Most of these are from Wednesday Writing Exercises or writing prompts posted by other writers on Google+, but the stories are all my own. All stories are unedited, with minimal copyediting, and maybe be tweaked over time.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Crystal Farmyard


The soldier stopped on the ridge, frigid wind pelting the hollow of his cheek with sleet and turning the last inch of his shoulder-length hair to ice. There, in a valley half-hidden by the barn, were the pigs his sergeant has sent him to bring back to camp:

“Frozen bacon is fine and all, but I’d rather have my pork roasted. Find them and bring them all in before it’s pig-cicles!”

He began to turn his horse, a placid plow horse repurposed for war, when a break in the clouds lit the porcine mass below with moonlight, transforming the pink and brown of flesh and muck to gleaming pink and silver. Beautiful.

A quick sketch wouldn't take but a moment, in this break of weather. Just enough to get the memory down, so he could expand on it later. There was coal in his shirt pocket, and a child’s drawing pad he’d picked up for doodles. Stripping off his gloves, he jotted the image down, his horse shifting uneasily beneath him. Inside, master, the beast seemed to say, you and I belong in a warm stall tonight.

The cold numbed his bony hands, his usually elegant lines shaky. Not yet. Almost, but not yet.

Wind whipped across his cheek again to ruffle the fur of his hat, and on to creak the rope swing dangling from a tree by the farmhouse. His fingers rushed to add the crystal painted ball, the shimmering laundry lines.

Ice cracked hard against his boot. Finished or not, he was done.

 ---

The sergeant stopped outside the shelter, a hank of ham in his hand, to stare at the shoes drying by the door. “Pacchu?”

No answer.

Opening the door, he saw a lone man seated in an empty pigpen, charcoal pencil sketching at a piece of paper. “Pacchu, come inside, get warm. Come eat.”

The soldier tilted his head back, circles dark under his sunken eyes, skin pale and sallow. “Not hungry, sir. Cold killed my appetite.”

Knobby wrists, too much belt hanging off his uniform’s trousers. War didn't make men fat. The sergeant offered his soldier a hand. “Not how it works, son.”

The boy was easy to haul to his feet. Shuffling, staring at his socks, the soldier shrugged. “Not hungry.”

The drawing lay on the floor: crystal pigs glimmering on a hillside by a farmhouse lit by moonlight. Couldn't tell from the image that the walls were all that was left of the structure, the other half naught but ash now. Couldn't see the rebel-informant farmer or his family as skeletons in their beds, the dog roasting over a fire beside the pigs and the clothes trampled into the mud by hundreds of boots.

A beautiful fantasy.

“Come in, son,” the sergeant murmured again. “Rozca shot a rabbit. You can have that.”

The boy hesitated, and let the sergeant pull him to the door.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Celebrating New Years, 2020


Nandy looks up and meets my gaze, the reflections of the lights strung from the ball in the center of the room to the edges glittering in her eyes. “Remember Facebook? I’m gonna update my status, as soon as we go live.”

I laugh, because Nandy—the Master of Ceremonies for local New Earth celebrations—has been a social butterfly as long as I've known her. Ever since the Shattering, when reality divided in 2017 and 5% of the population ended up on a parallel, uninhabited Earth, things have been tough. Sure, 5% of the world’s architecture came with us, but Washington only got the Internet restored last week. It’s set to go live to the public at midnight.

We discover new and fantastic things every day. Like telekinesis, and the low-grade empathy some of us seem to be developing. Maybe by the time it’s 2050, we’ll have telepathy. You never know.

“What are you going to say?” I put down my wine and lean over her shoulder, looking at the laptop screen. The old vineyards are carefully tended. This year’s vintage tastes fine to me, but I’ve never been a connoisseur.

“Um. Three years strong. You think the others have come as far as we have?”

I shrug. “Dunno. You think the professors are right? That there are twenty new Earths, and each got an equal proportion of established resources? Because if so, they’ll probably be right on par.” Friends gather around us, curious to see the main event. Someone begins the countdown.

“I hope so.” She slides the mouse over the Chrome icon and her finger taps against her lips.

“5… 4… 3… 2… 1… HAPPY NEW YEAR!”

 The clacking of the keyboard fills in the status line:

“Welcome, 2020. Miss you, Mom.”

The thumb clicks to +1.

Miss you too, sweetheart.