseers atop the nearby hills emplaced tinted lenses on their orbs and analyzed this new phenomenon. They witnessed a man striding down the beam, perambulating toward the surface. The stranger was light of everything -clothes, skin, hair, eyes. An alabaster masterpiece. He even glowed slightly, though whether the light was from the man or the beam on which he strode was a matter of debate among the seers. Whichever the case, he was blinding to gaze at.

A sudden eclipse occurred as a large, blind, flying Thing encountered the beam of light and both were extinguished. The man fell the remaining distance to the surface, a tumbling star, as the realm returned to twilight.

He pulsed on the ground, looking to all who saw as if he were an immense lightning bug, a beacon winking away in search of a mate. To all who could not see his light, his presence was warm and intriguing. Small points of light floated on a current of air in his direction.

He heard scuttling noises in the dark as he groaned and tried to sit up.

Silvery threads shot out from the surrounding landscape. A pair of large black spiders came into view from inky pools of shadow and crisscrossed hunting webs over his prone form, seeking to wrap him up in their stickiness.

The light stranger struggled to burn the webbing but could not keep up with the threads. He was soon tied up on the hard ground. The nightmarish spiders advanced, their mandibles making audible clacking noises.

Another piece of darkness, about the size of a person, broke away from the blackest shadows of a nearby outcropping of rock. It was a woman, dressed in draping fabrics of various grays. She clicked and clacked, drawing the attention of the spiders. She threw up her arms and spread wide her cloak, which expanded to a great size and rippled with lights and darks like the ground under a leafy tree that shakes in the gusts of a hot summer day.

The spiders clicked and clacked. Then they turned and scurried away in search of easier prey.

The dark stranger dropped her cloak and approached the light being from the sky.

He had almost freed himself from the tangle of spiderwebs. His clothes however, were stained with their substance. His right leg was also noticeably dimmer than the rest of him. And when he finally rose, he stood with a jerk and an awkward hop. The stranger stood there, looking at her as he picked and pulled at the remaining webbing. He seemed unafraid.

She shielded her eyes with a hand. “Dim yourself, sir. There are many here who feed on brilliance, as you almost found out first-hand.”

He concentrated and looked down at his outstretched hands. His emanations waned. Raising his gaze to the clouds for a second, he then returned her look. “Who are you?”

“I am called Chia. Chia de Ross-curo.”

“I am Epifanio Sea el’O. I have come to learn the secrets of darkness.”

Chia glanced around at the landscape, feeling many eyes upon the pair of them. She shook her head. He was still too bright.

Squinting, she thought. “I cannot hide you, even within my umbra. You emanate much, Bright One. Follow me, mayhap we can sequester over yonder.” She pointed to the left.

He saw nothing and said as much.

“Your light blinds you.”

“The Light is my life! I cannot reduce it any further. To do so would be to risk my death!”

“To not is to risk both our lives.” She raised an arm and covered him with a portion of her expansive cloak.

Instead of blocking his view, Epifanio was astonished at the clarity with which he now saw their surroundings. Despite lighter and darker sections, it was as if the cloth removed a haze from across his eyes. Most objects in view were also outlined in a halo or some sort of colored glow. Their destination was obvious now: a small stone structure near the shore of an inkjet lake. He tried to look closer but the image shook and blurred in and out of focus.

He uncovered himself from the voluminous cloak. Standing as best he could with his injured leg, he proudly proclaimed, “Why adumbrate when I can elucidate?” He folded his hands across his chest and unleashed a flood of light from his body as he uncrossed them. The entire valley was bathed with light.

“NO!” she screamed.



The ground shook beneath their feet. She threw her cloak around them both and pulled him down to the ground, but his light still shone like spotlights through the translucent portions of her garment.

“Have you no sense? You’re sending out a dinner bell!”

Through the patchwork fabric of her cloak, Chia scanned the surroundings. “Look!” a swarm of small, black winged creatures appeared from out of the cloud cover. These creatures spun in lazy circles and figure eights, eating the light as they flew lower and lower, following it to the source. Him.

“Light gliders!” she hissed.

“They seem harmless enough,” he said.

“Turn your light off, Stranger! It’s not the gliders I’m worried about, but what eats their succulent flesh.”

“My name is-” Epifanio paused as clouds of dust rose on a hillside to the west as an avalanche of gray rocks and boulders crashed down. Rumbling noises reached them a few moments later, drowning out the rest of his words as he spoke again.

Epifanio dimmed his light. “So much activity! I knew things moved in the darkness, but I had no-” he stopped and stared again at the falling hillside. Defying logic, the rocks and boulders continued rolling after they reached the flat valley floor. The rocks were rolling toward them!

“By the Stars Above and Below! See what your light has awoken?”

He shook his head in disbelief. “My people tell stories of Hell Below. A place void of light, so nothing sparkles, nothing shines. The darkness rules all and hides beauty from sight. I thought nothing could be worse than that. But this place, this place that attacks and devours the light of life. This must truly be hell.”

“We can debate theology later. Come!” She unwrapped them from the folds of her cloak and grabbed his arm.

Her charcoal skin seemed like a blasphemy against his alabaster flesh. “How dare you!” He tried to jerk his arm back but his leg betrayed him and he stumbled toward her.

Inches from his face, she whispered savagely, “I’ll dare more if you don’t come willingly. You’re risking my life now as well as yours. Now let’s go!”

She pulled him in the direction of the ruins by the ebony lake. The rocks from the avalanche were on the far side, still tumbling toward them.

“Faster!”

Limping along as best as he could Epifanio struggled to keep up. The noise from the tumbling rocks grew louder. It was hard for him to tell, but it looked like the rocks would reach the ruins before them!

“We’re not going to make it,” he said to Chia.

“We’ll make it!”

“The crushing rocks are almost there already!” he said, pointing to the ruins.

“We are not going there. We are headed to the lake! We’ll make it!”

“The lake?” Epifanio trembled at the thought and fell down. A lake of inky black. It roiled and burbled. What did its impenetrable surface hide? True fear froze him, a being of the upper air and light. There was no way he would go willingly into that substance.

“Get up!”

“I cannot. I will not go into that…that, whatever it is!”

“The Grinders will pulp you and devour your light! Let’s go!”

Blasts from ahead signaled the arrival of the rolling rocks at the ruins. They hardly slowed down. A few seconds more and the Grinders, as Chia called them, would be upon them. As close as they were, Epifanio could see that the rocks had openings upon their surfaces.

With a strength born of fear, Chia managed to drag the unwilling Epifanio to the edge of the lake. She pushed him in.

Without a sound or splash, Chia disappeared beneath the surface of the ebony lake. But for Epifanio it was a totally different story. For him the fluid was thick and unwilling. As moments ticked he slowly sank, his screams drowned out by the sound of crushing rocks rolling around the sides of the lake, coming around for him. How would he die? Battered to a pulp by the coming avalanche of sentient rocks, or drowned in a lake of black treacle?

He felt a jerk from underwater. Something was tugging at his legs. He tried to scream louder. He shouted with all of his being and all of the light left in him. It seemed as if a star exploded into being on the surface of the midnight lake, the countryside for miles brighter than it had ever been. Terror pushed Epifanio to his limit and then beyond...


Epifanio’s light went out.

*******

Picture for today: Although it has nothing to do with the story above, it does convey a battle between the dark and the light.