Friday, March 11, 2011

52/250: "As Ready As I'll Ever Be"

This week's 52/250 theme is "to the core", and my story that they included, available here, is called "As Ready As I'll Ever Be"

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

100 Word Challenge: "Shot Down"

Velvet Verbosity's 100 Word Challenge has been certified by the Sheen Institute to contain more Tiger Blood than any other writing challenge. The word this week is ample, and my entry is called "Shot Down".







"Wingman," I said under my breath. Ah well- beats staying home, right? I sidled up behind my mark, hovering just over her right shoulder. Trey set his sights on the willowy blond sipping wine, while Bri had the brunette who keeps hiding behind her bangs, eating a salad. I tapped my target on her shoulder, sighing inwardly as I checked out her ample thighs and considered my role in tonight's debauchery.

"Hey," I said to her smoothly. "I'm Samuel."

"Hi," she said, giggling. "I'm married." She indicated her blushing friends, as my friends plied their trade. "They're both single, though."

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

IndieInk Writing Challenge: "Hungry Heart"

The fine folks at IndieInk.Org have begun another rondelet of Writing Challenges, wherein various and sundry bloggers (and, one must admit, there are few people as sundry as bloggers) issue challenges to others and are in turn themselves challenged. My challenge will reside here when my compatriot completes it, and my challenge, from the selfsame luminous Ms. Boorn, is "if you could have a day to do anything...".

I'm going to once again attempt a Tim Duncan style bank shot here. Rather than write literally about my perfect day (which would involve 20 hours of sleep, probably, followed by a meal and four hours of watching Ken Burns' "Baseball".), I'm going to take it as a fiction prompt. Not what the author intended, I'm sure. But things seldom come out as we intend, do they?

I emphasize once again, for those who may or may not be related to me, that this is fiction. Made up. 100% not true. Never happened.

The story is called "Hungry Heart".


















"So what do you want to do today," she asked, looking at the ceiling. Her voice was thick with sleep.

"Same thing I want to do every day, Pinky," I said, my voice also raspy, looking at her out of one eye. "Try and take over the world."

She chuckled.

"No, really. It's your birthday. You're not working. We should do something you want you want to do." She cleared her throat. I understood what she meant, but the question still didn't make any sense.

She half turned towards me. Her body was between us. I reached my hand out, brushing her belly, touching her thigh. It was slightly prickly.

"Oh," she said, sounding grave and serious. "Oh, uh, no. I can't. No. Not...not now. OK?"

"Sure," I said. I ran my hand up and onto her hip.

"Besides, we can't just do that all day."

"We could try."

She chuckled again. "We'd have to eat."

"We'll order in," I said calmly.

"I'd have to pee eventually," she said lightly, stifling a laugh.

"I'll change the sheets," I said.

She laughed, coughed, and cleared her throat again.

"You're too funny. What do you want to do today, really? You won't have many more days like this."

I felt the word hit me like a slap. The thought of that shadowed my every move. "We could go see a movie."

"I can't get comfortable in those seats." She yawned and stretched. I watched the fabric strain as it was pulled taut.

"We could go shopping."

"You hate shopping."

"We could go shopping for books." I knew, even as I said it, I would feel too guilty to buy anything more expensive than an issue of "Rolling Stone".

"That isn't real shopping. Besides, my feet hurt when I stand up for too long."

"I can think of something that doesn't require any standing at all."

She giggled. "We already discussed that."

We were quiet for a minute. A car went by outside, the bass from their stereo audible through our walls. The car pulled away down the street.

"What do YOU want to do," she insisted, pushing herself upright. I rolled onto my back.

For months, that question had been as theoretical as "how are you going to spend your lottery winnings?". It doesn't matter what I want, it only matters what I have to do, I said silently. Want? I want to get a stack of CDs and a change of clothes and start driving west, singing along with Bruce Springsteen songs until my voice gets hoarse. I want to get away from need, from obligation, from guilt and money and fear and returned check fees and that sick feeling I get now when I look at her. I didn't know where to go, but the need to leave was so acute it was almost physical, vibrating in my limbs like a virus. My heart thumped loudly for a minute, then was quiet again.

She walked across the room, toward the bathroom, her stride ungainly and slow, her question hanging in the air between us. I saw her in profile, the person she was now and the person she was becoming all at once.

"How about I spend the day being with you?," I asked her back as she opened the door.

"That sounds awesome," she said, the smile in her tone as she shut the door without looking back at me. It clicked shut firmly. I looked up at the ceiling.