Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Repeating Myself - DBTC



Here I sit,
Laptop in hand,
Keys at tips,
My own tapping band.

Reading and writing,
Beating and rapping,
Creating and typing,
Clicking and tapping,

When I look back at old chapters
and realize with a start
I'm literally re-writing the last one
I've had a damn brain fart

Hours wasted
As I wipe the page clear
I'll have to try again tomorrow
And keep my old chapters a little more near

So sorry for a lack of a Smithy chap
I really meant to put one out
But it seems I'm repeating myself
I think I need to go and pout

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Looking Ahead - Journal/DBTC


First and foremost, allow me to apologize. I know that we had no post yesterday and today isn't any new fictional content. Unfortunately, yesterday just proved that life happens and by the time I was able to even get near my computer, I ended up deciding that bed was the better option. The end result was no post and no research. How sad.

That said though, I was discussing the upcoming holiday with my wife, the beautiful and talented Fabulosaurus and she told me that she was considering doing "InkTober". If you don't know what this is, it's when some artists dedicate themselves to doing a new piece of art every day. Well, I'm already trying to do that ANYWAY, but this got me thinking to last year when I did "SpookyTober". If you weren't around, "Spookytober" is dedicated to writing nothing but spooky stuff for the entire month of October.

I'm thinking I might do that again.

As a whole, it added to the fun of the upcoming holiday. It was silly but a blast and really helped dedicate me as a writer. I had to focus my talents to one specific area versus letting them wander. Plus, at the end of the day, I really do love doing spooky and creepy stuff. So, I'm thinking that might be in the works come the beginning of October.

Anyone want to join us?

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Late Night Research


    "I can't fuckin' do this anymore, mate."
    Julio's eyes burned and rubbing them only made them worse. No tears came to give relief. They were bone dry. He'd been staring at computer screens and dusty old tomes for more hours than he cared to count and he was losing what little focus he had left. The words were nothing more than a blur of squiggles.
    Closing his eyes, he hoped that not looking at anything would help. Instead he listened.
    Earlier, the library had been bustling. Despite the long standing stigma that one must be quiet in a library, there was only so much noise that you could suppress. It was nothing compared to how it was now.
    That is...empty.
    There was something to be said about knowing the right people. Had he been anyone, he would have been kicked out at closing time same as anyone else. Yet, trade hands and sometimes cash with the right people and you might find yourself with a few perks.
    Although, at the moment, it didn't much feel like a perk.
    "Goddamnit." he said again to the silence. "I'm done. Fuckin' done."
    Opening his eyes once again, he set about closing and stacking the dozen books spread out before him and saving the work he'd done on his computer. Every book was open to the same information, although it seemed to have slight variables based on what book it was from.
    Hoodoo.
    Up til now, he'd only heard the term traded by friends and colleagues. Men and women a lot more experienced in the paranormal than himself had talked about their run-ins with the black magic but never cared to go into details. Something about it seemed to make their skin crawl.
    He went to slam shut another dusty tome but found himself staring at the words.
    Goofer Dust. A powder, often brown-red or black in appearance, is a component of magickal spells made out of a variety of simple, natural ingredients. While there is a consensus among many that Goofer Dust can be comprised of any number of ingredients, the three basic elements that are most often agreed upon are rock salt, powdered sulphur, and graveyard dirt. Depending on its makeup, Goofer Dust is thought to have a wide range of magickal uses, but is most often utilized in malignant spellcraft.
     Julio shook his head and shut the book hard. The sound shattered the silence of the darkened library and echoed through the stacks. It was followed quickly by the remaining books that were quickly stacked and organized.
    Finally, with an exhausted sigh, he flicked off his desk light. He was instantly plunged into darkness as he extinguished the last bit of artificial light short of the "EXIT" sign that glowed green off in the distance.
    He'd have to keep researching in the morning. He'd heard reports of a witch sighted in the bogs just South of here. Of course, none of the locals actually believed that some woman was roaming the swamps dabbling in black magic, yet all of their "sightings" added up. Only a few deaths had been reported, all of them being contributed to gators and the sort. Julio would have to deal with her before anything big went down.
    It was only as he made his way towards the front door that he realized something was wrong.
    First, it was the soft crunch under his boot. It felt firm but giving. Definitely different than the hard wood floors of the library. Had someone spilled something?
    Reaching for the nearest desk, he quickly found the lamp and turned it on.
    Directly across his path, spread from one edge of the stacks to the other, was a heavy line of black and brown powder. It was deliberately poured and formed a clean barrier with the exception of his boot print. To his surprise, it seemed to extend in a line across all the stacks, working in a circle around him.
    BANG!
    Julio jumped at the sound. It had come from directly in front of him down the stacks where he would have been. Yet, nothing seemed out of place.
    BANG BANG!
    This time, it came from the stacks on either side of him. Was something hitting the shelves?
    "Don't break the circle."
    The voice was as clear as if they had been right next to him. Julio whirled instinctively to find nothing but empty desks and his lone desk lamp. He couldn't help but feel his heart start to race, his breath hitching up in his chest.
    BANG BANG!
   More hits. Farther apart again.
    It has to be the witch. Julio thought to himself as he reached under his jacket to draw the pistol he stowed there. He had no idea how she even knew that he was onto her yet, but he couldn't think of any other explanation. His eyes darted around the darkness, looking for any movement.
    BANG BANG!
    Julio jumped at the sound again, this time leveling off his weapon towards the stacks where the banging came from. He desperately wanted to squeeze a few rounds off, but didn't even know what he'd be shooting at.
    "Don't break the circle."
    He heard it again, but this time, he turned and fired wildly behind him in the direction of the voice. The gun boomed and roared but only managed to blow several holes in the stacks and knock books off the shelves.
    They hit the ground with a thud, scattering the strange line of powder in every direction.
    All at once, it seemed as if the sound drained from the library as Julio stared at the broken line. The bangs, the thuds of books, even the echoing roar of the gunshots slipped away as if in a vacuum. All that was left was the sound of Julio's breathing. And two words, almost whispered.
    "It's in."
    His heart pounded with utter ferocity as he yelped and turned towards the voice again. All he saw was the lamp on the desk. What he didn't see was what was under the desk, waiting for him to turn back around towards the exit. A thing with deep, black eyes, a slender, pale face, and long, sharp teeth that didn't like to cross a Goofer Dust line. At least...not an intact one.


(Hey all. So, this was SUPPOSED to be a quick little "Don't Break the Chain" post complaining about having to research stuff for writing. What came out was drastically different than I had originally intended. That said, I very well might make this a part of the hoodoo story I was already planning on working on...but we'll see. I hope you enjoyed!)

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Inspirations - Open Book Discussions


Ever since I've started to try and rededicate myself to writing and creating, one of the major problems that I run into is having something to write ABOUT.

At a glance, it's very daunting to think "I'm going to try and produce SOMETHING everyday". You wonder if you will have the ability. If you're going to produce anything worthwhile. You stress whether or not you can even keep yourself going to do it more than a few weeks. 

I can say that one benefit I've given myself to ease my concerns is giving myself a day off on Friday so that I might have a bit more of a set schedule with a day I can rely on. Aside from that, providing myself the "Open Book Discussions" as well as the "Don't Break the Chain" posts gives me a way to break up my thinking so that I'm not dead set on HAVING to produce a constant flow of narrative every day.

Of course, the ironic part is that the more I fall into the habit, the less daunting it seems. In fact, I'm starting to experience something I haven't for a long time. Inspiration. Not twinges of desire to create, but a real, solid hunger to write based on something I see or hear.

Kaleo - Way Down We Go

Here's a great example:

Way Down We Go was a song I heard on the radio that got my blood flowing. The song is amorphous enough that I don't doubt many people might here different things, but the feel for it for me was "Bogs". Maybe it's because of growing up in the Southern United States, but the song makes me think of twisting, overgrown water ways and dark, moonlit swamps with hoodoo witches in the mist. It makes me think of longing and loss and night and monsters hidden in the deep places of the waters and woods.

To that point, it's got me currently beating around SOMETHING inspired by it. Not sure if it's a short story or a flash fiction or what, but you should see something come of it soon.

That brings us nicely to the whole point of the Open Book Discussion:

What are some things that really inspire or have inspired you to create?

It really could be anything. Maybe it's a song (as seen above), or a movie, a book, something someone said, something you saw...really anything! What out there has or does set your soul aflame and make you want to create something new? I'd absolutely love to know!

Thursday, September 8, 2016

Hot Lava



     “GO! GO! GO!”
     The voice echoed and crackled in his radio. Mustering all of his strength, Gregory jumped forward off the pumice pillar. Far below him, he could see the bubbling pits of molten rock that glowed bright red and orange. Even through his spacesuit, he could smell the stench of rotten eggs. If he missed this jump, it would smell like cooked adventurer.
    Luckily, he didn't miss the jump.
     He hit the next pillar hard, but landed on his feet. Behind him, he could see his fellow adventurer Brian. He too had made the jump and landed on the pillar that Gregory had just left. Directly in front of them, their leader Jason stood upon another column of dark, volcanic rock.
     “Where are we going?” Gregory screamed. Even with the aid of the radios in their suits, they could barely hear each other over the roars of the molten planet with its heavy winds and boiling surface.
     “We have to get to the ship!” Jason responded, his voice breaking over the static.
    Gregory scanned the horizon. Where was Jason leading them? All he could see was smoke and ash above, fire and boiling rock below.
     “Where is it?” he yelled desperately.
     “There!” Jason said, pointing off to his right.
    Gregory squinted his eyes. For a moment, his suit visors were still blurred with nothing but hideous plumes of black smoke. Yet, as he stared, some of it cleared. It was just enough.
     “I see it!” Gregory gaped in response. “I can see it!”
     “Good! Now we just have to get to it!” Brian called from behind.
     The heat bore down on him. Even with the help of the spacesuit, Gregory sweat and panted as he watched Jason steady himself and jump to the next pillar over. He hadn't realized they were so close to the ship. They were almost there.
     If only he'd been ready to jump instead of watching.
     Gregory felt himself shoved from behind as Brian landed on the too-small column of pumice rock. If he'd been ready, he might have been able to jump, but just as quickly he found himself falling face first towards the lava below.
     “Greg!!!”
     Gregory shut his eyes as he plummeted towards the molten rock below. He felt his heart pounding in his chest. Any moment he'd hit the surface and...
     Wait!
     “JETPACK!”
     His hands instinctively found the controls. Years of training did the work for him and, just as fast as he'd been falling before, he was soaring high over the pumice columns; safe from the lava below.
Jason and Brian gaped at him.
     “Hey! Jetpacks aren't fair!” Brian yelled angrily.
     “Too bad! My suit has a jetpack. It's not my fault you don't have one.”
     “I want a jetpack...” Jason grumbled.
     “You're dumb.” Brian growled.
     “You're dumb.” Gregory snapped back as he rocketed towards the outcropping where their ship was settled.
     He landed with little effort atop the porous black rocks and quickly ran inside. He could see the others still jumping from pillar to pillar. While he waited, Gregory ran inside the ship and hopped into the pilot's seat. Turning the ignition key, his stomach sank.
     “Oh no...”
     Moments later, his fellow adventurers crowded into the ship and quickly sealed the airlock against the acrid heat and stench of the burning planet.
     “We've got to get out of here!” Jason called from the airlock door.
     “We can't!”
     “WHAT?!”
     “We can't go anywhere! We're out of gas!”
     Jason and Brian both piled into the cockpit. Brian angrily shoved Gregory out of the pilot's seat and tried to turn the ignition key.
     “We can't be out of gas!” he growled. “I filled it up on the ice planet!”
     Gregory un-apologetically kicked Brian in the gut and shoved him back away from the pilot's console.
     “Yes. We are! We used too much getting here.”
     But Brian didn't argue. Instead, he was slowly curling into a ball, holding his stomach. Tears were beginning to stream down the brave adventurer's cheeks. Jason simply stood over him, seemingly not sure of what to do.
     “Oh no!” Gregory abandoned the pilot's chair to console his friend who was now coughing and sputtering from the kick. “I'm sorry! I'm so sorry!”
     “No, you're not!” Brian screamed, his voice cracking as he cried harder.
     “Mom!” Jason screamed. “Mom, I think Greg hurt Brian!”
     In horror, Gregory looked back just in time to see Jason was already outside of the ship somehow. With Brian curled up in pain, he could only scream as he watched his friend and leader dive off the pumice rock face towards the molten rock below.
     “NO! You can't, Jason! The floor is lava!!!”

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Writing - Don't Break the Chain post



    "I can't write." Jeremiah said as he banged his head against his closed laptop.
    With a look of disgust, Kenroy stood up from his own computer and walked across the room to his disheartened brother. Grabbing him, by the scruff of the shirt, he got unpleasantly close to Jerry's face.
    "Do you know how to read?"
    "What?" Jerry responded in confusion.
    "I said, 'Do you know how to read?'"
    "Of course I do."
    "So you're literate, then?"
    Jerry pushed back against his brother. Ken released him without complaint but continued to stare dead into his brother's eyes.
    "Are you literate?"
    "Of course I am!" Jerry snapped, his voice raising angrily. "What the hell is wrong with you?!"
    "If you literate, than by definition you know how to read and write. If you know how to write, than clearly that's not the actual problem." Ken's face smeared back into a condescending smirk. "Writing anything worth reading is. Now hop to it, nancy boy."
    Jerry swung for a smack across his brother's ear, but his older brother was too fast. With a snide chuckled, Ken was already making his way back from to his own computer where his video games were writing.
    With a sigh, his attention turned to his closed laptop.
    "I hate it when he's right." he mumbled as he slid the top back open.

---

(Hey all. So, per my previous post, I'm gonna try something. If I really don't have anything too worthwhile like an open book discussion, a short story, poem, or another chapter, than I will suffix it as a 'Don't Break the Chain post'. These will serve as identifiers that the post in question is literally ANYTHING and I'm using it to make sure I write that day and not let myself get lazy.

They might be good. They might be bad. They might be nothing at all. It's writing practice at the end of the day. I hope you enjoy!)

Sunday, September 4, 2016

200: A Space Odyssey



    A cold wind whispered through old oaks and tall birch trees, playing across their leaves in the darkness of the night. They rustled softly, producing a calming music that drifted across the hillside where Ferdinand laid.
    However, he didn't much care about the song of the trees. His eyes were fixed elsewhere.
    High above him, the stars glittered and glistened. In the black expanse, the ceiling of the world seemed so close, and yet so far away. It seemed that if he could only get high enough he might be able to touch it, yet his efforts had always been in vain.
    Heaven's Gate. He thought to himself.
    His friends and family who had taken notice of Ferdinand's love of the stars above had questioned him several times as to what drew his attention. The answer was always the same. During the day, the sun threatened to burn him, but at night it seemed to be Heaven's Gate. Holes punched through darkness that shone through with divine light. A promise of what was behind the black canvas of the night sky.
    Many of them had told him to forget it. To focus on his farm and on his work, but he never could really listen to them. No matter how hard he tried, the beauty of those glittering dots above always drew him back til he found himself lying in a field or sitting in a tree looking up at them.
    If only there were some way to get up there. he wondered.
    He had tried climbing every tree he could, but to no luck. He had climbed atop the village buildings and jumped up to try and reach it. Once he even built the tallest ladder he might and propped it up. He fell and broke several bones, but his will was not shattered.
    Instead, he found himself once again under the stars, staring up at them. He had tried so many times yet failed.  
    What am I doing wrong? he groaned angrily.
    Reaching down to a loose rock nearby, he grabbed it and threw it as hard as he could into the sky. He watched it soar up and moments later, disappear. For a moment, this didn't occur as strange to Ferdinand. Clearly he had just lost sight of the rock...or did he?
    Picking up another, he threw another rock hard into the sky, only for it to disappear up into the the starry darkness. He tried another and yet another, each time sending them hurdling up into the sky and each time losing track of them in the black.
    I've got it. He thought to himself.

    The next day found Ferdinand waking bright and early. While his thoughts should have been on his crops and his cows, he could not escape what he had seen the night before.
    What if the answer is not to climb, but to soar? he mulled over while he sat upon his straw bed. To soar like a bird to the stars and the heavens above?
    Ferdinand was not a learned man and had no use for writing instruments or any real instruments of measure, yet he felt he needed them. He would need a machine of some kind. A creation that, much like his hand might throw the rock, he might be thrown to the heavens and to God's doorstep itself.  Ferdinand made his way off into the countryside, forgetting his farm duties completely.
    That afternoon, he arrived at the monastery several miles away. He was well received and soon was speaking to one of the monks there with regards to his idea.
    "A machine. Nay, a fist to hurl men towards the sky." Ferdinand said with a smile he could not contain!
    "It is not the place of men to expedite their trips to Heaven." the monk told him. "To do so is to damn yourself to Hell."
    Ferdinand left the monastery crestfallen, but not defeated.
    He arrived in the little village where he lived a short while later. It was there that he found his brother. He explained his thoughts to him as well.
    "You're a fool." said his brother. "You will soar to heaven! When you smash upon the rocks!"
    With a sigh, he left the village and returned home once again. His crops were ignored. His cows were forgotten. Without so much as a look at his farm, Ferdinand went to sleep.
    The next day, to his surprise, a strange man came to his house. He was notable smaller in stature and shorter in height. He wore strange robes in a style Ferdinand had never seen and spoke with a strange accent that he had never heard.
    "I look for place to sell toys." said the man in the thick accent and the strange robes. "You know where sell toys?"
    Ferdinand was about to suggest the village when he saw the cart that the man traveled with. It was decorated with all kinds of wooden imaginations. Automatons that bent and tops that spun and every other toy of wood and stone that Ferdinand had ever seen or heard of.
    "I know of a place nearby," said Ferdinand. "But before I give you directions, let me ask you a question."
    And so he shared his idea. A great and powerful machine to hurl men to the stars to greet God at his feet and see the heavens not as pinpricks in the darkness but in divine light and holy favor. The man listened, clearly confused often but attentive nonetheless. It was only when Ferdinand finished that he responds.
    "Yes. I have thing like that. Small. Need big though."
    And in exchange for directions to the village, the strange man with his strange robes and his strange accent gave him a small wooden toy. It had a bucket on one end and rock on the other that was supported by a beam in the center. When he touched a small lever on the side, the rock dropped and whatever was in the bucket was flung away.
    This is what I need. He thought to himself.

    The next months dropped away with Ferdinand almost completely engulfed in his project. His crops failed. His cows died. It didn't matter though. What little food he had left was enough. Once he visited the stars, it would be all worth it.
    With the unwitted help of other members of the village, he slowly gathered the pieces he needed to construct a much larger version of the toy the man had given him. The towering behemoth stood nearly three times as high from head to toe and the bucket that it had could easily toss any of the dead cows that were quickly piling up.
    There was only one thing left.
    On that final day, the day before he traveled to the stars, Ferdinand said goodbye to his family. He said goodbye to his wife and his kids, who begged him to stay and farm. He said goodbye to his mother and his father. He said goodbye to the monk at the monastery, his brother in the village, and anyone else who would listen. Whenever they asked why, his response was always the same.
    "I'm going to the stars." he said.
    His heart caught in his throat as the sun sunk below the horizon. His elation only intensified the darker it became. In the failing light, he quickly checked his machine once again to make sure everything was right. Everything had to be right. With the growing pitch of darkness, Ferdinand climbed into the bucket.
    Holding a long rope that he'd tied to the lever, he stared up at the stars once more as he had that fateful night before.
    Here I come. he thought with a smile.
    There was a yank and a jerk from below and, within the space between heartbeats, Ferdinand was flying. Flying towards the sky. Flying towards the stars. He extended his arms, ready to grab hold of the sky and pull himself up into Heaven.
    Several hundred feet away, his remains were unceremoniously splattered across a little hill under the stars near some old oak and tall birch trees.


(I hope you all enjoyed. This was a dark little diddy inspired by a silly Facebook post. Originally it was just a one sentence joke, but I had to run away with it. Huge build-up to one punchline, but what can I say? :P )