This is so nice. Having everyone together for my birthday. Of course, you could smash in all my toes with a hammer and it will still be the bestest Buffy Birthday Bash in a big long while.

Buffy ,'Potential'


The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...  

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


Betsy HP - Mar 16, 2005 11:56:09 am PST #639 of 10001
If I only had a brain...

Brrrrr.


Connie Neil - Mar 16, 2005 12:01:53 pm PST #640 of 10001
brillig

I can't think of anything for the other pictures. Anything that's not already been done. It's very frustrating.


Liese S. - Mar 16, 2005 12:19:36 pm PST #641 of 10001
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

for posterity

#3

Everyone knew eventually one of them would fill Annette's shoes.

Barb had insisted on the bash. "It's your responsibility, Hugh." What else did they have to do? One could only take so many tropical vacations.

Gloria pressed the camera into my palms. "Go on, dear, just snap a few. For posterity, you know." Her laughter rippled like her dresses.

Later they'd blame the alcohol. Barb's voice dropped when she was angry; Gloria's became shrill.

But when they had all gone, I cleared the glasses, emptied the ashtrays, tucked the children into bed.

Hugh was still sitting there. "Anita." I went to him. I always did.


Liese S. - Mar 16, 2005 12:23:03 pm PST #642 of 10001
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Huh. What did I do with my link? Oh, left a space, huh?

Also, couldn't trim those last 10 words. Couldn't figure out what to do.


Atropa - Mar 16, 2005 1:09:18 pm PST #643 of 10001
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

I've given up on the 100-word limit. But, I'm trying to make the drabbles as short as possible.

Photo #5

The Donna Messinger-Tofferdept "Little Girl Lost" mystery lingers to this day. In 1973, a young girl in a flannel nightgown was found crying in a Woolworth's toy department in Anaconda, Montana. No one in the town recognized her. Stating her name was Donna Messinger and that she was from Chicago, every attempt was made to reunite her with her family. However, not only was the Messinger family unable to be located, but the home address Donna gave was a deserted lot between two apartment buildings. After a blaze of publicity, she was identified as Donna Tofferdept, who had gone missing two years earlier from her family home in Worland-Ten-Step, Wyoming. Donna did not recognize the Tofferdepts, and insisted that her real family were the ones pictured in the photo that was clutched in her hand when she was originally found. While the photo did indeed show Donna, no one knew who the other three people were. Unable to accept the Tofferdepts as her family, Donna ran away from home when she was 14. She left a note saying that she had seen her brother, Butch, in a car going down the highway, and that she was determined to re-join her real family. The Tofferdepts, having no other children and blaming each other for Donna's refusal to believe she was their daughter, divorced three years later.


SailAweigh - Mar 16, 2005 1:25:53 pm PST #644 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Damn, Jilli. That last one was the creepiest for being the closest to "normal."

Photo #2.

Days of Wine and Roses

The summer that Nancy got married was the last time we went out on the river. Tucked under our skirts, we’d hidden two glasses and a bottle of father’s port. The bottle swung against my leg as we hauled the boat out to the breakwater. The pilfered wine would taste good as we let the boat drift along the riverbank, we thought.

It was a good trip. The pull of the oars and the breeze in our faces gave us a sense of movement that we knew would be over with Nancy’s marriage. Afterward: no mobility, no choices, no freedom.

edited for continuity, they weren't in a canoe.


Connie Neil - Mar 16, 2005 1:42:03 pm PST #645 of 10001
brillig

[link] Photo 9

Production Assistant Nicole held it out. "From your nephew."

I'd been so proud of that coat, that matching bag; so eager to head off to my new life at U.C. Berkeley. Brother Chuck was attempting to be cool, trying not to be impressed that his mousy little sister was daring the Big City.

1969 saw me burning the coat as a sign of bourgeois sensibility, but I held on to enough of my senses to finish Journalism School and get a job with local TV news. Now I was retiring, and the office was looking for embarassing material to use in the retrospectives.

At least the coat was long gone.

Nicole looked over my shoulder. "I'd kill for a coat like that, it's so hip and retro."


SailAweigh - Mar 16, 2005 1:44:02 pm PST #646 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Hehe. When my grandmother passed away I scarfed up her faux-leopard coat, hat and purse. The coat didn't fit me so I gave it to one of my daughter's friends. I do wear the hat and the purse upon occassion.


Scrappy - Mar 16, 2005 1:44:34 pm PST #647 of 10001
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

[link]

No woman had ever gone all the way around the lake, not without a man along to do the "heavy" work. Lem, their brother, laughed at both of them when they asked to borrow the boat. He told them both not to make spectacles of themselves. He warned them they could get hurt. Lalie snapped her fingers at him and started untying the bow.

Cora and Lalie didn't tell anyone else about their plans, but by duskof the perfect end-of-summer day, a crowd had gathered. Most of the folks from the cabins on the shore had gathered near Isaacson's store. There was some hooting and catcalling when their skirts rode up as they carried the boat over the pier, some cheering, but everyone was watching. Lem took the mooring rope from Lalie's hand. This time when she snapped her fingers, he smiled. Lem mentioned the boat trip at Cora's funeral. He was proud folks still remembered it 60 years later. "I was there to see them off" he said.


Amy - Mar 16, 2005 3:01:54 pm PST #648 of 10001
Because books.

Photo 6

They’d made me redundant, my sons.

Theirs were the names on Ivy’s tongue, the hair smoothed beneath her hand, the dreams that quivered beneath her lashes as we lay in bed each night. They were the reason for the spicy perfume of apple brown betty in the kitchen, the carefully planned excursions to the seashore, the sleek piano in the parlor with its full-throated song, every penny she secreted away for rainy days to come.

Maurice was her lifeline when Bernard drowned. I grieved for the sons I never had a chance to know, the wife who had abandoned me for motherhood.