Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Prompts - Average Activity in Four Styles


Prompt: write a 150 word story about something extremely average that happens to us in our daily lives. Then write three variations on this story using any style we want.

150 Word Exercise: Base Story

            Elaina sat in the dark, slumped over her desk. She was anything but a morning person; she wouldn’t even be up now if it weren’t for her boyfriend. They liked to talk before they went to school every day.
            She quietly turned on her laptop, hoping the other occupants of the house – namely, her younger sister, Bailey – wouldn’t hear.
            Footsteps sounded in the hallway. Elaina froze until the steps faded back into the living room. She heard mumbling, and then a slam as the front door closed.
            She sighed and went to turn on her TV when the door opened again with a creak.
            “ELAINA! COME LOCK UP BEHIND ME!”
            She started to reply in a scathing manner (of course she’d lock the door, she wasn’t stupid) but Bailey had already shut the door again.
            Slowly, a bit miffed that her sister acted as though she were the older sibling, Elaina pulled on her clothes and prepared to leave for school.
            She never did lock the door.



150 Word Exercise: Draft 1 – Videogame Style

*PLAYER ONE: Elaina_ HAS ENTERED THE GAME*
PRESS [ ] TO SELECT

NEW GAME_
[LOAD GAME_]

Loading Saved File…Do not remove Memory Card in Slot A…
[FILE 1 – 5:15 hours. Location: Bedroom.]

Loading…Do not remove Memory Card…
CUTSCENE
Narrator: “Elaina was not a morning person, but she got up before dawn each day to talk to her boyfriend, Simon, before school. They had to be quiet, though…”

*PLAYER TWO: Bailey_ HAS ENTERED THE GAME*

Elaina: [Sigh. I’m tired]
            I think I’ll go back to bed.

Bailey WALKS DOWN HALLWAY

Elaina: I should talk to her…
            [Oh no! She might hear me!]

Bailey EXITS HOUSE

Elaina: Finally I can watch TV.
            [I should get ready for school]

Bailey ENTERS HOUSE
            [ELAINA! COME LOCK UP!]
           
Elaina: […of course]
            DON’T TELL ME WHAT TO DO!

Bailey EXITS HOUSE

Elaina: [All right, time to leave]
            Screw school.

Elaina EXITS HOUSE

SAVE GAME?           Yes_
                                    [No]

---ERROR HAS OCCURRED. ALL UNSAVED DATA WILL BE LOST---



150 Word Exercise: Draft 2 – Space Pirate (Firefly)

Elaina Starkiller entered the communications room early. Her shift wouldn’t start until 0700 hours, but she wanted to send a Wave to her boyfriend Simon on the videophone before he started classes at the Academy. She certainly didn’t like being up this early, but in this galaxy there was no sun to differentiate between night and day.
Just as she fired up the equipment, she heard footsteps on the bridge. She hoped it wasn’t the captain; although they were sisters, they didn’t get along very well.
Elaina sighed as she heard the footsteps fade and the door to the shuttle pods close with a metallic thud.
The Wave failed to connect just as she heard the door open again.
“ELAINA! SEAL THE PORTS BEHIND ME!”
She started to shout some comment along the lines of “Sir yes sir!” in return, but the door clanged shut before she could. Instead she sighed and prepared for her shift.
It was only when the nearby moon exploded that she remembered that she never sealed the ports.



150 Word Exercise: Draft 3 – Pre-Television Radio Program

“Up next, start your day off with the horror story that’s sweeping the nation! Get ready for the next installment of Elaina and Bailey, Sisters in Crime! Brought to you by Safe-T Locks, the most affordable door bolts you’ll ever LOCK eyes on!”
“Our story begins early one morning in the dark before the dawn. Elaina Atkins was writing a letter to her boyfriend who was serving on the front lines. She had to finish before she left for school. Suddenly, she froze as she heard footsteps in the hall!
“I mustn’t let Bailey know I’m awake, lest she give me some chore!” Elaina thought.
The footsteps faded, and Elaina heard the front door slam. Happily she began to write again, only to be interrupted by…the door!
“ELAINA! COME LOCK THE DOOR AFTER ME!”
Elaina did hate it so when Bailey told her what to do, and she nearly gathered the nerve to tell her off – but Bailey was already gone.
Alas, Elaina never did lock the door…
Tune in tomorrow at 5 am to find out what creatures of the night snuck through that unlocked door! Thanks for listening, folks!”

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Prompts - 250 Word Explanation Story


Prompt: Write a scene in 250 words that explains how a character has an ability that they shouldn’t be able to have. Explain how they can do this without simply stating why they can.

            The night grew cold and dark as I sat in a corner of the abandoned house. My traveling companion, Carla, paced and moved her lips, though she knew I had no ability to hear the sounds she made.
            The room afforded no heat or light. I searched until I found a lopsided door. It led me to a room filled with shelves and cabinets, stuffed tightly with paper. By matchlight I could see on each paper patterns of curving lines, thick dots, and peculiar symbols. I recognized the patterns. They made what those who could hear called “music.”
            Carla soon came after me. She stared as I sorted the papers into two piles. On one pile I dropped my match. I felt the heat as it burned the yellowing paper. Carla made stomping gesture, but I held up two pages for her to see.
            I could not hear, but I knew that “music” made “songs” and people listened and tapped their toes. I imagined what they heard was like the pattern of ripples a skipping stone made in a still pond. The waters ebb and flow, lap onto dry sand and bring beauty and peace.
            The first paper I showed her was not the kind that imparted beauty. It was frenetic, discordant, unpleasant. With a weak pen I scribbled over it, blotting out its ugliness. The second paper was peaceful and harmonious; on it I drew gentle waves. Carla studied the papers and then my face. She began holding up other papers for me to see. A nod to the left, they were saved. To the right – burned.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Prompts - 250 Word Concrete Story


Prompt: Write a 250 word scene without using any words that indicate emotion. Focus on concrete details only. 

The blonde girl darted across the street before the light changed. A large pickup slammed on its brakes, driver raising his gloved fist. She reached the sidewalk and slowed, the thin lace of her Converse settling in an oily puddle. Her breathing was heavy, her blue eyes bright and shiny. My own breathing matched hers, and our mouths turned up slightly as we looked at each other.
            I held out my sweaty hand and waited for her to take it. She did, flicking her hair back with her free hand. We walked through the streets for nearly an hour, talking of many things. After a time she pulled me toward a dimly lit store. The windows, covered in flaking paint, advertised cheap prices and rare items. I followed her inside and placed my hands over her eyes. She stumbled slowly as I twisted around the aisles, weaving back and forth among the knickknacks and gadgets. I stopped in front of a display of large oriental rugs and turned her around to face me. Her breathing grew rapid.
            I leaned in and placed my lips on hers. For a moment her body stood still, arms tight at her side, green jacket slipping off her shoulders. I straightened and cupped her face in my hands, but her eyes remained shut. I heard a browsing customer tip over a nearby display. A child yelled three aisles down. The blonde girl opened her eyes and reached for my arms, pulling me into another kiss.

Thursday, March 19, 2020

Prompts - 300 Word Scene Combining Concepts


Prompt: write a 300 word scene in which you take a concept you are unfamiliar with and combine it with something you are very familiar and comfortable with. I chose to combine math and colorguard.

            “Dammit! I HATE THIS!”
A mechanical pencil flew across the room. Cora sat up in surprise, suddenly afraid for her health. She twisted in her seat and saw Jessica glaring at her paper.
“Um,” she paused as Jessica turned to her. “Do you want help?”
“Nothing will make this make sense! Chuck Norris could do this and it wouldn’t make sense!” she growled.
Cora grinned. “Simple projectile motion’s not that bad. It’s a graph, and the arc is tracing a parabolic shape on it, right?” Jessica looked back at her blankly. “Kinda like a frowny face?”
            She still stared. Cora sighed, but smiled after a moment of thought. “You’re in colorguard, right? You spin rifles?”
            “Only all the time.”
“Okay, so imagine you’re throwing –“
“TOSSING.”
“ – tossing your rifle to a teammate a few feet to your right. The rifle represents the line on the graph that is you and your teammate.”
            Jessica looked at her strangely, but nodded.
            “So, the rifle is tossed in an arc. X represents the horizontal component of the rifle’s movement and is being graphed against Time, and they’re directly proportional and increase with a constant ratio.”
“Unless it’s super windy,” Jessica muttered.
Cora rolled her eyes. “The rifle goes up and comes back down, so Y is negative and exponential. But it needs to have a positive initial velocity, which is how hard you have to toss the rifle. Do you get it?”
            “So…what you’re saying is…the quad I toss to Selina can be separated into horizontal and vertical components. The horizontal line is linear and the vertical line is exponential, because it moves up and down,” Jessica recited slowly.
            “Yeah! You got it!” Cora’s eyes lit up, excited.
            “YEAH! High-five!” Jessica smiled back. “Thanks, dude. You should try spinning sometime.”

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Prompts - Forwards and Backwards Dialogue


Prompt: Write lines of dialogue that make sense when read both forwards and backwards.


“It was a really long service.”
“Yeah, it was ok, hard to sit through.”
“How did your mom handle seeing everyone?”
            “I think everything will be okay when we all can go home and relax.”
“What’s going to happen now?”
            “Well, we’ll have to discuss it. It’s a big change.”                            
“I want to come back to this church again, it’s beautiful.”
            “Can’t we talk about something else?”
“So you’re going back to school?”
            “Mom really wants me to meet new people.”

Friday, February 28, 2020

Prompts - Editing


Prompt: Write a story in 200 words. Then edit it to 150 words. Then 100 words. Then 50.


200 Words

Deborah tucked the switchblade into the pocket of her security uniform. She hated to deprive some kid of his only defense, but she couldn’t have gang fights starting on her watch.
            “Homegirl! Where’s that asshole Paco?” Izadora called from the corner store.
            “Damn, girl, I ain’t seen him all day,” Deborah shouted. She got along well with Iz. They both hated the other mall security guards, who wasted their time flirting with the pretty girls who walked by.
            “Well, when you see him tell him he better get his ass over here, he owes me money!” Iz said, folding her arms.
            “That fool not paying you again? You should take his ass to court.”
            Iz laughed. A customer walked up to the door and she nodded to Deborah before going inside.
            Deborah continued on her rounds. She kept an eye out for Paco, as he was supposed to take the next shift, but she didn’t see him until she was clocking out. Reluctantly she handed over the confiscated blade, knowing Paco was the type to give it to some other kid. She lectured him about paying Izadora, but she knew he didn’t care.
            Some guys are just assholes like that.


150 Words

Deborah tucked the switchblade into the pocket of her security uniform. She couldn’t have fights starting on her watch.
            “Homegirl! Where’s that asshole Paco?” Izadora called from the corner store.
            “Damn, girl, I ain’t seen him all day,” Deborah shouted. She got along well with Iz. They both hated the other mall security guards.
            “When you see him tell him to get his ass over here, he owes me money!” Iz said.
            “That fool not paying you again? You should take his ass to court.”
            Iz laughed. A customer walked up and she nodded to Deborah.
            Deborah continued and kept an eye out for Paco, but she didn’t see him until she was clocking out. Reluctantly she handed over the confiscated blade, knowing Paco was the type to give it to some kid. She lectured him about paying Izadora, but she knew he didn’t care.
            Some guys are just assholes.


100 Words

Deborah put the confiscated switchblade into the pocket of her security uniform.
            “Homegirl! Where’s that asshole Paco?” Izadora called from the corner store.
            “Damn, I ain’t seen him all day,” Deborah shouted.
            “When you do tell him to get his ass over here!”
            “That fool not paying you again? You should take his ass to court.”
            Iz laughed. Deborah left, keeping an eye out for Paco. She didn’t see him until her shift was over. She told him to lock up the blade and lectured him about paying Izadora, but she knew he didn’t care.
            Some guys are just assholes.


50 Words

Deborah put the confiscated switchblade into the pocket of her mall security uniform as Izadora called from the corner store.
            “Where’s Paco? Tell him to get over here!”
            “He not paying you? Take his ass to court.”
            She saw Paco after her shift. He ignored her; he’s such an asshole.

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Prompts - Write Something Representative of Your Style


Prompt: Write a short piece that is representative of your writing style.


Steep Cliffs and Lonely Children

            It was early. The marine layer had yet to burn off, although lately it stayed through the day, shading all who wandered the paths in dim, misty fog. From my position on the sidewalk by Taylor Hall I could hear every conversation and remain unseen.
            The smiling boy with too-short jeans talked louder than most at this hour. I could hear the happy blitheness in his voice and it disgusted me. Not for any real reason; I had nothing against him or happiness in general. It just wasn’t the kind of morning for joyous proclamations of friendship. I liked watching lonely figures fade into the fog, and Smiling Boy refused to disappear.
            He had a companion, though I found her presence more tolerable. How she could stand the boy I didn’t know, but perhaps I was a little more cynical than her…and the rest of the humans that walked these paths so freely.
He was leading her up the hill in front of me. Her dark clothing made her a shadow against the gray sky, her blonde hair the only confirmation she wasn’t a fixture of the buildings. More bored than interested, I followed them at a slight distance. I was up far too early to be doing anything else of importance.
            They trekked up the hill, past the buildings my colleagues had affectionately titled “Farmanian,” Smiling Boy still crowing with undeserved glee. I had yet to hear the girl speak. I kept following.
            It soon became clear that they were not heading for the buildings themselves. Classes wouldn’t start for a few hours at least (though I hardly paid attention to things as trivial as school anymore). The boy was leading her to the park, which, on a clear day, had a view that most considered breathtaking. I found it stifling. The ocean was my enemy.
            Smiling Boy was probably the type to go surfing after class, cheering on his buddies as they tramped down the cliffs. I’d never go near; this whole school was treacherously close to the never-ending spans of churning, dark water. I dismissed him from my mind. I never wanted to think of Smiling Boy and his loud voice again.
            The girl would enjoy the park. Her head turned this way and that, lifting a thin wrist to gently caress the fog around her. I got closer, but never did I hear her speak. She was lonely, like me. She would enjoy the park on a clear day, like I did not, but would most certainly appreciate its beauty most in the fog. It was quiet, desolate and dangerous any time, but on a foggy day…
            On a foggy day, the ocean was hidden. You would not see the cliff. Not unless you tumbled down it.
            I smiled at a terrible thought of the lonely girl tumbling.
            After a few minutes I let the girl disappear and walked indistinctly down the hill. My spot had been discovered, my morbid thoughts interrupted by those I briefly found interesting, but this would not last for long. There was a place that I lived and slept and ate and it was in my mind, calling me away from the fog and the ocean.
            I wandered down the hill, farther and farther, turned and went down farther. Not beach-far but dormitory-far. Not that I lived in the dormitories. I did, but only when necessary. Only when others shepherded me back. That hadn’t happened in a long time.
            I stopped to stare at the damp windshields of cars and imagined running a key down the side of every one. I’d never do that. I prefer to stay silent and watch as others make waves.
            Waves…waves were my enemy.
             I’ve always had a lot of enemies, but none of them people. There’s a difference between hating something and being enemies with it. I hated Smiling Boy, but he was not my enemy the way the ocean was. I hated him like I hated the crushed can I kicked down the sidewalk; it did not belong and was disturbing nature around it but I could kick it away from me until I couldn’t see it, lost in the trash of others.
If I ever let people become my enemy I wouldn’t have a reason to live, for they are everywhere and have their sticky hands in all things.
There was hope left for the lonely girl. I could imagine the enemies she might have. Maybe the wind. Maybe those shorts Smiling Boy was wearing.
I could go back and try to talk to her. I could follow her and see where she lived, which dorm, what year, major, car, friends, classes, social security number. But I was too afraid. Afraid of discovering that she wasn’t lonely, that she didn’t mind those too-short shorts, that she didn’t want a friendly shadow like me.
It had happened before.
I don’t waste my time making enemies of people because people don’t waste their time with shadows.
I felt mist trickle down from the tree above me and decided to move. The fog was beautiful from the park, but anywhere else it was simply depressing. I couldn’t see my own shadow. I couldn’t tell if I was going to run into someone, unless they were talking too loud and stomping their sandaled feet.
I found the fence that barred me from falling off the sidewalk and down onto the track and grasped it with pale fingers. I thought of what to do next, and nothing came to mind. Nothing pleasant.
I heard footsteps from behind and froze. They passed me by.
I gripped the fence tighter and thought just as hard. Only one image played itself over and over in my mind.
I smiled as I imagined lonely girl tumbling.

Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Prompts - Setting


Prompt: Write a short piece that demonstrates a clear and vivid setting.


Katie sat stiffly against the cold stone wall, aiming a weak flashlight beam at the thick brown door. Her mother had gone out to check the barometers a while ago – was it thirty minutes? Forty? She hoped no more than forty-five, but with no clocks or windows, she couldn’t be sure. She pulled off her blanket. The room was small and offered no comfort in its white walls and thin cots. Katie shoved open the heavy door and took a deep breath.
The room beyond was large and drafty, illuminated by small slivers of light from long, thin windows near the ceiling. Rain streaked the panes and dark clouds obscured the small strip of sky. Hugging herself, Katie walked around the tables and chairs littering the floor to the large closet on the opposite wall. Silently she pulled out a large coat and rubber boots. An umbrella would be pointless; she’d need her hands to pull herself along the rope strung from the building to the meters.
She took another breath and refused to wince as the wind and rain pounded the windows and rattled the door. Her mother was out there, gone far longer than she should have been. Resolutely she continued on, struggling with the many layers of clothes. She had barely grasped the door when it flung open, causing her to jump back and reach for her goggles. Securing them, she flailed for the slick rope, sighing when she grasped it. She began pulling herself the fifty feet to the barometers. Their old chicken coop bent under the wind and garden gnomes smashed into its metal frame. Her mother’s plants were torn from their roots. Terrified, Katie doubled over, barely keeping a hold on the rope. She yelled as she moved, but her mother wasn’t in sight.

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Prompts - Inventing Definitions


Prompt: Pick any noun, verb, adjective, and conjunction from the dictionary and give them fake origin stories. 4-6 sentences only.

dune: (noun) a rounded hill or ride of sand heaped up by the action of the wind.
            In early England, Sir Richard Dune was a messenger in the king’s army. He had fallen ill, but still vowed to deliver an important message across the desert that divided the army and its main stronghold. Halfway through his journey, he succumbed to his sickness and collapsed. Days later, reinforcements marched across the sands to the army and one soldier noticed a slight hill with a stiff hand sticking straight out of it. Dune’s body was uncovered and forever after soldiers warned that piles of sand might really be dunes – that is, covering up dead bodies.


snub: (verb) to check or interrupt with sharp or slighting words.
            In a small country town in Europe, a young girl lived with her family. They had the unfortunate last name of “Nubbin,” and all the other children teased the girl, calling her “nubby” or “nub.” Eventually it became an insult among them, and the girl grew tired of being upset by this. She began to turn up her nose and make jokes about the others as she walked by, which caused them to call her a snob. One child, feeling himself to be particularly creative, combined the two and called her a “snub”, meaning a “snobby nub.” The others soon picked up on this and used the word “snub” to characterize the action of meanly insulting someone.


mettlesome: (adjective) full of mettle; spirited; ardent, brave, etc.
            An aboriginal tribe in Australia has a legend that has been passed down for centuries. They say that their ancestors once lived in harmony with all living things, sharing thoughts and feelings through a force of nature known as the Mettle. Every living thing was woven into the Mettle, and all could instinctively access it. However, as the years went by, tribes learned things such as “fighting” and “owning” and “greed,” and they began to split up. As soon as people separated themselves from other living things, cracks formed in the Mettle, until it was no longer a force that contained all beings, but rather a spirit that lived inside all things. Now, if a person shows great spirit or bravery, they are said to have some mettle in them, or are “mettlesome.”


nor: (conjunction) and not; and not either; usually as the second of the correlatives neithernor, implying negation of both parts of the statement.
            The young boy stood in the shadow of a giant stone monolith, the words of his elders still ringing in his ears. He had to complete an arduous task for his tribe to accept his as an adult; he was to travel to a neighboring land that lie between Norway and the Netherlands and return with an artifact of an enemy tribe. This monolith was to guide him, but the boy, versed as he was in the tribe’s written language, could not make out a single word inscribed on the stone. Two shallow arrows and a few thin letters were carved in its face, but it looked as though some of the markings had been worn away. Frustrated, the boy lamented “I don’t want “neither” or “nor”, I need to find the other tribe!”

Friday, January 3, 2020

Prompts - Characterization


Prompt: Create a character. Choose 5 people in their life to characterize them in only 50 words.


Tattoo Artist
            I refused to ink a dumbass “mom” heart on Nikki when she asked. I’d talked her out of bad tattoos before, something I do for customers who are also friends. And I like her style, loose and confident. We started bar-hopping on Friday nights, great fun for two twenty-somethings.

Therapist
            After 18 sessions I finally comprehend Nikki’s issues. She’s begun to answer questions about the incident (see session logs). I believe the best course of action is to locate her father. Nikki is nervous around males and refuses to consider dating. A positive male influence is vital to her progress.

Coffee Barista
            “Double chocolate chip frappuccino, extra chocolate!”
            I know who ordered that. Nikki Lamont. Gorgeous Nikki.
            I watch her everyday as she struts into the shop. She’s the most wonderful girl I’ve ever seen. Those deep green eyes, thick, shiny brown hair…
            Hell, I love her. I’m gonna ask her out.

Chauffeur
            I politely told Miss Lamont what I think of the horrid places I drive her to, but she ignores me and demands I drop her off a block away. Poor rearing, if you ask me. Good genes, but her mother pays no mind to Nikki’s childish behavior.
‘Tis a pity.

 Sister
            Nikki’s grown to be quite the bitch. Couldn’t be prouder, honestly. Mother doesn’t know day from night and my little sis has finally quit the goody-goody act. That therapist probably blames her behavior on me, but whatever. All I do is supply the fake IDs. Nikki’s finally tasting real life.

Friday, November 2, 2018

We Met in the Rain


            We met in the rain, without words. It was beautiful. When my lips met hers, slowly, hesitantly, it was without restraint, or care. They were soft, wet from the cold dripping rain, and chapped from the constant howling wind. I didn’t care; neither did she.
            We met in the ruins of the abbey atop the hill and hid in the archway that now led to nothing. In days of old it was proud and tall, a safe haven for all the townspeople and travelers and monks, now abandoned but for us.
            I’ve known her my whole life, but I’ve always thought of her as mine, my Eliza. I don’t know if she ever thought of me the same, but when we were in the abbey ruins, our lips pressed tightly together, I felt like I was hers. She could have had me for all our lives, had they not been so short.
            We only ever met in the rain.



            Alanna dashes up the hill, stumbles, falls. She pushes to her knees and crawls forward, willing herself to stand again. She slips in the mud and the wet and presses ever forward. The hill is steep, the many stairs too visible for her to dare approach. Instead, she uses her hands to claw herself determinedly up the mossy slope, drowned in rain and lichen.  
            The hill overlooks the entire town to the south, and to the west lies miles of ocean. In the autumn storms it lies dark and dormant, rain meeting waves in cacophonous marriage. Atop the hill lies graves, and the ruins.
            An abbey, once rivaled by none, now lies downtrodden. Its stone walls and vaulted ceiling are gaunt and broken, with centuries dividing it from ruin and its life as vanguard of the faithful. Its grand face remains, with large windows devoid now of glass and merely a gaping mouth where the grand wooden door once welcomed worshipers. The roof protected one last remaining transept, connected to the rest of the ruins by a tall tower visible for many miles.
            It is in this last vestige of hope and piety that Alanna finally arrives, cold, wet, and dirty, like many a weary soul searching for guidance. But instead of clergy she seeks the company of another young woman, for whom she has been longing to see.
            Alanna waits in the transept under the tower, wrapping her dampened cloak tighter around her. The thunder rolls, and she trembles, but not for the cold.
            She trembles with apprehension, with anticipation, with desire. Will she be left alone, as the sky darkens and grows dim, til the only light to shine her way back the lightning striking ever closer?
            She trembles.
            A clap of thunder shakes the crumbled abbey, and Alanna’s eyes dart to the patches of clouded sky. She blinks just as lightning illuminates the entire hillside, leaving sizzled dirt where damp earth once lay.
            She blinks and sees for just a moment a specter, the bright white outline of what she can only describe as something unnatural. Something that cannot be. Something dead.
            For a long second it stares back at her, this shining specter of a girl with long unkempt hair and sunken eyes, staring at Alanna as if they’re old friends.
            Alanna blinks again, her face stricken in silent screams. Then the thunder rolls and the lightning strikes again, near the first patch of fire-struck earth, and Alanna is once again alone.
            “Are you there?” a voice calls, gently but urgently, barely audible over the din.
            Alanna tries to call back. It takes three strangled tries before she manages.
            “Eliza? Is that you?”
            Another rain-drenched woman, young as Alanna and just as beautiful, emerges from the darkened empty doorway and rushes to her, desperate. They grab each other and hold on, tight enough to leave reddened marks on frozen skin.
            For many seconds they don’t speak, merely touch. Eliza, the taller of the two, presses kisses to Alanna’s forehead, gripping her by the head as though she might disappear. Alanna wraps her arms around Eliza’s waist and pulls her close, hands slowly making their way up Eliza’s back.
            “I missed you,” Alanna murmurs, accepting every kiss like the blind man receiving Jesus’ healing touch.
            “Not as much as I missed you, my love,” Eliza says, resting her head against Alanna’s. “It was nothing short of torture to watch you in the square yesterday and not call out.”
            Alanna smiles, burrows closer to the other girl, impervious to the rain that once caused her to tremble. “I saw you looking, and I’ve thought of nothing since.”
            They stay like that for long minutes, swaying gently back and forth in the wind. Their arms keep each other warm, their embrace staves off the chill. And for these long minutes they feel nothing but the deepest, most perfect love. They stand protected under the tall shadowed tower, sheltered from the wind and the fear and the rain.
            And then the thunder rolls, and the lightning flashes closer and closer to the ruins. Alanna gazes skyward, pulls back in alarm as a crack echoes through the transept.
            “Shh, my dearest,” Eliza comforts, pulling Alanna close again. “It is only the storm. Nothing more.”
            “But if were followed – ”
            “We weren’t.”
            “But if we were – ”
            “No one dares to come here but us, Alanna,” says Eliza. She looks Alanna in the eye, hands caressing her cheek and hair. “No one but us and the spirits that dwell here.”
            “Don’t speak of such,” Alanna begs, but she doesn’t break her gaze from Eliza’s.
            “Then let us not speak,” Eliza grins.
            Their lips meet gently, held back by the sins they are so ready to commit. They take their time exploring this long-desired closeness, pressing ever inwards until it’s unclear where Alanna’s skin ends and Eliza’s begins. Neither have a thought nor care beyond the feel of the other’s touch.
            And then the thunder rolls, and the lightning strikes, and three horrifying things happen at once.
            From the darkened doorway comes an angry shout, as two men stand frozen in shock.
            From the rain-soaked transept, barely sheltered from the elements, Alanna and Eliza spring apart, caught mid-embrace.
            From the sky, a mighty crack as lightning strikes one final time, illuminating the four figures as the stricken tower crumbles.
            Mere seconds pass but Alanna feels the weight of every one of them as heavy as the stones surrounding her. She watches as her dearest Eliza stands one moment in front of her, hand still clinging to Alanna’s cloak, and in the next moment, gone.
            Where she once stood was now only rubble, as the once mighty tower disintegrates into ruin. The last vestige of light and clarity, the final champion of truth and love, now dead on the muddy ground, beneath layers of lightning-scorched stone.
            Thunder rolls, and Alanna screams.
           


            The men drag Alanna from the ruins. The stonemason and the priest, sent to investigate reports of ghostly sightings in the storm, see her only for her sins. They listen not to protestations or grief, and pause only to wonder if there is anything to be done for the other girl…but her body is not to be recovered, this night or any.
            Alanna knows nothing but her pain, and sees Eliza disappear with every falling tear. The men carry her to the town hall, where a waiting council of stern-faced elders await, her father among them. Eliza’s father, among them.
            “We found no spirits, save only she,” begins the stonemason, casting Alanna to the floor with disgust.
            “Alanna, I demand the truth!” Her father’s words register only dimly.
            “…and one other,” finishes the stonemason.
            “Another? Where is the culprit?”
            “Young fools in love?”
“Has the young man escaped you, then?”
The priest speaks up, still as the grave. “Young woman, actually.”
There is silence. Alanna cries and shivers and remains prone on the dirt floor. The fire lit in the room is not enough to warm her, will never be enough again.
The priest matches solemn gaze with Eliza’s father. “It was your daughter, who now answers for her sins before God, for she no longer stands on this earth.”
Gasps are drowned out by Alanna’s frightful sobs. She wishes to be dead as well, and not here, alone among her nightmares.
“Eliza?” the man says. “My Eliza, dead?”
“And what manner of sins were you committing there together, that she may end up dead?” demands Alanna’s father, fear and anger lovingly intertwined in his voice.
“I…” she begins, but her voice cracks and fails. “I loved her, and she loved me. She…she was mine.”
At her confession the rain seemed to pour down harder, gaining torrential power as it sought to drown out her wails.
The men murmur, and seem not to know what to do.
“We cannot let our town fall to sin,” begins the priest.
“My daughter is dead and yet you speak of sin?”
“Was it not her sin that caused her to become so?” spits the stonemason, who had seen the wickedness with his own eyes.
“Mine is alive, though I refuse to be grateful,” says Alanna’s father, stern and strong. “She must be punished.”
There are more whispers, suggestions, and Alanna hears none of them. She craves death. If they choose to spare her, she will seek it herself. It was a pact she had made, not with Eliza but with herself, and she knows deep inside she cannot live in this world freely, openly, and without reservation. She is either a lover of women – a lover of one woman – or she is no one at all.
The men come to a decision, and Alanna only realizes this as she is grabbed by each arm and hauled to her feet. They do not hold her, and the men are forced to drag her out of the town hall. She dimly notices that one of them is her father. He is not looking at her.
The rain shocks her into feeling once more, and she raises her head to stare deep into the darkness. She gazes towards the direction of the abbey ruins, of Eliza’s final resting place, and knows she will be there again soon.
Alanna is taken to her home, her father’s house, and shut into her room. She knows not if the door is locked or barricaded for she does not test it. She does not think. She does not sleep.
The rain continues until morning. It does not stop, but merely lightens as the sky turns from inkbottle night to the green-tinged grey unique to the seaside. The light has barely touched the earth when her door opens, and her mother stands before her.
“Is it true what they’ve said?” Her voice is falsely strong, as though she is only allowed so many words before her mouth fails.
Alanna turns to meet her mother’s eyes. She does not need to speak.
Her mother gasps, and one hand rises to shield her mouth. The other whips out and catches Alanna across the cheek. The pain is sharp and smart but Alanna has no tears left to shed, no emotion left that could broach this unending chorus of desperate screams that blind all her senses.
Her mother leaves. Alanna does not see her again.
Her father comes for her and, wordless, takes her by the arm and pulls her outside. She does not resist, and trudges behind him, head down, rain seeping into her still-damp clothes. She only know realizes she’s still covered in the mud of the night before.
They continue on a long-winding path through town, displaying her wickedness for all to see. She distantly hears shouts and perhaps jeers, but cares little for them. She raises her head when she realizes that they have started to ascend up the hill to the ruins, and the men from the night before are waiting at the top. Right next to Eliza’s remains.
Her father drags her towards them and throws her to the ground, as if she were nothing more than something dead and rotten washed up from the sea. He moves to stand with the other men and she looks only at the pile of stones where Eliza lay crushed.
The priest begins to chant, a call that echoes through the ruins and invites all manner of ghostly responses.
They do not disappoint.
The sky darkens so suddenly that all look up, only to see tumultuous dark clouds rolling in from over the ocean, swiftly coming to swirl above them. The priest falters, but renews strength and faith and continues on, despite thunderous melodies of sudden roaring seas.
Lightning strikes and in her heart of hearts Alanna calls out for Eliza to be with her.
She waits, staring only at the ruins, until lightning strikes again. One of the men shouts in alarm, and soon they all turn to stare. Alanna looks on in solemnity as the specter, so fearsome to her the night before, arises again from the stone and mud. But this time it does not disappear as quickly as it comes; this time, it drifts ever closer.
Within seconds the dead-eyed ghost girl is close enough to touch, and a few of the men splinter off and run down the hill, screaming. Another faints at the sight. Still more stand in frozen silence, and one prostrates himself, begging for his life.
Alanna just waits.
The luminous ghost of love once killed beckons for Alanna, and she rises to her feet.
“Begone, foul demon, I cast you out in the name of the one and Holy God!” cries the priest, the only one brave enough to speak.
Alanna brushes past him, and he proves not brave enough to do much else. The specter leads Alanna past Eliza’s tomb and through the ruinous remains, past grassy mounds and dried-up wells to the edge of the cliff overlooking the sea. The abbey once proudly beckoned ships and spirits alike to its misty shores and now is warns all away from the poisonous town below.
The ghost pauses only at the very tip of the headland, and waits for Alanna to come so close they are nearly touching. Alanna finds herself enchanted by this apparition, for although it appears only in the form of some nameless girl, she sees in it Eliza, and herself, and many women before and after, dressed in strange attire as they smile sadly at her, reaching out their hands. She reaches out her own, and it gently passes through the shivering death, and for a moment she feels the truth and beauty known only in the afterlife. She understands love, as pure and boundless as it can only seldom be, between mother and child and selfless lovers.
It is with this last joyous reproach that she is encompassed in the ghost’s embrace. She sways gently with the cold absent touch, and as she sighs out in contentedness, lightning cracks.
Thunder strikes.
The headland crumbles into the sea, and Alanna crumbles with it.