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.
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.
Has anyone pointed Sophia to photo 9? Because it's so her!
Edit: You know what, she's never around, but I'm going to email it to her.
Has anyone pointed Sophia to photo 9? Because it's so her!
lightbulb goes off
THAT'S why the girl in the photo looked so familiar! I was actually wondering, in livejournal, where I'd met her.
I admit, as soon as I saw that photo, I thought of Sophia.
I'm actually working on some edits to Cruel Sister right now. This is the first I've done on the book since the flooring insanity began, and it may work to my advantage, since the six or so week hiatus away from the book brings me to it with fresh eyes.
For Photo 7:
That day was the last time I saw Robert. We had slipped away from our offices, meeting in the park across from his hospital. Sitting so close that I could make out the brown fleck in the blue of his left eye, I wondered if the warmth I felt was from the sun dappled across our backs, or from his arm brushing mine.
His voice cracked as he said, "I have some news." It seemed that his uncle, who managed the family trust, had seen us one afternoon at the theatre before the lights had fully dimmed, watching as Robert brushed my cheek with his fingertips.
Research, Robert said, took money. He couldn't risk that.
Three months later, he and Susan were married.
Photo #8
My God, I love those women. I loved them within a month of meeting them, and I still love them, even now that two of us are dead. We called ourselves the Fantastic Five, knowing full well we were a decade past the time for Fantastic Fives. It fit us, somehow, just as we fit with each other. I still remember the night we took that picture. It was late one night, a week or so before Spring Break our freshman year. Janet wanted pictures of us to show her parents, to prove we were all proper young ladies.
I’m pretty sure she didn’t show them this one.
"Look at Me" Challenge picture #4 .
I don’t know why my husband insisted on taking this picture. We have been married for five years, and there’s still so much I don’t understand about him. It was a Tuesday afternoon; I was sweaty, tired, and uncomfortable from kneeling on the rocks. He came down to the river and said he needed to take my picture. He said I looked especially beautiful in that moment. Beautiful while doing laundry? I told him he was talking crazy, and he responded by saying I am always beautiful. Maybe someday I will be able to see me the way he does.
These drabbles are all completely amazing. What a stunning topic and stunning results.
(Oh, and I totally also thought of Sophia.)
Photo 6
Alternate Memories
I found the photo among my mother's effects. Peculiar, really; my mother, although something of a magpie, tended to save material objects, rather than personal touches.
I recognised the room at once. That was my grandmother's study, where she wrote her terrifying books, the shelves of what she called "fodder", full of facts and statistics, completely devoid of enchantment for a child. Yet I loved being allowed to bear her company, although she mostly ignored me, concentrating instead upon the written page.
This morning, staring at the photo, I realised one final oddity; I've no clue who either of those boys are.