I don't pretend to be who/what I'm not. I will be honest here unless I publish under the category "This could be news," which is 99% fiction and a wee bit sarcastic. ;-) I want readers who come here to have as much fun as I do. Not all subjects can be fun, but most can be funny if I do my job right ;-)
My inner child is reflected in my logo and will change at a moment's notice.
Daily Prompt: Ghostwriter If you could have any author –living or dead – write your biography, who would you choose?
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No decision was even necessary!
I choose Stephen King.
He could make my life sound interesting, and elaborate about the spooky things. I could ship him all of my journals (since junior high) and we could Skype regularly about the details & other stuff…
Daily Prompt: Silver Screen Take a quote from your favorite movie — there’s the title of your post. Now, write!
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Tony held tightly to his grudge for 15-years and counting. He could not let it go. Some things that Ralph did annoyed him, but nothing caused any bitterness and ill-will toward Ralph, until he stabbed Tony in the back.
He would almost understand if Ralph’s betrayal was over money, or a woman. But not an old musty book. He and Ralph were browsing at the county flea-market, when Tony discovered what he believed to be a family heirloom. A diary, dated in 1892, when the author was 16-years old. He couldn’t wait to get home and compare the handwriting to an old scrap-book he inherited.
Tony was 99% sure that 16-year old Cassie, was his great-great-grandmother, Cassandra.
Ralph was uncharacteristically bitchy about Tony’s insisting they leave, grumbling all the way to the parking lot.
“This thing can wait another hour or so, can’t it?”
“I feel like I need to get this diary home, now,” Tony explained. “Aren’t you even a bit curious?”
“No. Just drop me off at my place, OK?”
“Well – OK”. Tony was hurt that his friend did not want to be part of his discovery, but he said nothing when Ralph hopped out of the car and said, “See ya later!”
Tony dug out the old family Bible, scrapbooks and photo albums and piled them on his dining room table. His hunch was right! Great-great-grandmother Cassandra, and the 16-year old Cassie that wrote the diary, were the same girl. He was so excited, he stayed up all night reading her diary. It was a fascinating and entertaining book. He also learned a lot about his other family members as he read.
When he woke up, the sun was shining brightly through the kitchen window, on his head. It took him a minute to figure out why he was sleeping at the dining-room table, and not in his bed. Cassie’s diary was nowhere to be found among the pile of books on the table. He knew he fell asleep with the diary in his hands. What the Hell could have happened to it?
Two days later, Tony was having a beer at Ralph’s, when he noticed the spine of a book burned up in the fireplace. He took a closer look. It was Cassie’s diary!
“What have you done?” Tony demanded, pointing at the fire-place. Ralph shrugged. “I got a real bad feeling about that book you found,” Ralph told him. “It felt haunted.”
“Then you should have talked to me about it! Not go behind my back and destroy it!” he yelled. That was the last time he spoke to Ralph, 15-years ago.
As if his grandmother was standing close, whispering to him, Tony heard “Fester, Fester, Fester. Rot. Rot. Rot.” He tried to remember the section in the diary where she wrote those very words. Oh yes – it was when she wrote about her brother, Ethan, who hated their cousin Lloyd for reasons she did not know. She worried about Ethan because she saw what his bitterness toward Lloyd was doing to him.
“Ethan’s soul is being devoured by his hatred,” she wrote. “His bitterness is spreading into all aspects of his personality, turning him into an old man before his time.”
Later (only a few pages in the dairy), she wrote about confronting Ethan and telling him he was “festering and rotting” his life away. She teasingly punched his arm, and mimicking his gruff voice, said,” Fester, Fester, Fester. Rot. Rot. Rot.” Ethan and she laughed together for a long while. Then he told Cassie he would try to let go of his festering grudge, making her happy and hopeful that she would “have her normal brother back”. She drew two red hearts, ending the day’s entry in her diary.
Tony shivered as goosebumps crawled up his arms. His great-great grandma was trying to tell him he behaved like Ethan. Was he going to make his whole life rotten over what Ralph did to her diary? Or was he going to let it go back into the past where it belonged?
He was certain he knew what his great-great-grandma wanted him to do.
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BTW…
The quote, said by Meg Ryan’s character “Kate”, was in the film French Kiss. If you haven’t seen this film – you should 😉
A Creative Writing Challenge: It’s 2AM and your phone has just buzzed you awake, filling the room in white-blue LED light. You have a message. It’s a photo. No words, no explanation. Just a photo. Tell us all about it. And what happens next…
Emmy sleepily reached for her cell phone. It was flashing its LED light, and buzzing on the nightstand. The display showed “You have a new message”, and the time it arrived – 2:00AM. No one she knew would send a text this late. Unless it was an emergency.
Now wide awake, she took her phone from the nightstand and displayed the message. There was no subject line, nor were there words – just an image.
The photo took her breath away, and filled her soul with a deep sadness. She stared at it, confused. Emmy had not seen the photo before, but remembered that day clearly. She and Jeff were in the National Forest, having a picnic lunch. Whoever took the picture must have had one heck of a zoom lens, Emmy thought. It was the last time she saw Jeff. The tears that were brimming in her eyes, now spilled down her cheeks.
The deep pain rushed back to her, like a vengeful boomerang.
She had no idea who could have taken this photo. And why would they send it to her now?
Emmy hit the “Reply” button and got an error message instead of the senders email address.
“Dammit!!” she swore loudly. Tracking down this person will not be easy.