by Sarah | Feb 10, 2013 | Books, Hybrid, Tuesday Tales, Writing
Another Tuesday Tales, the same story – still without a title. I thought I’d reveal what they are in this one, but with only 300 words to play with…well, it just wasn’t happening. Hopefully next week.
There is a tiny little time jump for this one in order to make it fit with the assigned image, but really nothing happened, so it’s just a scene break š
Remember, this is a meme with many contributing authors, so make sure to click the link at the bottom of the image to take you to see more!
Anyhow, as always this is un-edited mostly, so forgive any errors. :
The markings on my hand tingled. Itching fire crept along every line until it flamed bright red against my flesh. Just when I was certain the flesh would peel back to reveal what was beneath the flame cooled.
I rose from the couch, not sure if heād arrive as a human or magically appear. But he was close. The ambient temperature rose enough that I began to wonder if the burning in my hand had truly died down or my body temperature just rose to match the coming flames of hell.
With a squeal of tires a fire-red corvette ripped into the driveway.
āDaddy dearest. How kind of you to call.ā I knew heād hear me over the engine. Heād probably hear me from the next town if he tried.
Sure enough the inappropriately distinguished gray-haired gentleman in the car looked right at me through the sheer curtains that covered my picture windows. Damn third sight. Mine could be useful, but his was just annoying.
āForget it.ā With my hands on my hips, I shook my head at him as he got out of the car. āIām not doing it.ā
āIf there was any choice, I wouldnāt make you.ā He didnāt even bother to knock, walked right in my unlocked door. Thankfully he didnāt bother with even a cursory greeting as my skin already tingled from his proximity.
āThereās always a choice.ā
āNo, Jyoti.ā
āI am Carolyn.ā I stormed after him. āIn this life, on my vacation Iām Carolyn. I did my part. I fought the battles. I defended our territory.ā
āAnd now you must preserve it, or else we all perish. Youāre the key, Jyoti.ā He turned, cradling the small red box that had been in the package in his hands. āYou must die to keep us alive.ā
*~*
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*~*
by Sarah | Feb 3, 2013 | Books, Challenge, Hybrid, Tuesday Tales, Writing
Another Tuesday Tales, the same story – still without a title. It’ll come to me eventually, I suppose. Ā I give a couple of hints into WHAT Carolyn is, but still don’t spill the beans completely. Ā I believe the next foray into this world will answer it for you…but I can’t be sure until it’s written. š Ā I do know that a couple of times during this bit I tried to slip back into 3rd person. Still not used to this first person stuff.
Remember, this is a meme with many contributing authors, so make sure to click the link at the bottom of the image to take you to see more!
Anyhow, as always this is un-edited mostly, so forgive any errors. :
I got to my feet and carried the box into the kitchen. For a few minutes I could do nothing but stare at it sitting on my table. Ā Whatever was in that box could, and likely would, ruin the busy life I had now — only to make it more chaotic. I’d done my time, earned this vacation. With trepidation I dug the scissors out of our ājunkā drawer and sliced open the tape.
It didnāt matter if I could have sliced it open myself. Without direct orders Iād stay human as long as possible.
Brown shredded paper provided a buffer against bouncing. The assembly shunned many modern conveniences like packing peanuts. It now was suspect, the delivery truck and man might not have been anything more than my phoenix spy outside. Crafty creatures like that could imitate a great many sounds.
I sighed. No point in delaying any longer. I yanked out the shredded paper and it drifted like snow to my spotless bamboo floor. A plain white envelope sat on top of something.Ā The stamped crest was made of pure liquid silver, set by cooling to earth’s temperature and removed only by fire itself. Not known to humans, only our kind knew of its location and existence.
Two dragons curved along the shield, their tails entwined, noses touching. The face of the shield held a griffin with wings unfurled. Habit brought my hand to my chest where my pendant hung hidden below my shirt. Solid silver, heavy daily reminder of how many years before my molt would occur.
So far in this incarnation Iād worn it every day, it had helped me appreciate the short span of time Iād have. After so many years it became easy to take a vacation as a human for granted. After all, thirty years is nothing when youāve had eons.
I pulled my hand from the pendant and ran my fingertips along the lines of the crest. Once again Iād have to shed a bit of humanity to open it. They knew it, thatās why theyād used liquid silver.
A scream jolted through me and the envelope toppled to the table. My heart pounded in my chest as I glared at the hawk perched outside my window. While Iād ended use of my third-sight, I had no doubt he was the same phoenix from out front.Ā āFor an animal with a life as long as mine you are exceedingly impatient. Iām opening it. Go return and tell them as much. Nosy bird.ā
Its beak opened and a staccato of shrieks echoed out, a loud and very poor imitation of laughter.Ā āGlad youāre enjoying yourself.ā
I grabbed the envelope again and stretched out my neck. Doing this would leave my hand marked for days. Iād have to feign an injury so Darren wouldnāt know. Maybe I could keep it down to one finger.
Eyed closed I focused on the burning heat in the base of my spine and let it build into a small flame.Ā Under careful guidance the flame worked its way along my bones and into my veins down to my finger.
Pain let me know the shift was happening, but I kept my eyes closed. Iād much rather let instinct tell me the silver had melted than the visual of the matter.
Once the flap of the envelope popped up I pulled my finger back. It took ten times more concentration to rein in the heat and return it to my source. My index finger throbbed and when I opened my eyes it looked like someone had fun with a tattoo gun over half my hand. Lines wove together into something akin to a Henna tattoo, with both elaborate designs and the scallops of scales.
If only I was still single I could leave them.
No matter, Iād cover it later. For now, the letter had to have priority. I pulled out the thickĀ card-stockĀ and flipped it over.Ā My own fathers elegant script scrolled along the card.Ā A message and a command.
Emergency. Inside the box is your excuse. You will not be able to return.
āBullshit.ā I threw down the card. āI wonāt do it. You tell him.ā
My tattooed hand jerked toward the bird outside my window.Ā āYou tell him that I wonāt leave so that I canāt return. I wonāt molt so easily. Tell him.ā
The bird let out a shrill scream before lifting into the air.
Sure Iād be in trouble. But Iād be damned if Iād be ordered around that easy.
*~*
Side note, to see approximately what Carolyn’s hand looks like after this little incident, it’s something like this:
http://blog.bodycandy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Henna-Tattooing.jpg
(I’m linking to the image rather than display it as I don’t like displaying any image that isn’t mine on the blog. Click over, though…it’s pretty cool)
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*~*
by Sarah | Jan 28, 2013 | Books, Challenge, Hybrid, Tuesday Tales, Writing
I’ve joined another weekly writing challenge called Tuesday Tales. I get a prompt every week and write what comes to mind. This first part flowed so well, I’ll probably try to continue the story, using prompts along the way.
As of now, this is untitled. It’s not my usual style to write in first person, so I’m on a learning curve, but it’s how the story wanted to be written.
Please keep in mind that this story is coming in short pieces and is all first draft, so spelling and grammar issues are possible.
This weeks prompt: Light.
The high pitched whine of a delivery truckās brakes penetrated the sanctuary of peace Iād built. Heavy footsteps plodded through the snow, a shadowy form growing larger through the intricate frosted glass.
Tension started to wind its way through each of my relaxed muscles. The calm center Iād managed to find popped like a bubble at the peal of our insanely loud doorbell.
So much for meditation.
With the kids at school and husband at work I thought maybe I could manage to find peace and quiet for five minutes. Thatās what I get for making plans.
āI could try again.ā Even as I said it, I knew it was just too much work.
Besides, curiosity tugged my attention toward the door.Ā Despite last yearās mad obsession with the home shopping channels, Iād been very good about not buying a whole lot this year. I couldnāt recall ordering anything in the past week.
Maybe Darren had ordered something.
I snorted as I rose to my feet.Ā Darren wouldnāt order anything online. Doesnāt trust the internet, big brother, or the space needle. I have always thought it was adorable, really. The man didnāt even own a smartphone.
Everyone owns smartphones. Even everyone in the government heās so afraid of.
I pulled open the door and found a small box, hardly worth shipping via the big shipping company. Addressed to Carolyn Riese. Me. Return address, oddly smudged until unreadable.
My hackles raised and I glanced around the quiet neighborhood.
Nothing out of the ordinary caught my eye, but my nerves stayed on edge. Winter covered every naked branch and home, covering the world in white silence. A loud scream from a hawk made me jump out of my skin. I found it high in a tree.
Despite the risk of a neighbor seeing I let my third lid blink so I could see beyond the normal. The moment the membrane restored my inhuman sight the world around me changed. Light shimmered and echoed through each snowflake until the ground itself was as blinding as the sun.
Rays of red light streamed down from the tree, echoing sun-dogs in its effect. The red-tailed hawk had revealed itself to be a phoenix.
They were watching me.
If I ignored the package, the consequence could be great.
āItās only been fifteen years.ā
The phoenix turned its head at my complaint, fiery wings flapping before it lifted into the air and soared toward me.
I snatched the box from the porch and slammed the door before he got too close. The box settled in my lap as I sank to the floor. It couldnāt be.
There was still an option to ignore the box, but if I did theyād turn my life upside down in worse ways than I could imagine.
I couldnāt let that happen.
*~*
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