Val Muller

The Electronic Wordsmith

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This month’s challenge is to write something beginning with “My favorite colour tastes like…”

Today’s writing comes to us from Cathy MacKenzie. Her most recent publication, BETWEEN THESE PAGES, is a compilation of 18 short stories. The book is available on Amazon and Smashwords.

 

 My Favourite Colour

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My favourite colour tastes like death and demise,

the evil that lingers behind the light at night

.

It’s the dark in the day and shades of grey

of living and dying

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It’s hard and firm, chokes one up

and leaves a film upon one’s tongue

that lashes out at all in sight

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It’s the soiled, the wicked,

the disastrous, the disgraceful,

the dishonourable

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It’s grim and hopeless, angry,

illegal and sinister,

the Devil in all of us

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It’s the dank in the darkness,

the smell of skunk and

spiders, dead and alive

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It’s a pelt marred by a steak of white

like lightning rushing through the night

to wake the dead

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It’s six feet under in a rotten pine box

so cheaply made, disintegrating

and disappearing to dust

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It’s the bits that fly in the air

when a body sleeps

and stirs to shake off the fallen unknown

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It’s morning before the sun

when dusk still prevails

and eyes can’t adjust to the slew

of shadows swarming by

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It’s when dawn tries to open its eyes

and yawns a morning sigh

and awakens those

who dream of nightmares

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Its name is known and it’s the doom,

the evil that takes over the good—

Satan in the garden

who spews and stills the world

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I’ll come for you when your time is due

and you can’t stop the pitch,

the coal, the burning coal,

or the enemy who seeks to destroy

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You must wait for day to wake

to brush away the cold

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My name is Black

and I may leave,

but I’ll be back.

* * *

The Spot Writers – our members:

 

RC Bonitz

http://www.rcbonitz.com

 

Val Muller

https://valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie

 

http://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

 

Melinda Elmore

http://www.authormelindaelmore.blogspot.com/

Valentine’s Day is one of those days. While there’s a nice “warm, fuzzy” about it, it also seems somewhat manic—either someone is ecstatic about the holiday, or else in the doldrums. I thought I’d match the manic nature with my Valentine’s Day post, musing on the pros and cons of the holiday.

The Cons

In high school, my friends and I handed out black plastic flowers on Valentine’s Day, taping up posters that said “Happy Corporate Holiday” and other such things—regardless of whether we had a boyfriend. We were teenagers; we were rebellious. Valentine’s Day is what started a years-long tradition of me making my own greeting cards that featured, on the back, my hand-drawn logo: a crown with the red circle-and-slash sign, along with the slogan “down with the crown.” It was directed specifically at Hallmark but generally at any institution that, I felt, made people feel like they had to feel a certain way at a certain time.

Case in point: Valentine’s Day.

On such a day, I felt like the world wanted us to feel happy and smiley. If we weren’t euphoric, there was something wrong. If we weren’t dressed in red and pink and handing out sugar and messages to everyone we met, we weren’t really part of humanity, were we?

Fitting in was never a big deal for me, so it didn’t bother me specifically. What bothered me more was watching other people not fit in. I always felt sorry for people who didn’t have a significant other. I imagined how someone might walk through the day, deeply affected when seeing others receive roses and teddy bears and chocolates. I imagined how someone might feel—as I’m sure we’ve all felt—at allowing herself to imagine what it might feel like to have someone who would send flowers, taunting herself with a possibility that seemed so impossibly far from reality. I felt most sorry for those people.

But I felt sorry for others, too. I felt sorry for people in stable relationships who felt pressure at Valentine’s Day to do something terribly nice for a significant other. I imagined them falling short of expectations, or just having an off-day on February 14 to the chagrin of their significant others. I felt sorry for people who had ordinary problems on Valentine’s Day, like those who had the flu or the stomach bug. Weren’t they supposed to be hugging and kissing and eating chocolates? How could a universe that imposed universal happiness on us on the 14th allow such a tragedy?

I felt sorry, also, for those in new relationships. What about people who started dating at the beginning of February? There was hardly ample time to see if the relationship would sink or float—and now the added pressure of doing “just the right amount” for Valentine’s Day.

All in all, more pressure than it would be worth.

I felt sorry, too, for children in elementary school. I remember well my teachers being very clear: if you bring valentines cards or treats, you must bring enough for everyone. We all had little envelopes taped to our desks, and we had to go around delivering one valentine per box. I felt sorry for the kids who nobody seemed to like, and who received valentines simply because the teacher said they had to. They always got the valentines no one wanted. The brown ones, or the green ones. Not the red or pink ones. I wondered if those kids knew they were only receiving valentines because the teacher said they had to. I never figured out which made me more sad: whether the kids knew, or whether they didn’t. Again, the holiday seemed always to bring joy to those who already had it, and emphasize sorrow for those who would rather forget it.

The only thing that never made me sad on Valentine’s Day was seeing children and their parents exchange valentines. There’s something about a hand-drawn Valentine for a parent that’s so genuine. And, of course, a daddy giving his daughter a box of chocolates… that comes from the heart as well. But with true love like that, a national (corporate?) holiday doesn’t seem necessary.

The Pros

While in general I don’t like conforming, there’s something to be said for setting aside a day, a time, a place for remembering those we love. Too often in our lives we take our loved ones for granted. It’s often said that time is our most precious gift. We never know when it will run out.

I remember well the first song that made me tear up. The middle-school chorus came to my elementary school to perform. They sang the song “The Living Years.” I can’t remember if it was the first time I heard the song or not, but I do remember it was the first time I actually listened to the lyrics. Yes, I was listening to the lyrics, but as always, I was the observer. I noticed the conductor, a teacher from the middle school, was crying. She was crying during a very specific verse:

“It’s too late when we die
To admit we don’t see eye to eye

I wasn’t there that morning
When my Father passed away
I didn’t get to tell him
All the things I had to say

I think I caught his spirit
Later that same year
I’m sure I heard his echo
In my baby’s new born tears
I just wish I could have told him in the living years”

It wasn’t until years later, when I heard the song on the radio again, that I truly understood what those lyrics meant. The song inspired a frantic sense of the delicacy of life. I thought back to what that middle school conductor must have been thinking, or who she might have been missing, or what she might have been regretting. To me, this song gets at the heart of what’s so important about Valentine’s Day–and other holidays.

I used to get so stressed out cleaning the house for Christmas, or preparing for family to come over. Both my parents told me that years and years from now, no one would remember how neat or messy my house was: when people get together, they want to see each other. People are what make memories. I don’t get stressed anymore.

For me, this is the positive side of Valentine’s Day. It’s a chance for us to pause and remember to do something special for those we love. And we need those reminders. It could be that before we know it, it may be too late.

So this Valentine’s Day, instead of blowing money at an over-crowded restaurant, do something nice and thoughtful for those you love, but more importantly, reach out to those you may have lost touch with, those who mean a lot to you, those you don’t speak to as often as you’d like. Reach out to those you see every day who might not have a Valentine of their own, or anyone in their life for that matter. Because sometimes whether the valentine is red, pink, green, or brown, it’s the thought that counts, and small thoughts to us often mean much more to their recipients.

Thinking back to those kids in elementary school, the ones who got the valentines no one else wanted, I’m thinking they probably appreciated them after all.

This week’s post comes from RC Bonitz, author of A Blanket for Her Heart. The theme is once again- “My favorite color is x and it tastes like…”

Too Late

 

I hate it when I wake up in the middle of the night like this. Something, a noise, whatever drags me out of sleep and then I can’t get back to dreamland for hours.

Light from the street steals around the edges of the blinds, casting phantom shapes and shadows in my bedroom. Freaks me out sometimes, especially when the house creaks too.

What was that? Something sliding, a window, the glass door in the family room? I’m awake now, yes I am. There’s silence again, did I imagine the noise? No!

Footsteps now, sneaky, moving through the house? This can’t be happening, must be my imagination, has to be a dream.

The floor creaks, the kitchen door squeaks, oh God, someone’s in my house! I grab the bedside phone. Too late, it’s dead!

I have to get away. I throw back the covers and jump from my bed. I’ll go out the window, quiet as I can. Or should I shout and try to scare him off? Too late, the bedroom door swings open and the light goes on. He’s there, a man, dressed in black, a very shiny knife in his hand.

He smiles, an evil, vicious smile it is. “Well, well, what have we here.”

“Go away. I called the police,” I shriek.

“Not on that phone you didn’t”

I’m trembling, shaking, scared to death. There’s something about this guy. “What do you want? Take anything, I don’t care.”

His smile becomes more sinister. “Don’t worry I will. What’s your favorite color?”

“What?”

He glances around the room. “Looks like you like blue I guess. Dull color if you ask me.”

I’m shaking now. What an insane question.

He takes a step closer, and then another. “Now me, my favorite color is red. Have you ever tasted red?”

I try to back away, but he matches me step for step. I’m up against the wall now. “What? No, I don’t know.”

“Sure you have. Wine, jelly, tomato. Now me, I like something stronger. Bet you can’t guess what.”

I can’t speak, can only shake my head.

He switches now and simply stares at me. I cringe, my heart stops at the evil in his eyes.

“Blood,” he says, so softly I can barely hear him.

He takes one more step closer and swishes the knife through the air, back and forth in front of me, coming closer all the time. “I’m not a vampire. I just like the taste of blood.”

This can’t be real, must be a dream, but he’s right there in front of me. The knife comes slashing at my throat. I throw up my hands to block it. Too late, oh God, too late.

.

 The Spot Writers- our members: 

RC Bonitz
http://www.rcbonitz.com

Val Muller
https://valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie
http://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

Melinda Elmore
http://www.authormelindaelmore.blogspot.com/

 

 

 

Oh (s)No(w)!

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Those of you following my blog from several years ago may remember my dramatic, traumatic entries about The Great Snow Nightmare (it’s so dramatic, it had to be written in three parts: 1, 2, and 3). Those of you on the East Coast have probably been hearing about this ironically-named Winter Storm, Pax, for several days (or even weeks) now. It’s already hit the South, and it’s coming toward me very quickly.

The snow is forecasted to start on Wednesday evening, growing worse overnight, and leaving sometime the following afternoon with a shroud of thick, white winter lying over the world. Most people I know are relishing in the possibility of a snow day (or, snow week, as it might turn out). I, however, have a meeting about 20 miles from my home, from 7 – 9 p.m. on Wednesday night. The meeting is not going to be cancelled, and as far as I can tell, since I am the minute-taker, I am a required attendee.

Well.

You can imagine, the thought of being stuck on the road again brought all kinds of repressed fears to the forefront. I keep thinking back to January 2011, when I was stuck in my car (creeping along the last 2 miles or so of a 20-mile journey) for about 13 hours. People were so freaked out by the snow that they were leaving their cars everywhere.

Growing up in New England, I like to think I can drive in snow. I didn’t get stuck, or skid, even once that cold, damp January night. But lots of other people did. They skidded. They got stuck. They abandoned their cars in the middle of major roadways. I can’t help thinking: what if the snow comes just a bit earlier than predicted? What if I have to face the prospect of finding somewhere to spend the night, or driving through hazards to get home?

A writer’s mind never sleeps—even when the writer is sleeping—so I decided to throw my nervous energy into preparations. I thought back to my January 2011 experience and wondered what would have made my night better. This time I have a smart phone, so if I get stuck, I can “live Tweet” my traumas. So, car charger—check. Last time, I had only a tin of mints. No water or food. So this morning I stuck a grocery bag of food in my car. Only the essentials, mind you: a gallon of water, a jar of peanut butter, some honey-roasted peanuts, and of course, chocolate. Lots of chocolate.

But last time, I wasn’t prepared to spend the night anywhere. So into my back seat I threw an overnight bag, full of all the things I might need for a normal overnight stay somewhere indoors—glasses, toiletries, pajamas, extra socks, extra clothes. But then I thought: what if I do get stuck, and I need to become some kind of Bear Grylls? Bear wouldn’t like a pair of fuzzy Halloween pajama bottoms, would he? So in went my running tights, long underwear, sweatpants, jeans, and waterproof pants. Hey, you never know what kind of snow it might be. Then my Sorrel boots, several pairs of thick socks, two pairs of skiing mittens, a metal snow shovel, a pocket knife, and a handful of glow sticks I bought in the Halloween clearance section of Walmart. I’m sure Bear could work wonders with such stuffs.

Then, of course, a sleeping bag, an extra blanket, an extra winter jacket, some trash bags (the last time I got stuck, people had plastic bags wrapped around their feet to keep out the water), some lighters, a few candles, a flashlight and a pack of batteries, and several books.

The books have nothing to do with survival. I just like to read, and if I get stuck somewhere miserable, I want to be sure I have something to do.

So, car now looking like I’m taking a family of six on a vacation or a camping trip somewhere, I was left to play the waiting game. Waiting to see what would start first—the meeting or the snow.

Remember, though, a writer’s brain never sleeps. And so here are some of the scenarios going through my head, based on what is packed in my car, while I await winter’s wrath.

Scenario 1: Thankful

I emerge from the meeting, and it has just started to snow. I drive home cautiously, but the roads have been well-treated, and the snow is barely sticking yet. I enjoy the winter ambiance and make it home safely and uneventfully. A trio of deer greet me as I pull into the garage. The power stays on all night.

Scenario 2: Mild Nightmare

I emerge from the meeting, finding the world already shrouded in an impenetrable layer of snow. I am forced to book a room at a local hotel, where I spend the money I earned at the meeting and spend the night tossing uncomfortably in an unfamiliar bed. But at least I have shelter and safety. And books. Lots of books.

Scenario 3: The Sequel

For some reason, everyone is still out on the road when I emerge from the meeting, probably panicking for last-minute groceries. The snow has started to fall and stick to the roads. There are so many cars that, as with the storm of 2011, the plows are not able to clear the roads. People freak out. They abandon their cars, creating obstacle after obstacle. I creep along, wondering if it would have been faster for me to just walk the 20 miles home. I arrive home at 3 a.m., unable to get over the freshly-plowed snow at the end of my driveway. I ram the car in as far as it will go and hope for the best. It was a long, boring, and frustrating night, and it doesn’t even make that great of a story! Just as I make it to bed, the power goes out.

Scenario 4: Deus ex Machina

I emerge from the meeting and realize it was all a dream. It’s actually May, and the spring peepers are peeping. There is the fresh scent of greenery in the air—the scent of flowers and life and growth. The stars wink at me, and winter is just a glimpse in my rear-view mirror. Summer awaits.

Hopefully this delusion is not the result of me skidding into a tree and hitting my head too hard!

Scenario 5: Bear Grylls

I start out for home, determined to make it despite the strong scent of the cherry Yankee Candle packed in my overnight bag. But along the way, the snow has thrown up treacherous obstacles. Cars are stranded in ditches. The road is slippery and barely passable. I follow a plow for as far as it is going, but it turns off the main road with 12 miles still for me to travel. I make it as far as I can, but the snow rises above my wheels. I am unable to pass. My car finally becomes stranded. I try to call for help, but no help is available for several hours, until the road becomes passable. I think about every horror movie I know and wonder whether it would be safer to stay in the car, or trek for home on foot. I see a solitary figure pass by on foot, hood obscuring its face, but I’m too scared to roll down the window. Perhaps it’s a serial killer. Better to be alone than with a killer. So I sit still until the figure passes.

Then I make my decision.

Like Bear Grylls taught me, I leave a message, tearing the blank front page from one of my books. Remember, this is a real emergency here—the book will understand! I leave a message, citing the direction I’m going and promising that I’ll be back for my car.

I empty my backpack of its work supplies and outfit it with the essentials: my two lighters (wrapped in plastic zip bags), my two candles, my flashlight, some extra clothes, my gallon of water, some peanut butter, and my peanuts. I stuff in more warm clothes., but I take them out and fill the extra space with chocolate. Because—well, chocolate!

No one is around, so I use the back seat as a changing area. I change out of my meeting attire. I layer up, just like they say to do. Running tights, then long underwear, then jeans.  A few shirts, a sweatshirt, and my triple-layer jacket. One set of ski-mittens clipped to the jacket, the other set stuffed in the pockets. Scarf and dignified winter hat. Scratch that. Bright yellow hat with dog ears. Easier to see in a rescue situation.

But then what? What for a weapon? Bear Grylls would not venture into the unknown without some method of defense—especially if he just saw a serial killer go by!

What would I use for a weapon? I have my pocket knife. I forgot to pack duct tape, so I find some medical tape in my First Aid kit. I use it to strap the knife to the edge of the snow shovel. I feel at one with my inner hunter-gatherer. But what if  a plow comes by and knocks me into the woods? How will a plow see me in such a snow squall? A snow-shovel-spear is no match for a snow plow beast.

I dig out my glow sticks from Halloween. There are two green ones and three blue. I light four of them, sticking them into my backpack. I am Val the Glowing Hunter, dog hat on my head like some Neanderthal tribesman. My body is thick with furs–er, jackets. I don my heavy boots.

And the trek begins.

I trudge through the snow, sweating in my layers but glad for the protection from the elements. I jog to the extent my boots will let me. There is no light, but the whiteness of the snow reflects upon everything. I take out a flashlight, using it every now and again to light the path. The snow is covering everything, making potholes difficult to spot, and I snag my foot. A plow scrapes along in the distance, but near me there is nothing. No man, no beast, no machine.

I follow the road, but somehow the snow drifts, and the yellow tape at the center of the road disappears. The wind picks up, and the snow blinds me. I stumble around, continuing my trek until the snow clears. I find myself in the woods. The highway is nowhere to be found, and now everything is snow storm silent. I stumble through the trees, and a sleeping deer jumps up from its bed at my approach. I have no idea where I am or what direction I’m heading in. I take out my phone to make a call, but there is no reception. I plod along, raising my snow-shovel spear menacingly at the animals that are seeking shelter in the woods.

doggie hatThe modern human in me tells the Neanderthal that I should have stayed in the car, and I convince myself to backtrack. But my footsteps have been washed away by the winter wind. It’s no use. Neanderthal Val pulls her dog-eared hat tighter over her brow and summons all the Bear Grylls knowledge from her brain.

I seek shelter under a pine tree, using my knife-shovel to clear the snow and cut some of the lower branches, laying them on the ground like a bed. I am wearing so many layers that I cannot feel the cold. The snow has made the wood too wet for a fire, but–by goodness–I have my cherry Yankee Candle. I curl up on my pine-branch bed and light the candle. The chocolate in my bag is cold, but it melts in my mouth. I’m thirsty, but the water is all the way at the bottom of my backpack. Neanderthals find zippers tedious, so I eat a handful of snow instead.

I feel like I should be chanting some type of primitive invocation to the snow gods, but I don’t know any, so I recite the first few lines of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales in Middle English, the ones I had to memorize for that college course a decade ago. I’m still chanting those lines when they find me the next morning. I’m taken to the hospital just for caution’s sake. When they find my car, it has been broken into, and my netbook, which contains the minutes from the meeting I attended, is gone, rendering the entire night completely pointless. I’m still reciting Chaucer, and wearing the hat with the dog ears, when they take me in for counseling and advise my husband to take me somewhere very, very tropical–very, very soon.

Addendum

Reality ended up combining most of the options above. The meeting lasted longer than I expected, and the roads were starting to grow thick with snow. There were, in fact, lots of people out in town, crazily going for last-minute groceries. But when I got to the highway, it was largely abandoned. Several people who didn’t know how to drive in the snow were plodding along very, VERY slowly, and I passed them very, very carefully, knowing that time was the enemy here, not snow, as the longer I was out, the heavier the snow would start to fall. The only thing Neanderthal Val did was wear the silly hat with the dog ears–until the white-knuckles got to be too much and she got hot. As for the option about the spring peepers… that happened, too. Only, it was just in my head.

I’m thankful to be home safely, and I have to give a shout-out to my dad for teaching me how to drive in the snow. Growing up in New England, he made me drive around and skid intentionally so that I’d know how to control a car in such conditions when I actually had to.

 

 

 

 

 

This week, I had a chance to chat with contemporary women’s / romance author Susan Haught. Be sure to check out her links at the end of the post!

Tell us about yourself:

Hello? Is anyone there? Oh–there you are! I’m a little nervous even though no one can see me. My name is Susan Haught, but please call me Susie. Sounds younger, don’t you think? I work four days a week at a busy day job and when I’m not holding my eyelids open with a toothpick (I’m up at 4:15 am), I’m writing. Or trying to figure out the cyber-world. Technology and I have a love/hate relationship and often don’t see eye to eye. Or screen to screen as the case may be. The other guy usually comes out the winner. I’ve been around a long time, most of it without technology.

When I’m not writing, I’m reading. I feel a strong writer will also be an avid reader. We learn by reading and besides, what better way to escape the rigors of the real world by climbing into the pages of good book? I also have a tendency to plant too many things in my yard and in the mountains of Arizona with its soil of mostly decomposed granite, not much grows well. So I spend a fair amount of time digging up dead plants and replanting new ones in the hopes someday I’ll find something that works. Probably not going to happen any time soon. The nurseries will continue to fatten their wallets. Maybe I should stick to growing my word count. But there’s one thing I can’t live without. Australian black licorice. I’m an addict. Hubby and our son have made giant leaps into my good graces with bribery of the luscious black stuff. Works every time.

Tell us about your book:

Shall We Dance? is a short novella included in the Halloween Anthology by Dancing With Bear Publishing. This is Rudy’s story, an elderly man who refuses to speak because no one cares enough to understand him–except Rachel, a soft-hearted young nurse who chose to start her career in the nursing home where Rudy resides. When Rachel discovers tidbits of Rudy’s past, she acts on a whim and makes Halloween special for Rudy with surprising results for both of them.

Under the Mistletoe, also from DWB Publishing, furthers Rachel’s adventures with Desmond, whose last wish is to visit the home he shared with his wife. In the path of a bypass, the condemned home reveals links to Desmond’s past that will forever bind the dying lumberjack to Rachel’s future, and cause Rachel to understand the depth of true love. Sometimes the treasure you find isn’t about the gold, but the wisdom of the journey.

And I’m pleased to announce DWB Publishing has contracted Paper Hearts, the third and last of Rachel’s adventures in the nursing home. You’ll meet Dottie–a spunky woman with a speedy walker–briefly in Under the Mistletoe, and her story. Rachel is caught between losing her job and helping Dottie visit a bookshop where a special book appears each year with a Valentine message from her past. With the help of Finn, an enigmatic stranger, the tender story of young love is revealed through the eyes of an old woman. Tentative release date is February 14th.

Did you always know you wanted to be a writer?

halloween-previewYes. But it wasn’t until I saw the movie Finding Neverland, the story of J.M Barrie and Peter Pan, that I realized I wasn’t crazy–that maybe what I was, was a writer. You see, J. M. Barrie opened doors and saw behind them not a normal room, but what his mind dreamed would be behind it–a magical world only he could see. Yep. Crazy. Though I’d never put pen to paper for more than an occasional letter or poem, I knew that somewhere inside of me lurked a writer, because I too, see those things behind doors and inside my head. It’s a constant battle to stay focused.

I didn’t write my first novel until a few years later when I woke from a vivid dream with what I thought was the ending scene of a story in my head, complete with sound effects and in living color. It was 2 am, and I jumped out of bed and began my novel. I finished it only to discover I knew very little about the craft and began to teach myself, attend workshops and read, read, read. Said novel is a mess. No wonder I had so many rejections! But I think it’s salvageable. Now that Rachel’s adventures are over, it’s time to revisit the dormant pages and make them work.

Who is your favorite character from your book, and why?

Wow. Loaded question. I love all my characters, even if there’s a bad guy in there somewhere. It’s hard not to love them because I created them. But I have a soft spot for Dottie. She’s very much mistaken for a snarky, nosey busy-body, when in reality, she’s trying to hide her feelings under a tough exterior–something I think we all have to deal with at some point in our lives. Dottie reminds me of many of the elderly I’ve met all bottled into one personality. I dearly love her.

And then there’s Finn–the enigmatic stranger. He’s mysterious, well spoken, is a dead-ringer for Mark Twain and never seems to age. And he’s one of the main characters in the novel I’m revising. He will return in each of the others I have planned for the series as well, taking on a different name in each, but very much the same man. He’s delightfully fun to write and by far my favorite of all so far. And I don’t have to say good-bye to him. Good-byes are hard. Even fictional ones.

What’s your favorite scene or location in the work you’re currently promoting, and why?

That’s an easy one. The bookshop in Paper Hearts is called The Ages of Pages Bookshop. All bookstores to me are special, but Ages of Pages is magical. You’ll see why when you read the story. If I was to own a bookstore (which my husband thinks I already have the inventory) it would be just like Ages of Pages. And I’d hope Finn would do me the honor of showing up. One can dream, right?

What book or author has been the most inspirational for you, and why?

Actually, there are two. I can’t mention one without the other. I’ve always been a Stephen King fan and in my opinion, there is no one better at digging into the psyche of the human mind and dredging up things a person can and will do when pushed to the limits. He makes me gasp. And that’s a good thing. Then there’s Nicholas Sparks. His timeless love stories tug at every heartstring imaginable. If there’s a story where the characters are the combination of those two styles, I’m so there. Character-driven stories stuffed full of every emotion are what I live for and strive to write. Plot is important, but it’s the characters that drive the story.

If you were to be stranded on a desert island, what non-survival item would you bring along that you couldn’t live without?

Do I have to choose just one? Oh boy. I don’t think a desert island would have wi-fi, so a computer is out. It would have to be an endless supply of paper and pens (does that count as one? Does in my book!). I’m happiest with a blank sheet of paper in front of me where I can put the things I see inside my head into words. In doing so, I would never be lonely because all those characters come to life and live lives of their own until the story is finished. Then later on, I could visit them any time I wanted and maybe create a few more if they told me they were lonely. If I have to choose just one, it would be a magical book that never ended. Problem solved.

Are you working on any other projects at the moment?

Yes. And no. My first priority at the moment is to get my son moved to California to begin his career. After he’s settled, I’ll begin revising my novel Fireflies. It’s a good story with some great characters, but it needs a sharp knife and some TLC. I also have two other novels in the series that are probably one-third completed that I set aside to begin work on Shall We Dance? I’m not one to normally start and stop projects, but the story behind that is a long one and best suited for another time.

Where can we find you?

I’d love to see you hop on by my website at www.susanhaught.com where you can learn more about me and read my blog; visit my Susan Haught, Author page on Facebook; follow me on Twitter @srhaught; and Susan Haught on Google+. Oh, I almost forgot–I’ve recently discovered the wonderful world of Pinterest! Find me here.

This month’s challenge is to write a story beginning with “My favorite color tastes like…” Today’s story comes to us from Val Muller, author of the Corgi Capers mystery series and the supernatural chiller Faulkner’s Apprentice. The story below is written in the voice of a rebellious protagonist riling up the crowd in one of her works-in-progress, The Salt Rebellion.

* * *

Salt

By Val Muller

My favorite color tastes like salt. White is the color of salt, after all. But my favorite color, the white I’m thinking of, isn’t the color of innocence or purity, if that’s what you’re thinking. Brides and baptized babies and all that. No. That is not my favorite color. Brides and babies are white by default. White by inaction.

Inaction can never be my favorite color.

My favorite color is the color of salt. Salt as in sweat and tears.

Action.

Think of what power salt has. It renders the ocean habitable to countless creatures. It balances our metabolisms, aiding water in its vital purpose. Salt aids our palate, taking the plain and ordinary and bringing out flavors inertly buried.

We all contain flavors inertly buried. Dreams, goals, desires, thoughts. We all have a purpose, something we were made for, and yet in a place as bland as this, we wander about unsalted. We grow complacent and look beyond ourselves for the spice that makes life worth living. But true joy cannot come from without. That is not the place for greatness.

True joy—the ingredient of greatness—must come from within, and we must be allowed to draw it out. May salt leave its streaky white trails on our cheeks, but we must be allowed to draw ourselves out from within our shells.

Perhaps this is why salt is not allowed here.

Perhaps there are those who do not want us to find happiness from within. Perhaps there are those who already live without and wish for us to seek joy in the externalities they can deliver. Perhaps there are those who have only power to gain from our unhappiness, from our weakness.

From our inaction.

Salt is the color of action. Its whiteness is the color of diligence, of work. A white piece of cloth will only remain so through diligence and care. So, too, our freedoms. Ignored and neglected, our freedoms will turn a dirty white, then a dingy dung, a soiled soot until no trace of its whiteness is left as a testament to its former glory.

So I say hold out for salt. Hold out for joy. Hold out for greatness. Don’t let our whiteness be sullied by the gentle agony of inaction. Fight back and persevere until you taste the salt of tears and sweat and action.

* * *

The Spot Writers- our members: 

RC Bonitz
http://www.rcbonitz.com

Val Muller
https://valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie
http://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

Melinda Elmore
http://www.authormelindaelmore.blogspot.com/

The current challenge for The Spot Writers is to use three of the four words: radio, dress, attic, photo. This week’s writing comes from Cathy MacKenzie. Her most recent publication, BETWEEN THESE PAGES, is a compilation of 18 short stories. The book is available on Amazon and Smashwords:

  The Key

Augustus slammed the journal on the table. It’s blank, fill it up, he said. Tell me what life is all about.

I stared at the leather book. A strip of elastic held the cover closed. What is this, I asked.

I flipped the cover. The pages were empty.  I don’t want this. My thoughts are my own. Private. I looped the elastic back over the cover and threw it back at him. You fill it up. I’ll read your words rather than you reading mine.

Aghast, Augustus’ eyes bulged. I discerned a tear, though why he’d cry over me was a mystery. My doorbell had just rung; we had just met. Augustus stood there when I opened the door. For some reason, I invited him in and led him to my kitchen. Sit down, I said. I’ll make you a cup of tea.

My name’s Augustus, he said.

I’m Florentia.

That’s when he produced the book—the journal he carried inside his coat, hidden from me. Perhaps he thought if I had seen it, I wouldn’t have invited him in. But I would have. I didn’t know the mystery of journals then, didn’t know their power. Didn’t know they harboured secrets—all of our secrets.

When I threw the book at him, he left. Not a thank you for the tea, glad to have met you—nothing. Just got up, waddled to the front door, and disappeared. His cup of tea sat on the table, untouched, as if I had served a ghost, an invisible man. The journal lay behind on the floor—the only reminder Augustus had existed.

I stared at the brown leather journal after Augustus left. The book was easily recognizable as a journal, for it had no lettering on the spine or on the cover. The taut elastic across the front cover was another clue it was something other than a novel.

I tried to turn away from the journal, look somewhere else, but the blank pages drew me toward it, as if a magnet lay on the first page. I couldn’t touch it again. My fingers would surely burn if I did; that was my greatest fear.

I sucked my fingers, as if they had been singed, despite the fact I hadn’t touched the object, then dried them on my lavender dress. The lace edging caught in one of my fingernails, tore it. I picked at the nail, more to keep myself occupied and my mind off the book of empty pages that waited for words to make it whole.

It was necessary I go to the attic—climb those many creaky stairs and enter that dusty storehouse of treasures and memories. Though it had been numerous years since I had been there, I remembered it well: The sole small window, like an ornate framed photo adorning a blank wall, breathes life into the airless room; the trunk sits below the window.

Similar to a cloak of many colours, the trunk holds memories, shades of lives and living preserved forever—until the key is inserted into the lock. Until then, the lid remains closed. I alone possessed that key.

Hidden from view and held within folds of the silky fabric draped over my body, the key’s hardness weighed upon me. Augustus, despite my unwillingness to know the truth—to face the truth—had awoken something in me, had stirred a desire. The key, too heavy to carry any longer, became weightier the longer I dwelled on the situation. The attic beckoned. I had no choice but to face my demons. I’d have to go to the attic, unlock the trunk. Then—and only then—could I write my story.

 * * *

 The Spot Writers- our members: 

RC Bonitz
http://www.rcbonitz.com

Val Muller
https://valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie
http://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

 

 

This young adult book was recommended to me by a writer friend (who obviously knows my preference in books). I read it (mostly during one snuggly sitting) during a snow day. Bloody Jack is the story of a girl named Mary (later, Jack, Jacky, Bloody Jack, and a handful of other nicknames) who grows up on the streets of England in the 1700s. Although she was raised in a “proper” family, her parents and sister died in an epidemic, and she was left on the streets. There, she encounters extreme prejudice, with adults believing she (and her “gang” of children) were simply begging to earn extra money, or at least that’s how they justified not giving money to her.

She sleeps in a “kip” with her gang of children. They huddle together to keep warm, and they share any food they’ve been able to find at the end of the day. She is constantly losing friends, however, because of starvation and other dangers. The most disturbing danger is a young man named Muck, who sells dead bodies to doctors for use in science experiments and dissections. At times, it seems Muck encourages the death of children so he can get paid for their bodies.

When her best friend, a boy she has a sort-of crush on, dies, Mary decides to run away to better her life. She decides on joining a ship in the Royal Navy tasked with defeating pirates. She cuts off her hair and dresses like a boy. She is chosen from among a pack of “street urchins” because she is able to read. On the ship, she becomes one of six ship’s boys, and she learns about sailing, fighting, music, and reading. Obviously, being a girl presents a special set of problems while aboard a ship full of men, and she struggles to keep her gender a secret. In addition, with no female role models, Jacky is confused about what’s happening to her body, and she has to pay a prostitute on one of their shore leaves to explain it all to her! I won’t reveal too many details here, but I love the concept of a certain boy on the ship developing a crush on “her” and then hating himself because he thinks “she” is a “he.”

I enjoyed Jacky’s voice. She’s honest and genuine. While she grew up educated as a young girl, living on the streets caused her to tone down her dialect a bit (even though she is reprimanded for it at many points through the novel). Her willingness to do uncomfortable things to better her position made her a likable character, and although she’s not outwardly brave, she has a quiet desire to survive that allows her to do things others would not. Though she’s a girl, the book was written by a male author, and the adventures are quite masculine, so I think both male and female young adults would enjoy this book. It’s the first in a series, so the resolution leaves a lot to be decided. Based on a short preview, the second book seems a bit more “quiet” when it comes to plot, so I’d be interested to see what “Bloody Jack” does next.

This week’s flash fiction comes to us from Val Muller, author of the Corgi Capers kids’ mystery series. The prompt was to create a story using three of the four following words: radio, dress, attic, photo. The story below takes place in the world of one of Val’s works-in-progress, a YA post-apocalypse tale on a barren earth, which most humans have abandoned for the promise of an Eden on another planet.

* * *

Action and Bustle, Too

By Val Muller

The wind roared against the house, blasting Abigail and everything with a new layer of dust. Abigail pushed on the door, struggling to open it against the years of debris that had accumulated inside. The door gave, inch by inch, until the space was large enough for her to squeeze through. She stepped onto a soft pad of dust and closed the door behind her, leaving on her mask until the air settled. Only then did Abby remove her lenses and mask and look around.

It was a typical two-room house with a single window facing the south. The boarded window allowed a bit of light through. The room was barren—all furniture likely burned long ago. The chimney itself was full of dust; a huge mound of soft, red dirt pooled around the hearth.

The people who lived here had abandoned the house long before the extraction. They had probably died before the strange ships from the stars descended and promised to take everyone to a better place. Better for them—lucky to have died without having to make such a choice. Abby shuddered, thinking of her mother and the others who were duped into believing such a promise.

The second room was a kitchen. Part of a dilapidated countertop was all that remained. The sink had likely been traded, as well as the stove. That, or looted. This was a waste of time. There were no spare parts here, no rope. Nothing. Abby took up her mask again and her goggles, but she stopped when she pushed the door open. The ceiling was low, but the roof was high.

There had to be an attic.

Abby returned inside and jumped onto the remaining countertop. Part of the ceiling wasn’t wood at all, but a dilapidated piece of corrugated metal—like the one at Pap’s house. It pushed upwards easily, and Abby hoisted herself up into the beams.

The attic was tiny, and she had to duck in order to fit. She needed to use her flashlight, too, despite the preciously low battery. Attics were rare in these types of houses, and they usually hid many a treasure. In the corner was a dust-covered box. Abby blew at the dust, tightening her mask to save her lungs. The air settled, revealing a black and silver device. Abby squinted hard. She knew what this was. She had read about it somewhere. It started with an “R.”

Repo—

No.

Radia—?

No.

Radio!

That’s it. It was a radio. A communication device. They only worked when there was more than one, but one was better than none, and think of all she could learn taking it apart and putting it back together! Besides, Wade would love to take it apart. If she ever found Wade. She thought of the intelligence and drive in his eyes, the way its incandescence radiated through even the dust. Something she hadn’t seen in anyone since he’d left. She stuffed the radio under her arm. The radio alone made the entire trip worthwhile.

The attic grew taller in the center of the house, and Abby could stand without stooping. She swept the room with her flashlight and shuddered at something human-sized standing at the center. She shook off her fright. Whatever it was had stood there for years.

She removed a cover of dusty burlap to reveal an old mirror, nearly her height. She’d read of these, too, but the closest she’d ever come to seeing her reflection was the tiny peeks she’d get in the shards of metal used to signal each other in the dust. Beneath the mirror was a box—a trunk. A nice one, too, but too heavy to travel with. The trunk contained only one item.

It was only a dress. Her mother had worn these things, and Abby had always wondered what good they were. They were inconvenient for running, for exploring, and for riding horseback. Still, she’d never had her own before, and the house provided a nice shelter from the dust.

She stripped off her dusty clothes and admired her form in the mirror. The fabric was once white, though the dust had dyed it a reddish cream. She danced in front of the mirror, highlighting the billowing fabric with her flashlight. Her limbs tingled. She felt light. She felt alive. She felt—like a girl. Her mind rushed with thoughts of Wade, and she blushed despite her solitude. How nice it would have been if he had just stayed with her. If neither had agreed to their quest to seek wire and motors and nuts and bolts. If they had agreed to live their lives in peace—even if it meant being the last of humanity on earth.

She imagined herself as her mother, raising children in blissful ignorance of the terrors in the skies. Calmly singing, rocking her children to sleep even as their own destruction was planned in the cities and the skies. Abby swallowed hard and removed the dress, packing it away for later. As she dressed, she remembered a quote from one of her books, a quote spoken by her namesake, Abigail Adams. “Calm is not desirable in any situation in life. Man was made for action and for bustle too, I believe.”

With a quick zip of her pack, Abby ducked down the hole in the ceiling and out the door into the world of dust, donning her lenses and mask. Wade was out there hustling, trying to mold his discontent into purpose. And so, too, would Abby. And she walked into the dust, bustling into action, looking for the next find.

* * *

 

The Spot Writers- our members: 

RC Bonitz
http://www.rcbonitz.com

Val Muller
https://valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie
http://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

 

I found this middle-grade book in the independent reader section of a used book store and picked it up because I love dogs and I love reading authors’ takes on animal “voices.” As the title suggests, this book is told from the point of view of Squirrel, a stray dog who spends most of her life in the wild and outskirts of civilization.

tale of a strayI bought the book without looking inside and was pleased to find I enjoyed Squirrel’s voice. So many people nowadays have Facebook and Twitter accounts for their pets, and they all speak in “lol-cats” voices, such as “I can haz cheezburger?” A Dog’s Life was a refreshing break from that. The dog’s voice was genuine, simple, and eager, making her a likeable character from the start.

Squirrel is one of the two surviving dogs born to her mother’s last liter. Her brother, Bone, lives with Squirrel and her mother in an abandoned shed of a summer home until their mother disappears. Bone decides it’s time to leave the safety of their shed, and Squirrel (loving her brother more than anything) follows. Their journey is full of dangers, including rabid foxes, hungry packs of feral dogs, busy highways, and humans of various levels of intention. I won’t spoil any more of the plot for you.

What I enjoyed was the author’s take on the various humans involved in Squirrel’s life. Some were well-intentioned, but Squirrel, being born in the wild, simply didn’t trust them. Others, whom Squirrel was forced to trust, turned out to be irresponsible (or jerks). Of course there were plenty of well-intentioned and helpful humans, but it was interesting that a few “lesser” humans were enough to make quite an impact on Squirrel. My favorite part (and here’s a tiny bit of a spoiler) is when Squirrel grows old and finds herself at the house of an equally old woman. It’s quite a touching ending.

The book is good for dog lovers. I can see non-dog-lovers rolling their eyes at some parts, though, because the story does revolve around the life of a dog—humans are secondary. It would be a good book to read to children night by night as it offers an opportunity to discuss different perspectives as well as the huge responsibility pet ownership actually is.

I’ve read a handful of similar dog books, and this has been my favorite so far because the voice of the narrator is “just right.” It’s not too cute nor too adult. It’s just the way I would think a dog would be.