Saturday, October 25, 2014
The Battle for October Sky – Part One
Author's Note: this story takes place in the same world as my fantasy/steampunk world featured in a previous story: Badlands Journal
Captain Reginald Beaumont stared out over the sea of dunes searching for signs of life: a dot suggesting a head, natural oases, a line of tracks in the sand, fresh kills, man-sized shadows. In short, anything that could harbor a threat to his airship. One loony with a rifle would be all it would take. One lucky shot to deflate the wrong air sac, or jam an elevator, or the rudder, to consign his airship and crew to a slow death upon the sands. Damn the desert heat! Beaumont reached up to his collar buttons but stopped short. No, better to wait until he was out of the crew's view. Let them see sweat, not weakness.
A faint cough sounded behind him, more as an announcement of presence than actual need to expunge the lungs.
"Yes, Chevket?" Beaumont said.
"Sir," the younger, taller, and much thinner man said, "the engine room reports that our powerplant will need changing within the hour."
"Have we lost the capability of hot-swapping deaders?"
Chevket turned his head and gave an apologetic bow. "The engineer feels it would aid the deaders' recovery if we did not subject them to the undue stress of swapping while under load."
"Duly noted. Inform Mister Wallace to proceed with the hot-swap."
"Sir." Chevket moved to the brass tube and began relaying the order to the engine room.
Engineers, thought Beaumont, must have fears of becoming deaders themselves the way they coddled their charges. More interested in their unnaturally-animated husks and the precious engines they powered than for the integrity of the of the October Sky's gleaming silver envelope floating the airframe and all the truly living souls aboard. Such was the luxury of a ship’s engineer, but not its captain.
Friday, October 17, 2014
A Letter to Colleen
Over
the last couple of weeks, I've tried and tried to write a fitting
memorial to my old friend Colleen. I failed. Everything sounded like
an obituary. Fact is, I still can't believe she's gone. When I left
Colorado two Fridays ago to see family and friends in the Midwest, my
plan and hope was to visit with Colleen, provided she was up to it.
I'd be in the area for three days and kept my plans loose, hoping
that on at least one of those days I'd be given the
go-ahead by the Powers That Be to stop in. Instead, I had
lunch with another one of our friends and got a chance to hug her tightly.
Every time I think about Colleen, it's like I'm talking to
her in my head and because there were things I wanted to tell her, my
good-bye won't be a good-bye. It'll be a letter, a letter I should
have written long ago.
Hey
Colleen,
In
the 35 years we've known each other, I don't think I ever told you
how much I admire you. Yeah, that sounds way too sentimental and
let's change the subject and all that, but it's true. And here's the
thing, that's exactly what you are: true. True to yourself. True to
the ideals you've held all your life. True to the friends you've
gathered along the way.
I
think I was a bit intimidated by you when we met, but you know how my
memory is. You were so damn sure of yourself, so amazingly smart and
perfectly at home in the world. I could tell just by watching you
walk. Your loose-limbed amble belied your sharp eye, taking in the
stories that surrounded you. And, for you, everything and everyone
had a story, even if you had to make it up. Of course those were the
best stories, but it took me a while to figure that out.
Still,
you befriended me and I count myself lucky to be included in the
posse of characters that pepper your life. I wish I'd recorded some
of our marathon phone sessions from the early days. What the hell did
we talk about for hours at a time day after day? Our kids? No, too
mundane, unless they'd done something off-the-wall. But I do have
every one of our party invitations for the Winter Solstice
One-Size-Fits-All Sing for Your Supper parties you so loved to host.
Every once in a while I take them out and read them, always ending up
with tears of laughter streaming down my face. I can hear your voice;
I can see you sitting at the typewriter(!) pounding them out as we
tossed off ideas. It was easier, though, if I did the typing because
you liked to pace and wander about the room.
Wandering
has always been your specialty, one of the things I most admire about
you. (I know, I know, stop with the praise already!) In my own
travels I was never as mindful as you about how important the journey
is as compared to the goal. The journey, after all, is fodder for new
stories and introduces you to countless interesting folks that you
can either turn into the heroes of your stories, or kill them off.
Killing them off is so much fun!
We lost touch for a while, but when we reconnected, I was sad to know that you
had a place on the city council and that I was no longer there to
dutifully document its foibles for the newspaper of record. How much
fun that would have been! I can see the worst of them rolling their
eyes and gritting their teeth every time you called them out for a
stupid idea. And there, right there, is one of the best parts of
Colleen Sutherland: your ability to point out flaws in someone's
reasoning with calmly stated logic. Often, they don't get it and
while you never suffer fools gladly, you often choose not to waste
your time. The patented Colleen shrug and a mumbled "idiot"
have to suffice.
Misfits,
though, misfits always have a friend in you. Anyone who has been
deemed too odd, too complicated, too scary
to be taken seriously can count on your advocacy, if not your
friendship. And if some sacred cow needs to be slayed, you're always
there to pick up the knife. Remember how we took a bottle of wine out
to the cemetery to watch the Perseid meteor shower? I was all for
just lying on the top of the car, but nope, it was a grave or nothing
for you. I forget now whose graves you chose, but we spent a few
giddy hours lying side by side in the dark, sipping wine and watching
the skies.
Then there was my 30th birthday party. It was back in your
old house and you even made a cake; cucumber-shaped with sickly green
frosting. Only a few of us knew why. One of my relatives showed up
and completely ruined the party, at least for me. You rather liked
that relative at first, found her stories fascinating. But you saw
how distressed I was and wasted no time asking the woman to leave,
politely, but pointedly. Later, you took me aside and asked me why in
the world I would allow such a person in my life. That was long
before the phrase "toxic relationships" was part of the
lexicon, but you knew all about those.
You
also knew I wouldn't listen. Not then anyway, but some months later I
excised that particular poison from my life and have had 30 years of
peace. You're the only person I never had to explain it to. Thank you
for that. Thank you for making me crazy with your logic and your
honesty. Thank you for teaching me how to shrug and walk away. Thank
you for pushing me to write, to do what I love and how to push
through fears. And thank you most of all for your love draped like a
loose arm around my shoulders, never too tight and always ready to
set me free ... and to let me back in.
With
love,
Betty
This week's story Lightening the Load
- Bettyann
Friday, October 10, 2014
Colleen Sutherland, Storyteller
This week, we lost our friend Colleen.
In the almost eight years I knew her, Colleen was the bohemian writer and provocateur that I aspired to be. Her life was like a series of short story hooks: getting married on a lunch break, waiting out a riot in a bar, living in a house cut in half, or living through the Summer of Love. She was woman whose only regrets were never having been arrested, and not writing her stories earlier.
She was my greatest cheerleader, and often said that our writer’s group meetings were important because while family and friends could be sympathetic, they could never truly understand the maladies of the daily writer. We celebrated getting our stories published by magazines no one knew existed, thumbed our noses at rejection letters from even more obscure publications, held book sales in supermarkets, and challenged each other’s boundaries. I consider getting Colleen to kill a dog in a story to be one of my supreme accomplishments as a writer. She taught me that a writer’s voice develops naturally from writing, and writing, and writing some more.
She told me she used to be afraid of death, so she started hospice volunteering and got over it. I like to believe that at the end, she stared at the reaper and was not scared, only curious. Maybe she flipped him off. The cancer took away her words first, so I will never know. She didn’t want a funeral; she said that when you’re dead, that’s it. I urge you to keep that in mind when you read her story this week and know that while she was writing it, she was laughing the whole time.
Friday, October 3, 2014
Element of Doubt
By
Bettyann Moore
“Darn
it, here he comes,” Kitty Nesbitt said, peering through the living
room blinds. She let the slat fall with a shuddering clatter.
“Oh,
you don’t know that he’ll stop here,” Pete said. “He could
just as well pass us by and go to the Johnson’s or Muriel Flat’s.”
Kitty
snorted. “I know for a fact,” Kitty told her husband, “that
Muriel Flat hides in the laundry room where there are no windows or
doors. I admire her for that.”
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