Gossamer: Write at the Merge Week 3 and Scriptic

I used to think that children were like butterflies.  They’d stay inside a cocoon you would shelter and watch until they would finally break free.  You’d catch a glimpse of them floating by as young adults and then they would vanish into their own little world.  Mysterious.  Hard to fathom.

But as a teacher I came to understand children were not always sweet little things.

I found I had to wrap myself and my heart up tight with an Ace bandage in order to maintain control over my students.  Had to feign cheerfulness or sternness as required.  There wasn’t room for too much getting close.  And yet somehow the children seemed to creep in anyway.

There was one I felt an affinity with, an odd thirteen year old that started with me when she was only eleven.  I couldn’t say why, but she had become a sort of rock in my life.  A reliable part every Tuesday evening, and she would make me laugh with her silly stories and wild opinions.

This week, she came into the room in tears.

“Whoa, whoa, what happened?” I asked, thinking it was just another fight with her mother.

She told me.

A local boy had just committed suicide over the weekend.  He was happy.  He was popular.  “Everyone liked him,” my student said, scuffing her neon sneakers on the floor of the studio.  “He was in high school but we were all still friends with him.  A good friend of mine, she’s kinda overweight and gets bullied a lot.  She says she’s feeling suicidal too.”

“What?” my hands slammed on the piano keys, startling her.   It seemed out of the blue.

“We go to talk to the counselor and stuff.  But she’s out this week.  My friend said that the boy – Chris was his name – he was the only one that ever told her she was beautiful everyday.  She doesn’t know what she’ll do without him.”

I started trembling.

“Okay, we can’t let this go,” I said in a stronger voice than I felt.  “Sweetie, you need to take her to get help.  Do you talk to her?”

She nodded.

“Will you talk to her tonight?”

She nodded again.

“You tell her from me: I used to be suicidal too.  When I was her age, actually.  But I got help, and I am much better for it now.  Often it’s a mental imbalance – a hormonal imbalance.  Did you know that?”

She shook her head, her eyes filling with tears again.

“Okay, well, sometimes a doctor will put you on herbal medication or harder medication and it straightens you out.  I’m not saying that will happen to your friend but it might.  She needs to go to therapy so they can talk about changing the way she thinks.  Changing her thoughts from negative ones to positive ones.  That’s what the therapy does.  But you can’t let this go.  This is important – her telling you that was her cry for help.”

I didn’t want to see another incident, I thought.  Not another suicide so close to three accidental deaths the week before at the same school.  I would not let this happen.

My student piped up.   “At lunch today this random girl we didn’t even know said something about her dad and about maybe her not eating so much.”

“Geez… did you punch her?”

She laughed and I held a hand out.  “I don’t advocate violence, but seriously, what did you do?”

“Me and my other friends went over to her table and said, ‘Hey, why the heck would you say that to her? Maybe you shouldn’t eat so much!” That was more like my strong student.

“Yeah, those bullies?  That girl?  You tell your friend they are just doing it for power.  They just look for a weak link in the system.  If it wasn’t her, it would be someone else.”

“Yeah, I told her even if she just like, yells in their faces or something, but doesn’t cry and take them seriously, that was fine.”

“Good.”  I wrote down a number on paper and folded it up very small.  I held it out to my student.

“You tell her,” I said as she clutched that piece of paper like a lifeline, “you tell your friend that her place in the world is so important that a complete stranger is willing to talk to her if she needs the help.  You tell her.”

“I will,” my student said.

In those two words, she looked every bit the fragile thirteen year old she was.

I gave her a hug and sent her home, feeling that maybe I went too far, but hoping her friend would get help.

I saw myself as a thirteen year old, lonely and begging for help.  Maybe that’s what had made me react so emotionally.  I saw myself in that girl and wanted to stop her from having to go through all the bad things that I experienced in life.

I felt terrible.  I cried and tossed and turned all night.

I had never been thrown into such a serious situation before.  I had never dealt with it.  What would another teacher do?  What would anyone do?  In this day and age, something as simple as offering your help could be interpreted in negative and damaging ways.

What a shame this world had come to that.

I looked to my family for advice and my cousin told me I had gone too far, that I should have just told her to get help and that was all.  I overstepped my bounds, she said.

I didn’t know if I had.  I fretted about that.  I fretted about the girl.  Was she all right?  Was my student handling things okay?

The next day, mid lessons as I sat distracted with a piano student, her mother stopped by the studio.  I went out to talk to her in a free moment.

“Did she talk to you?” I asked her.  She said her daughter hadn’t.  She was there for another reason.  I sat her down and explained everything that happened.

“Did I go to far?” I asked.  “Is it okay I said all the things I did?”

“You know her really well,” her mother said.  “She’s tough.”

“Because I know going into detail about those things… I just thought to myself: another adult would just say: go get your friend help, and wouldn’t explain why.  I wanted her to know why.” 

“And you absolutely did the right thing.  Thank you.  I really appreciate what you did for my daughter,” she told me.  “Her friend is going to get help, I promise you.”

“I just did what I felt was right.”

“And you were.”

That night I sat writing on my computer and my mother came in, knocking on the door.  “You know,” she said, “you might have saved a little girl’s life.”

“Maybe I did,” I said.  “Even if she isn’t suicidal, it’s a cry for help for something.  I just did what I had to.”

I wondered, thinking to past heroes in history, if this is how they felt.  Satisfied they did a good job, but not really feeling they did anything special.  I hadn’t.  I hadn’t.  I just didn’t want to see a little girl hurt.

Such gossamer threads hold our lives together.  Fragile, like a butterfly’s wing.  We don’t see how they connect  or help until one of them breaks and we all fall.

If we watch one another for the signs, maybe we can prevent that.

I cried again and my mother hugged me like I was just a child myself.

“You’re a good person,” my mother whispered.  “That’s why you care so much.”

She was right.

Maybe caring was all it took to make the difference.

The Ace bandage around my heart had started to unravel, but I found that I didn’t mind.

~*~

So this is entirely nonfiction.  This just happened.

This was written for Write at the Merge 3, which gave the prompt of the two words: “gossamer” and “Affinity”.  And also, for the Scriptic prompt exchange this week, Eric Storch gave me this prompt: The Ace bandage had become unraveled, but I didn’t mind.
I gave Andrea this prompt: The eyes are not the windows of the soul, they are the doors. Beware what may enter them. (A quote from “Doctor Who” but please don’t feel you need to write about him. Just a little inspiration!)

But in all seriousness:

If you notice anyone you love acting strangely, suddenly giving away old things, leaving a job, breaking up with or divorcing a significant other without much warning, keep an eye on them.  Talk to them.  Find out why they are doing these things on a whim.

The boy who committed suicide this past week was a popular child, and no one suspected anything was wrong.  However, he did end a long relationship the week before he died, and he took the time to write letters to all the people he loved, (which definitely took planning,) which were found upon his death.

I believe that education about mental illness and depression are key to preventing teen death.  I didn’t learn specifics about these things until high school, but I had already felt depressed and suicidal at the age of 13.  It was only because a friend told on me to my parents that I am alive today.

People will tell you that the world is a much more progressive place than it used to be, that mental illness is no longer a stigma.

This is a lie.

I have faced bullying, misunderstandings, and I am fairly certain (but unfortunately have no proof) that the real reason my last job ended suddenly was because my boss found out I was seeing a therapist.  While I only have a very mild case of depression that is now under control thanks to therapy, changing the way I think and a daily regimen of St. John’s Wort, there are hundreds of others afraid to get the treatment they need because they are scared what people will think of them.

We need to start educating our children younger, and not wait for a young life to snuff itself out before having that serious talk.  By then, it’s too late.  The damage is done.

I fully advocate teaching children about these things from a young age.  Make them see that mental illness is not a sign of a bad person.  Good people can have major problems.  And some come out the other side – mostly – fine.  I advocate a community where students, teachers, friends and families all communicate with one another.  If I had not reached out to my student’s mother as well as my student, perhaps nothing would have changed.  But I felt open enough to approach her anyway and do the right thing.

Say what you will.  I am not a mental health professional.  I would never say I could counsel a child.  But I have been through the experience myself and I know what that little girl now faces.

I wasn’t sure at first if I should have said all I did to my student.

Now? I know I made the right choice.

Would you?

~jms

Past and Pending – Write at the Merge Challenge

Past and Pending

~*~

I took the river road until I reached the end

I wrote those words into my song “Lullaby”, but I had never actually taken River Road all the way up.  When Meagan called me looking for an adventure, I thought about the words again.

“Let’s go as far North as we can today,” I said.

“We could make Easton and back before sunset,” she said.

My best friend for about thirteen years, Meg was the one with wanderlust.  It was the bug she had given me: a virus I didn’t mind catching.  Now I had the desire to get out and leave, find new paths and journeys.  This was the gift of Meagan’s friendship.

“Okay.  Let’s go.”

The air was cold that day.  We were glad to be in a car as we drove past the Delaware river and half-frozen lakes.  There were waterfalls as we passed rocky hillsides.  Actual waterfalls.  I hadn’t seen the like since Colorado and stared out the window in awe.  It was truly magical.

We talked about travel, geography and the Jersey Devil while munching on sourdough pretzels.

“Sometimes,” she told me as she turned the wheel, “while driving through the Barrens, I used to look for the Devil.  Watching for shadows against the stars.  Because those are the woods where Legends could still be alive.”

This was our friendship.  Topics meandering and lovely all the while.  We were poets and writers and liked to lose ourselves in “lines dissecting love” and life and other things.

The Shins’ Past and Pending was on right after a John Doyle reel.  Eclectic music, but it fit our personalities.  I didn’t listen to the words, but the sound made me think of all our road trips together. And while we’ve never taken a really long one, they are all memorable.

Once, we ended up at Seaside Heights during a cold spell in March, walking down the deserted boardwalk.  You never know with us.

This trip, I got a sandwich from a supermarket deli, and the hunger trumped the odd taste of the food.  “You never know,” she said, eyeing my sandwich dubiously.  “These places the food could go either way.”

We were off again down the road, sometimes listening to music in silence, which we have always been wont to do.

I missed her when she was away at grad school.  She is like family to me, the big sister I’ve never had.

As icicles dripped off of cliffs of “hills-not-mountains” around us, I wished.

“I wish it could always be like this,” I whispered to myself.  I hope the years and miles never change our camaraderie.

We round a stone wall, laughing at a strange mural as we enter Easton and prepare to journey homeward.

the strange mural of Easton. Canal Poseidon? Triton? We could not figure it out.

the strange mural of Easton. Canal Poseidon? Triton? We could not figure it out.

Days like this precious moment of friendship are mile markers on the path of my memory.  And in the dark times, I travel them over and over again.

Days like this, past and pending, are all that matter.

~*~

Write on Edge has begun a new and fancy challenge.  This time, it was 500 words or less, the song Past and Pending by The Shins, and the word: “WISH”.  I immediately wanted to write for it.  It took me some time to be inspired because I couldn’t decide if I wanted to take the song at face value or not.

My final decision on it was what you just read. :)

Meagan is truly my best friend.  She has a wonderful poetry blog, which I encourage you to visit.

I’ve been driving myself nuts all morning trying to find the term one of the ancient writers used for the form of love – I want to say either Socrates or Plato spoke of this form of platonic/friendship love – between two members of the same sex and said it was completely different from the love shared between a man and a woman.

This love was not romantic or sexual, but it was the strongest form of love, that only true friends could share, and it was rare.  If anyone can remember the name of this, or what it’s called, I would appreciate you leaving a comment.  I Google searched and checked my college textbooks but had no luck finding the term!!

Anyway, the mysterious missing word for this love was going to be the title, but instead it became Past and Pending, haha

Thanks, as always, for reading.

jms

Beautiful Chaos- Red Writing Hood The Gallery

20121211-112614.jpgx

She had waited all day to get a chance to talk to her old college friend.

Her stockings were slipping in a most irritating way under her slacks by the afternoon. She shuffled at her guard post, trying to fix them without being too obvious.

“You dancing or what?” Charles popped through the doorway from his assigned room. He rubbed his smooth shaved head.

“I’m trying to fix my stockings!” Anita said. “And I need to show you something. Here.” She pulled out a pamphlet from her blazer pocket.

“What’s this?”

She shook the brochure until he took it. “This is the dilemma I’ve been telling you about.”

“This looks nice,” he said, flipping through the brochure. “Sprawling grounds and fountains. Two acre parkland. They take the residents for a stroll every day, weather permitting.” He handed it back to her. “Sounds great. What’s the problem?”

“The problem is, I don’t know if absolute chaos is a good enough reason to send my mama to a place like this!”

Charles gave a deep belly laugh. “Oh, your mama is going to love it there.”

“I just feel so bad, you know?” Anita leaned in. “I promised her I would always take care of her. But lately, it’s,” she sighed, leaning back on the wall, “really hard.”

“Has she been worse than when we talked last week?”

Anita frowned. “I’m worried about my grand babies. She’s started yelling at them because she don’t know who they are. They’re only two. They don’t understand. And I don’t know how much longer our electronics are going to hold out. She fried a third coffee machine yesterday.”

“Ouch.” Charles chuckled. “You do love your coffee.”

“But…” Anita folded the pamphlet up, holding it in her hands. “That’s not a good enough reason to do it. The biggest reason is, she keeps trying to drive somewhere. She don’t have a license anymore. Not after her last accident. But she always finds our keys and tries to drive. She’s not herself.”

“My father got the same way in the end, you know.” Charles stroked his chin. “Stopped eating because he didn’t know my wife and thought she’d come to poison him.”

“Mm. That’s awful.”

“He also took things apart. It was when he started trying to fix the gas stove we knew he had to go somewhere else. He was becoming a danger to himself and the rest of the house.”

Anita shook her head. “It’s so hard seeing parents go like that. They’re the ones taught us everything. Now we have to do our best to keep them happy and safe until they move on. I just don’t feel right taking her from the house…”

“But you know you done all you can for her. Don’t feel like you’re giving up. Everything’s gonna work out, you’ll see.” Charles smiled.

Anita shrugged and tucked the pamphlet away in her blazer as the sound of patrons in the next room over floated in.

“I’d like to think I’m a good daughter. And that I made my mama proud. She’s still my mother, no matter where she is.”

She eyed the Pollack on the wall next to them and shook her head. “Mama used to be an artist. But if she starts painting like that, I’m gonna be sure her mind is gone.”

“It’s not that bad,” Charles said.

Anita tilted her head to the side, giving him a look. “You joking?”

“It’s like life,” Charles explained. “Sometimes you have to find the beauty in the chaos.”

The patrons were entering the room behind. “Whoop, gotta get back to my post,” Charles said, slipping through the doorway. “See you around, Anita.”

“See you.”

Anita folded her arms behind her back and stared at the painting.

She found that this time she didn’t mind it so much. She liked the shade of brown Pollack used.

“Oh!” Anita clucked her tongue. “You just had to go and ruin it for me, didn’t you, Charlie?” she muttered.

She turned away from the beautiful chaos and stood tall.

The patrons came into the room.

~*~

I wrote this for Write on Edge’s weekly prompt, Red Writing Hood. This week’s was a 500 word limit, and the prompt was the picture on this page.

I am not a fan of Jackson Pollack, so Iatched onto the guards. It’s kind of a sin to say it because everyone I know likes Pollack’s work. But for me it is just chaos, so to try and appreciate it I have to really search for the beauty.

And I guess that’s what I wanted to do with this story, was force my character to see the beauty in her own chaos.

My grandfather has dementia and it only gets worse with age. Fortunately, if there can be a fortunately here, it seems to be a slow process.

But he no longer recalls much of his past. He’s a brave man, because though I am sure he doesn’t remember any of us grand kids, we call him Dziadzi (grandfather) to remind him who we are, and he always says: “oh how are you? Great to see you!” And though he weekly takes apart household objects and turns the heat all the way up, we still love him.

And he is in his 90s, still living at home with my grandmother, who is also in her 90s, and cares for him and my mentally handicapped aunt. Pretty neat. I hope the day never comes we have to put him in a nursing home, but if it does, I hope my family understands they aren’t failing him, that sometimes it is really for the best.

Love you all, thanks for all the support and follows lately.

A big yay to R.B. Wood for Episode 26 of the Word Count Podcast. If you guys trek over there you’ll find 5 wonderful stories by some great authors (including my good friend Eden Baylee,) and 1 song, (mine).

“Lullaby” is the name of my song and that version of the recording is completely exclusive to that ‘cast. Enjoy!

Cheers and hope your December is lovely for you thus far,

~jms

Hunger (Red Writing Hood Linkup) (Very Appropriately Named)

"Red" Original Image

Original drawing copyright me 2010, “Red”. Kind of bad, drew it at work but hey, pretty cool anyway.

 

Rated R for graphic violence.  Not for the weak-hearted/weak-stomached.

~*~

Hunger.  That was all she knew for the first few hours.

The blood that had been so caked on was now mostly washed off.  But some still remained, and some would never wash off even after it was already gone and scrubbed away.

It wasn’t hunger for the flesh – that was immaterial.  She could eat it or she couldn’t.  That was a natural instinct, the need to feed, and it wasn’t one she fought.

It was the hunger to kill that frightened her: that shaky, tense, exhilarating sensation of destroying the life which had so nearly taken hers.

It was the hunger that would slowly consume her.

When the wolf had smiled at her – and he had smiled, she saw it in the bearing of his teeth when he had opened his jaws to consume her… she had lost control.

Towards one whom she had offered her throat willingly once, she now felt no pity. 

No remorse.  She hated him.

He had tormented her since she was a girl, really.  All the times he’d pulled her from the path, caused her to stray, just for the sake of a little danger.  Jumping fences and roving between dark evergreens.

She used to be scared of him.  After all she was little, and he was two years older and bigger.  He made her stay behind in the bushes to play games too grown up for her when all the other children had gone home.

They lost touch over years and grades.  He dropped out in highschool, and she, sick though it was, had missed him.

When she was finally old enough, too old for the games but still too young to take care of her grandmother alone, he came to her again in his leather jacket and combat boots.

This time, she wasn’t frightened of his hands.  Hers fit neatly into his, and she wondered how she ever thought they were too big.  His eyes were so beautifully blue-green, the color of seaglass; of the Pacific.  A coast (economically) so far from her diner waitress job, she could only dream of it in his eyes.

And his teeth… they left marks in the dark, but back then he wasn’t the danger he would become – oh no, not yet.  She wasn’t afraid of his teeth.  Or his smile.

She escaped with him for a little while.  They would ride his motorcycle down the long, abandoned pathways of the Midwest together, she holding on tight and forgetting all the things she was supposed to be doing.

But life always creeps back, as it does, and so does death.

She returned, no longer little red, but just Red.

Her hair, once so long, was short, red and black.  Grandmother was too weak to take care of herself anymore, and with mother dead, Red knew it had to be her.  Grandmother hated the hair, but liked the homemade biscuits and gravy Red would make in the late afternoons, and that was enough for Red.

Her Wolf grew distant, and she grew distant in turn.  It wasn’t long before she ended it, because really, why wait for something that was never going to happen?  Besides, Grammy needed her.

He didn’t like it.  He tried to call her, to find her at their old haunts, to corner her.

She didn’t like that because it took her back to early memories of him –the times when she used to be scared. 

She should have stayed scared of him.  That night, the night she got home a few hours later than she’d intended, she knew something was wrong.

She dropped her purse when she entered her grandmother’s room.  He was there, standing over the bed, and Grammy…

Red’s lipstick, Berry Hard, rolled across the floor and under the bed with the small sound of plastic on wood.  Such a small sound – smaller than the blood screaming as it pulsed through her ears.

“Do I have your attention now, little Red?” he asked, crimson liquid dripping from his knife onto the floor, his head tilted to study her.

No, no-no-no-no her mind repeated, an endless stream of denial that made her more numb than anything else.

“You’re mine,” he said, and he licked the blood off the knife. 

Licked it, she reminded herself in horror. 

He stepped towards her.  “Now no one can keep you from me.“

No one but myself, she thought in that second.  She ran.  He followed, still holding the knife.  But she had the upper hand.  She knew the old farmhouse better than anyone.

She was almost to the shed and the spare phone when she tripped.  He had her by the ankles, pulling her.  She fought to grab something, anything.

He dropped the knife.  He was on top of her, strangling her and trying to rip her clothes at the same time–

Her hands touched a handle in the grass.  She knew what it was but had to escape first.  She whaled on him, kicking him, and connected with some part of him, because he let her go. 

In that moment, she had the hatchet.  She and Grammy had gone camping so many times with that small axe…  She was no weakling, no scared little girl.

Rough words and what big hands you have

She rolled and rose to her feet, hitting him in the head with the heft.

Scratchy leaves and what big teeth you have…

She lifted the axe, and she was terrified to see his blood-soaked face smile…

He knew.  He knew what she was going to do.

It was not an easy kill, and she raised and lowered the axe multiple times, connecting metal with skull.

Blood was on her, in her mouth… on her hands.

In her rage, she couldn’t stop.  She dropped the hatchet and took the knife, stabbing him over and over.

When she saw what she had done, she was crying.

Her grandmother’s blood was inside him, and his blood was inside her.  They were all connected and, what was more, she realized why he had smiled.

The hunger to kill, the hunger that filled her in the moment, was his.  In her anger, she had become him.

Red was red, covered in blood. The wolf was dead.

She was inside the house again, hardly knowing what she was doing, washing her sins in the farmhouse sink.

In the shadowy half-light above tile floor soaked with pink water, Red grinned, an edge of white tooth in the silvery mirror.

Something very dark was still alive inside of her.

Some sick, twisted part of her wanted to know what was in that darkness so very badly…

~*~

A very dark story based on a fragment I wrote back in 2010 but never completed.  I am very happy with this.

Written for the Red Writing Hood challenge this week: something based on a song. But of course, the fragment itself was longer than the original prompt challenge, (350 words) and as it was, my fragment was unfinished.  I didn’t have the heart to cut it shorter. 

Thus, it’s not getting attached until the weekend linkup (hope it happens!) but hey, my intentions were good.

<a border=”0″ href=”http://writeonedge.com/red-writing-hood/&#8221;

So the song that actually inspired the original clip was the intro to “Hot Summer Night” by Meatloaf. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpG_KiNvHac

A woman and a man have a conversation that goes like this:

MAN: On a hot summer night, would you offer your throat to the wolf with the red roses?

WOMAN: Will he offer me his mouth?

MAN: Yes

WOMAN: Will he offer me his teeth?

MAN: Yes.

WOMAN: Will he offer me his jaws?

MAN: Yes.

WOMAN: Will he offer me his hunger?

MAN: Yes.

WOMAN: Again, will he offer me his hunger?

MAN: (strongly) YES.

WOMAN: And will he starve without me?

MAN: (even more emphatically) YES.

WOMAN: (hesitates) And does he love me?

MAN: (whispered tenderly) Yes…

WOMAN: Yes.

MAN: (longingly) On a hot summer night, would you offer your throat to the wolf with the red roses?

WOMAN: Yes.

MAN: (pause) I’ll bet you say that to all the boys.

I honestly don’t always listen to the whole song following because the beginning was what always – ahem – captured my imagination.  I played Little Dead Riding Hood at a local scary-hayride-corn maze type deal, and wrote the original fragment around that time.

I hope you liked it, because I sure did!  Creepy though it is…

~JMS

Seeking: Red Writing Hood Prompt ‘Music’

The fruitless search for a purpose plagued him even when he tried to sleep.
Not that he needed sleep…but he enjoyed the feeling when she was with him.
His hand found hers and held it tightly in the dark as he listened to the song pumped gently into the air by her little clock radio.

From the hills I look up at stars
And feel the darkness swell like a bruise
And in my head, I’m playing with words
I scramble and strain to find the right ones
sometimes there are none.

He knew what the singer was talking about. They were alike in their search for inspiration.
She was his muse now, the only thing that made any sense in the world. He kissed her suddenly, and she moaned in her sleep, disturbed by his movements. He’d follow her to the ends of the earth. If only she had reason to stay.
And as the sounds of the guitar floated through his head, a wonderful idea came like a flash of lightning.
He gently extricated himself from his lover’s comfort and rushed to his desk. Taking an empty pad of paper and a pen, he began to write until he ran out of paper. Sketches, diagrams and plans fell to the floor. It was morning when he held up the last sheet, smiling at the final design.
Behind him, as the dawn light tickled her face, his lover sat up and crawled over the bed to reach him, wrapping her arms around him. “What is it, babe?” she said, sweet and low from slumber. Her eyes took in the papers on the floor and his sleepless appearance.
“I’ve done it,” he said, swiveling to look at her.
“Done what?” she asked in a wide yawn.
“Made my mark on the world, love,” he said. “I couldn’t have done it without you.”
“Me?” she said and snorted, looking skeptically at him from behind heavy eyelids. “I was asleep.”
“I just needed you and a little music,” he said, showing her the drawing.
“What do you call them?” she asked, smiling. “They’re beautiful.”
“They’re called Fae,” he said, tasting the name aloud on his lips for the first time. Then he reached up and kissed his muse.
~*~

So this was my answer to the Red Writing Hood Challenge for the week.

Believe it or not, this is backstory to my original YA fantasy series Ebony, although it won’t make any sense as part of that until well after it is published! For now enjoy as a standalone, hah.

The song that inspired this writing was “Church of the Pines” by Sun Kil Moon, from the album Admiral Fell Promises.

Here are the full lyrics. I wanted so badly to fit in the phrase: “dense vines strangle the black oaks” because it was such a fitting sentence, but I could not, sadly!

I hope you enjoy the song. It’s been stuck in my head for days now.

Here are the lyrics. I in no way own this song, it is completely the copyright of Mark Kozelek and Sun Kil Moon!!

Spring, spring.. flowers blossom and bloom.
Squirrel, squirrel.. jump down onto my roof.
Sparrow, Cardinal, hummingbird.
Redwood, holly tree, juniper…

The service moves slowly through the hills
Faint sound of the highway
Night sets on the church of pines,
Ending the day, they laid down to rest.

From my room, I look at the street
And see the youths passing along
While I unwind, head in a song.
And in my bed, I play the guitar
I loosen the strings ’til I find a tone
And if it don’t come… then I put it down.

Howl, howl.. dogs of the neighborhood
Moon glow, over the gravestones
Dense vines, strangle the black oaks
the lamp light, the fallen fence posts.
The sun rises over the tree line….
With welcoming morning light.
Day sets on the church of pines,
one day we’ll all.. be laid to rest.

From the hills I look up at stars
And feel the darkness swell like a bruise
And in my head, I’m playing with words
I scramble and strain to find the right ones
sometimes there are none.
sometimes they don’t come.

Write On Edge: Red-Writing-Hood

The Prompt:

“For Friday, let your character be inspired by music. It doesn’t have to be a specific song or genre, it doesn’t even have to exist anywhere outside your mind. Show us in 400 words or less how your character reacts to a piece of music. It can advance a story line or provide a character sketch–or both!

Come back and link up with us on Friday.”

Coatrack. (RemembeRed)

COATRACK

Stay true to your roots, my father told me. But don’t be afraid to go against the grain.

I promised him I would. I haven’t seen him since the day we were separated. I was carved, sanded and polished into a coat rack, but I’d like to think I didn’t let him down.

I found home in a big family. I lived in a shady corner near the front door, complete with linoleum floor and the occasional pet dog trying to make me back into a tree, but I liked it.

Every Saturday night was Chinese Food Night. At least, that’s what the house elders always said. They would talk for a long time on a small black device, then the kids would come, and the grandkids. Eight coats would fill my arms. Windbreakers and leather jackets in summer, thick down coats in winter. Ten humans would gather around a cramped dining room table I could just make out in an adjoining room. The kids would then take little black devices and spend most of the night giggling over them. I didn’t know what they were, but they must have been very important to distract them from their elders.

Sometimes, when the crowd got louder, glasses filled to the brim, they’d come out in the foyer to talk. I didn’t have much choice but to listen. Coffee black hair and black glasses came into view–one of the sons talking on a square black thing.

He whispered, but I could hear him just fine.

“Dinah…she knows. She’s been so cold…we have to stop this. Please don’t cry…Jesus…” he ran a hair through his coffee black hair and removed his glasses, wiping sweat off his face with his forearm. “I’m confused. I know what I said!” His voice grew softer as the conversation dwindled in the other room. “No…I can’t see you anymore.”

“Rick,” grey hair swam into the edge of my vision. A commanding glare from the matriarch. “Come and eat with your family.”

The matriarch retreated to the other room, leaving the glasses man by himself for a minute. He looked for a moment like he wanted to take his coat, even reached for my arm, but then he turned and went back to the table.

Stay true to your roots.

I wish I could have my father back, sometimes.

Then again, I still have eight coats to hold.

~*~

This was in answer to the Personification challenge on Write On Edge this week. Last time I did this was in college and I like this answer a lot more than my old one!

Write on Edge: RemembeRED