Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Buttons and Ice cream


Another "short" story by yours truly.
I hope you enjoy. Comments, and critiques are encouraged and appreciated.

-Brandolyn

Buttons and Ice cream

I hate buttons.

I haven’t always hated buttons, but recently they seem to be out to get me. On a good day they are tricky to slip through a button hole, and they always make removing clothing an arduous task; instead of simply pulling a shirt over my head, I must first undo the buttons at the neck and wrist, or otherwise turn the shirt inside out and pull with all my strength until eventually the sleeves pop over my wrists. What a pain. And when I’m having a bad day, they seem to know it and decide to avoid the ever elusive button hole.

I hate buttons. However, I think as I look across the room at Chris as he dresses for work, I do love how buttons pull the shirt tight across his chest. I smirk, and add that small detail to the sketch I’m working on.

“What?” He asks me looking up after tucking in his deep navy shirt. He sounds bored, but he looks slightly intrigued.

“Nothing.” I smile my cutest, most innocent smile and focus my attention back to the sketch pad on my lap. He ignores me and goes back to getting ready. My sketch is nearly finished. It’s Chris, in his uniform, looking every bit as handsome as the day I first met him. Back then he was a junior Officer; he didn’t have the stripes that adorn his sleeves today.

“Wow.” Chris had crossed the room and is looking over my shoulder at the charcoal sketch I made of him. I laughed.

“Well, it may not look quite right but imagine it with some colour and a little less shaky.” I may hate buttons, but I love charcoal, it’s one of the only remaining mediums I use: chalk, conté and charcoal. Charcoal moves and blends easily, so it’s easy to hide any mistakes, and lately I’ve been making a lot. It wasn’t perfect, but I liked it well enough.

“It looks amazing.” He smiles at me. “You are as talented as ever.” He says beaming.

“Don’t make fun.” I shut my sketch book as a shudder runs down my spine, down my leg and through my left foot. I wince uncontrollably. Chris reaches down and very gently puts one finger under my chin to raise it up. He brings his mouth down to mine and caresses me softly.

Most couples kiss, but Chris and I, we caress. It sounds cheesy, and maybe it is, but we do and I love it.

When I was growing up I went on a few dates and had a few stolen kisses, but nothing ever made me want more, so I never got time to practice kissing. Chris has told me on several occasions, I am the first girl he ever truly kissed, so he didn’t know what he was doing either. I’ve never known if we just got lucky, or if we’re doing it wrong because we didn’t know what to expect when our lips first touched, but either way, we never simply kiss.

Our first caress was long awaited by both of us, it just sort of happened, like a reflex and ever since, when we kiss it’s sweet, tender, prolonged and deliberate. That’s not to say that it’s unseemly, but it is so true that we keep them to ourselves; the rest of the world can have their kisses, and we will keep our caresses to each other.

This caress makes me weak in the knees and I am glad that I’m still sitting down.  He holds me close as we break apart, whispering softly,

“Sorry I won’t be here tonight, but I’ll see you in the morning.”

“Wait,” I call and pull him close again. He had missed one of his shirt buttons and I fix it for him. Fortunately, today it doesn’t take me too long. He thanks me and leaves.

Whenever Chris’ gone, either for work or out with the guys, I usually become extremely productive. I work from home, so a nice quiet house is perfect. Tonight however, my work was going to wait. Every time I look at it I feel a needle sharp pain right behind my right eye. Work can wait till morning. I should just go to bed, but I have a book that I am dying to finish.

I recline in my favourite chair for a while reading, but that numbing pain I’ve been trying to avoid all day creeps up on me in the silence. Before I can fixate too long on my pain, I get a text.

If you’re sleeping, sleep well. If you can’t sleep, take a bath.
-C
Maybe a bath will help.


Chris designed the bathroom specifically for me. He built it right next to my office and he painted it a relaxing pale blue, with white trim, lights that dim and a Jacuzzi tub for really hard days. The bath helps a lot; the pain in my head and behind my eyes was nearly gone, and the prickling in my spine disappeared, but the heat has made my feet and hands sluggish. I nearly fall out of the bath as my feet drag clumsily out of the tub. 

Immediately my tension returns.

Relax.

It isn’t just my work, the pain or nearly falling out of the tub that was making me tense. That was annoying, but I deal with this every day; it just gets worse whenever Chris works nights, adding worries about him to the jungle of stuff I have to deal with.

I had always dreamed of becoming a Police Officer. I have the fitness, the focus, the drive, but as my Doctor has pointed out several times; I cannot pass the physical. Multiple Sclerosis hasn’t stopped me from doing anything before, but when my symptoms get worse in stressful situations, it’s hard to keep a high stress job. I came to terms with Chris' job a long time ago. I'm really proud of him, but it doesn't keep me from worrying.

I open Chris’ closet and pull out a deep blue, long sleeved sweatshirt from his time at the Police Academy and put it on; it smells like him, like pine and peppermint. I picked the one shirt he owns that doesn’t have buttons and slip the shirt on easily. I look in the mirror out of habit and sigh. 

Fitness-wise my health has never been better,  I’m lean and muscular; not that I can see any definition under Chris’ sweater, but I can see it in my bare legs; strong calves from my hours on the tread mill. Fitness is important; Chris has to stay fit for his job and I stay fit to challenge him, besides, my Doctors are always telling me that fitness staves off illness

“Liar.” I accuse the mirror. I don’t know if fitness keeps illness away, but if you’re fit, at least you still look great when you get sick.

I close my eyes and shake out my limbs trying to relax my body starting with my neck and shoulders, then my back and hips. I wiggle my toes, at least, I think I do. I open my eyes and check the mirror. Yep, they’re moving. I sigh relieved.  I haven’t been able to feel them in years; nothing more than a constant numbness.

I tip toe down the hall, careful not to trip over myself, to the kitchen and make myself a pot of tea; Cinnamon Apple Spice is my favourite. Chris prefers Earl Grey, but I like my warm cup of tea to smell of Christmas.

My favourite mug is sitting on the counter; a green mug with the drawing of an owl wearing a bow tie with the caption “Dr. Whooo”, that Chris got me for my birthday. It’s my favourite, so we’ve agreed to keep it on the counter so that I don’t risk dropping it from the cupboard- I broke a mug and two plates last week. 

The problem with my situation is that I can be perfectly fine one moment, then the next moment a jolt of pain; like a really bad internal shock will make me twitch uncontrollably. Sometimes I’m glad we don’t have kids, what if I suddenly twitched and dropped the baby?  Or held on too tight trying not to drop it? I sigh again and focus on my tea. It’s steeped a bit too much for my liking, but it’ll be fine. 

Habitually I open the freezer. We’ve already eaten, Chris made us Fillet Mignon with potatoes and asparagus, but I wanted something sweet to go with my tea. I had made homemade popsicles out of lemon water and popsicle sticks. Inside the freezer, on the middle row was a half pint of my favourite ice cream, with a note attached.
Some days it’s O.K to cheat.
XOXO

If I wasn’t so excited to be having ice cream when I’m supposed to be on a dairy-free diet, I would have burst into tears. 

I grab the half pint of Cappuccino ice cream, one spoon, my tea and hurry into Chris’ study. I quickly make a small fire and pull on the big quilt we made out of his old sports jerseys and snuggle up on the big couch. Chris' study is the only room in the house with a fire place, it’s also one of the few rooms that doesn’t have a television; making it our favourite room. 

When he’s working, or sorting bills I like to come in here and read, just to be in the same room. I used to come in and read before Chris put in any extra furniture; a desk, a desk chair and a lamp, that was it; I would sit on the floor. He brought in bookshelves for me, but the big couch was mostly for him, so he could lay down with me while I read aloud to him. 

The fire’s comforting, but the later it gets into the night, the less I can fight how much everything hurts, no amount of tea or ice cream, or sappy movies can distract me anymore. I close my eyes, curl up on the couch and cry as my body twitches painfully out of my control. I pray that everything still works the same when I wake up; because I never know what to expect when I open my eyes in the morning. 


When I wake up Chris is holding me tight. We’re still on the couch in his office, covered by the jersey quilt. There’s golden early morning sunlight peeking through the shades. It's morning, and he's home.

I realize he’s somehow under me. He must have picked me up while I was sleeping. He has one hand wrapped around my middle, while the other strokes my hair gently. I bury my face into his shoulder, before I realize he’s talking to me. His voice is soothing. 

“Relax.” “I’m home.” “Relax.” He repeats softly over and over. Every time my body twitches I feel his hands hold me tighter, like if he can hold me still, it won’t hurt so much.

“How was work?” I ask sleepily. I hear a rumble in his throat that signals indifference.

“It was nothing compared to your night.” His hand is still drifting slowly from the top of my head down my spine. For the first time since I came into his office during the night my body lay perfectly still. The skin on my neck prickles happily at his touch and I conform to his body comfortably. We lay still for a while. 

“I’m sorry I left you to go through tonight alone.” Chris whispers to the back of my head. I turn around and prop myself up on his chest. I look at him thoughtfully remembering all the ways Chris was with me last night; he designed my relaxing bathroom, he sent the text message, I wore his sweater, he left me ice cream with the note, I snuggled in his quilt on the couch in his office … the list went on and on.

“You didn’t.” I say proudly, before I lean down and caress him. He holds me tight again and we settle into the couch for a long over-due nap. 

I fall asleep happily knowing that when I wake up, if nothing else works properly, but I can still kiss Chris like that, and be kissed by him the same, then I will be happy.

Friday, 25 January 2013

Writing something different

On January 20th I got inspired during a walk with my dog to write a story based in the world of the BBC Television series Sherlock. (If you haven't seen it, then I highly recommend it. It is cleverly written and puts a great twist on a classic story by bringing Sherlock and John Watson to 21st century London.)

It started as silly babbling in my head of the characters in a scenario I would love to see on the TV show, but that is so far into the future it would be highly unlikely to ever be created. While I walked I wrote the dialogue, and the drama, picturing the story like an episode of the show, with moments that fade to black, commercial breaks and flashbacks. It was a compelling story. So, when I got home and the dog fell asleep, I started to write it all down.

This is a new form of writing for me, and one I am very willing to keep practising. I classified this as a "Fan Fiction." If you've ever heard the word, you will probably associate it with works like "50 Shades of Grey", which started off as a Fan Fiction. The term usually refers to written works surrounding characters, and places in Popular Culture, whether it is about Super Hero's, TV shows, Archie's love triangle with Betty and Veronica. In the world of Fan Fiction, anything is possible.

There are websites and "Fandoms" dedicated to these Alternate Story lines or Alternate Universes. It's amazing. Much of the work that is out there I would deem, Teen Dreams: fluff stories, with not a lot of substance, but occasionally you can stumble onto a beautifully crafted and compelling story that makes you wish that this piece of fiction was the original.

My piece is entry level. It's not a typical novel, style, so I feel out of my element, but the story came to me so fluidly, that I just wanted to get the whole thing written down. I wrote off and on for 3 days. 3 days, 20 pages and 8,517 words later I had published something online.

I subscribed to a website dedicated to Fan Fictions and submitted my work. There's no screening process, it's just published online for anyone to see and review it. I posted the first chapter of the story on the evening of the 23rd. On the first night I had 1 stranger "Favourite" my work and ask me for more. I also had my #1 fan, my sister, beg me for more on the website.

*I have a fear of posting my work online- I know it's an odd thing for a blogger to say- and have forced myself to put my work out there through my blogs, I thought this might be another challenge. However, since there is no way this story would ever get published: it's based off of someone else's brain child that is copy written, I had ZERO issues publishing it online. I am nervous about the reviews, but I'm also very excited to see how strangers (with no emotional investment to me or my work) feel about my work.

In the morning I posted chapter 2, then 3, 4, 5 and finally 6 throughout the day as I finished editing them.

On the first night I had 82 Views, spread over 41 Viewers and 1 Favourite.

On the second day I had 367 Views, spread between 82 Viewers and 3 Favourites.

I have no idea how many of those visitors like what I wrote, but it's still an amazing feeling to get so many people exposed to something I wrote in much a short period of time.

I wonder what day 3 will bring?

If you are interested in reading my piece, please find it here:
http://www.fanfiction.net/s/8938240/1/The-Pieces-of-Sherlock-s-Heart

***PLEASE BE ADVISED*** This style of writing is not for everyone. It reads differently than most writing. THIS IS NOT A STAND ALONE STORY. The characters have a lot of history that is alluded to, but is not explained in this.

That being said, I hope you enjoy.

-Brandolyn


Wednesday, 23 January 2013

Back Jacket Challenge #3

The 3rd, in my Back Jacket Challenge. 

The Daughter of the Raven Queen

Blayze; a young archer and aerial merchant, was confident in her beliefs that life ends at death. Raised not to fear death and taught that to reanimate a dead body is heresy, she resolves to purge the world of the un-dead during her travels. So when her lover is killed and brought back to life as a blood craving Vampire Blayze is torn between the urge to destroy him and her desire to be with him.

-Brandolyn

Tuesday, 15 January 2013

Back Jacket Challenge #2

The 2nd of my Back Jacket Blurb Challenge. 

The 2nd of the Roaglenian
The Tower of Arista

Anna wakes up every morning, looks around the tiny room she shares with her younger sister, pushes her father's wolf off the end of her bed and waits for a torrent of visions to flow before her eyes.
Anna can see the future.
She sees glimpses throughout the day, but mornings are when the visions are the most succinct, and when visions of her her own death, and the deaths of her loved ones start to plague her in her sleep Anna becomes determined to avoid her fate.
When she wakes up in a huge velvet covered room, surrounded by servants and wait staff, with no recollection of who she is, what she can do, or how she is going to die, Anna unknowingly starts to walk straight down fate's path toward the end of her vision. 
How will Anna remember who she is if she doesn't know the life around her is a lie? How can she avoid her death if she can't remember it is coming? 

-Brandolyn

Saturday, 12 January 2013

Back Jacket Challenge #1

Every time I come up with a story and start writing I inevitably write the blurb that I envision would be on the back jacket of the book. I think the cover of a book and the back jacket say a lot about whether a reader will enjoy a book or not. You get a quick taste of the main drama of the story. I love back jackets, but am always sad when they spoil a little bit of the intrigue, so I am shamed to admit I don't read many. I get my books through recommendations and intrigue from the title and cover, but I know a lot of people who say that the blurb at the back of a book is the deciding factor when they are looking for a book.

I talk about writing a lot but I have a hard time sharing it. I blog and share that, but when it comes to my novels I hold them so close that not even my family has read them. Recently, and off and on for the past several years I have been asked to share my work. Every time I sigh, think about it, agree and then never share. This winter however, I have been officially challenged to share some of my writing.

I am still very worried about sharing unfinished works, but my challenge was just to share a blurb. Just enough to get someone interested and wanting more. So I decided that my book jacket blurbs would be a wonderful compromise.

Over the course of the next few weeks I will be posting Back Jacket Blurbs, and would love any constructive and creative criticism my readers can offer. These are works in progress to get me more willing and comfortable sharing my work with the public. Enjoy.

-Brandolyn



The 1st of the Roaglenian. 
Gems


          The people of Everly have lived in peace for the last 25 years, after the devastation of the Ogre Wars. The country has flourished and swelled with riches, but when an old foe; long thought to be dead, threatens to take her revenge and steal the country's most prized possessions, the people of Everly hurriedly hide away their money, jewellery and precious metals. 


         When her town is ransacked, Trissiana Jeffreys; a young woman, beloved by all but known by none, embraces the opportunity to rid herself of a life long secret when she and her companions realize what their country should have been protecting; the children. 


Wednesday, 9 January 2013

Where I find Inspiration

I had the most amazing experience while at work today.

In the past I've been struck by inspiration while out for a walk in the park. The trees, the flowers and all the colours and smells of nature, but today, instead of being inspired by nature I was moved while working on a demolition and remodel of a bathroom in a very old A-frame house. It wasn't the beauty of the architecture that I was fascinated with, but rather the decay and history I saw as I ripped down the walls and exposed the framework of the house. 

Looking at the insides of the walls and the layers (literally layers of history in the wallpaper) on the walls as I tore them down was amazing. Even someone with the smallest imagination would have been amazed when they realised there were 4 different layers of wall paper exposed on one wall. 

I also created stories about the water damage and the dust and grime. I also practised how to describe it so that a reader could see the creeping black mould as it snaked up the cracked wall, through the pealing pastel wall paper and onto the rotten, exposed wood behind, up to the buckling ceiling like a tide of destruction lapping at the walls, poisoning and breaking every surface it touches. 

Look at these pictures. Find something that speaks to you and describe it.
Or think of when you would use some of these pictures to inspire descriptions in your writing. 

For example: 
Look at this Lath and Plaster wall. Used up until the 1950s. 
Lath and Plaster, with the rough wooden slats, plaster pouring through the gaps, giant wad of hair and discarded cloth poking through holes in the wall. 
All these details could be used in a horror story set in an old house.

Or:   

You could describe all 4 types of wall paper in this room during a chapter where a family is renovating the late grandparent's house to resell and reminiscing about all the generations that the house had housed. 

I like to fixate on little details, but you have to know when to describe and when to let the reader's imagination do most of the work. 

For example: 

I could choose to describe every inch of this picture, or I could simply tell you it was an old bathroom, stripped of walls, leaving the old, worn skeleton of the walls exposed. From that sentence the reader understands that there are no walls, and they don;t know Lath and Plaster, but they know the old, worn wall is exposed. 

On the contrary I would describe the layers of peeling wallpaper; the bold geometric patterns, the pastel coloured florals and the faded red apple visible through a tear in the top layers of paper. The red apple, bright and warm in a sea of pale, dirty and cold dried out old paper. I would describe the faded white chefs that had faded from exposure to the Sun except from a patch behind the toilet where water damage had discoloured one with mould. 


Textures, colours, smells, emotions, memories, everything can be a descriptor to describe the room. The decay of this room makes me feel sick. BAM! The reader knows the room is unappealing in its current state. 
"My hand unintentionally moved to the collar of my shirt and held it over my nose as I entered." 
"My mind danced in wonder at the families that had shared this room. A bathroom covered in little chefs. What would it be like to brush your teeth every night, look around and have an undeniable urge to eat an apple or bake a pie?"

Inspiration comes in all shapes and sizes. Today it came to me in the form of age, wear and decay. Beautiful in its own way and exceptionally descriptive, if you know how translate the story. 

Happy Writing!

-Brandolyn

Anything stand out to you? Any amazing descriptors that you can't wait to use? I hope so. 
Leave me a comment and give me an example. Thanks!