Better not go alone

creepy overgrown abandoned house

You know it’s lovely down in the woods but sometimes it can get a little creepy. That’s what happened with the March Furious Fiction writing challenge of ‘person, place, object’. Simple right? Our <500 word stories had to include a character in disguise and a mirror, and take place in a park.

National park, dog park, business park, car park, amusement park – there were plenty of options, and stories are all about choices. Sometimes good, sometimes bad.

You can follow that link to read this month’s winning and shortlisted stories, and you can join in the fun this coming Friday (3 April) when the AWC will issue a new challenge at 5pm for a weekend of furious writing.

Meanwhile, I hope you enjoy my tale of an ultimately delicious walk in the park:

The Dead Zone
You slip through the hole in the fence half an hour after sunset.
I’m waiting by the gate, hidden by the twilight and the camouflaging shadows of signs that shout ‘keep out’ in seven languages. The weeds are waist-high and my shirt is the same colour as the rusted links of the padlocked chain. I watch your face as you take in the ivy-draped guard hut, the cracked bitumen where trees have reclaimed the road, the blistered husk of an old telephone booth.
Your eyes shine with the illicit thrill of doing the forbidden.
Hallo, kleiner Leuchtkäfer,” I say.
You startle like a deer, but you don’t lose your smile when you see me. I like that.
“What did you say?” Your accent is as broad as the wide country you call home.
“I welcomed you in, little firefly.” I thread through the weeds towards you. You weigh my size, gender, clothes and age with a glance, and I see the moment when you decide I’m not a threat but an opportunity. Your smile grows brighter.
“Are there fireflies?” you ask. “I read online there’s all kinds of animals.”
I wave my hand at the devouring wilderness, as if I have conjured it.
“All kinds,” I agree. “The fireflies are best near the pond.”
You tap your phone to bring up an aerial photograph of the site. I move closer, pretending to peer at it, but I want to breathe in your scent.
“There’s supposed to be a tower,” you say. “I want to camp there and watch for wolves.”
You name the predators with reverence and I allow myself a smile.
“There is a watchtower.” I start to walk as if I will take you there and you pace beside me, gesturing with the hand not snapping images of saplings growing through ruined cars, faded graffiti on crumbling concrete, squirrels chastising us from the illusory safety of their trees.
“I knew it’d be good,” you say, “but this is amazing. Are there still landmines?”
“Oh, yes,” I say and you move closer. “It is one reason they warn people to keep out.”
“But they don’t. Tourists. Locals.” You flick a glance at me as I lead us into a narrow lane between derelict cottages. “They call them stalkers at Chernobyl.”
“I am not a stalker,” I say, “and there is no poison here, only the demilitarised zone.”
“It’s still an exclusion zone, a dead zone,” you say and I almost laugh.
“An involuntary park,” I murmur. “It had no choice.”
You do laugh at that.
The fireflies I promised are mirrored in the dark water of the pond. You tap and tap, capturing their beauty. Then you hold your phone at arm’s length and sling your other arm around my shoulders, drawing me close for a selfie.
“Smile,” you say and I bare my teeth although, of course, you are alone on the screen of your phone.

 

 

(Banner cropped from an image by Iva Balk from Pixabay)

Refuge and resources

old gate with sign 'please shut the gate'Not wanting to catastrophise or anything, but now seemed like a good time to post about some free online resources that I love and which others may not be aware of.

In the coming weeks/months you might find yourself with some thumb-twiddling time (or possibly climbing the walls). What to do if you get bored of binge-watching and you’ve delved to the bottom of your physical TBR pile of books? What to do if, for reasons we don’t need to dwell on, you can’t physically nip down to the local library to restock on books, magazines, DVDs and CDs?

Well, you can still visit the library, even if you can’t do it physically, as long as you have internet access. Your public library service very likely offers a glorious multitude of online resources that you can use, as long as you’re a member (and it’s free to be a member so it’s all good).

Here are some of my favourite online library resources:

BOOKS: Obviously books! Your public library should give you access to one or more eBook and eAudio book providers. You may be able to do a single library catalogue search and get back all results, both physical and digital, and borrow from there. Or you might have to access your library’s online resources page and log into the eBook provider to search for eBooks from that particular provider. That might sound complicated, but it’s really not. It just means you might have to check in a couple of places. I regularly use BorrowBox and OverDrive and access the files of the borrowed eBooks through Adobe Digital Edition and CloudLibrary, which I’ve set up on my laptop. Chances are good your library has clear instructions on how to get started with eBooks and, if you get stuck, technical help is only a phone call away.

READERS’ ADVISORY (RA) SERVICES: Not sure what to read next? No handy librarian to ask? PM me, or DIY with eResources like Books and Authors or Novelist Plus or Who Else Writes Like? You’ll have to check to see what online RA services your library subscribes to, but they are fabulous ways to find read-alikes, genre and themed suggestions, and lists of recommended books. Then, once you’re armed with a few suggestions, you can check out the eBooks…

MUSIC: Free streaming and free downloads? Over 13 million songs with everything from classical music to Broadway showtunes to death metal? Yes! I hope your library service offers you access to Freegal like mine does. Freegal lets you search by genre or artist or song title, find new releases, music videos, most popular songs and albums, and also provides themed playlists. It’s great for finding old favourites and, if you search by song title, lots of versions of popular songs. It also has audio books and spoken word albums which include comedy routines and poetry readings and more. Hours of entertainment!

FILMS: I’m not that keen on the moving pictures thing, but if you are, check to see if your public library online resources include access to Kanopy, which lets you stream movies and documentaries.

LANGUAGES: Maybe you’ve always wanted to learn a new language? If your library has Mango Languages in its eResources, you’re in luck. Your library membership lets you log in to Mango and choose what you want to learn from over 70 languages. Best of all, if you want to impress everyone come next September 19, you can even learn Pirate.

MORE, SO MUCH MORE: Honestly, log into your library website, go to their Online Resources page and browse the list. Magazines, newspapers, articles, genealogy, video tutorials, educational kids’ games, car engine manuals (seriously!), craft and hobby resources – it’s kind of overwhelming how much stuff is just sitting there, waiting for you to discover it.

So brew your hot beverage of choice, find a comfy chair, and treat yourself to some online goodness. Learn new things, immerse yourself in fabulous fiction, discover songs you can dance to.

Stay safe, everyone, and let your library’s free online resources help you stay sane.

 

On guard, and time for fury!

photo of an alert dogAnother month, another Furious Fiction.

Today’s post is a two-edged sword – one side shares the 500 word story I wrote for February’s AWC Furious Fiction Challenge, and the second (the sharper side and call to action) is to tell you that today, at 5pm, the AWC will unveil their March challenge. You’ll have 55 hours to craft your own tale to meet whatever fiendish criteria they propose – and be in the running to win $500. Come on, it’ll be fun.

Meanwhile, here’s my take on February’s requirements for some sort of guard in the story, inclusion of the words narrow, golden, leathery and glossy, and the first and last sentences each to contain just two words:

RESCUE
Bad day. You make it to the couch. Cue brass band and medal ceremony. Achievement get. Level up.
You make it to the couch and curl around the pain like a whiskered fern frond, or one of those leathery, segmented insects you find under rotting wood. Are they slaters? You can’t remember.
The room hangs sideways. Horizontal verticals of curtains, door frame, bookcase. Improbable uprights on the tilted coffee table. You reach for a bottle of water caught between the sedimentary layers of neglect but you’re too stiff. Fossilised. Curled like an ammonite. Like the glossy, carved scroll on the neck of the violin you haven’t taken out of its case for eight months.
Cue first violin, screeching a glissando from shame to rage, a tremolo of failure.
You read online that some people don’t have an inner monologue and laughed until you couldn’t sit up, until your head was an Easter Island monolith, drenched in salty Pacific rain. For years you absorbed criticism and despair. Now the sullen echoes, a symphony in D-sharp minor, crush you into the couch.
You can just about breathe through it.
Then he’s there, coming in from the kitchen, trailing dirt prints on the carpet and the scent of basil he’s brushed against. A velvet-soft head pushes under your hand and noses your wrist. He’s so warm, like he’s swallowed the sun to bring it inside for you. His tail beats a bass drum tattoo on the couch, thunderous applause speaking joy at your company.
You breathe together.
Your fingers glide over his ears, stretch and repeat – easier than any scale you ever played. He whines softly, a melancholy oboe, just enough to remind you there’s more to the orchestra than the strings. More to the day than the couch. More to you than failure. He licks the inside of your wrist, rasping and real in a way the echo of the first violin can never be.
“That’s right,” you tell him. “You scared it.”
You make it to the front yard. There are five chewed tennis balls tucked into the big blue pot with the golden cane palm. You pick one up and he’s a dervish, ecstatic with anticipation. You throw and he flings himself after it, blurred pursuit through the narrow tangle of green.
“Nice dog,” a voice says from the gate as the ball is returned. It’s a man, kitted and capable, from the building site three doors up. “What sort is he?”
The best sort you know. Bravest and true. The sort that stands between you and despair.
“A guard dog,” you say.
“Really?” He considers the soft ears, short legs, limpid eyes.
“A rescue dog.”
“Oh, cool.” He smiles. “Nice to meet a lifesaver.”
“Yes.” You look down and meet that dark, loving gaze. “Good dog.”

 

 

(Banner cropped from an image by Hans Aldenhoven from Pixabay.)

Monstrously fine!

B_red leavesI mentioned last August that I was interviewing monsters to feature in a short story I wanted to submit to the anthology call for CSFG Publishing’s Unnatural Order.

The good news is that the delightful beastie I chose, whose CV included such sterling job titles as Devourer of Souls and Great of Death, made the cut and has been included in the upcoming anthology.

Needless to say, I couldn’t be more delighted than to be again sharing a table of contents with the dapper Rob Porteous and the delightful C.H. Pearce, and eleven other talented monster  wranglers, including Grace Chan, Freya Marske, Nathan J. Phillips, Tansy Rayner Roberts and Leife Shallcross.

Thanks to editors Alis Franklin and Lyss Wickramasinghe for their unnatural selection.

The anthology will be out later this year. Don’t worry – I’ll keep you updated on all monstrous developments.