April 2014 Issue of The Scribblers Newsletter
Welcome to the April issue of The Scribblers. In this issue we have new writing prompts, part one of a story by Jamie Baker, a story by John Matthews, contest information, a few interesting writing sites/blogs. We hope you enjoy this issue.
We are always looking for articles and short stories to publish, as well as suggestions for the newsletter. Please send any ideas, stories, etc. to colleen. We'd love to see any contributions you'd like to make to The Scribblers.
If you no longer wish to receive this newsletter, please email colleen with the word 'unsubscribe' in the subject line and we will remove you from our mailing list.
April Writing Prompts
Each month we try to provide prompts for you to use. Pick one or more and write 500 to 1,000 words using the prompt/s as the basis of your story. And have fun with it.
1. Karen slammed the door and got into her car. This was the end.
2. Dave and Jim were fishing from the shore of Assateague Island. Jim's deep sea rod bent almost to ground level. What in the world was on the line?
2. Dave and Jim were fishing from the shore of Assateague Island. Jim's deep sea rod bent almost to ground level. What in the world was on the line?
Sisters
A Coming of Age Story,
by Jamie Baker
Part 1
The hall was crowded with kids, yelling and messing with
each other in the five minutes between classes.
Scuttling along the edges, waiting for a break in the crowd so I could
cross to the intersecting hall to the science class, I watched as the kid ran towards
me and swerved around the corner. He was
one of the Mexican kids, his hair greased back so that it was as smooth and
shiny as his sharp-pointed dress shoes.
Swerving around the corner, he smacked full-face into Nannette
Gyerson. Nannette is in the same science
class as me. We both sit in the back,
slumped, heads down, crouched behind the broad lab tables.
I always thought Nannette was a name that should belong to a
pretty girl, a girl like Annette Funicello, smiling and confident, but this
Nannette wasn’t like that. She was tall,
taller than all the other students and many of the teachers. And she was big, shaped like a barrel,
wearing shapeless baggy flowery dresses that looked like the housedresses Mrs.
Pelligrini wore when she gardened. On
Saturdays, she would pay me a dime or a quarter to pinch off the dandy lion
buds so they wouldn’t bloom into yellow flowers and then the white puffy seed
fairies that blew away in the wind. That
was at our old house, before I had to come to this school.
When the kid hit
Nannette, the hall became instantly silent, all heads and eyes turned to watch
the collision, mouths half open in stop action.
The kid slammed into her, his face burrowed into her big chest for a
half second before he bounced off her and fell on the floor.
In the next instant, time started again. He jerked himself back up off the floor, the
noise in the hallway winding back up to full volume.
“Damn,” he screeched, “she bounced me like a ball.” Jumping and pointing at her as she tried to
apologize, he continued to screech, “She bounced me like a ball.” The laughter in the hall rose into an echoing
clamor. Nannette laughed too, a
hysterical giggle that sounded too much like the cries of a coyote I’d seen on
Wild Kingdom, it’s rear leg caught in a trap.
I dodged around the
crowd and slunk into the science lab.
We don’t live next to Mrs. Pelligrini anymore. We had to move. Now we live in an apartment complex. Our apartment is on the second level, above
the big open concrete yard where the pool is.
“The pool will be great, hon,” my dad said to my mom as he
carried boxes up the concrete steps that led from the parking lot, always
trying find the silver lining. Always
trying to convince her that opportunities and good fortune were everywhere.
The new apartment, number 32, is right above the pool.
“You can keep an eye on the kids when they’re out here
swimming. Just look out the window and
they’ll be right there.”
As it turned out, she never needed to look out to see
them. You could hear my brothers all
over the complex when they were in the pool, or anywhere, if they weren’t
asleep. And she didn’t have to look
for me at the pool either, because I was never there. I stayed away from my brothers as much as I
could, but even when they went over to the playground at the elementary school, I
didn’t go to the pool. I’d outgrown my
old bathing suit and I’d gotten into an argument with my mom in the middle of
trying to pick out a new one. She wanted
me to get one with a little skirt on it, which only babies and old women
wear. Even my mother’s bathing suit
didn’t have a skirt on it, which she never wore anymore because her legs were
veiny.
On the far end of the courtyard, which is what my parents
call the concrete yard that surrounds the pool, is the room where the coin-operated
washers and dryers are located. There
are a couple of chairs in there, along with a wobbly table and some old
magazines, and a Coke machine. Outside
the laundry room, there are two old beach chairs tucked in under the concrete walkway
that runs around the 2nd level.
I volunteered to do the family laundry because it’s the one chore that
gets me out of the apartment. I was down there one Saturday, slouched in one of
the beach chairs, reading the Red Badge of Courage for school and waiting for
the washer to finish so I could move the clothes to the dryer, when I heard
voices and laughter echo through the concrete entrance from the parking lot.
Two girls, carrying boxes and suitcases, came through from
the shade of the walkway and went to the door of apartment number two. I tried to look like I was still reading my
book while I watched them. They were
young, just a few years older than me I thought. The girl with long blond hair had on a short
little sundress; one of the thin straps slipped off her shoulder. She
fumbled a key into the door lock. The
other girl had a mass of frizzy brown hair that reached to her shoulders. She was wearing faded jeans and a t-shirt
that was cut off at the waist. Both
girls went in to the apartment, closing the door behind them.
Two pages later, and after I had slotted the quarters into
the dryer, the girl with the wild hair came out of the apartment and crossed
the court yard to where I was still sitting in one of the beach chairs. She nodded at me as she passed by and went
into the laundry room. After a few
moments, I heard the clink of coins, followed by the crash of a bottle tumbling
out of the Coke machine and then the pop and hiss when she used the machine’s
opener. Standing in the doorway, she
took a big swig of the Coke, and then dropped into the other beach chair,
sitting sideways with one leg over the grey-weathered arm of the chair, so she
could face me.
“Hi, I’m Ginger.”
“I’m Carol. Did you
just move in?”
“You know I did. You
just watched me move in twenty minutes ago.”
“Well, yeah. But I
thought maybe you were helping your friend move in.”
“That’s Marci. We’re
sharing the apartment.”
“Um, I didn’t see any furniture. Is your apartment furnished?” We had brought our own furniture with us, but
I knew that a few of the apartments were rented furnished.
“No, Marci’s boyfriend has a truck. He’s coming over after he gets off work.”
“Oh, well, welcome to the neighborhood, I guess.”
“Sure, thanks.” She unwound herself from the chair and stood
up. “Well, see you later.”
“OK, bye.”
I watched her walk back over and let herself into the
apartment. When she came out again a few
minutes later she was wearing cowboy boots.
Marci had the same little dress on, a big macramé bag slung off her
shoulder, and sandals that laced up her tanned calves.
After that, I tried to hang out at Marci and Ginger’s apartment
as much as I could. They were both
waitresses at Galloway’s Family Restaurant, three blocks away. Marci would turn
21 on her next birthday.
“As soon as I do, I’m getting a job tending bar at one of the
lounges down by the airport,” Marci said.
She was dressed for work and I could see her standing at the bathroom
sink, putting the finished touches on her make up. “That’s the way to make money. The tips are great and a bar’s a good place
to make connections, if you know what I mean,” and she winked at me in the
mirror. I didn’t know what she
meant.
“I’m not going to work in restaurants or bars for the rest
of my life, that’s for sure,” said Ginger, who had graduated from high school
in the spring. It was her day off and she’d hollered come in when I tapped on
her door. I had two loads of whites sloshing away over
in the laundry room. Ginger was slouched
down in the faded over-stuffed armchair she’d bought at the Salvation Army
store. There was an old sofa, too,
covered with a bedspread to hide the torn cushions.
“What are you going to do?”
“Join the army. Or
maybe get a job at the zoo. You know the
San Diego zoo? It’s the best zoo in the
world. But I’ve got some family business
up here to take care of first?”
I wanted to know what kind of family business, but I didn’t
want her to think I was prying.
“Does your family live close by?”
“Oh, yeah,” she took a long drag on her Marlboro and then
stubbed it out in the tuna can she used for an ash tray, “yeah, one of my
families lives close by. Real close.”
“You have more than one family?”
“Sure, doesn’t everyone?”
I thought about that.
I had my family that lived upstairs and then I had my grandparents who
lived in New Jersey, but I just thought of all of them as one family.
“Where does your other family live?”
“In Oakland. That’s
where I grew up.”
“I was born in Oakland.
At City Hospital. Is that where you
were born?”
“Yep.” She pulled
herself out of the chair and padded over to the refrigerator in the kitchen
alcove. This was a one-bedroom
apartment, much smaller than ours, which had three bedrooms and an eat-in
kitchen. This apartment seems small
and compact in comparison, cozy and relaxed, with milk crate book cases filled
with second-hand paperbacks and Marci’s collection of shells and bones, the two
twin mattresses on the bedroom floor, flanking the dresser that Marci and
Ginger shared, and the pots of aloe vera and wandering Jew on the window sill
in the living room.
Ginger flopped back into her chair, reaching a Coke out to
me.
“It’s the last one.
We can share.” I took a sip and
handed it back to her. She passed it
over to Marci. I’d never drunk from the
same bottle as anyone except my brothers.
I felt my cheeks get hot, but Ginger and Marci didn’t seem to
notice.
Marci took a couple of sips from the bottle before passing
it back to Ginger.
“I’m going in a little early, I’ll see you there Ginger.”
She swung her macramé bag onto to her shoulder and went out the door.
Ginger gave me the Coke and crossed to one of the milk
crates, pulling out a photo album. She
sat down on the sofa, close enough that I thought I could feel the warmth of
her thigh.
“This is my Oakland family,” she said, flipping the book
open.
Over several pages, I looked at pictures of people I didn’t
know doing the same kind of family stuff my family does, trips to the beach,
picnics at the state park, holiday dinners.
There were two girls and two boys.
It was hard to tell anything much about them in the earlier, black and
white pictures, but the ones on the later pages were in color, taken when the
kids were older.
“How come your parents named you Ginger? You don’t have red hair. No one in your family does.”
“My name’s Virginia.
My other mom called my Ginger and my Oakland family just stuck with it.”
“Your other mom?”
“Yeah, the mom in my other family. Hey, I have to get ready for work.”
“Yeah, ok, I better go check the laundry. I’ll see you later.”
If she answered, I didn’t hear. She was already in the bedroom, shucking out
of her jeans, when I was letting myself out.
A few days later, Ginger and I sat in the beach chairs, a
load of my brothers’ clothes tumbling in the dryer. A light rain was falling, spattering the
surface of the pool, sending overlapping, concentric circles across the
water. Ginger was talking about her
family again.
“My parents aren’t really my parents, you know? I mean, they brought me up, but they adopted
me. They adopted all of us.”
I couldn’t think of anyone that had been adopted. I thought about the pictures in Ginger’s
photo album.
“Are you the oldest?”
“Yeah, but I was the last to be adopted.”
“Wow, really.”
“Yeah, the boys, Tom and Rick, are brothers. My parents adopted them first, when they were
2 and 3 years old. A year later they adopted
Christine. She was just a baby, ten
months old. I was adopted next, when I
was seven.”
I was about to ask her where she’d been before she got
adopted when the buzzer went off on the dryer and I had to pull the clothes out
and fold them before they got wrinkled.
When I came back out, the warm, folded clothes neatly stacked in the
basket, Ginger had gone back to her apartment.
I had looked forward to Christmas break, planning to hang
out with Ginger or Marci as much as I could.
I stopped by their apartment the day before the last day of school. Ginger was packing one of the suitcases I
had seen the day they moved in.
“Hey, Carol, I’m going to Oakland for a week. Can you water the plants for me and keep an
eye on the place?”
“Um, sure. But what
about Marci? Won’t she be here?”
“Maybe sometimes, but she’s been staying with her boyfriend
a lot, so she may not be around.”
“Her boyfriend? That
guy Jimmy?”
“No, not him, they broke up.
She’s going with some older guy she met at the restaurant. He’s a bar tender and he’s been teaching her
how to mix drinks.” She fished a key out
of the Mason jar they kept on the kitchen counter for the change they needed
for the laundry machines.
“Here’s the spare key.
Don’t water the plants too much, maybe just once and then let them dry
out. I’ll be back for New Years. Marci and I are gonna have a party here. You’re invited.”
I checked the apartment every day, letting myself in with
the key that I had added to my own key ring, sometimes two or three times a
day. Sometimes I hung out in there for
an hour or so, watching game shows on Marci’s little black and white TV or
thumbing through the worn paperbacks.
More than once I pulled the photo album out and studied the pages. Now that I knew that Ginger was the oldest,
it was easy to pick her out in most of the pictures, but the images were so
small and grainy, it was hard to see any real features or details. In most of the pictures her hair was short, a
tangle of kinks and ringlets that reminded me of my own mess of cowlicks and
curls.
To Be Continued
Writing Sites for Authors:
Suite 101.com, Four Steps to Editing and Revising a Manuscript: Four Steps to Editing and Revising a Manuscript
Helping Writers Become Authors.com, 10 Ways to Make Your Readers Loathe your Antagonist:10 Ways to Make Your Readers Loathe Your Antagonist
The Write Life.com, 25 Editing Tips for Tightening Your Copy: 25 Editing Tips for Tightening Your Copy
Writing Blogs for Authors You May be Interested In:
Better Novel Project.com, Deconstructing Bestselling Novels, One Index Card at a time:Better Novel Project.com
Martha Alderson, the Plot Whisperer: Plot Whisperer.Blogspot.com (At the bottom of the page is her plot planner)
Vix Stories.com, 25 Guides on How to Write a Short Story: http://vixstories.wordpress.com/2011/06/10/25-guide-on-how-to-write-a-short-story/
Downsizing
by
John Matthews
“Mike, she’s here
again. She’s pulling weeds in the flower
bed.”
“I’m sorry
Wilbur.” I said. “I’ll be right over to get her. This is embarrassing.”
“It’s okay,
Mike. She’s no bother. I was just worried you might not know where
she was.”
“I should have
guessed.”
I hopped in the
car and started over to our old place to pick up my wife. It had been a year since we moved out of the
big house in the country. The work of
keeping up with the garden and flower beds had become too much for Bonnie, even
though she loved to do it. Yes, of
course I did my share, but I was retired and starting to resent how the chores
were eating into my enjoyment of my golden years.
So we
downsized. Moved to a condominium in the
city. The extra time we found ourselves
with was a blessed relief. I had time to
play golf again. And Bonnie’s hip and
back pain got better. I thought she was
at last content. But she has always been
a restless person. When she finally
agreed to give up her driver’s license it made the boredom even more
confining. And with boredom came
confusion. She sometimes forgot we had
moved and seemed perplexed when she stepped out the front door of the condo and
found the surroundings strange.
But we coped. We had good neighbors who lent a hand when
necessary and offered reassuring reminders when she needed them.
It was one of the
neighbors who first drove her over to our former home. It seemed like a reasonable request from
Bonnie. She said she wanted to visit one
of our former neighbors who, she said, would bring her back to the condo. That was the first time I got a call from Wilbur, who had bought our
old place. He said Bonnie had walked
into the garage, helped herself to a pair of clippers, and was deadheading the
butterfly bush blooms.
It’s true Wilbur
has never taken as good care of the landscaping as Bonnie had. What she was doing was as necessary to her as
it was a waste of time to Wilbur.
But her plan for
getting back to the old house and getting our new neighbor to leave her there,
alone and without a car, was so well thought out and reasonable that it
reassured me. I had started to fear that
Bonnie was starting to slip into one of those conditions common to older
people. One of those diseases I can never
remember the name of. No, not
Asperger’s, the other one that starts with an “A.”
And when I picked
her up that first time at Wilbur’s she gave no indication she was in any way
mixed up. She was not thinking that the
place was still ours, just that Wilbur was kind of lazy. And, truth be told, I think when Wilbur saw
her, he waited to call me until she had done a pretty good piece of work.
So I saw no reason
to try to change things. Life was
good. We were happy. Sometimes I even drove her over to the old
place myself and sat and visited with Wilbur while she puttered in what used to
be her yard. Yes, of course I kept my
eye on her. I could tell she now got
shaky after shorter and shorter periods of work. But she wasn’t doing anything she didn’t
want to do. And she never forgot her
doctor’s warning: “Just remember,
Bonnie. No BLT’s. Do not bend, lift, or twist.”
I enjoyed watching
her doing what she loved and I was reluctant to tell her when she’d had
enough. Sometimes Wilbur would go out
and suggest she quit and she never argued.
At his suggestion she would come in and tell me she was ready to go home. She knew we now lived at the condo. And she was glad to go home.
Her bones, joints,
and muscles continued to wear down. But
there was nothing wrong with her mind.
She was aware of what was going on and that eventually even our home in
the condo would be too much for her to manage.
I was going to suggest we visit some places where she could get some
assistance with her day to day living.
But I was selfish. I didn’t want
to live at such a place together when there was nothing wrong with me. But I didn’t want to live without her. She made it easy, as she always did.
“Let’s just look,”
she said. “We don’t both have to
move. I know you’ll still visit, take me
out now and then, have dinner with me.
It will be like when we were dating, remember? We each had our own home, which we loved, but
we looked forward to our times together as something special.”
Yes, it was
easy. I hadn’t realized there are people
who are specialists at working these things out. We could afford to keep the condo and a room
for one at Evergreen Manor. Our kids
were very supportive. Oh, that’s
right. I didn’t tell you we have
kids. They are great, but I hate old
codgers who are always bragging about their kids. Their names and ages and jobs wouldn’t
interest you so I won’t waste your time listing them. But Bonnie would not ever consider asking
them to take care of her, any more than I would.
So now I visit
Bonnie every day. She has her own room
so we can share some privacy, but we spend most of our visits with the other
inmates. I’m not supposed to call them
that. It’s sort of an old person’s joke. Some of them are really sharp. Witty and clever. But of course some of them have a little more
trouble keeping things straight.
Today’s visit was
particularly pleasant. Italian night in
the dining room. Braciole and a nice
glass of Sangiovese. We sat at a table
with several other women, friends Bonnie has made already. She doesn’t usually have trouble remembering
their names. But once in a while I have
to help her. Sometimes it seems like I
know these people better than she does.
Why is that? We took a walk on the veranda in the moonlight
then came back to her room and watched “Doc Martin.” I dozed off for a few minutes but it didn’t
matter. It’s pretty easy to pick up
what’s going on. At least we haven’t
degenerated into watching Lawrence Welk.
After that, it was
time to go. I got up and fumbled in my
pocket for my car keys. They’re never in
the pocket where I left them, but this time it was particularly difficult to
find them.
But then Bonnie’s
arms were around me. She knows just how
to squeeze to make everything seem all right.
“Oh, Mike. You forgot again, didn’t you?” I could hear her jingling her car keys in my
ear. “I’m the one who has to go
home. You’re already home, remember?”
THE END
And Finally...
We are always looking for articles and short stories to publish, as well as suggestions for the newsletter. Please send any ideas, stories, etc. to colleen. We'd love to see any contributions you'd like to make to The Scribblers.
If you no longer wish to receive this newsletter, please email colleen with the word 'unsubscribe' in the subject line and we will remove you from our mailing list.
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