Archive | July 2012
Countdown to Addergoole Year 9: Lolly and the Prophet
52 43 Days To 52 Weeks
For the 52 days leading up to the 52 weeks of Addergoole: Year 9, I will be posting something Addergoole-related every day.
Today I present to you Jeremiah the Prophet and Liliandra-called-Lolly!
Jeremiah cy’Pelletier is a Seventh-Cohort student; he spent his first year in Addergoole Owned by Rowan, the dryad-like Fourth Cohort. He’s often likened to a scarecrow – at 6’7″ tall and bone-thin, with a messy tousle of brown hair at the top, the resemblance is clear.
He has been called the Prophet since his first year in school; he is rumored to have cryptic visions, although some think the moniker was just a pun on his given name. Preferring secrecy, as does his entire crew, he doesn’t answer many questions about the nickname.
With him today is Liliandra cy’Linden, called Lolly. She bears a resemblance to this the porn star Loli Feder, although her nickname comes from her fondness for outfits like this (image, safe): she’s a tiny blonde girl in dollish clothing, with long dollish blonde curls and an occasionally far-too-childish set of behaviours. Jeremiah has been Keeping her since several weeks into her first year – Lolly is an 8th Cohort student.
The two originally appeared in Three-Way and Duet.
And, today, if you would like to ask Jeremiah or Lolly any question, at any point up to the end of Duet, feel free!
The first three question-and-answer sessions are still open as well:
45 to Go: Timora (LJ)
46 to Go: Porter (LJ)
47 to go: Wylie (LJ)
This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/376841.html. You can comment here or there.
July Giraffe Call Summary
2012-07-14
Theme: Addergoole Summer Camp
9 stories written.
9 total prompters, 0 new
1 people donated a total of $20, 0 of which were new.
$0 of donations were left unclaimed.
Call: http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/370598.html
At the Zoo (LJ) Ayla, Ioanna, and Yngvi
Long Summer (LJ) Kendra
Summer Camp (LJ) Finnegan and Efrosin
The Ropes (LJ) Rozen!
A cy’Linden Summer (LJ) Jamian and Manira
Seeing Ghosts (LJ) Finnegan
Monster Camp (LJ) Finnegan and Efrosin
Three Summers (LJ) Agatha, Acacia, and Shadrach (as kids)
SummerTime Memories (LJ) – Jamian and Ty
We reached $20, which means two people may choose a 500-word continuation. The Random Numbers Say it’s…
eseme
and
imaginaryfiend!
Please collect your 500 words at the service desk!
anke and
ysabetwordsmith, please collect your 500 words from June as well!
This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/376619.html. You can comment here or there.
Protected: CaliNovel – Chapter 20 partial
Countdown to Addergoole Year 9: Character Development Meme
52 44 Days To 52 Weeks
For the 52 days leading up to the 52 weeks of Addergoole: Year 9, I will be posting something Addergoole-related every day.
Today: parts of a character development meme!
Wylie
1.) Describe your character’s relationship with their mother or their father, or both. Was it good? Bad? Were they spoiled rotten, ignored? Do they still get along now, or no?
Wylie lived with a man who was, biologically, his mother, and the woman who foster-mothered him. He believes them to be his mom and dad and has never met his biological father (nor do I think they’d get along).
He had a decent childhood and grew up generally happy – not spoiled and not rich, but not starved or neglected and not poor, either. His parents provided more discipline than he thought was appropriate, trying to tame his unruliness and trying to prepare him to be sent away. Neither worked well, but the practice will serve him well in the long term.
His foster-mother has always treated him as her own, and raised him with his older sister Kendra and his baby sister (who will be in Addergoole Year 12 or 13) as a family. As far as she’s concerned, he’s family. His “father” has always been a bit confused by him – he feels he’s a bit of a cuckoo’s egg, distractible and hyperactive where Cedric is level-headed and straightforward – but has done his best to love him and parent him properly despite that.
One week into Addergoole, they’ve gotten Wylie’s hastily-scribbled postcard, mailed off a care package, and aren’t sure if they should be worried or not.
Timora
2.) What are your characters most prominent physical features?
Before the Change, Timora’s long dishwater-blonde hair and her coltish long legs counted as her most prominent features, although she almost always hid her legs behind long Little-House-on-the-Prairie skirts.
After her Change, her hooves and tail are likely more prominent, although she maintains the hair (just blue now) and the very nice legs.
Noam
3.) Name one scar your character has, and tell us where it came from. If they don’t have any, is there a reason?
Most of Noam’s small scars were erased by the Change; the butterfly markings across his torso and face actually altered his skin, bringing it back to baby-smoothness while they covered it with brilliant patterns.
Noam was more than a bit of a nerd in his old school, but he had the not-entirely-uncommon distinction of being an attractive nerd. He was never a sports-team joiner, or really much of any sort of joiner, but he and some of his friends in school did play back yard football or whatever other excuse to run around in the mud.
Thus, he has his share of small scars – the dime-sized scar on his thigh where his friend Max Fralick accidentally stabbed him with a piece of wood, the long slice mark across his forearm where he fell in a junkyard, the three burn marks on his shoulder from a mishap with a model rocket.
Of all the things the Change wrought in him, he dislikes the loss of that scar the most.
This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/376229.html. You can comment here or there.
Countdown to Addergoole Year 9: Timora
52 45 Days To 52 Weeks
For the 52 days leading up to the 52 weeks of Addergoole: Year 9, I will be posting something Addergoole-related every day.
Today I present to you Timora!
Timora is a shy, uncertain girl who reached her height (5 foot 7 inches) quickly and the rest of her growth more slowly, making her awkward and uncertain around her classmates. Added to a generally retiring nature – in a family full of loud and boisterous people, she has always been the quiet one – this generally led people to misunderstand her name as a pun for “timid.”
Her brother, Smitty, tried to tell her about Addergoole. He was hampered by first the geas, second by the fact that his experiences at the school were some of the mildest around, and third by their six-year age gap and his long absence from home during Timora’s formative years. She is left understanding that there is a family legacy relating to the school, and that there are animals to spend time with there.
(Click link for more).
Timora originally appeared in Fae-bane and Frying Pans, Etc..
And, today, if you would like to ask Timora any question, at any point up to the end of Frying Pans, Etc., feel free!
The first two question-and-answer sessions are still open as well:
46 to Go: Porter (LJ)
47 to go: Wylie (LJ)
This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/376048.html. You can comment here or there.
Summertime Memories
Jamian and Ty are characters in Addergoole
Summer between Years 5 & 6 of the Addergoole School
“I’ve been thinking about the kids.”
Tya’s hands wandered over Jamian’s body as he spoke, the conversation so out of tune with what his hands were doing that Jamian thought, maybe, that his lover wasn’t really paying attention to either.
“Our kids?” he offered, trying not to say my kids.
“Our kids. us as kids. Growing up in this world.”
“Heavy thoughts.” He moved Ty’s hand up to his shoulder.
“I try once in a while, you know. And I was thinking about this summer camp Regine runs…”
“Ty, they’re still breastfeeding. They can’t walk or talk yet.”
“Well, not this summer, but they’ll grow up, you know. And Mies is almost old enough…”
“And Anise has Mies well in hand. Besides, is a Regine summer camp the best idea?”
“Well, I mean, it would be your decision, of course.” It was clear that grated on Ty, even without empathy. “But it didn’t do me any harm.”
“Ty… love, lover, you grew up with no idea of what the outside world was like.”
“And you grew up out there, and spend your childhood thinking you were a freak.”
“Well, I’m not exactly normal.”
“And it worries me, you going around thinking that, with our babies both the same as we are.”
“And it worries me you thinking half-breed is somehow inferior, around our half-breed babies.” Jamian propped himself up on an elbow, no longer feeling like being petted. “Ty, what’s this really about?”
Ty sighed. “I keep putting my foot in it about the kids, don’t I? I miss them, Jame’. I miss you.”
“You’re welcome to visit any time you want.”
“But it’s not… they were mine, and then they weren’t.” He sulked lightly. “You don’t even remember summer camp, do you?”
“Kinda? I mean, I went to camp a couple summers.”
“So did I. Same camp, Jame’. I remembered you the first time I saw you, here.”
Same camp… Jamian blinked at Ty. “That was… oh, wow, that was you. I had such a crush on him… uh. You!” He’d tried to forget that, all these years.
And it was the right thing to say. Ty grinned, his hands sliding down between Jamian’s legs. “You do remember. I’m glad.”
Jamian surrendered control once again. It seemed to make Ty happy, and it cost him nothing, here, in bed. As he ran his fingers through Ty’s curls, though, he remembered, faintly, the golden curls he’d tried for so long to forget.
This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/375653.html. You can comment here or there.
Linkback, Prompting, & Donating incentive story!
This is the linkbacks, etc. incentive story for the June mini-Giraffe-Call. I will post 25 words for each linkback, 50 for each prompt, 75 for each donation.
This is set in Steam!Callenia, some 750 years after the Rin & Girey tales.
“Are you sure that’s what the aetherometer reads?” Alsoonalla leaned over the seat back separating she and Teriana from the boys. “East?”
“I’m sure, Soon.” Onton shook his head, shook the aetherometer, and looked back at the road. Their goats were making a fair clip on the paved roads near the city, but once they hit the mountains, it might be a different story entirely. “Due East. It’s reading a deep vein of the good stuff.”
“I’ve never heard of any veins of wild aether in the Eastern mountains.” Teriana flipped through her notebook, finger running down the edge of the script. “Some small bits of the earth-energies, of course, although most of that is further south. But nothing of what we’re looking for.
“Well, if you’d heard of it, it would have been tapped by now. That’s part of the problem.” Doanisad had his own charts – old mining charts, older priestly documents. The aether, what had been called síra in the ancient days, had been pulled and torn and mined from every inch of this continent. There was little left, and what there was was hidden.
Doan’s father and mother were historiologists, scholars of the past. Teri’s were miners, using concentrated aether to pull ore from the hills. Soon and Onton were dabblers, avoiding a career in the priesthood by studying at University. For nine years, ever since that incident with the goat and the stone necklace, they had been working and plotting together.
The culmination of their friendship, their Ninth-Year thesis, was the aethometer Onton was currently pointing down the road. In theory, and in the controlled environment of the classroom, it had done exactly what it was supposed to. For some students – most, perhaps – that would be enough. But not for the Dreadful Four, the Stone-Eaters, the Back-Room Brigade. Not for them.
“I understand the theory behind the device and the project.” Teri defended herself, as always, with an affected upper-class accent far more formal than Onton or Soon’s. “I’m simply doubting your ability to read it properly.”
“The dial was of your design.” Soon and Onton would put up with Teri’s airs. Doan saw no point in that.
“Then I would be able to read it, of course. I was casting no aspersions on my abilities.”
“Of course you weren’t. We all know that…”
“Rock!” Onton interrupted the growing argument with a quick and ostentatious swerve to one side, guiding the goats around a large boulder and, of course, showing off his own skill in handling a carriage.
For a moment, they were all too distracted holding on to argue.
Then Soon clucked her tongue. “The roads in this district are falling apart.”
“It’s not a militarily important route.” Onton frowned at the road.
“Really, at this point, what is? We’re not at war on the continent anymore.”
“This year.” Doan ran a hand pointedly through his blonde hair – mark of the southern Bitrani people, who had been conquered and re-conquered.
“All right, all right. I surrender.” Teri held up both hands. “Could we please not fight? Doan, I believe your ability to read a dial unquestionably.”
Soon settled back into her seat, smoothing her hair with both hands and not looking at anyone. Onton did much the same, pulling his driving gloves straight and clucking at the goats. Doan stared at his charts for a moment, and then, reluctantly, nodded.
“I know, it seems beyond strange.” He ran a finger over the glass face of the dial. “But it’s East we’ve been pointed, and it’s East we’re going.”
“Roughly,” Onton warned.
“Directly,” Doan countered.
“No, I mean…” He steered the carriage hard to the left. “The road’s getting really rough. We’re definitely out of safe territory.”
“Oh… oh!” Teri grabbed the arm-rest and braced herself as they hit a particularly rough patch. The four-goat team seemed entirely unconcerned, prancing along as if they were in the meadow at home. Goats would, of course, cheerfully pull a cart up a mountainside, never mind the riders behind them.
“Pass me the crossbow under your seat?” Doan reached a hand back towards them, his eyes on the roadside. Soon set one in his hands, carefully, and took the other herself.
“I’ve got the right, Doan, you take the left. Teri, if you would watch our rear?” Unsafe meant bandits.
Bandits, and deserters, and other, less savory sorts. There was always a rebellion going somewhere. There were always dissatisfied northerners, or southerners, or easterners. Soon sighted along her crossbow and watched for danger.
“Oh!” It was Teri who squeaked, half an hour and a thousand bumps and jolts later. “Uh-oh!”
“Teri?” Doan turned first. Soon kept her eye on a bush that seemed to be moving improperly for foliage.
“It’s…”
“Just me.” Their cargo was moving, and a deep, rumbling voice was coming from underneath the tarp. “Have no fear, I’m not a bandit.”
“No…” Teri’s voice was rising higher. “No, you’re not. You’re worse, aren’t you?”
“Now, that’s unkind. Sir, if you wouldn’t mind putting down that crossbow…”
“I don’t think I will. Teriana?”
“I know him,” she confirmed. “I mean, we’ve met. More than once.” She gestured with one hand, flicking her fingers as if trying to dislodge something unpleasant. And, slowly, the tarp rose, exposing a hat that nearly covered the face of their stowaway.
Wide-brimmed and purple, with bands of yellow and gold decorating its brim, it was not the hat of any but the most affluent bandit, and it was not a stealthy sort of hat. Nor was the face underneath, the beard smooth and braided, the nose long and prominent, the lips glossed, the sort of face you expected to see on a bandit, or, really, anywhere in the outlands like this.
Of course, it bore quite a resemblance to Onton’s face, but none of them would mention that, not yet. It wouldn’t be polite, not until one of them said something.
“I know him,” Teri repeated. “Not willingly.”
“That’s a fine thing to say!” The man sat up, revealing a felted waistcoat in a brilliant shade of plum. “After all I’ve done for you.”
“I’d hardly say any of that was done for me, Beelang.” She was putting on airs again. She must be very upset by their guest. “Any more than a harness is for the goat’s benefit.”
“Teri…”
Doan waved the crossbow, and Beelang fell silent. “That’s enough.” Doan shifted his grip, but didn’t move his aim of their guest. “Leave Teriana alone, and tell us what it is you’re doing in our wagon, on our expedition.”
“Well, that’s a problem. You see, I can’t do both at once, because I’m on the expedition of yours, if that’s what you’re calling this little jaunt, with the express purpose of not leaving Teri alone. After all, she can’t just bound off into the wilderness with no chaperon!”
“This isn’t an Empress’ reign, and she’s not a wedded wife, anyway.” Soon wasn’t looking at their interloper, yet; she was still watching the road. “Doan, can you truss him up? I think there’s something in the bushes over there, and I don’t want the distract…” She ended her last word with an arrow shot into the bushes.
“Hey, hey!” Beelang’s complaint was cut short as Teri gentled him across the skull with a blackjack. She caught him before he could slump out of the cart, while Doan was still gaping and the wounded-whatever in the bushes was making startled, unhappy noises.
“Give me the rope,” Teri snapped, which finally goaded Doan into action.
“You hit him pretty hard, didn’t you?”
“I hit him precisely hard enough to render him unconscious… I hope.” She tied their unwelcome guest up with tidy, strong-looking knots. “Soon, whatever did you hit?”
“Well, I’m hoping desperately that it’s not a wild goat. That would go poorly. Or a mountain lion.” She hopped down from the cart, still pointing her crossbow into the trees. “Onton, if you wouldn’t mind…?”
“Coming.” He passed Doan the reins and followed her, a long metal spear in one hand and its aether-storage pack in the other.
“Oooh, oww…” The sounds had gone from animal to human, or a clever facsimile of such. Soon moved even more cautiously. “Bitter water and rotten stone!” That was probably human. She nodded Onton forward, minding his flank. There could be more than one.
“By the whirlpool of Tienebrah, they shot me!”
“You threatened me.” Soon kept her crossbow pointed levelly at the sound of the voice; Onton flanked the invisible complainant slowly.
“I’m hiding in a bush. What sort of threat is that?”
“The sort you learn to pay attention to.”
“I don’t want to know where you grew up, do I? Ow, whirlpools, you really shot me. This was supposed to be a frolic, just a spot of fun. Nobody was supposed to get hurt!”
His consonants were awfully soft, his vowels long and trying to be two or three sounds. “Are you Southern?” What was taking Onton so long?
“No.” Suddenly the whining was gone. There was someone coming up on her right, and where Onton had gone there was a rustling and shaking in the bushes. “I’m Bitrani.”
She swung the crossbow to her left, fired, and dropped it, drawing her longknife. “Ware,” she shouted, as the whining Bitrani dove out of the bushes at her.
“You have a funny idea of a frolic.” He was shot, at least, his somber waistcoat pierced with half of her bolt, but that wasn’t stopping him from coming at her with a back-curve blade.
“You have a funny idea of a school project. Fully armed, carrying munitions. Does your advisor know your brought explosives?” He was going for her throat; she was suddenly glad for the hidden armor in her collar.
“Of course she does.” An armpit wound would distract him. She stabbed quickly. “The roads are dangerous, you know.”
“Behind you, Soon, down!” She dropped and whirled as a sword went singing over her head. The sword was followed by a loud thump and a spurt of blood, the spray coloring her sleeves red and splashing over her face.
“Blasted mountains.” Her first attacker sat down hard. “You killed him.”
“He had his weapons inches from Soon’s face. It seemed reasonable.” Onton wiped his blade on the dead man’s tunic – very dead; his head was several feet away. “I’d suggest you surrender now before it appears that you’re threatening an Imperial Princess.”
“And if I kill your precious Imperial Princess?”
“Well, it appears that she’s pierced you once already with an arrow. You’re probably going to leave a trail, and Soon’s been known to poison her arrows. That means you’ll make it maybe a day’s travel before I catch up with you, at which point…” Onton’s voice dropped an octave, and his eyebrows furrowed. Suddenly, he sounded like a much older man. “I will destroy you utterly, and make you beg for it while you bleed.”
“I didn’t realize you two were going to the grassy hills.”
“You didn’t realize anything about us.” Onton’s voice was still rumbly, giving no indication that he and Soon were, in fact, doing nothing at all on the grassy hillsides. “I’m sure your capture will give you plenty of time to think about rectifying that.”
“Capture? What?”
“Surrender, and I’ll see that the poison in your wound is treated, and that you’re well-cared for. Attempt to harm us…” He left the threat unspoken. Since he’d entirely fabricated the poison, Soon was impressed he was leaving anything at all up to the imagination.
She cleared her throat. “The same,” she added, in a regal, grown-up voice of her own, “goes for anyone else hiding in the brush.”
Nobody came forward. The man at the end of Onton’s blade sighed. “I surrender. You were supposed to be a bunch of students.”
“Then why attack us?” Soon took the leather thongs from her purse and began trussing the man up, mindful of his wounds.
“Well, for what you were carrying.”
This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/356901.html. You can comment here or there.
Summer on the half-shell, a story of Stranded World
“Just pose for me, Sum, it’ll be fine.”
“Pete, no. You don’t want me to pose naked. I don’t want me to be posted naked all over campus.”
“Not naked, then, tastefully draped. Like Venus on the half-shell, we use a long piece of fabric and I paint it as hair, all the way down to your ankles. I’ve got a few pieces here…” He pulled a long strip of silk, golden yellow, from his box of painting props. “Summer, please? I’ve been wanting to paint you for ages.”
“We’ve been dating for three months, Petie.” She knew she was going to give in. He was doing the puppy-dog eyes thing. She always gave in to the puppy-dog eyes. “You’ve been wanting to paint me for ages?”
“Longer than we’ve been dating. Please? I promise nothing bad, nothing you’ll be embarrassed for your friends to see.”
“I’m not worried about my friends. I’m worried about my brother. And you should be, too.”
“I don’t see him here.”
“That’s because you haven’t upset him yet.” She wrinkled her nose at him. “Look, hon, I like you. But nothing that will make my brother raise an eyebrow.”
“Why do you let him run your life like this?”
“Because he’s family.”
At her glare, Pete held up both hands. “Okay, okay. Tasteful, right? Summer, I can do tasteful. I just want a chance to paint you.”
He held out the drape of fabric again. “Summer on the half-shell. When I’m done, you’ll be able to hang it in church.”
She took the silk from him. Winter couldn’t frown at her for art. “All right, Petie. Summer on the half-shell.”
This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/375475.html. You can comment here or there.
incentive Stories updated
June Linkback
Incentive Story: East to the Blue (LJ)
Most Recent Update
July Linkback
Bowen’s Summer (Lj)
Most Recent Update
This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/375127.html. You can comment here or there.