Thlibnab splorted quietly to avoid flulluping aloud, tightened his three spines into alignment more straightly, on this, the most stately, within this, the most revered, dome of the high kingdom, on this, the most Wequian day of the Wequiass calendar.

Had there ever been more care taken in the braising of the spiced beavain?

The final chords rang out, and the elliavian players tucked globules into scale-plates most formally, signaling dessert.

Eons of patient culinary service to the reign of the High Wequat, paid dividends today.

Tureens ratchet-folded open, revealing steamed prattlems.

The High Wequat, falling upon seven elbows, wept.

More entries at Chuck Wendig’s terribleminds.

 

I can’t locate the quote, but I recently saw someone describe their writing process lately as “carrying water up a mountain by the teaspoonful”. That’s exactly where I am lately.

I’ve let all my effort on short fiction fall by the wayside, and I miss it quite a bit. Hopefully, I can work a few pieces up soon and get those out. One of the best things about writing is the whole feedback cycle that short work produces, so I need to do some of that soon.

Meanwhile, I’ve focused all my spare time lately into the longer work, Eyeslight, with is a novel I’ve been working on for, years, at this point. Writers write, but sometimes, it’s more a time-management game than anything else. When all is said and done, however, the only thing that matters is persistence. Keep at it, little by little, one teaspoon at a time, if that’s all you can manage.

If you’re in that same spot, keep at it, you’ll get there.

In the spirit of transparency, I wanted to share my numbers over the last few weeks.

I’d gotten the manuscript up around 10k at one point, and hit alot of roadblocks with plot, character, setting… so yeah pretty much everything.

I switched gears, and built a sample cityscape out in SecondLife, to work out the logistics, then destroyed it, tore it out and moved on to other things.

Last year, I put the thing up for the NaNoWriMo Gods, and had my ass readily handed to me, but I did manage to get the manuscript built up to around the 20k mark.

Went back into OSGrid, built it again, much better than before, if I do say so myself, as a full-sim project. It’s there now if you care to visit, but it’s just the skeleton of the place roughed out. I may or may not continue to flesh out the details.

Meanwhile, the manuscript was up to just over 22k.

About a month ago, I got a new second-wind on the draft, and that’s the push I’m on now. With this push, I’m trying to find time every day to get some wordcount in. I don’t always manage, but it’s been going better than it ever has. At the moment, I’m 10k up from where I was, and just recently crossed the 30k mark, which is tremendously encouraging.

Here’s the breakdown of the last three weeks of effort…

sat – 596
sun – 753, 669, 632
mon – 0
tue – 0
wed – 0
thr – 295, 405, 284, 519
fri – 280, 480

sat – 362
sun – 133
mon – 575
tue – 535
wed – 0
thr – 0
fri – 0

sat – 927
sun – 1013, 235, 571
mon – 259
tue – 549
wed – TODAY [31,908]
thr –
fri –

How are your goals? Are you getting it done? Here’s hoping so!

 

[Wordcount: 802]

Toby and Jayce didn’t talk much during the first few trips to the dig, they just did the work, grinding out the trips. Out to the dig, fill the dried leather satchels with the leather scoops, back to the collection zone to pour the black stuff onto the pile. Again and again. The tones in their headsets harmonized periodically as they walked the path, tones weak and strong fading in and out in threads, guiding their direction moment to moment.

Kella kept to her own rounds, but made eye contact with Toby each time they would pass in their columns.

“Hey Kella, nut up.” Kella made no face at the group of boys loitering at the dig, walked past them without showing her knotted rope or so much as replying to the challenge.

“Jayce probably has us all beat, dontcha, Jayce. Nut up, let’s see ‘em.”

“Nut yourself up, Royette. I don’t tie at the dig anymore.”

“There’s alot you don’t do anymore.”

“Tying at the dig is a lie. You don’t have a full trip until you’re down on the dump. Make your pickup, make it back. Until then, you don’t have a trip. Your knot’s not earned.”

“I’m a liar, Jayce?”

“Just calling reals reals. Something either is or it’s not. I’m not going to tie one and claim I did it if I didn’t make it all the way back. Not everyone makes it back.”

Royette pushed his way over to Jayce and got close, chest-to-chest. “Well I think you’re calling me a liar. Big talk for a murderer that can’t even do that right.”

The rage in Jayce that would normally have unsheathed him at the heart of the matter this time froze into his gut.

“Heh,” said Royette, backing away triumphantly, but also relieved, “You lost your bite.”

“Lost my stupid,” Jayce tossed back, “Looks like you found it, though.”

“C’mon, pick up,” Royette commanded his little troop, “Let’s get this trip dumped, actually earn our nuts,” throwing that last part a little more loudly, facing Jayce’s direction.

Jayce finished his grab and joined Toby on the return trip. On the way back in, they passed a group laughing and joking, but went silent as they approached.

“Half of them still think you’re the bully you’ve always been.”

“Yeah, and I can use that,” Jayce said, “Hey. You. Come here.” He set down his load and went over to the kid that had been laughing. The kid dropped his gear and scrambled backward a few steps.

“Don’t hurt me. Don’t hurt me like you did Liam…”

“Come here, you idiot,” Jayce reached for his head.

“Do as he says,” said Toby. Toby could be trusted; the kid stopped and let Jayce come at him.

Jayce adjusted the boy’s headset, “Your gear is on wrong. Tone like this instead. It’s clearer, safer.”

The kid looked around, smiled, “It worked, thanks.”

“Show others. Get smarter together.” Jayce picked up the boy’s gear and handed it to him. Both lines fell back into motion, one in and one out.

The crystal was still in the middle of the path where Toby had mixed up a batch of the powder. It had become a regular thing for those in the outgoing line to touch it for luck.

“How did you do it then, the crystal? All that shit out there, it’s all the same to me.”

“It all has tone. That’s why we tune up before we go out, so we know what’s what.”

“Yeah but, we just match up to the guide tone, then go at it. We’re not learning anything from that.”

“If you listen, you’ll hear, and if you take the time, you’ll learn. You can learn their signatures by tone, like music. Eventually, you get familiar with which do what.”

“Well, I know, we do that every day. That’s it? There’s no faster way?”

“There is no magic, Jayce. It’s all just hard work, grinding this out. You can just get quota and crank out another day, whatever. Or. You can really listen, learn this stuff, memorize every tone, get control over it.”

Jayce didn’t respond, he just kept walking, but was starting to really listen.

Kella was waiting after Toby finished rounds. He and Jayce went over to her.

“You’re here,” she said, staring at Jayce.

“Yeah, I am.”

“Yeah, you are, aren’t you,” despite her mixed concerns, she saw something different in Jayce.

The three of them walked to the Library, up the steps, and made their way in, toward the back room.

Jayce knocked.

There came no answer.

Kella shuffled her feet, pushed her oath band high on her arm.

Shadows fell long from the low sun, and they poured through the rubble inside the library. Noises could be heard behind the door.

Toby knocked again.

The door never opened.

 

(WARNING: This story has some yucky gore. If you’re not into yucky gore, you may want to give this one a pass.)

[Wordcount: 2373]

Arthur was compelled to count it out once again.

“1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14. Always right. Always f-, fourteen,” and backwards to be sure, “14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, and 1. One. One to fourt-, fourteen, fourteen to one. All good. All fourteen. All one. Did you hear me? DID YOU HEAR ME? I SAID ALL FOURTEEN! EVERY LAST O-, ONE OF Y-, YOU!”

Fourteen positions in a circle on the floor, carved into the wood, chipped away over weeks of work, handmade, quite literally. According to the book, it had to be done this way, or it wouldn’t be effective. Some jobs just cannot abide shortcuts.

So, as the book instructed, he had wrapped his finger off to let it die. He’d picked the ring finger of his right hand for this, in case he ever marries, he remembered thinking, that would be the finger he’d need the least. So he tied it off and let it die.

Once it was far enough gone, he went about the repulsive work of removing the dead finger and boiling it down to remove everything from the two bones he’d gotten free. The larger of the two he scrubbed on a rock until it was sharp enough to chip away bits of wood. Having tied the sharpened bone to a pencil with thick rubber bands, he was able to carve out the full design with fourteen positions.

“You and all your thirteen hounds, Xenth! DO YOU HEAR ME, XENTH? DO YOU SEE ME COMPLETING THIS? I bet it pisses you…” Arthur was gripped by some shapeless power that distracted him for a moment. He shook it off again. “There you are, you bastard. There you are. COME AT ME, YOU FUCK. Come at me, and watch as I finish this. Of all the things, you can’t distract me from this. Not this time, and never again.”

He fell into a chair in the corner and lifted a lumpy pillowcase that had been resting next to the chair. He opened it and looked inside. He was compelled to count them all out again. “1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14″, fourteen little clear plastic bags with one red dot inked on each. “1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14″, fourteen bags with two red dots inked on each. “1, 2, and 3″, three bags with no markings at all. “3, 2, 1″, “14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1,” “14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6,” he hesitated a moment, shook it off and continued, “5, 4, 3, 2, and 1.” All there.

The inked dots were all that distinguished one bag of stuff from the next. They were all clear bags, and all full of a gray-black powder that looked like powdered pencil graphite. Arthur held one of the un-inked bags up, gazed at it.

“What do you taste like, little robots, little machines?” he smelled deeply at the plastic, “If I breathe you, would you live in my blood?”

It had taken Arthur months studying the book enough to have summoned Xenth’s dogs in the first place, and months more studying how to send them back. It took even longer to find the nanopunks streetside that knew enough to put this together, and to get their hands on all the ingredients to do it. He was dedicated to his task; a man obsessed.

Arthur put the bag back into the pillowcase and set it aside, stood up, and went into the kitchen.

“I ALMOST HAVE EVERYTHING I NEED, XENTH. You’re losing this one, pal.”

On the kitchen table was a small paperboard box full of large-gauge barbed fishing hooks. He carefully pinched one from the box, and placed it on the table next to a 2×4 plank of wood. The plank was stained with reddish brown dried blood, and had a carved end that fit his hand in a custom grip.

Arthur closed his eyes and inhaled deeply. He exhaled. He inhaled again. “Okay, okay, okay. Do this, do this,” he exhaled. He opened his eyes and gripped the board with both hands, dropping the stained end to knee level. “Okay. Okay. Okay.”

He clenched his teeth and yelled.

“oooooOOOOKAYyyyyAAAAGGGH!!” Arthur swung the board upward as fast and as hard as he could manage, and bashed himself on the nose with the full force of the swing.

His vision popped white when the board connected and flushed into sparkly orange and yellow explosions while the pain spidered out across his face. He dropped the board and it clattered to the floor. His sinuses filled with a warm fullness, and he rushed to the upper freezer part of his refrigerator.

Arthur took out an ice tray, which was full of frozen red cubes except for one vacant space where a cube had not yet been made. He held this under his nose and let the space fill with his blood. He watched the smooth dribble cross-eyed as the cube space filled, and he quoted from the book, “…bait of the blood from a man given to his task.”

“LAST ONE FILLED, XENTH. LAST ONE!!”

He got the hook from the table, and placed it into the wet cube, and positioned it to match the hooks in all the other cubes.

Arthur was able to get the tray back into the freezer and close it off before he passed out.

When he woke, he was on the floor, unsurprisingly covered in dried blood around his face and neck and hands. He double-checked the freezer first; all fourteen cubes were done, made and ready. All set.

With that reassurance, he took the time to clean up, pick the blood from under his fingernails and scrub the floor and table. The work with the board was complete, so he washed that up, too.

He stepped over to a wall mirror and looked at himself, examined his partial profile, tested the bridge of his nose with an index finger on each side. It crunched around quite a bit, but probably no new breaks deeper than what he had already inflicted. He looked at his growing beard, the weird fray of his hair, but had a hard time looking into his own eyes; he felt like a stranger to himself. He forced himself to look at himself. How long had this been going on; at least a few years now, worse and worse; before he lost his job and started pulling from savings, before friends stopped calling. Over his shoulder, he could see the lumpy pillowcase next to the chair…

“ENOUGH, XENTH.” he pulled himself away from the mirror. “Enough distraction. We have business. You and I.”

Arthur grabbed the bag and went to the carved circle and started laying out the little bags of powder.

“1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14.” He spoke the numbers as he placed all the bags with one inked dot were laid out, one at each carved position. “1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14.” All the bags with two dots were laid, stacked on top of the first: fourteen piles of two. In the center, he placed all three unmarked bags in a stack, one on the other. He rushed over to a drawer next to the oven and grabbed a hammer and a fist full of nails from a box, then put the hammer and one nail in the circle, and put one nail with each of the fourteen piles.

“Haven’t stopped me yet, Xenth. There’s still time, brother! Still time to interrupt me, yet again!” he taunted.

“Now it gets tight.” Arthur muttered. Now everything is on the clock, everything has a lifespan, and it’s all got to mesh like gears, or this clock won’t tick.

Arthur looked around, double-checking all the pieces, re-counting all the components. Everything looked ready. He started.

He went to the center of the circle, taking hammer and the one nail, and pounded the spike through the stack of three bags, both pinning them together on the floor, and piercing them all so they begin to mix. The pile began to churn and buzz and spill out and fold over, kneading itself to life.

At the fridge, he pulled out the ice tray of blood cubes, and twisted it to free the cubes as he rushed back to the circle.

Starting at the first carved position, he pulled out a cube by the hook eye, placed it next to the pair of stacked bags, then drove a nail into those bags. He moved to the next position and repeated.

The center of the circle churned and formed itself into a small geometric box or cage or skeleton of some deliberate shape, which had individual formations on each of the side shafts that seemed to be some sort of plug or connector; fourteen of them.

At the first carved position, the pair of bags melded together and began to push out two tendrils. One tendril grew toward the center of the circle; the other grew opposite and outward from the circle.

So far, evidently, miraculously, the nanotech was performing as promised by the people Arthur had gotten it from; forming the component pieces as planned, as programmed.

Once he’d completed the circuit of fourteen positions, he was back to the first. He took the outer-reaching tendril and fed it through the eye of the hook in the frozen blood cube, and folded it back upon itself. The tendril wove into itself, forming a permanent adhesion. This he did the full round of the circle, for the remaining fourteen positions.

Once done, he’d noticed that the geometric skeletal basket in the center had fully formed, and was clamping onto connections from all the tendrils, each connecting to its own connection plug in a way that appeared to be magnetic somehow. Again: as planned, by the programming.

“That’s the shit.” He was impressed; it seemed that for once, he had trusted in the right kind of people.

Each of the fourteen piles had finished forming into piles of strands their full length, and the setup was complete.

Arthur retrieved the book from the kitchen counter, between the regular cookbooks, and fell to his knees near the circle, opening the book up to a page marked by a clump of his own hair.

The language written in the book was one that he’d learned by reading, but was mostly unsure if he was pronouncing everything exactly correctly. It stood to reason, though, that his summoning of Xenth, the Omnitherian god of Distraction, had worked well enough, as he’d been plagued by Xenth and his pack of dogs since his experimental run through the Incantation of Calling. He was confident that his recitation skill was well enough to suit.

He read loudly and carefully, with purpose and intent. He fought at every breath to not stutter, to not waste his effort, to not succomb to the call of distraction; the power of Xenth himself.

The recitation took several minutes of time, and Arthur fully lost himself into the text, entirely focused on the purpose at hand. As he concluded, the portal, in fact, opened.

He closed the book and set it aside while the floor in the center of the circle melted away from the idea of reality. It went blurry and dreamy, spilled out with fireflies of light riding long sweeping tracers. The nanotech-formed cage began to float above the portal and pulse up and down as if breathing.

Arthur could hear, near his head, behind his right ear, the panting of a curious dog, beginning to whine. Turning, he saw no such dog, but he could hear another, and another. He had the attention of Xenth’s hounds.

He stood and grabbed the first of the frozen, hooked, blood cubes, and threw it hard toward the area where he had heard the panting dog. He did this with all fourteen cubes, laying bait for the entire pack of hounds, and one for Xenth himself.

One by one, the strands went taught against their anchors at the cage hovering above the portal. Once all fourteen strands went fully tight, they began to vibrate each their own tone, musical, but not in any scale or key that was natural to the human ear. All fourteen tones together harmonized a horrific storm of sound, which fed the portal.

The portal yawned powerfully, and inhaled the skeletal cage, swallowing it into itself to a vanishing depth. The howl of the thing was nearly deafening.

Each of the dogs had its turn to yelp and to be dragged toward the portal, slowly pulling out of Arthur’s reality, hooked in the jaw by the blood bait Arthur had crafted.

He counted all the hounds as they flushed into the portal. “One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six. Seven. Eight. Nine. Ten. Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen.” Every hound accounted for.

Only one tendril remained.

“IT’S DOWN TO YOU, XENTH.” Arthur plucked the tendril like a guitar string, just to hear its sickening song.

The portal strained against the power of an Omnitherian God, but the fibres in the nano cable were holding.

Xenth emerged.

He was unlike what Arthur had pictured; composed more of memory-images and thought-bits than of physical stuff, and it looked like he was hooked through the fist, like Xenth had grabbed the bait with his hand, unlike mouthing at it like all the hounds had.

The arm of Xenth slowly appeared, being pulled toward the vortex of the portal.

“I KNOW YOU’RE NOT USED TO THIS KIND OF THING. YOU KNOW, THINGS COMING TO COMPLETION. DON’T FEEL BAD THOUGH, NOTHING LASTS FOREVER.”

It crossed Arthur’s mind how long the portal would remain open, and wondered how long the cables would remain in tact.

As if he caused it, the nanotech tendril swirled into smoke, and the portal choked closed.

“D-, damn it.”

 

Due to the generous nature of one Helen Howell, Yours Truly is the gracious recipient of The Versatile Blogger award, thusly:

The terms of this award, as it came to me, are as follows:
1. Acknowledge he or she who presented the award to you.
2. Post seven random facts about yourself.
3. Present the award onward to five other people.
(Although, as I look, it appears that the terms of this award has changed as it translates from person to person. I believe that earlier on, terms were to present this to fifteen other people, for example.)

I’ll be honest here. My first inclination was “Wow, someone thought enough of my blog to mention it!” followed quickly by “Oh, it’s just one of those vanity things.” Normally, I don’t like those ‘answer twenty questions about yourself’ things, so I just overlook them and keep going.

But for me, this time, it was more important that someone thought enough of my work, and went through the time and effort to mention me in a post, so, that meant alot more.

So, in the spirit…
Thanks, Helen Howell [web]! I’m grateful you take the time to read my work, and are enjoying it to some degree. Thanks for mentioning my blog and passing the award on [here]. There’s a thousand bloggers out there, so thanks for picking me!

Seven random facts:
1. I enjoy finding fossilized shark teeth on a beach more than any human being ought. In my head, I’m finding a thing that’s easily 10,000 years old, is unique beyond unique, and that fact must mean that it was done with some un-understandable and universally coordinated purpose.
2. When I was a kid, riding a bicycle, without fail, every single ride was not on a bicycle, but in a spaceship, with lasers, being chased by aliens, which always, all, got shot, by me, via my last working laser, since the rest were damaged by asteroid debris.
3. I’ve recently lost a black matte Fisher ballpoint Bullet Space Pen and a vintage Pilot MYU 701 fountain pen. It haunts a huge portion of my brain, which is occupied at every moment of every day, hoping that I’ll discover I’ve merely misplaced these pens in some dumb place, and I could find them at any moment. (Same for my wedding band, and I’m too ashamed to talk on that matter further.)
4. I hate Tweetdeck, and I use it almost exclusively on my Mac, which I hate. I prefer a PC, and anything other than Tweetdeck. In Tweetdeck, I habitually clear posts from columns because I cannot abide the columns to appear untidy. There are times when I don’t even read tweets; I just spend time with Tweetdeck, clearing out columns.
5. Coffee, no sugar, half/half. Unless sometimes with sugar too. Unless sometimes on ice. Any time of the day is fine.
6. I have one tattoo, covering my lower right leg. It’s the cover from the playbill of a play I wrote in 1994 called “Within Confines of Likeness”, done by the incredible Justin Bolonski [web] [Facebook]
7. I saw “Cannonball Run” when it opened at a drive-in theater, while sitting on top of a red International Harvester Travelall [this thing].

Five award recipients:
I had a tough time picking recipients, but, here they are! (I’ve tried to pick people who have not yet received this award, so, maybe I did or didn’t.) Congratulations, kids, you’ve been awarded! Please follow these people, read their stuff, leave comments; they are all outstanding writers.
1. Emma Newman [twitter] [web]
2. Maria Kelly [twitter] [web]
3. Stephen Green [twitter] [web] (Is Stephen on Twitter? I couldn’t locate…)
4. Justin Davies [twitter] [web]
5. Adam J Keeper [twitter] [web]

The lineage:
This was the first time I’d heard of this award, so I did what I always do, which is to go Googling. I was hoping to find where the award originated, who started it, why it was started, something of that nature. What I found was anything but that information. Tons of people have been recipients, but I’m still not sure where it started, or what the original rules were.

My bright idea then, was, fine, I’ll trace my lineage back, starting with Helen, and we’ll see where we go. And so, my Versatile Blogger lineage:

I got it from…
Helen Howell [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
FARfetched [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Angela Kulig [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Melanie McCullough [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Sara Furlong Burr [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Shawna Railey [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Sophie Li [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Ashley Graham [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Cherie [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Lori M. Lee [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
CP Ani [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Sophia Chang [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Angela Perry [twitter] [web] [via] (hey! this person sounds familiar!) Who got it from…
Katrina Latham [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Michelle B [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Manda [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Just Ramblin’ [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
anjobanjo22 [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Melissa Morse [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Rita R [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Lian [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
d@rk_@ngel_kn!ght [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
Elizabeth Obih-Frank [twitter] [web] [via] Who got it from…
The Reason You Come [twitter] [web] [via]

…and that’s when it got interesting. At this point, two people gave the award to The Reason You Come. I followed both forks. One fork led to one person, and then to another. That person was awarded by five different others, listed at once. The other fork led to a person that was awarded by seven different others, listed at once.

This is where I gave up.

I thought about following all the combinations back, just to see where they might lead. I thought about coming up with a rule to follow, like “always assume the last listed, or the most recent, is the fair lineage, and go from there”. In the end, though, I decide that as interesting as it might become, I’ve spent enough time on this to be satisfied for now.

Thanks again, Helen!

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