
Wanting to QUIT and START AGAIN!
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To take part in this challenge in word discipline, check out this site:http://www.showmyface.com/search/label/6WS
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Wanting to QUIT and START AGAIN!
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To take part in this challenge in word discipline, check out this site:http://www.showmyface.com/search/label/6WS
~
Marybell Westmoreland was, at the delicate age of 82, a soft, pink-cheeked, quiet woman. Standing merely five feet, one inch tall, she nevertheless commanded total respect from rich and poor, elite and scoundrel.
No one really knew for sure if she was rich or just extremely smart and thrifty. Very few people ever saw her actually spend money, but she always seemed to have a well-stocked larder, immaculate gardens, late-model vehicles, elegant gowns, and hoards of priceless jewelry.
She seldom entertained these days, but when she did, the party was one for the society columns to slobber over. She nearly always had a guest list that included several members of royalty – from half a dozen different countries – as well as homeland celebrities and scores of friends. They ate; they danced; they gossiped; they groveled where necessary; and they had an all-round rollicking good time.
That’s why, when the Thursday morning papers reported that Marybell Westmoreland had been arrested and charged with poisoning her gardener, citizens from all around the world were in shock.
“I just do not believe it!” one duchess was heard to exclaim to her husband as she slammed down the paper. “Why, we’ve known Marybell for decades! She hasn’t an evil bone in her little body!”
“Mmmm,” replied her hubby. “Well, my dear, these things generally do take one by surprise, you know.”
“Nonsense! They have the wrong person; that’s all! You’ll see!”
“Well … time will tell, my love,” hubby replied, as he finished his coffee and rose to gather his hat and briefcase, preparing to head out for a meeting.
“I must send her a telegram to encourage her!” he heard his wife add as the butler let him out the front door.
And so the duchess sent her telegram – as did scores of other friends and family from all echelons of society.
Having been released on an exceedingly large bail, Marybell Westmoreland, chose to go straight to her home and refused to see anyone or go out in public for any reason. News reporters swarmed the area just outside the boundaries of her property, hoping to get a tiny glimpse that would allow a chance at a photo that would, no doubt, at least triple the sales of their particular newspaper.
One enterprising young woman reporter did manage to talk one of the maids into speaking with her, and when asked how Miss Westmoreland was behaving, the maid answered, “Oh, she’s the same as ever, Lord love her. She goes about the house hummin’ to herself just like usual, and she has her meals at the right time, and eats like a horse. It’s a sure bet she ain’t worried about gettin’ a death sentence.”
By the time a month had passed – and the scheduled trial was still three more weeks away — the reporters went back to ordinary stories and let the old lady go on about her life uninterrupted. Gossip seemed to die down. There just wasn’t enough activity taking place in Marybell’s day-to-day life to add any fuel to the fire.
Finally, the trial began. Each side presented various forms of what they considered evidence, but everything was so circumstantial that most of the people following the proceedings had made up their minds within three days that there would be nothing to convict the old bird.
They were all the more shocked then, when the defense attorney put Marybell on the stand herself. Naturally, the judge asked her publicly if she understood that she did not have to testify against herself, and she replied that she did understand. “But I don’t mind, Your Honor,” she told him. “I’ll be glad to testify. After all, it’s my own trial, is it not? How ill-mannered would I be to expect people to come to my trial if I don’t even act like a good hostess and talk to them!”
The judge rolled his eyes and turned to her attorney. “Do you agree with this decision, Mr. Withers?”
“No, Your Honor, but my client has insisted.”
“Very well. Proceed then.”
“Thank you, Your Honor,” he said and cleared his throat for the coming interrogation. After asking Marybell to verify her name and other identifying information, he went right to his first shocking question.
“Now, Miss Westmoreland, will you tell us, please, did you poison your own gardener, Mr. Samuel Trustbody?”
“Yes, I did,” she replied, looking him directly in the eye.
The audience in the courtroom – including both attorneys and the judge – sucked in an audible breath.
“I beg your pardon?” said Mr. Withers. And days later, one reporter made the comment that the look on the poor defense attorney’s face at that moment was one for the history books.
Very calmly, as if she did that sort of thing every day, Marybell replied, “I said, yes, I did.”
Mr. Withers cleared his throat again. “You are saying that you poisoned your gardener, Mr. Samuel Trustbody, in order to kill him?”
She nodded her head, her soft pink cheeks looking just a little pinker than usual, but with no other sign of any agitation. “Yes, that is correct.”
Poor Mr. Withers had never lost a case so quickly, and he just did not know how to deal with the situation. He cleared his throat again, but when he began to ask the next question, his voice came out so squeaky that he had to start again. “And … may I ask why you killed your gardener, Miss Westmoreland?”
“Well, you see I had to.”
“Go on, please. Why did you have to kill him?”
“Because he just insisted on digging up the whole yard behind the greenhouse to plant a new garden. Naturally, I couldn’t let him do it. I tried to talk him out of it. I even ordered him not to do it. But all he would say was that his contract with me said that he had free rein to plant anywhere he saw fit, and he was convinced no other place would be right for that kind of garden.”
“But … surely … madam … that was not sufficient reason to take his life!”
“Oh, I had to! Don’t you see? If I had let him go back there and dig up all that area, why … he would have discovered all the other bodies I’ve buried back there.”
THE END
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© 2013 Sandra Conner
I decided to have some fun with a little graphic art for this week’s photo challenge. This is my take on “Infinite.”
Hop over to the WP site and learn how to take part.
http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/10/11/photo-challenge-infinite/
This Week’s photo prompt is from Sandra Crook:
My story is below:
CURTAIN CALL
Since the earthquake, the amphitheater’s rubble. Few seats intact – and the stage – where ….
Worming my way around boulders, over loose rock, I descend to the stage.
Today, the wind mourns through here, but that night it was deadly still – as was the audience – awaiting the climax of the murder scene. I was afraid – but I had to do it.
I can feel now the weight of the dagger I used to replace the fake one. I plunged it deep – just as the world around us came apart. Falling on top of me, his body took the boulder that would have killed me.
~~~
Hurry on over to Rochelle Wiseoff-Fields’ site and get into the act.
http://rochellewisofffields.wordpress.com/2013/10/09/11-october-2013/
Hey, don’t run away!
You’re in the right place.
I just thought it was time for a new title.
Hope you like it.
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Julia’s prompt this week was one little word:
“… fall ….”
When I saw it, I was just suddenly attacked by this overwhelming sense of whimsy. I could attribute the result to the fact that I did actually try a new snack food a couple weeks ago that was part of a contest. But it’s more likely the fact that ‘fall’ is in the air, and it’s my most, most, most favorite time of the year. Whimsy is just bubbling out of me!

“Now, Doris, don’t fall apart when I tell you this.”
“Tell me what? What’s happened!”
“Now don’t start. There’s nothing we can do about it.”
“About what !”
“See, I knew you’d over-react.”
“For crying out loud, Melody, what’s going on!”
“Well … you didn’t win ….”
“Huh? Didn’t win … what?”
“The ‘Name the New Potato Chip’ contest.”
“I didn’t enter any contest! What’s with you?”
“Well … I entered for you. You suggested the new chip be called ‘Tangerine Tango.’”
“Well, thank God I didn’t win!”
“Why?”
“You know I hate tangerines, and they’d send me a whole box of those chips.”
“Yeah, and you give me everything you don’t like. I love tangerines!”
~
Hop over to Julia’s Place and get involved. You don’t have to write something as ridiculous as I have. We like sensible writers too.
http://jfb57.wordpress.com/2013/10/07/100-word-challenge-for-grown-ups-week108/
This daily prompt is based on the proverb that says “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” The prompt asks us to show you beauty — as we see it. The photo below is one that I love. There will, no doubt, be a few people who do not like it, but to me there is a special beauty in it. I took it a few years ago and edited it with the photo program to get exactly this effect. I use the photo for a line of Christmas cards that I am very proud of.
Well it does feel good to get back in the saddle with Friday Fictioneers. I have been a little swamped with other work the past couple months and have missed out on the fun. But this week I am going to have even more fun than usual because not only have I written a story in response to the challenge, but I have also invited the students in my current creative writing class to participate along with me.
Unfortunately, most of those students have not had the time to submit something for this week’s prompt (I keep them too busy writing for the class), but two students have joined me. The first submission is a 100-word story from Jo Boester, who is a new blogger here on WordPress. (You will find her blog at this link: http://jboester.wordpress.com/).
The second submission is a 100-word poem from Erin Campbell. Now, Erin actually submitted this poem for another challenge we took part in, but when I looked at the picture for this week and saw the connection with the ocean, I took it upon myself to encourage her to let her poem apply to FF’s as well. She writes of tide and time from a unique perspective, and I think it’s a fitting response to the challenge.
I’m very proud of both of these writers and look forward to seeing them pursue their writing goals and publish more of their work in the near future.
Last of all, you will find my story. I was just in the mood for romance this week, and although seagulls seem to be the main focus of the photo, my mind and heart were captured by the beach itself and the romantic interlude it inspired. Hope you enjoy what we have to offer.
Here’s the photo prompt, which comes to us from E. A. Wicklund at http://momusnews.wordpress.com/
THE LONELY SEAGULL
by Jo Boester
As I walked on the beach early one morning, I spied a seagull ahead of me, sluggishly wading in the water. The closer I came to him the more I could sense his loneliness. When I drew closer, I saw another seagull circling overhead.
The seagull in flight was slowly closing the gap between them, and as he swooped down, they both spread their wings wide in greeting. Some observers might have thought this was an act of aggression, but I believe it was a way of avoiding being alone for another long day. I wondered: “Do the birds, as well as man, desire companionship?”
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© 2013 Jo Boester
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OPREA
by Erin Campbell
A rock is my island.
The rock is my throne,
where I sat and watched
as the world turned to dust.
A thousand years of progress
swirls around me like
a cloak around my shoulders.
It caresses my cheek and settles in
my eyes and hair like a crown
as the wind bellows at its loss.
Tides rise and wash the ages onto
sallow shores, leaving broken shell
memories behind in their wake.
I am the only one to keep them close.
The island grows as I grow.
Loved and feared by nothing.
A ruler of ashes, I command ghosts.
~
© 2013 Erin Campbell
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THE KISS
by Sandra Conner
They sauntered along the isolated beach, shoes in hand, just as the sun slipped into the ocean.
Stopping at an outcropping of rocks, Jonah leaned against the rockface, pulling Valentina against him. Her eyes sought his, instantly identifying the fire that turned them to wine. “I thought I’d never get you to myself,” he growled softly as her arms encircled his back.
He tightened his hold, burrowing his right hand in her hair, pulling her closer. Nibbling and teasing her lips, he finally possessed them with a hunger she’d come to crave. She felt the melting begin and eagerly surrendered.
~
Join the fun. Get the details over at Rochelle’s place:
http://rochellewisofffields.wordpress.com/2013/10/02/4-october2013/
I’m especially excited to be taking part in Julia’s challenge this week because I also invited students of my current creative writing class to participate as well. Many of my students are just too busy to write more than what’s required for the class right now, but two of them, Erin Campbell and Lyra McCarty each submitted a 100-word poem for the challenge. I’m very proud to call them my students, and I think you will enjoy their poems.
The fact that they chose poetry for their response to the challenge is especially interesting to me because I had written a poem this time around as well and was awaiting the student submissions so that I could share all of our work in this post.
For those of you who are not familiar with the challenge, you can find all the details on Julia’s own site at this link:
http://jfb57.wordpress.com/2013/09/30/100-word-challenge-for-grown-ups-week107/
The prompt this week: “… as the world turned …”
Now for the poetry:
OPREA
by Erin Campbell
A rock is my island.
The rock is my throne,
where I sat and watched
as the world turned to dust.
A thousand years of progress
swirls around me like
a cloak around my shoulders.
It caresses my cheek and settles in
my eyes and hair like a crown
as the wind bellows at its loss.
Tides rise and wash the ages onto
sallow shores, leaving broken shell
memories behind in their wake.
I am the only one to keep them close.
The island grows as I grow.
Loved and feared by nothing.
A ruler of ashes, I command ghosts.
~
© 2013 Erin Campbell
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AS THE WORLD TURNS
by Lyra McCarty
As the world turns I seek you.
I listen — and you are here?
Not a caress passes between us.
But I know that you are near.
Always a crowd surrounds us
In a whirlpool of noisy things.
Some are always pushing
They think I have no King.
I live in the twilight hours
Lost between night and day.
I know you Dear Lord Jesus
And understand your way.
As the world turns I seek you.
I listen — and you are here?
Not a caress passes between us.
But I know you hold me dear.
~
© 2013 Lyra McCarty
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AS THE WORLD TURNED
by Sandra Conner
As the world turned and turned and turned,
So his heart yearned, and churned, and burned.
Day unto day and night unto night
He pondered on ways to satisfy spite.
If he could not have her – his love, his life,
He’d see to it no one else made her his wife.
He thought out his strategy, planned every move,
And finally knew how to deal with his love.
So swiftly he made his way into her room
And there, as she slept, introduced her to doom.
Then, satisfied that a lesson she’d learned,
He joined her in silent death as the world turned.
~
© 2013 Sandra Conner
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The Christmas blog is never closed. Visit it often. It will make you feel happy!
In the midst of the enormous political upheaval of the past months and the growing evidence that we are face to face with a governmental machine that can no longer be trusted to keep freedom secure, I have been giving myself to re-reading and absorbing the great guiding thoughts and principles of some of the most memorable leaders with which the United States has been blessed.
Some of these individuals may have been proponents of political views that I don’t share completely, but they seem to have been in agreement on one particular view that our nation’s citizens need to make the focus of their attention: the concept that in God alone rests the historic success — and the successful future — of the United States of America. I share a few of these statements here in the hope that we can continue to learn from these leaders whose experiences taught them the priceless value of governing according to the precepts of God.
Abraham Lincoln: “Being a humble instrument in the hands of our heavenly Father, I desire that all my words and acts may be according to His will; and that it may be so, I give thanks to the Almighty and seek His aid.”
Benjamin Franklin: “He who shall introduce into public affairs the principles of Christ will change the face of the world.”
Thomas Jefferson: “I always have said, and always will say, that the studious perusal of the Sacred Volume will make better citizens, better fathers, and better husbands.”
Ulysses S. Grant: “Hold fast to the Bible as the sheet anchor of your liberties; write its precepts on your hearts and practice them in your lives. To the influence of this Book we are indebted for the progress made, and to this we must look as our guide in the future.”
Patrick Henry: “I have now disposed of all my property to my family. There is one thing more I wish I could give them and that is faith in Jesus Christ. If they had that and I had not given them one shilling, they would have been rich; and if they had not that, and I had given them all the world, they would be poor indeed.”
Abraham Lincoln: “I am nothing, but truth is everything. I know I am right, because I know that liberty is right, for Christ teaches it, and Christ is God.”
Thomas Jefferson: “I hold the precepts of Jesus as delivered by Himself, to be the most pure, benevolent, and sublime which have ever been preached to man. I adhere to the principles of the first age.”
Dag Hammarskjold: “God does not die on the day when we cease to believe in a personal diety, but we die on the day when our lives cease to be illumined by the steady radiance, renewed daily, of a Wonder, the Source of which is beyond all reason.”
Albert Schweitzer: “All work that is worth anything is done in faith.”
William Penn: “Men will either be governed by God or ruled by tyrants.”
Abraham Lincoln: “My great concern is not whether God is on our side; my great concern is to be on God’s side.”
Woodrow Wilson: “The sum of the whole matter is this: If our civilization is to survive materially, it must be redeemed spiritually.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower: “Without some moral and spiritual awakening, we will awaken some morning to find ourselves disappearing in the dust of an atomic explosion.”
Lyndon B. Johnson: “If we who serve free men today are to differ from the tyrants of this age, we must balance the powers in our hands with God in our hearts.”
Calvin Coolidge: “In this little Book [the Bible] will be found the solution to all the problems of the world.”
Abraham Lincoln: “We have been recipients of the choicest bounties of heaven; we have been preserved these many years in peace and prosperity; we have grown in number, wealth, and power as no other nation has ever grown. But we have forgotten God! Intoxicated with unbroken success, we have become too self-sufficient to feel the necessity of redeeming and preserving grace, too proud to pray to the God who made us.”
~~~
Pilgrims reached the blessed shore,
But bitter winters were in store.
Death and anguish played their part.
Still, ’twas with a thankful heart
That they gathered to expound
Upon the God whose gifts abound.
We, who in their footsteps trod,
Though they lie beneath the sod,
Now do take the lesson learned
From their lives, and, in our turn,
We prepare to thank and praise;
To that same God our anthems raise.
And just as they faced troubled days,
Through hardships grievous made their ways,
So, now, such grievous times we face,
That ne’er before have taken place.
Yet from their lesson we take heart
And lift our songs with grateful hearts.
We will not bow to troubled thoughts,
Nor in the throes of fear be caught,
We have too rich a heritage.
So with forefathers we engage
To praise and sing and laugh and play
And celebrate Thanksgiving Day.
~~~