A True Story by Miracle

October 30, 2009

Crocodiles

For those of you who don’t know, I lived my formative years in Orlando, Florida. Florida is hot, humid, and sunny – perfect for crocodiles. In every lake large enough for a crocodile’s tail, you’ll find one. No wading through unfamiliar bodies of water is allowed in Florida if you want to keep your body outside a monster’s digestive tract.
My dad’s work was a big, white building that I once thought was the White House. It had a large, grassy stretch of land with a few lakes. I remember walking with my dad to his car and noticing dark, bumpy forms in the water and wondering about them. “Are those crocodiles, daddy?” I asked. “Yes,” he said. “Can they eat me?” I stared at the huge, motionless lizards. “Yes,” he said. “If you walked down to the water and stood there, would they get you?” “Probably,” he said, “But they’re not as fast on land.” I decided to stay away from them.
Even after I left sunny Florida behind, crocodiles remained in my life through the county zoo. The reptile house had five of them behind a thick, glass wall. They didn’t look like captives. They watched me with cold, haughty eyes, motionless, a chilling smile curving across their jaws. Suddenly I’d feel like I was the one behind the glass, not them. And I’d remember Florida, where these creatures were free. I’d shiver, and go watch innocent turtles paddle across their tank instead.
I still think of them before I swim in lakes, and I have to remind myself that I’m not in their land anymore. I respect crocodiles for their power and their unrelenting dignity.

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Miracle’s Blog!

October 30, 2009

Check out my new blog at: http://tamethewind.blogspot.com/

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Write That Novel

October 30, 2009

http://theworstending.com/?p=1171

Anyone remember this? Writing a novel in half a year, and how a few people pledged to do it? Well, i’m just wondering how many of you did it… not that now is the time to try, because tomorrow is gonna be busy for a lot of you :D

~by Sandy

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

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Wait Like The Rest

October 28, 2009

*

The Trees are bleeding again

Crying tears of multicolored makeup

And wailing as They undress

Because Winter’s fingers strip Them bare

*

The Flowers are drooping and whining

Knowing They have to nap for a while

Like children They pout, forced under the soil

Waiting for Mother Sun to let Them out

*

The Rivers are slowing Their flowing

They have no passengers to take downstream

The River’s business isn’t booming

So They bide Their time like the rest for spring

*

Categories: Poetry.

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Trapped in the Wind

October 28, 2009

by Robyn and Miracle

AN: This “poem” was actually an impromptu chat between Robyn and Miracle .

Do you ever feel like life is building a cage around you?
and you start feeling trapped and claustrophobic.
And there’s no real reason for it
Just people who always want something from you
because they think they know you.
Schedules that are never clear. Chores that are never finished.
things that never mattered before, but just start building up, wearing you down…
Your own face starts to look like a piece of the scenery of your life..
everything is so familiar that you’ve stopped noticing anything…
And the whole time there’s something building inside,
something hot and dangerous…
waiting for something to break the thin skin
between it and the world, for something to set it free…

And when the shadows fall and the world leaves you alone for sleep,
you’re not even sure you want to fight…
because you’re afraid and unsure what this burning inside you is…
and when you’re not trying to strangle it and just focus on the drudgery at hand
it feels…a little like the books. A little like the ancient stories…like freedom.
so you start exploring, prodding, and then you’re more confused than ever,
and you don’t know who you are or even who you were before
and suddenly all the drudgery seems threatening and strange,
and all the things that you took for granted are suddenly too complicated to understand
and you don’t know what the next step is
and you don’t know if there is a next step…

It’s like standing on a cliff, naked, in a hurricane,
not knowing whether good or ill lies at the bottom of the incline.
And as the wind buffets you, as the fear makes you colder than even the wind,
you’re not sure whether to run the other way…or let the wind push you over.
yes, yes, yes. And then – what happens next? I don’t know, and I can’t guess
Should I stand and turn to ice–never knowing, thinking twice?
Should I let the wind do with me what it will,
embrace the fleeting freedom it brings before it dashes me to pieces?

To die and taste death’s bittersweet lips, or live as empty as starless skies?
…Or to fight for a life worth living?
But how can such a fight be won? What for armor? What for a sword?
What for will to fight in a world that feeds as a vampire on my will and heart?
and what, oh what, for hope?
That feeble thing like starlight that cuts through this world of mist,
yet flies at break of world’s gray day? Can any touch bring forth its brightness?
Can another voice bring it forth from the night?
Does such a touch belong to fingers I’ve chosen to run from?
Can such a voice belong to someone I never met,
and never shall, should the end I choose to seek? Who can know? Not I, not I.
Or do they belong to me? Or is there no such touch?

Who can answer? Does anyone hold the answer? Does it lie below,
where shadows hide the future, and where I fear to go?
Does it lie ahead, an even bleaker thought, after longer weeks of these aching questions?
What I wouldn’t I give for the answers to be in my hands now?
To teeter here forever, on the brink, between what to do and what I think…
here come the rains, the winds tease me forward, and now I must decide…
but instead of hardening, simplifying,
my will falters and confuses more wildly than ever before…

Categories: Poetry.

Helpless and Robbed Soul

October 26, 2009

by Sandy

Background note: to make a long story short, i made a deal with Ashden that i’d write something positive about boys if she’d write a poem about boys (and knowing her, you don’t even have to SPECIFY positive ;) ). well, i tried last night and of course it came out derogatory, sort of scolding a random girl for falling in love, and telling her to QUIT IT. thought it might amuse y’all anyway.

He stole your heart, it’s his to keep;
He made it beat to fast.
When you see him, it skips a beat,
But how long will that last?

He stole your self, now you’re not you;
You’re only his “darling.”
And now no matter what you do,
You’re not queen, but he’s king.

He stole your pride, your dignity;
You won’t have it again.
He’ll give it back someday -maybe,
But nobody knows when.

He’s just a thief, so let him leave
And give back what he stole,
So you won’t always have to be
A helpless and robbed soul.

Categories: Poetry, Romance.

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EXCUSE ME, ANDREW, HEARTBREAKER, MURDERER OF STARCITY, BUT I WAS JUST WONDERING…

October 24, 2009

by Sandy

hey mir, if you see this, make your brother get on and see the grief he has caused us all… by the way, this is posted under futuristic fiction because it’s a glimpse into the future, CUZ I’M SURE HE WILL BE WRITING MORE IF HE VALUES HIS LIFE.

From the very first post,
we’d get excited and giddy
When we saw a new chapter
of beloved Starcity.
We would scream in excitement
and grin from ear to ear
As we joyfully read
that story so dear.
That is, till one day
when Andy to himself sighed
Saying, “Forget this story!”
not caring if we cried.
Our worlds grew dark and gloomy;
incessantly we’d weep.
Oh, the days without smiles,
and the nights without sleep!
Jules was deeply distraught;
<3breaker she named him
-What a fitting name
for when our world grew dim!
So COME ON, GET WRITING,
Mr. Artemis Fowl!
If you don’t, we’ll be mad,
and at you we’ll scowl.
Please bring the light back,
at least for a while.
Just one little chapter will
surely make us smile.

Categories: Futuristic Fiction, Poetry.

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October 24, 2009

Love Books?

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Sugar is Sweet (by Jules)

October 23, 2009

In the spring
Leaves thrive in green
The color of eyes and
So cute to see
Visibly alive
Invulnerable
Stretching far into the future
More so than anyone can see
In the fall they shrivel up and die
Brown and orange and red,
Freshly bled
They lie on the ground
Breaking down into dirt
Until the are eventually forgotten
Under the snow of the cloaking winter

Roses are not only red
They are blue like sorrow
And pink like shy
And yellow like sunshine
And black like beauty
Or sometimes viewed as death
Violets are not only blue
They are purple like royalty
And pink like charm
And white like cleanliness
And yellow like serenity
Sugar is always the sweetest thing
When gifted or stolen
From a friend, from a heart, from a store
And so were you

Green leaves, roses, violets, sugars
Bloom in the spring
Decadent to the tongue
Fresh to the lips
Green leaves, roses, violets, sugars
Die off in the fall
Stretching from my grasp
Falling from the mouth
They are lost
Is that what is happening here?

___________________________________

Author’s note: I starting thinking of this while walking home from the bus stop. I guess that’s all I’ll say. :P Hope you guys like it.

Hearts!
Jules

Categories: Poetry, Romance.

THE WORST Writing Week

October 23, 2009

Here’s a idea child (inspired by the site Book-in-a-Week). The first week of every month, we’ll have a SERIOUS writing week. Each of us can set her (or his, arty) own goals and strive really hard to meet them.

Example, if  decide to set my WWW Goal to 30 pages, I’d have to write 30 pages in seven days.

We’re coming up to november, so we can launch The Worst Writing Week Nov. 1 – 7 (NaNoWriMo’s can opt out of this one).

So, whaddyathink?

Categories: WORST.

On Writing

October 23, 2009

by Suzanne Britt

The question “how do you write?” gets a snappy, snappish response from me. The first commandment is “Live!” And the second it like unto it: “Pay attention!” I don’t meant that you have to live high or fast or deep or wise or broad. And I certainly don’t mean you have to live true and upright. I just mean that you have to suck out all the marrow of whatever you do, whether it’s picking the lint off the navy-blue suit you’ll be wearing to Cousin Ione’s funeral or popping an Aunt Jemimah frozen waffle into the toaster oven or lying between sand dunes, watching the way the sea oats slice the azure sky. The ominous question put to me by students on all occasions of possible accountability is “Will this count?” My answer is rock bottom and hard: “Everything counts,” I say, and silence falls like prayers across the room.
The same is true of writing. Everything counts Despair is good Numbness can be excellent. Misery is fine. Ecstasy will work – or pain or sorrow or passion. The only thing that won’t work is indifference. A writer refuses to be shocked and appalled by anything going or coming, rising or falling, singing or soundless. The only thing that shocks me, truth to tell, is indifference. How dare you not fight for the right to the crispy end piece on the standing-rib roast? How dare you let the fragrance of Joy go by without taking a whiff of it? How dare you not see the old woman in the snap-front housedress and the rolled-down socks, carrying her Polident and Charmin in a canvas tote that says, simply, elegantly, Le Bag?
After you have lived, paid attention, seen connections, felt the harmony, writhed under the dissonance, fixed a Diet Coke, popped a big stick of Juicy Fruit in your mouth, gathered your life around you as a mother hen gathers her brood, as a queen settles the folds in her purple robes, you are ready to write. And what you write about, even if you have one of those teachers who makes you write about, say, Guatemala, will be something very exclusive and intimate – something just between you and Guatemala. All you have to find out is what that small intimacy might be. It is there. And having found it, you have to make it count.
There is no rest for a writer. But there is no boredom either. A Sunday morning with a bottle of extra-strength aspirin within easy reach and an ice bag on your head can serve you very well in writing. So can a fly buzzing at your ear or an interminable afternoon in a biology lab in front of a frog’s innards.
All you need, really, is the audacity to believe, with your whole being, that if you tell it right, tell it truly, tell it so we can all see it, the “it” will play in Peoria, Poughkeepsie, Pompeii, or Podunk. In the South we call it that conviction, that audacity, an act of faith. But you can call it writing.

THE BEDFORD READER, page 237

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

NaNoWriMo

October 22, 2009

http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/whatisnano

I’m signing up for this, and I think it would be great if we dove into together. ITS SCARY!!!!!!!! If you’re 13 or older you can sign up. If you’re 12 or younger you can sign up in the youth section and do pretty much the same thing (except less words – IF YOU WANT).

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

AWESOME LINK!

October 21, 2009

Written for teen writers by the fabulous Ally Carter (author of the Gallagher Girl books), these “demystifying” tips and tricks about the publishing/writing process are PRICELESS:

http://www.allycarter.com/ya_ally_writers.php

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Housework

October 19, 2009

Ok, so we’ve been on WE for a while now and we’ve accumulated some clutter. If EVERYONE will pitch into this, it would be GREAT

we have a million drafts that have already been published otherwhere, have been abandoned, have been forgotten… so if you would go through and see the old drafts you’ve done and either finish them up and publish them or delete them, I’d be eternally grateful.

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

MASQUERADE X

October 19, 2009

What’s your most embarrassing moment?

*AHH! These aren’t heavy things, these are the silly things your friends will NEVER let you forget.

Categories: MASQUERADE.

Forget (introduction)

October 18, 2009

“The human race is about to die.”
“Completely.”
“Absolutely.”
“There is no denying it.”
“They cannot defend themselves against this upcoming event.”
“And that is why we will save them, yes?”
“Yes.”
“We will infect them.”
“Infection is a strong word.”
“We will turn them into us.”
“We are immune to the Alignment.”
“And humans are not.”
“Thus, we will just change them.”
“It’s not such a bad change.”
“I like us.”
They all murmured their agreement.
“We’ll just spread the conversion germs around.”
“Germs would be the wrong word.”
“Stop correcting me, will you?”
“I’ll see what I can do.”
“Anyway, we’ll spread the conversion germs around. This will save us hundreds and hundreds of years, to get our population up. The conversion germs spread through contact, do they not? So, we just go around touching people, they become mezenes, they forget about being humans, spread the conversion germs around further, and soon enough, the whole planet is run by mezenes.”
“Except for a few humans, once the conversion germs are put to a stop by either some human scientist or we decide we have enough of us.”
“And those humans will die when the Alignment comes around.”
“Seems good enough for me.”
They all murmured their agreement again. The mezenes began to disperse. The moonlight glinted off their white as cloud skin, shining on their gray nails, and flashing at their eyes, which had a red ring around the irises. The conversion germs had, then, only six days to spread, before the Alignment happened, and the entire human race was destroyed.

Categories: Futuristic Fiction.

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Check out this link!

October 16, 2009

http://www.des.emory.edu/mfp/OnFailingG.html

Try, try again :D

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Geek

October 16, 2009

by Miracle

My image of myself was perfectly acceptable. I was a short, dark-haired, light-eyed creature with my head in the clouds and my hands wet with ink. My hobbies were uncontaminated by science or mathematics: writing, acting, dancing, singing. Some science and math crept into such practices, of course, but I did my best to avoid them and make disgusted little faces when they showed themselves. I was happy. There was no need for a drastic unveiling.

The seed was planted during an innocent walk to English class with my dad after Algebra II. I was going goo-goo eyed over synthetic division (it makes polynomial division so much easier!) when my dad says:

“You’re such a geek.”

For the first time in my life I understood the cliche: “taken aback.” I paused mid-step, blinked, and was rendered speechless. After a hasty recovery, I gasped: “What?”

“You’re such a geek.” Why, thank you for making that so much clearer.

“That’s Andrew,” I said. “And you.”

He just laughed. So I was left to wonder and analyze and bewilder over what he possibly meant by such a crazy assertion. But then English class began and I quickly forgot my worries in a blissful cloud of language.

I might have continued with my oblivion if it wasn’t for my state the next day. Maybe I wasn’t getting enough sleep or maybe someone shot sugar into my blood while I slept, but I was loopy. I sat outside in the grass and simply marveled, hyper-aware of every insect and blade of grass. My thoughts went haywire; I swear I was recalling every science fact ever crammed into my fifteen years of existence.

When I touch this blade of grass, it’s really just my magnetic force field colliding with its magnetic force. I wonder if it would feel any different if I was. Or – would I go right through it? Without a magnetic field, the atoms in the grass wouldn’t stop mine… You get the picture. I was grinning like the idiot I was, glorifying in all these weird facts that don’t matter to anyone except science freaks. And all of a sudden I think, Oh my gosh, I’m a geek.

And I liked it.

It was frighteningly wonderful to let the air-headed pencil princess float away to the clouds where she belonged. I was just – me. A geeky writer. A paradox.

I still have my dark hair and light eyes, and I’m not counting on platinum blond curls springing from my scalp anytime soon, but I did grow three inches. I’m officially “medium.” My fingers are still inky, but I’m a little better at sticking to the dirt. And while math isn’t exactly a friend, its not an enemy either. I know I can take it in stride and still be me.

So maybe a little unveiling was a good thing.

Categories: Creative Nonfiction.

MASQUERADE VIV

October 13, 2009

What’s your favorite memory?

*

Memories are special things. What’s your most cherished? Do you have more than one?


Categories: MASQUERADE.

Adventures in Aquassia – Prologue

October 13, 2009

yes, of course this title stinks, but ah, well :)
this is supposed to be a re-telling of ‘The Little Mermaid’. tell me what y’all think :)

Here in the underwater world, Aquassia, many strange and beautiful creatures dwelled.
The majority of them were not human, or beast…
But mermaids, and mermen.
King Trigon, the ruler of the mermaids, was a fair and just king. He ruled his people well, and made sure that they were well taken care of. None of them wanted for anything, and they couldn’t imagine life anywhere else.
His youngest daughter, Evaelys, however, was not content with her life. She wondered every day what the ‘world above’ was like. People on land couldn’t possibly have tails and fins, so what did they have? Many of the mermaids said ‘legs’, but what were those? Would she ever get to go up and see one? What was it like to not have a tail and fins?
Ah, yes. I see I have forgotten to tell you what the mermaids actually looked like.
In Aquassia, all mermaids had a long, beautiful tail with two fins at the end. They all wore fitted, sleeveless, strapless shirts that came up to about two inches below their shoulders and were made of shimmering, smooth fish scales that seemed to change color in the light. Their tails were all various colors, some bright greens and others oranges, pinks, purples, and blues-there were even colors no human had ever seen before.
The mermen looked much the same, though they did not have fish scale shirts. Their tails were less bright than the mermaids’, but they were much longer. Most mermen had broad chests and were very strong; they had to be strong to be able to protect Aquassia.
Evaelys had sixteen other sisters, all older than her, some by a few years and others by many. Trigon loved them all and gave them everything they could want, but the thing Evaelys wanted most was to discover what had happened to her mother, Raevel.
Years ago, they had all-the whole Waterliss family-had been up at the surface of the water. They had been sitting on rocks and watching far off ships sailing through the ocean. Evaelys was too young at the time to now remember much of what had happened, but what she did remember was that her father had been playing with her and her sisters in the water, splashing them and laughing in his deep, booming voice when suddenly her mother had screamed…and seemed to disappear into thin air.
Her father had shouted at them all to get back underwater-to swim away as fast as they could. “Get back to the palace, and don’t stop for anything!” he had shouted before diving into the water where their mother had been swimming, watching them.
Evaelys, being the youngest and the slowest had quickly fallen to the back of the line of her retreating sisters. They left her far behind, and soon she was too tired to keep swimming.
One of her older sisters noticed her absence and hurriedly turned around to come and get her…but not before she heard her father scream in rage and sorrow.
When he had come back to the palace two days later, he had told the people that the queen had mysteriously disappeared, and all that he had found was her crown lying on the ocean floor. There was no other trace of her, not even after he had searched for two days straight.
The people had been greatly grieved, all knowing deep down in their hearts that the sea witch, Zalori, had probably taken her. She had always envied Raevel Waterliss for the fact that she was queen and was so beautiful, and it seemed that now she had taken her revenge. Who knew what she would do to the queen? She was so powerful she could take away the queen’s pretty looks, or even her wonderful singing voice.
That, however, had been nearly fourteen years ago. Evael, who had been three when it had happened, was now soon to be seventeen.
Her father knew of her wandering spirit, and instead of ‘keeping an eye’ on her, he kept both eyes on her. He was so afraid that she would go up to the surface or wander into the witch’s part of the ocean…and be lost forever, just as it seemed his beautiful wife was.
Now whenever Evaelys-called Evael by most mermaids and mermen-went  off alone somewhere, he had one of his guards follow her. They would stay at a distance where she couldn’t spot them, but where they were still close enough to save her if she needed saving.
All Evaelys really wanted was to explore ‘the worlds above’…even with all the warnings given and stories told about it. What must be it be like to not always live in a pretty underwater world? What was that bright thing they had up there…oh, yes. The sun. What must it be like to feel sun on your skin, Evaelys wondered?
But, alas, she seemed doomed never to know. Her father would never let her go to the worlds above…not anytime soon, at least. She was hardly able to venture out of the confines of the kingdom of Aquassia, let alone go to the ocean’s surface.
Yes, Aquassia was a wonderfully fascinating place…but Evaelys just…wondered.
And, my friends, as you will soon see, she would become the first mermaid to ever find out what she wanted to know about the worlds above…
And it would be this that would change her life forever.

Categories: Fantasy Fiction.

Tags: , ,

A Wee Tale

October 13, 2009

ha ha this poem stinks SO bad…but yeah. started it awhile ago and recently was desperate to finish it so this is the shoddy ending. HA HA HA HA it is written AWFULLY. lolz :D and everyone will prob. be able to tell, but just in case you’re not, this is supposed to be Scottish. ta! ~Myth

“Come and sit upon me knee
Ye  dear an’ darlin’ lass
And I’ll tell ye an old, old story
While I’ve a break from me tasks.”

“Ach, aye, Grandpa, please
Do tell me a story, do
I’ll come and get upon yer knee
And sit your story through.”

“Alright, then, me dear
I think we’re ready
We’ll speak of a lass and a lad, who I fear
Was just a wee bit heady.

Once upon a time, ye see
There was a lass, fairer than fair
Her eyes were emerald green
And flamin’ red was ‘er ‘air.

This lassie’s daddy was a wee bit protective
Just as yers is, me love
So to win him over was the lad’s objective
For this girl the others was above. “

“She sounds pretty, she does
But do go on to tell me, Grandpapa,
How on earth, I’d like to know, he was
Able to win her papa.”

“Well, me lass, ‘twasn’t easy
Twasn’t easy a’tall,
The father said, ‘If ye will win me,
Ye must prove yer gall.’

He said, ‘If ye can swim a ways
A ways being fifteen miles,
And then, just as ye want to rest, to lay
You’ve got to make a huge wood pile.

It must reach vera’ , vera’ high
And the wood must be cut in sturdy planks
It canna’ fall nigh, or to her you can goodbye -
Oh, and make sure those planks are seven feet in length.’

So, the lad set off, he did,
Albeit, a wee bit puzzled
He couldn’t stop to rest his eyelids
Or get a drink to guzzle.

No, he must keep goin’ now
If he wanted to finish these tasks,
He must swim and chop wood or, I say, how,
How else would he would get his lass?

He did the jobs fast as he could
And then went back to ‘er father
Said, ‘Sir, I’ve done as ye asked me to,
I’m a’feared I can’t walk much farther.’

‘Ach, that’s too bad,’ said the lassie’s da,
‘Because I’ve more for ye to do.’
The lad’s face fell, for he knew tha’
He wouldn’t make it another task through.

‘I want ye to go and build me a house
Do it as quick as ye can
I don’t care if ye’re loud as a lion or soft as a mouse
Just make sure it’s sturdy and pretty; not bland.’

Once more, our vera’ confused laddie
Set off to do the task – he raced,
His arms achin’, he thought only of Maddie
And of ‘er bonny face.

At last he was done, and wearier than ever
‘er da inspected the buildin’,
And, as the lad waited, sure he’d their relationship sever
His heart began a’wiltin’.

Suddenly, then, her da turned around
‘Ye’ve done a great job, ye have,’ he said
Ye’ve built a house for me daughter to live in
She’ll have a roof o’er her ‘ead.

Ye built e’en when ye felt so weak
After swimmin’ fer so long
And ne’er a complaint did ye speak
So I think I hear the weddin’ song.’

The lad’s face lit up, bright as the sun,
“Oh, thank ye, sir, oh, thank ye!” he cried
And now that his strange, strange tasks were done
He and his lass Maddie the knot could tie.

And that’s the ending, me little lass,
I do hope that ye enjoyed it,
And now, I’ve got me own tasks to do,
So, ye’d better hop to it.”

“Oh, grandpa, thank ye e’er so much!
I really did love yer tale! “
And, with a kiss softer than a butterfly’s touch
She scampered off,  her imagination set sail.

Her grandpa sighed as he watched as she went off
She was so much like his own lass, who dwelt in heav’n above…
He turned to the wall, to see his sweet’s picture, whisperin’ soft
“She now knows our story, me love.”

Categories: Poetry.

He Had A Plan

October 13, 2009

He coulda been a preacher
Spread God’s truth round the world
Coulda been a teacher
Taught boys and girls
He coulda been a daddy
Taught his son to pray
God had a life for him
But you threw it away

CHORUS:
‘Cause mommy didn’t want a baby
Daddy said no
And that priceless treasure
Said goodbye without a hello
God gave you a gift
You killed what he bestowed
Snatched out of His hands
I know He had a plan

She mighta been a doctor
Saved lives every day
Mighta been a singer
Sang the Lord’s praise
She mighta been a mommy
Taught her daughter to pray
God had a life for her
But you threw it away

CHORUS:
‘Cause mommy didn’t want a baby
Daddy said no
And that priceless treasure
Said goodbye without a hello
God gave you a gift
You killed what he bestowed
Snatched out of His hands
I know He had a plan

BRIDGE:
You ended a life
Before it could begin
You crushed something special
And quite God-given
Just look what you’ve done
Such and awful mistake
Don’t you know unborn life
Is not yours to take

So let him be a preacher
He’s a gift that God gives
And let her be a doctor
At least let her live
Other precious gifts
Being killed every day
They’ve got a life waiting
Don’t throw it away

CHORUS:
Mommy don’t you want a baby
Daddy don’t say no
Don’t make that sweet treasure
Say goodbye without a hello
God gave you a gift
Don’t kill what he bestows
He’s in the Lord’s hands
I know He has a plan

Categories: Lyrics.

Tags: ,

ANNIHILATION

October 13, 2009

Okay.

WHY IS IT THAT EVERYONE HAS BEEN POSTING SUCH SAD STUFF???? SERIOUSLY – YOU NEED TO TELL ME WHO IS BEING AN IDIOT AND MAKING YOU THIS WAY AND THEN I NEED TO FORM A SQUAD THAT WILL HELP ME GO ANNIHILATE THEM.

Thank you very much for complying.

Have a great day.

Signed,
Myth

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Eyes

October 13, 2009

by Miracle

It was late summer, on of those hot days with a bleached sky and red faces. We were at the pool, but the water was so crammed with bodies that it was hotter and sweatier than the air. We stretched out on the pool chairs instead and watched everyone pant and splash. Missy was laughing at something I had said, her knees tucked to her chest. I was on my stomach, dangling my ankles in the air and smiling.

I’ve drawn that scene a thousand times, but I’ve never gotten Missy right. At first her face was too sad, then to happy. I still try to match her perfectly to the memory because I want to understand how I missed the signs.

“Draw me something, Addie,” she said suddenly. She knew I had my sketchbook with me. I always did. I reached into my pool bag and found it and a pencil.

“Draw you what?” I drew lots of things, but mostly faces. I loved how a person’s soul was in their face. I flipped to a clean page and sat indian-style.

“Anything.”

I started drawing Missy, but she interrupted me.

“You could weather anything with just that book, huh, Addieface.” She laughed. “Look at your eyes! If you concentrated that hard when I talked to you, you’d know all my secrets.”

I grinned. “Don’t I already?” I started drawing her nose.

She stretched out on her back. “The same old blue,” she groaned.

“What were you expecting? Green?” I put down my sketchbook and rolled onto my side, facing her, but she sat back up.

“Let’s go eat nachos.”

“Sure.” I crammed my sketchbook into my bag and dug out my wallet. She came over and slapped my hand.

“I pay. Go away.”

“A singer and a poet. Incredible.” I stood and crossed my arms.

“I hate singing,” she said. She grabbed three wrinkled dollar bills from her back and started walking. I froze.

“You’re kidding.” That was as impossible as me saying I hated art. She walked back and punched me lightly.

“Yeah, I’m kidding. Let’s get nachos. I’m starving.” She smiled, and I felt chilled to the bone.

The nacho cheese was spicy, as usual. I remembered halfway through the snack that Missy hated spicy nachos, though I loved them. It was our only difference we had with food. We even both hated chocolate. Everyone else looks at me like I said I hated them.

“You hate these nachos,” I said, staring at her. We were sitting on the pool chairs again.

“You don’t. I wanted to try them again, anyway.”

“Oh.”

She melodramaticly plucked a cheesy chip from the paper tub and chewed it thoroughly. “Yum.” She grimaced.

“You weirdo,” I laughed.

“So I don’t like them. But you never eat them because I’m always around.”

“It’s just food,” I said.

“Yeah, well. Can I see my picture?

“Sure.” I retrieved my sketchbook, flipped to the quick drawing of her face, and passed it to her. She stared at it.

“It’s me.”

“Yeah.”

She handed it back. “It’s really great, Addie.”

I looked at it. It was rough, but I had managed her cheekbones perfectly for the first time. I looked back at her. “What’s wrong?”

Her face melted, but she just said, “I don’t have any eyes.”

I stared at the drawing. Perfect cheekbones, chin too pointy, neck to skinny – no eyes. I’d left them out. I hadn’t ever gotten eyes right. I was afraid to draw them because I knew I’d get them wrong.

Maybe that’s what I didn’t see in Missy’s face. Maybe it was her eyes pleading with me, telling me everything, but I never learned how to see them right.

“You’ll figure it out. You’re an amazing artist,” Missy read my mind like I never could hers.

I grinned at her, but suddenly she avoided meeting my eyes. She just flipped open her cellphone and frowned. “Three. I’ve got to get home.”

“I’ll walk you,” I said, standing

“No, that’s fine. You’ve got to get home too. Call your mom.” She tossed me her cellphone. I didn’t have one yet.

“She can pick me up at your house.”

“We live in opposite directions. I don’t want to be a hassle.” She pulled on jean shorts and a spaghetti strap over her tankini and slung her bag over her shoulder. I finished calling my mom and she held out her hand for her cellphone. I gave it to her.

“See you tomorrow, Addie,” she said and walked quickly away.

“See you,” I said. Then suddenly she dropped her bag and ran back to me, strangling me in a boa hug. “Bye!” I gasped. I saw tears in her eyes before she let go, grabbed her bag, and sprinted toward the exit.

The next morning, at 7:03am, her mother called me. Missy had committed suicide the night before.

It took me six months to decide not to follow her. I tried twice, but the first time I told my mom in time for her to save me, and the second she found me before it was too late.

Today I turn sixteen, one year older than Missy will ever be. I found my sketchbook in my forgotten pool bag, so I read it. A picture of Missy laughing. Missy sticking out her tongue. Our feet running barefoot in her backyard. Then the last one. Missy with perfect cheekbones and no eyes. Missy who killed herself six hour later. I sob, ducking my head away, trying not to get smudgy tears on this last memory of my beautiful friend. And suddenly there is a pencil in my fingers and I’m moving it across the a paper, and all the lines and shapes align in my head.

I draw Missy’s eyes. And they are perfect.

Categories: Short Stories.

Cuts and Burns (2nd half)

October 10, 2009

by Roxanne

        I felt tears coursing down my cheeks from the burning of the smoke. The big room we were all just in was completely blackened by smoke. The music continued to play though the stereo was melting on the outside. The curtain had caught fire and the last performers were behind it. John was shouting at them through the black screen. I ran up to help.

 ”It’s a thick curtain and we can’t get it open,” he explained. “They say all the other exits are blocked! Let’s try peeling open the sides.” We hurried to the right and pulled the fabric towards us. After moments of struggle, it ripped free and we saw tearful faces coming our way. We helped them out one by one until no one remained backstage.    

      While I ripped off the bottom of a girl’s bodacious skirt, John ran to the door on the other side. He kept as low as possible to avoid the heat and take in any remaining oxygen. I followed him. His eyes were red and he was helping a freshman off the floor.

“He passed out,” John rasped. I nodded and help him with the kid. John put the boy’s arms around my neck and backed off.

“Where are you going?” I asked. “There’s no one else up here!”

“No, I heard someone over there!” He pointed. 

 ”Okay, well make sure you and whoever’s over there get out before the ceiling caves in and there’s no more oxygen!” I cried, and piggy backed the boy out of the room. I turned around at the last second and saw John look my way one last time. His face was pale, but darkened by the smoke. That’s the last I ever saw of him.

       The boy on my back finally came to, but wasn’t able to walk. I carried him through the deserted hallway to the stairwell. There, I saw a glass window broken in and a firemen pulling kids through. He was on his last kid when I ran in. I passed him the boy and turned around.

“Please come this way, Ma’am!” He called sternly through his mask. I told him that I had to go back for my friends and pointed to the door. Without waiting for a reply, I turned and ran back into the smoke. I soon dropped to the floor. It felt like I was being squeezed through a tiny hole. My skin burned. When I reached the door to the room I couldn’t see anything, my eyes were so watery. I called John three times but he never answered. I knew I had to leave or I would die. I turned around and looked down the hall to make sure Diane was not there. But I couldn’t see two feet in front of my face. I kept crawling towards the stairwell and eventually saw the fireman there, coming towards me. He jumped onto the stairs and boosted me out of the window. All the while I tried to tell him that my friends were still in the building.  

    I burst out of the window in a cloud of smoke and immediately felt overwhelmed by the fresh air. I was on a ladder high above the hotel parking lot and all the people that had gathered there. It was twilight but the sky seemed clear and bright. I was helped down by multiple firefighters as I coughed and wheezed. Finally I reached ground level and a oxygen mask was secured to my face. I felt the coolness and immediately passed out.

    When I awoke, I was in a hospital bed. My parents were watching me and approached when I came to. They told me how glad they were that I was awake and how worried they had been. I tried to reply, but I couldn’t find my voice. I saw numerous patches up and down my arms and legs. My eyes still stung. Finally I got my voice and asked my parents about Diane and John. They said that neither had been found. The building wasn’t stable enough to search for bodies yet, so they couldn’t say for sure that they were dead. Coach Gerry had survived. Four other students were missing. The entire group of teachers had made it out. The D.J. had suffered fatal burns.

    The next day I was released from the hospital. I returned home in a subdued state,  awaiting the news about John and Diane. It came that night. They had both died. John had been found alone in the fifth floor room, face down in the ashes. Diane was found in the stairwell, one floor away from safety.

                                                                                                                   * * * * *

        Two weeks later I’m at a service for the students who died. Those of us who had been caught in the fire were invited an hour early to “comfort each other through such a trauma”. I walk in unnoticed, and slip to the back bleacher. Everyone else is huddled throughout the gym in groups; Jimmy sits with his ditzy girlfriend who had added to the chaos of the fire by screaming; the girl who had helped carry Coach Gerry down sits with her jock friends who had pushed others out of their way in an attempt to save themselves.

     The freshman I had saved seems to be looking for someone. I watch him and eventually he makes eye conact with me. I brake it, but when I look up again he’s still staring right at me.   

 ”Thank you,” he mouths. I nod slowly. He returns to his friends; the cheerleader Diane had saved; the guitar-players John and I had rescued from behind the curtain. And sitting here, alone, I know that I had chosen my friends well. They had been the ones to stay behind, to not only let others out before them, but to go back, taking severe risks upon themselves, to help people weaker than themselves. They had made the ultimate sacrifice. They had given their lives up for others. While so many had refused to risk bodily harm to help, John and Diane had stayed in harm’s way until every other person was safe.

All I have to show is a few cuts and burns. They have given up their lives.

Categories: Inspirational Fiction.

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