So, as a thank-you, I rolled up a story.
Now, this is a fun set. If you look at this image, you can see that the first option is a cage. Continue reading
So, as a thank-you, I rolled up a story.
Now, this is a fun set. If you look at this image, you can see that the first option is a cage. Continue reading
Previous: Searching for Answers
They spent hours looking at the papers before they had to go back to their childhoods, back to chores and schoolwork and things that, some days, seemed downright constraining.
Barbara’s mother, happy she was “taking some initiative” helped her put together a flyer for babysitting, and helped her post it at the Library – the proper downtown one, which had never been abandoned because, bright and shiny and brand-new, it didn’t tend to lose kids in its recesses. It had no portals to other worlds. Barbara had looked.
With three others posted – grocery store, post office, and their church – Barbara returned home to some math homework that was only exciting if she thought about it in terms of national economies and some literature homework that was so stultifying she added in a 2-page book review of The Wealth of Nations. Surely that counted as literature, didn’t it? Continue reading
These are a few microfics, written to prompts for my Renovations Prompt Mini-Call (which is still open as long as I keep getting prompt).
The tree was ancient, the sort of monster that managed to live through a convergence of luck and good soil, best placement and the weakness of her neighbors. She had sucked up all the sunlight for what seemed, to the younger trees, like miles. And she had, in turn, sucked up lightning blasts.
It had been the last one that killed her, cutting through old scar tissue and toppling her in a crash louder than any thunder. Continue reading
Last night, I was feeling like I was running on one cylinder and running out of gas, but I play this writing game, 4theWords, and I really wanted to move up one step on the leaderboards for battles.
Which meant 4 130-word (or so) battles.
So I asked for suggestions on Mastodon, and this is what came of it.
Well, technically, two of these weren’t even from suggestions…
But anyway! Words!
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Filling the Boots
He woke and shook out the cards. Continue reading
Now on Patreon!
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Nobody had expected the Trees to be the ones to go over.
The Zedriygro had been pushing at the Atraoya borders for years now. They had been sending in agents – some of them Human, but just as many Elf or Centaur or Animal expats who had been living either in Zedriyg or in neighboring Glasia, beyond the red sands, for years or even generations, having fled, one might assume, the Quartering that had caused this whole mess in the first place
Written to @InspectorCaracal’s prompt, also the title of this piece.
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The tree stood in the middle of a blasted wasteland, and the one thing that everyone agreed on was that it was magic.
Whether it had been put up by one of the last mages in the great wars as a way to heal the wasteland, or whether its creation had formed the wasteland, nobody could agree. Whether it was a blessing or a menace, no two people concurred on. And thus there were two paths through the wasteland, one that ran right next to the tree, and the other which wandered almost a mile away to avoid it.
The tree itself loomed over its own oasis, a small circle of greenery in the middle of an otherwise lifeless expanse. It was easily over thirty feet wide at the base, and it loomed two hundred feet in the air. And yet its lowest branches were easily reachable from the ground. Continue reading
Marlin had made a promise.
It was the last promise she’d ever make, even if she were still capable of making promises. She had learned, since, to think about the nature of the words she said.
But she knew, no matter how many times she cursed her impetuousness, that she likely would have made the same promise again.
I will guard this blade until the right bearer comes along.
The old woman of the lake had told her you will know, deep in your heart, heavy in your chest, tight in your lungs, when the right bearer comes. I did.
The old woman had given the sword to Tyleeal, to Marlin’s sovereign, to Marlin’s love.
And Tyleeal had done as all great heroes did and died in mighty battle.
Marin hadn’t realized, when she swore the oath, how long it would be.
She hadn’t realized how lonely it would be.
She hadn’t known that the castle was only visible to some people, was only visible at some times, and lived, in a sense, out of time.
All this she’d had time enough and then some again to learn.
At first, she had been proud and angry and sent away anyone who wished to wield the great sword with simple words, you are not the one.
Then, she had asked them what tribute they had brought her, what made them worthy to wield the sword, before she had sent them away with the same words.
She had demanded vigils for a while, vigils which gave her someone else to speak to for some short time.
She had demanded they fight her, and found her skills had grown a bit rusty.
And now? How when youths came from the mainland to the secret, sacred island, they came knowing three things.
They brought her tribute in foods and clothing, books and rumors and stories. For three days, they told her stories of the world outside, the wilder, the better.
They fought her in single combat and then in pairs, having brought a companion for this part.
They sat vigil for two nights while their companion kept Marin company.
And then they felt, she thought, like they had tried their best when she sent them away.
But this one, this one came alone.
The boat held one person, not in armor, and enough food and supplies to last a small company a month. It bumped up on the dock and the person, hooded, carried three packs to the place where Marin waited, when someone was coming.
The hood pushed back. Marin’s heart stopped, her chest tightened, her lungs felt on fire. She dropped to her knees in front of Tyleeal come again, and she understood, suddenly, why the old woman of the lake had spent so much time hovering in the back of the court. How long had she waited?
“I thought,” said the knight who was and was not Tyleeal, “that, looking at all the stories, you must be horribly lonely here. So I thought that I would sit vigil with you for as long as it takes. Until the right one comes along. I brought some food—”
Marin pressed her forehead to the knight’s feet. Don’t go, she wanted to say. Instead she said the only thing the oath would allow her to say.
“The great blade is yours. It has always been yours, no matter how long you take. It will always belong to you.
“Please,” she whispered, “stay a while before you must battle. Just a little while.”
“Dear heart,” said Tyleeal, in a voice she could not help but recognize, “you have waited all these centuries for me. I believe I can wait just as long here with you before I take up the sword.”
Written to @katrani‘s prompt:
the creative ways a bored Guardian of a Sacred Weapon comes up with to test would-be wielders
or at least tangential to the prompt.
Story based on a dream I had
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The King was raving.
Not that anyone would ever say that; he was the king. You didn’t mention he was raving — or hallucinating, or having fits — if you wanted to hold on to your head, your soul, and your volition.
But the King had gotten it in his head that one of his trusted advisers and lieutenants had betrayed him, and was going around the castle, using The Voice that filled every corner of that huge edifice, declaring that when he found that Lieutenant who’d betrayed him, he would kill them, rend them, destroy them.
And because this wasn’t just any King or any edifice, all of his lieutenants were running around shooting one of their lieutenants in turn, which was getting more than a bit exhausting and very bloody.
And me? I was staying out of the way and trying not to be seen. When you are a human in this place, in The Castle of the King, you do your damndest not to attract any attention save that attention that brought you there – and since the one that had brought me there was currently chasing his lieutenant around trying to shoot him and complaining that the man wouldn’t hold still for it, well, I didn’t want his attention either.
And that worked fine until the King called a general assembly. You didn’t not go to those, but even sitting in the back, I felt someone come up behind me. Not my paramour, such as he was; no, he was in front of me, eyes glued to the podium and the throne at the front.
No, this was another human-like person, and he had a hand on my shoulder. And then, while the King talked about traitors in his midst, a bag came down over my head.
I was going to die. I had never known anything so clearly as I knew that. I was dying, here, too far from home, with a burlap sack over my head to hide my shame.
An image flashed into my mind. No, a vision. I did not see visions, I who did not belong here. But there it was, a creature all scales and plates, green and blue as the sea it was crawling out of, our sea, the sea the Castle of the King hulked overlooking.
It was coming. And it was the reason the King was raving.
I lost consciousness, only then understanding that that was why the bag was there.
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