Monday, November 12, 2012

The Ghost Ship in a Bottle

Last month, Daniel made one of the coolest ship in a bottle ever and that inspired me to write a story. I've never written about pirates before, or even had a ship feature in any of my stories, so this was totally new to me. But it was fun doing the research.

So in that post, Daniel promised the story and I've finally finished it. There's still some more work that can be done, but I figured it was good enough for now. I'm totally open to any kind of feedback or critique. In total, this story is a little over 8100 words long. I figured you, the reader, wouldn't want to read all that in one sitting so I'm just going to post the first 2500 words. If you want more, you're going to have to leave a comment and ask nicely. :)

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May 10, 1750

Tonight has been a strange one. I don’t spend a lot of time writing about my days at work. They are all the same. Serve food and drink to grabby sailors. It’s not worth the price of the paper and ink. But I do like to write down the interesting stories I hear, and sailors always have a tale to tell, even if it is all lies. Instead of just writing the story I heard I shall write down everything about this night, it’s worth every drop of ink and every scrap of paper I have left. It is not every night you hear a true telling of a legend and then see it right before your eyes.

I will start by saying that the old woman has been coming to The Salty Dog every night for the past week. She comes in at about dinner time and takes the table closest to the fireplace. Wrapped in a bulky gray shawl, her white hair a mass of tangles around her face, she orders a mug of rum and a bowl of soup. She eats quickly and silently and once finished she moves from the table to the old rocking chair. The rocking chair used to be One-Hand Sam’s, the owner of The Salty Dog, grandmother’s and when she passed he placed it by the fire to have “a place for the weary to rest their bones”.

The old woman rocks there all night watching the other patrons. Nothing seems to bother her, even when a scuffle at a dice table turned into a full out brawl right beside her, she just kept rocking and smiling. She stays there until an hour before closing time. Then she stands and shuffles out the door without a word.

I’ve been watching her these last seven nights and tonight I decided I’d talk to her before she left. I made sure I was the first barmaid to her table. None of the other girls seemed to care because the old woman didn’t tip much.

“What can I get for ya, Grandmother?” I asked as I brushed some crumbs off the table.

She looked up at me and smiled, the winkles around her mouth and eyes deepening in her brown face. Most of her teeth were missing. “My usual, dear. Rum and soup.”

I smiled, nodded and headed towards the kitchen. As I passed the bar I asked Sam to pour a mug of rum for the old woman. He nodded and I pushed my way into the hot kitchen. It smelled of roasted pork and fresh baked bread. Weaving around a couple of the other barmaids I grabbed a bowl from the counter and ladled the thin chicken soup into it. As I came out of the kitchen I picked up the mug of rum from the end of the bar and made my way back to the fireplace. A few of the other regulars called to me as I walked across the room, but I ignored them. I was going to get this old woman’s story. Just as I have gotten all the other’s stories. 

I set the bowl and mug down in front of the old woman and asked if she needed anything else. She shook her head, a spoon full of soup already in her mouth. I let her be and attended to the other patrons but I kept an eye on her in case she needed anything. As soon as she had emptied both mug and bowl she stood and waddled over to the rocking chair.

I returned to her table to clean it and then paused next to her and asked, “Is there anything else I can get you, Grandmother? If you’re cold I can get you a blanket.”

She looked up, her jaw slack and eyes wide, and then she smiled and shook her head. “No thank you,” she said. She patted the gray shawl wrapped around her shoulders. “This keeps me warm enough.” Her voice was sweet, not the voice I expected to hear from such an old lady. Her  hair and her lined face made her look old, but her blue eyes were so bright and alive. I wondered if maybe she was younger than she appeared. I had known sailors to look much older than they were because they spent so much time in the open, salty sea air.

“Very well,” I said with my sweetest smile. “You just call to me if you need me. My name’s Sara.”

Grandmother nodded. “And you may call me Maya.”

The rest of the night passed as they all do. I waited on more tables than I could remember. And the whole time, Maya sat in the chair and rocked. She watched the other patrons with interest but she never spoke to anyone, and no one took any interest in her.

At around three in the morning the tavern began to empty. I offered to stay late and help with the closing. Sam was helping one of the local drunkards stand.

“Sara, I’m going to help Billy here home. I’ll lock the door on my way out and I’ll be back in a few minutes.”

“Okay,” I called over my shoulder as a swept the floor.

As soon as I heard the lock catch I walked over to Maya. “We’re closing now. Do you need help getting home?”

“No dear. But can I sit here a little longer?”

I smiled. “Of course. We can leave together if you like.”

She returned the smile. “Thank you, Sara. You’ve been so kind to me tonight, how about I entertain you with a story while you finish up your work?”

“I’d like that.” I continued to sweep near her as she started her story, but as the tale progressed I found my self being drawn in and it wasn’t long before I was sitting at her feet like a child.

Here is the story she told, as best as I can remember her telling of it.
~~~
You’ve heard the legends of the Ghost Ship that plies the waters in these parts of course. Everyone speaks of the silent ship full of ghost that is made out of mist and moonlight and attacks the ships of pirates, leaving only one survivor to pass the tale.

What no one knows is how that ship and her crew became the Ghost Ship. Well I will give you one telling of the tale. It is a sad story, but one that needs to be passed on.

There once was a man named Joseph Walker who captained the ship Hades Hound as a privateer. He was the best privateer in the area. Hades Hound was small and fast, a pretty little 12 gun, one mast sloop that carried 113 tons . She was the terror of the Spanish and the French. Captain Walker roamed the Caribbean freely and helped to protect his home in Port Royal.

Life was good and sweet for Captain Walker. He had a lady in Port Royal that he was planning to marry for she was carrying his child in her belly. He was just waiting to have enough money to buy them a little home. Once he had a house he could settle Lilly and the baby there, where they would be safe and comfortable and he would continue his work as a privateer.

But everything changed in one day. It was cold and rainy. Winter was coming in and Captain Walker knew this would be the last of the pickings for this season. He had just attacked and gained the spoils from a fat Spanish galleon and was eager to get his share. He figured after this payment he would have enough to marry his girl and buy a small house.

It was a long walk from the docks and up into the nicer parts of town where his investor, Mr. Banks lived. In his hand he had a reckoning of all the treasure that was sitting in the hold of Hades Hound. With the cut he’d get from this haul combined with one more like it, all of Captain Walker’s dreams would come true. He whistled as he walked up the cobble stone streets.

Walker was escorted into Mr. Banks office and stood waiting in front of his desk as Mr. Banks finished reading over a stack of papers. Mr. Banks was a fat man who spent most of his time sitting at a desk and looking at his account books. When he finally lifted his small eyes, made smaller by his red puffy cheeks, from the papers and saw Captain Walker, he grunted and held out his hand for the list of spoils.

Walker handed it over and watched in silence as Mr. Banks marked some of the items in particular he wanted. He handed the paper back to Walker and said, “Have those items and my cut of the gold delivered to my warehouse, as usual.”

“Of course, Mr. Banks,” Walker replied with a nod. “Now as to my next voyage…”

“There won’t be another one.” Mr. Banks said, his gaze already back down at his account books.

“Excuse me, sir?”

“I said, ‘There won’t be another one.’ I’m taking the ship back.”

“You’re taking Hades Hound from me? Why?”

“I’ve decided to put my investments else where.”

“You can’t take her,” Walker said as he stepped forward and leaned upon the desk. “She’s my ship.”

“No, Captain, she’s mine. I bought her, I own her. I merely hired you to captain her.”

“I’ll buy her from you.”

Mr. Banks laughed. “You don’t have that much money, I know it. Besides, she’s not for sale.”

“Mr. Banks, please, I’ll give you anything I have. I—”

Mr. Banks cut him off. “Hades Hound is mine and she is not for sale. You will take your cut of this haul, pay the crew and then dismiss them. Good luck in your future endeavors, Mister Walker and good day.”

Walker tried to argue more, but he was escorted out of the building and tossed into the street but a couple of Mr. Banks hired body guards. Cursing, he picked him self up and dusted off his clothes. He strode back down to the docks, unaware that the dark anger in his face made people hurry to stay out of his path.

A black rage was slowly building with in his belly. Mr. Banks had been his investor for nearly two years, the crew was mostly filled with the men Walker first hired. Hades Hound was Walker’s home, his way of life. He could not imagine being without it.

Despair began to mix with the rage. How was he going to find work now? The seasons were changing and it was coming to the time when there were fewer ships going back and forth between the Old World and the New. No one would be looking to hire a captain and crew for at least three months and by then Walker would have a baby to care for.

With his head hanging, Captain Walker made his way to the brothel where his lady lived. He found her in her room lying in bed, heavy with child, she only had a couple months to go before she was delivered. She listened silently as Walker told her what happened with Mr. Banks.

“I am sorry, Lilly. It’s going to be a while yet before I can properly marry you and buy us that little house you wanted,” Walker said, tears in his blue gray eyes.

Lilly sighed and sat up on her elbow. “Don’t worry about it,” she said. “I’ve decided not to marry you.”

Walker’s jaw dropped. “What? Why not?”

“I’ve decided to go home to my mother. I’ve written to her and she says she’ll let me come home, even in my condition.” She paused and stared at his face. Shaking her head, she continued, “There’s nothing for me here Joseph.”

“There’s me. We can still get married and you can live with me. I know it’s small, and it’ll be crowded once the baby comes, but we can still be together. I can still take care of you.”

Lilly shook her golden head. “It isn’t enough. I came to Port Royal to find me a rich man, a privateer like you who could give me better than what I had. I didn’t mean to have a baby so soon but there’s no helping that now. And since you are no longer going to be rich, I have no need of you.”

Walker was stunned into silence. He stared at his pretty Lilly and the black rage filled him. Breathing hard, he shook his head to clear the blackness from the edges of his vision.

Lilly’s face softened. “I’m sorry Joseph. I do care about you. But I have to think about what is best for me and my baby.”

“Your baby? That is my baby too!” he shouted.

“You don’t know that,” she shouted back. When he didn’t respond she continued, “I’m a whore, Joseph. Did you truly think you were the only man that has shared this bed with me?”

The blackness was creeping into his vision again. If he let it get to the center of his eyes he knew something bad would happen. Without another word he turned on his heel and slammed the door behind him. He strode down the street and went back to Hades Hound.

The crew was busy unloading their haul but they all stopped and stared as their captain stormed aboard and went into his cabin in the stern. The first mate was the first to break the uneasy silence, his voice cracking like a whip. “Get back to work, dogs!”

Within his quarters was Charlie, a black slave who Captain Walker had saved from drowning while the Hades Hound was attacking the ship Charlie had been working on. No one else seemed to care about the slave’s fate, but Walker took pity on the desperate man and leaped into the water to save him. After that, Charlie had sworn to serve him until death because of the life debt he now felt he owed to Captain Walker.

Charlie saw the rage on his master’s face and was quick to pour him a glass of rum. Captain Walker ignored the glass and reached around to grab the bottle.

“Somethin’ the matter, Cap’n?”

With a growling rumble and between swigs from the bottle, Walker told Charlie about his day. Charlie’s face fell at the news of the loss of the ship and then he winced at the Captain’s tale about Lilly.

“So right now,” Walker concluded, his voice already slurred, “I’d like to sit here alone and get as drunk as possible.”

Charlie nodded. “Very well, Captain.”

He left the Captain there and did not see him again until morning. Charlie didn’t tell the rest of the crew anything, even when pressed, he kept silent. It was not his place to tell these men that they were out of a job or to air the Captain’s personal pains.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

So as I said, I'd love to hear your thoughts. And if you really like it and want to read the rest, ask nicely. :D

Thanks for reading!

Friday, November 9, 2012

WIP Mini Blog Hop

Got tagged for this by KitCat. :)

The Rules:

  • Give credit to the person/blog who tagged you.
  • Post these rules.
  • Answer the questions about your current WIP (Work In Progress).
  • Tag five other writers/bloggers and add their links so we can hop over and meet them.

The Questions:

#1. What is the working title of your book?

Dragons in Space. I suck at titles.


#2. What genre does the book fall under?

Fantasy/Space Opera mash up.


#3. Which actors would you choose to play your characters for the movie rendition?

For Sonya: Natalie Portman

For Tal: Uma Thurman

For Alvin: Taylor Lautner

For Jelani: Usher


#4. What is the one sentence synopsis of your book?

Sonya Lee, a Moon Dragon Rider, takes a group of soldiers and researches to the planet of Chung-sea to investigate an alien outpost where they discover that there is life beyond their solar system and where Sonya begins to unlock the secrets of their new alien neighbors.


#5. Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

Hopefully, I'll get an agent and be published by one of the Big Five. Nothing wrong with self-publishing, but that would be my last option. Too much work for me. I'd rather be writing.


#6. How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?

Well, the first draft isn't done yet. I started it a year ago for last year's NaNoWriMo. Then I worked on another project for a while and had a baby, so it's taken some time to get back to Dragons. I do plan on having the first draft done by the middle of next year, at the latest. :)


#7. What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

The only one I can think of is the Pern series by Anne McCaffrey. If anyone knows of other Fantasy/Sci-Fi mash ups with or with out dragons, I'd love to hear about them.


#8. Who or what inspired you to write this book?

Well, my husband always inspires me and encourages me to write. But for this particular story I just got this image in my head of a woman riding on a dragon and looking down at a planet from space. And my brain went, "Oh hell yeah!"


#9. What else about the book might pique the reader's interest?

Well, there are aliens, and space ships, and space battles, and a love story, and political intrigue, and fun characters. Oh yeah, and DRAGONS IN FREAKING SPACE! :D


#10. Tag You're It!

Um.... All the people I know who write and have a blog have already been tagged..... So I open this to everyone. Steal this and pass it on! And then come tell me about it and I'll add your blog link here. :)

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

I'm a Rebel!

I'm doing NaNoWrtiMo, but then again, I'm not. I feel so dangerous. Okay, not really.

But I am trying to write 50,000 words this month. They might not all be on the same project, but if I can write 50K in 30 days then maybe next year I'll actually win NaNo. That would be nice.

In other new, I have finished that pirate ghost ship story I and Daniel have promised. Just need to give it one more editing pass and then I'll post it here. If all goes well, I should have it up by this weekend. I promise!


Thursday, October 18, 2012

NaNoWriMo?

It's that time of year again. Halloween is just a week or so away and then it will be November. The month my eldest turns 3 and then Thanksgiving. Oh yeah, and that whole "Write a 50,000 word novel in a month" thing.


Alas, I am not really participating this year. "Why?" you ask. Well, I'm in a really good spot with my Dragons in Space novel and I don't want to stop. Technically, you're supposed to start something new for NaNo. Dragons was my NaNo project last year so I'll continue to work on that this year. I'll still try to get 50k out in one month, so I'll be there in spirit with the rest of y'all.

If you'd like I can still do weekly updates (I should be doing that here anyway *sheepish grin*) and try to find something encouraging to say to those of you who are seriously trying to win that NaNo badge.

In other news, I'm working on a cool ghost story and should have that up by the end of the month. It's partly for the AW Blog Chain and partly in conjunction with Daniel and his ship in bottle blog. It's been fun to write and I'm hoping to have the first draft finished by the end of the week and then I'll edit the crap out of it.

So that's what's been going on. Keep an eye here for the ghost story and for updates during November. :) Happy Thursday and thanks for Reading!

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Kricket's 7 Writing Tips

So I just started doing this blog chain thing on my lovely Absolute Write forums. Here's how it works, you get a prompt, write a blog post about it and then everyone runs around the internet reading everyone's blogs. Fun! This is my first time at it so if this post sucks and is boring, I'm sorry,

The Prompt:
The Number Seven
September used to be the seventh month of the old Roman calendar and its name literally means seventh "month," so this month is brought to you by 7. Write wherever the prompt inspires you,fiction or non-fiction, prose or poetry. Do try and keep things at a PG-13 level, though.

The Participants:
orion_mk3 - http://nonexistentbooks.wordpress.com (link to this month's post)
Ralph Pines - http://ralfast.wordpress.com/ (link to this month's post)
bmadsen - http://hospitaloflife.wordpress.com (link to this month's post)
writingismypassion - http://charityfaye.blogspot.com/ (link to this month's post)
pyrosama - http://matrix-hole.blogspot.com/ (link to this month's post)
areteus - http://lurkingmusings.wordpress.com/ (link to this month's post)
randi.lee - http://emotionalnovel.blogspot.com/ (link to this month's post)
wonderactivist - http://luciesmoker.wordpress.com/ (link to this month's post)
BBBurke - http://www.awritersprogression.com/ (link to this month's post)
meowzbark - http://erlessard.wordpress.com/ (link to this month's post)
SuzanneSeese - http://www.viewofsue.blogspot.com/ (link to this month's post)
AFord - http://writeword.blog.com/ (link to this month's post)

And here I go!
~~~
7 Things I've Learned, so far, About Writing!

1. Read, read, read. Read everything you can get your hands on. Even explore new genres. A lot of the writing basics are the same no matter what you write but sometimes it's good to see how different situations and voices are used in other genres.

2. Research. I don't care what you're writing, if it's anything other than your own life, you'll have to research something at some point. Learn how to research properly. Don't be afraid to do interviews with real live people too. Don't assume your audience is stupid and won't catch your mistakes. Also, just because you see it in a movie doesn't mean it works that way in real life. Your average reader is smarter than your average movie goer, they'll be able to tell when you're talking out of your ass.

3. Study. Study the craft of writing. Study grammar, I know it sucks, I hate it too, but you got to learn this stuff. There are sooo many books out there on the subject of writing and all of them will tell you basically the same thing, but some have a different angle on things that might help you. You don't have to do everything those books tell you too, but it's good to try new things and see what works for you.

4. Grow a thick skin. Unless you plan on your stories never seeing the light of day you're going to have to learn how to take criticism. Face facts, not everyone is going to love and adore your work. There are Grammar Nazis out there who will tear every word to shreds and some people will hate your characters, setting, idea, etc. and you need to learn how to handle that professionally and not let it destroy your desire to write.

5. Set goals. Keep them small at first. Start with setting a daily word count goal or a time limit, but keep it manageable. It will help boost your confidence as you achieve those little goals every day.

6. Keep positive. Some days the words are going to flow like water and other days it's going to be like pulling teeth. Some days you're going to think you're a freaking genius, other days you're going to wonder why you put your self through the trouble. Just remember why you love to tell stories and sometimes, it doesn't hurt to sit back and day dream about how awesome it will be to become a famous author.

7. Write. Obvious, but as they say, practice makes perfect. Try to write everyday if you can. And yes, I count blog post and journal writing as part of my writing routines and goals. Anything to keep your brain sharp and your fingers quick.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Bonding

So I posted this bit of my writing awhile ago and now I have rewritten it. It's gone from a little scene to a full blow opening chapter to my WIP. I'm happy with the results and would love to know what you think. So whether you're a Grammar Nazi or a Casual Reader I'd love to know what you think.

~~~

“Any day now, Trainee Lee, we’ve been out here for 15 minutes already.”
            
Sonya Lee looked over her shoulder at her teacher Master Abdul. The harsh sunlight reflecting off the yellow moon rock of the canyon wall threw his broad smile into stark relief. She let out a shaky breath, the fog blooming against the visor of her helmet. “I don’t think I can do it, sir.”
            
“And why not?”
            
She swallowed the lump in her throat. “I’m afraid of heights, sir,” she whispered.
            
Master Abdul let out a belly laugh. “You want to fly in space but you’re afraid of heights?”
            
Sonya shrugged, her skin tight space suit creaking against the movement. “There’s no gravity in space, sir. No falling down.”
            
He continued to laugh. “I can see why you failed to Bond with a Flyer.” He struggled to contain his mirth for a few moments then cleared his throat and straightened his shoulders. “Nonetheless, you still have to do it. The Jin-saw won’t be complete until you do.”
            
Sonya nodded and turned to face the canyon once more. The ledge they stood on was narrow and sat dozens of meters below the top of the wall. The shuttle that had dropped her and Master Abdul here was long gone. The only way off was to jump.
            
She tried to tell her self that the gravity on this moon was less than that on Terra, her home planet, but it didn’t help. Taking deep breathes, she looked up into the ether and counted the stars, willing her heartbeat to slow.
            
As she counted, a vague sense of worry pulsated in the back of her mind. The worry was not her own and she sensed that it came from somewhere below her. She tried to concentrate on the feeling but it slipped away like oil on water.
            
“Just do it, Trainee Lee,” Master Abdul said. “You will continue to be alone here,” he tapped the side of his helmet with a gloved finger, “until you make that jump. So just throw your self out there.”
            
Sonya nodded and took a few long strides backwards. Heart pounding, she closed her eyes and ran. She meant to keep her eyes closed, but when she felt her feet leave the solid rock her eyes popped open and she screamed.
            
Even with her helmet on, she could hear the air rushing past her. The jagged rocks below grew larger. Flailing her arms and legs in a vain attempt to slow her fall, she drew in a breath for another scream when she noticed a dark shape launch off the canyon wall.

The scream died in her throat as Sonya watched her Moon dragon dive beside her. He was small, for a hatchling, but still large enough to carry two humans on his back. His smooth hide looked like the star filled sky above; black with hundreds of white specks that covered him from head to tail and across his wings.
            
For a moment, Sonya and the dragon were even in the air and she could see into his large, completely silver eyes. A wave of love and reassurance radiated from them and for the first time Sonya noticed black flecks in their depths.
            
Keeping his wings tight against his body, the dragon shot past her. It was then that Sonya noticed the saddle strapped to the base of his neck. Knowing what was supposed to happen next, Sonya spread her arms and legs out. The dragon snapped tail flaps that went the entire length of his tail, and wings wide and maneuvered him self below her.
            
Sonya hit the saddle with a bone jarring thud.  She grasped the handholds and pulled herself into a sitting potion. Once there she was able to reach all the straps that would hold her onto the saddle. As soon as she was secure, she leaned forward across the dragon’s neck and hit a small yellow button on the saddle. The shield, a clear bubble of silicate enforced glass, surrounded her and hissed as it pressurized and oxygen filled the space. She closed her eyes, heart pounding against her rib cage as tears pooled beneath her chin inside her helmet.
            
Are you alright? The voice in her head was that of a little boy.
            
Sonya gasped and opened her eyes. With the shield protecting her, she hadn’t noticed that they were flying forward. The canyon walls flew by as the dragon made long sweeps with his wings. She looked forward and saw the Moon dragon looking back at her with one eye. The sense of worry in her mind was still there but was being combined with more reassurance and an overwhelming sense of joy.
            
“Yes, I’m fine now,” she said aloud.
            
Good. He turned his head forward and the worry dissipated from Sonya’s mind. The dragon spread a frill studded with short horns that circled three fourths of his head. Thin veins glowed a dim orange between the white specks. My name is Hey-song. Can we do some real flying now?
            
“This isn’t real flying?” Sonya asked with a grin as she removed her helmet, setting it down between her legs and breathed in the air that was pumping inside the shield.
            
I want to be up there. Hey-song jerked his head towards space. I don’t like how the gravity drags me down here on the surface.
            
“Are you sure it’s safe?” she asked.
            
You’re within the shield and the atmosphere here on Yeogsa is thin enough that the shield will protect you as we get into space.
            
Sonya gnawed on the inside of her cheek trying to think.

The com piece in her ear crackled with Master Abdul’s voice, “Okay, Trainee, time to bring him in.”

“We should go,” Sonya said.

Like hell, Hey-song opened his jaws and let out a roar that Sonya could feel as much as hear. He pitched up and pushed his wings hard. Sonya clutched the hand holds and yelled for him to stop but he ignored her. Master Abdul’s voice yelled in her ear for them to come back, but they were soon out of range.
            
As they neared the edge of the atmosphere the shield began to glow orange with the heat. Sonya hunkered down against the saddle and prayed to the Mother Dragon. The moment they broke through into space she began to float up against the restraints, her back butting up against the top of the shield. She pulled her self down and clamped her thighs around the sides of the saddle.

Muscles aching from the strain, Sonya looked over her shoulder to the tank of oxygen that sat on the back of the saddle and provided her breathable air. We shouldn’t stay out here too long. Sonya pushed the thought toward Hey-song as Master Abdul had taught her. This tank will only last an hour.
            
Ack! You don’t need to shout, Hey-song grumbled.
            
Sorry. Sonya said, mentally pulling back. Master Abdul is going to be so pissed about this.
            
We’ll just fly around for a few minutes and then head back, okay?
            
Alright, she said. Sonya was going to ask a question but her mind froze as they came around the side of the moon and her home planet came into view. It looked so much larger from space than it did on the moon’s surface. A green and blue ball streaked with lines and swirls of white. An orb of life filled with both humans and dragons, coexisting in peace for the past two hundred years.
            
She stared at it for a long time. She had seen the planet from space before, but it felt so much closer and real with nothing but the thin shield separating her from it. This is what she had dreamed of ever since she had entered Dragon Academy eight years ago and here she was, riding a Moon dragon in space. Sonya giggled.
            
Every trainee dreamed of creating a Jin-saw with a Moon dragon, but that privilege was reserved for those with the strongest psychic ability. The fact that Sonya had managed to attract Hey-song and then successfully Bond with him would be considered dumb luck by some and a miracle by others. She couldn’t wait to get back to Yeogsa’s base and see the look on her classmates faces when they saw her riding Hey-song.

Agitation flared in the corner of her mind that was now always connected to Hey-song; disturbing her thoughts. Turning her eyes from the planet and back towards the moon, Sonya saw another dragon hatchling flying towards them. She was riderless, and for the first time, Sonya realized how very small Hey-song was compared to other hatchlings.
            
The female dragon circled Hey-song. Sonya couldn’t hear what the female was saying, but she could feel the tension in Hey-songs body and hear his angry responses.
            
Fly off, tolai!
            
Sonya winced against the words bouncing around in her head. What’s going on?
            
Hey-song snapped at the dragon when she flew too close. She’s taunting me. She’s trying to get me to race her.
            
Suddenly, the female dove down and snapped her jaws right over Sonya’s head. Sonya couldn’t hold back a small shriek despite the shield protecting her.   
            
That’s it, tongsal nom! You want a race, you got one. Through the Ancient’s Canyon, first one to the Rock Falls wins.
            
“Hey-song,” Sonya shouted. “Can’t you take me back to base first?”
            
No time, he said as he began his descent back into the moon’s atmosphere. This hapung ends now.
            
The dragons headed back towards the Canyon that ran like a scar around the entire belly of the moon. They were on its dark side now and Sonya wondered where Master Abdul was. When she looked down to try to get her bearings everything tilted and she gasped, squeezing her eyes shut. Sweat popped up all over her body and she suddenly wished she had settled for Bonding with an Earth dragon.
            
When she opened her eyes again, Hey-song and the female were hovering in an updraft above the Ancient’s Canyon waiting for her to be ready. Knowing there was no way to change his mind, Sonya readjusted her grip, said a prayer to the Mother Dragon and made a mental note to talk to Hey-song about his foul language. As soon as she was settled, the dragons launched forward.
            
Hey-song’s wings made long hard sweeps through the air, but the female’s wingspan was larger and each wing beat propelled her further ahead. He let out a foul curse and Sonya could feel his body rumbling as pouches beneath his wings filled with a special chemical concoction. Once the pouches were full, a pair of moon crystals within the pouches struck each other and caused a spark. The ensuing explosion launched them forward as if a rocket was strapped to his back.
            
Hey-song folded his wings, tail flaps and neck frills against his body and shot ahead of the female, leaving twin trails of vapor behind. Sonya looked over her shoulder, the female seemed to pause for a moment and then she too launched forward as her pouches filled and ignited. She began to gain on them, her pouches being larger than Hey-song’s allowing her to sustain a longer burn.
            
The female was less than a tail length behind when she seemed to slow and fall back. She had burned off all the fuel in her pouches. She opened her wings again and flapped furiously as she waited for her pouches to refill.
            
Sonya could still feel the rumble between her legs. Hey-song was still burning his fuel and gaining speed. How are you doing that?
            
Doing what? Hey-song asked.
            
How are you still burning your fuel? Haven’t you run out yet?
            
Run out? Hey-song sounded appalled. I never run out. There’s always a continuous flow into my pouches. Do others run out?
            
Yes. Sonya turned her gaze forward and risked letting go of the hand grips so she could put her helmet back on and lower the sun visor. They had come around the other side of the moon where the sun blazed bright and hot. It’s a safety precaution, she continued. Your body stops filling the pouch when it’s full so that you don’t run out of energy. It takes a lot for your body to make that stuff. Didn’t you know that?
            
Hey-song shrugged his shoulders. No one ever told me. I thought all Moon dragons flew like this.
            
Well most dragons have to wait for a while for their pouches to refill.
            
Huh. Well, sucks for them. He turned his head and gave her a toothy grin.
            
As they continued down the Canyon, Hey-song shut off the flow to his pouches and spread his wings, frills and tail flaps wide to catch the winds. Tiny veins glowed orange between the white specks as he absorbed the sun’s radiation.
            
Sonya looked back again to see the female dragon way behind with no chance of catching up. I’m pretty sure you won.
            
Of course I did.
            
Sonya laughed as they continued to sail through the Canyon. Now that they had slowed down, she took the opportunity to get a look at her surroundings. Yeogsa was the smallest of the three moons orbiting Terra and housed the Moon dragon’s history. Here in the Ancient’s Canyon the Moon dragons recorded their stories through huge carvings that took up the canyon walls from top to bottom. Only half of the canyon had been used so far and, unfortunately, some of the older history had been lost over time due to erosion.
            
They turned a corner in the winding canyon and there was the Rock Falls. A section of the Canyon where the walls had crumbled in on them selves and the result gave the illusion of a waterfall made of stone. Hey-song began to turn lazy circles in an updraft.
            
We better get back soon, Sonya said. I’m going to be in enough trouble as it is.
            
Let’s wait for the amkay to show up. I want to see the defeat in her eyes.
            
Hey-song, you really need to watch your language, it’s rude. Hey-song snorted in reply and Sonya continued. And besides, do you really need to rub it in that you won?
            
Yes I do. I’ve been getting crap from dragons like her ever since I hatched, just because I’m smaller than everyone else. I’m tired of it. I want them to respect me.
            
And beating them in races will do that?
            
Yes. Hey-song said as he turned to watch the female finish the last leg of the race. That wasn’t even my fastest. He called to her. I was taking it slow so as to not upset my human here.
            
Sonya couldn’t hear the female dragon’s response but she did see the rude manner in which the female flipped her tail at Hey-song. He laughed as he turned and flew between the Rock Falls, continuing on their original course.
            
The pictures in this part of the Canyon were faded and crumbling. Sonya could make out the shape of a dragon here and there and once she saw a clearer picture of the night sky. Deep grooves made by dragon claws playing connect the dots between the stars to form the constellations.
            
I’ve never been in this part of the Canyon before. Sonya said.
            
Me either, Hey-song replied. He glided on a strong wind current, his head swiveling back and forth, looking at all the carvings. He stopped suddenly, his wings flapping backwards to stop his forward momentum, jostling Sonya.
            
What is it? She asked.
            
Look. Hey-song jerked his head to the right. Carved into the wall beside them was a picture that Sonya thought was a human at first. It stood on two legs, had two arms and the rough drawing of the face was very human. But something was wrong and it took Sonya a moment to figure out what it was.
            
“It’s too long,” she said aloud.
            
What?
            
Sonya shook her head. It’s not human. The body and the features are too long. Like someone took a human and stretched it. And look at the ears, how tall and pointy they are.
            
Could just be a bad carving.
            
No… Sonya drew the word out, thinking. This part of the Canyon is ancient history, long before humans came to space.
            
Hey-song shrugged, My mother never told me any stories this old. Most of the stories I was told while in the nest are recorded after the Rock Fall.
            
Sonya was about to say something when a huge shadow fell across them and an angry voice cracked in her ear.
           
“Trainee Lee, what the hell do you think you are doing?” Master Abdul asked.
            
Sonya cringed and looked up at the adult Moon dragon that hovered above them. This female dragon was at least ten times bigger than Hey-song. Her silver eyes glowed and judging by the way Hey-song’s head drooped, she was giving him a lecture.
            
“Fly up here so I can see you.” Master Abdul said. Sonya didn’t even have to tell Hey-song, he was already maneuvering around the side of the adult female so that they were even with her back.
            
Strapped to her back, at the base of the neck, was a pod made of dull back metal. Inside, Sonya knew, was a small cockpit in which Master Abdul sat. She couldn’t see him clearly through the windshield but she could imagine the rage on his face.
            
“I’m sorry, sir.”
            
“We’ll talk about this when we get back to the base,” was his terse reply. “Come on.”
            
Master Abdul’s dragon flew out of the Canyon leaving Sonya and Hey-song to follow after, heads hanging.

~~~

Thanks for reading!
 

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Writer's A.D.D.

I'm sure many writers have this problem. Jumping from one project to another. Or at least, saying you're working on one thing but then you change your mind within a month and work on something else. I normally would say that I'm not this jumpy, but it seems that way lately doesn't it?

So I know I said a couple post back that I was going to start working on a more traditional fantasy White Crow story. Well I lied, I'm not going to work on that. I think my mind is burnt out on White Crow right now. Because even when I tried to think about it, my mind would just drift back to the piece I started last November for NaNoWriMo, Dragons in Space (terrible working title).

I love dragons, always have, always will.

So, now that I've moved (see my regular blog for pics soon) I'm ready to get back to writing. I spent most of yesterday looking over what I wrote back in November. And after kicking my self and wanting to cry for how terrible the writing was, I realized I had a good start and I could still work with this.

Starting today I'm going to start from the beginning and rewrite what I have so far and then go from there. I'm hoping I can get this first draft done by November so that I'll be free to do NaNoWriMo this year. But if that doesn't happen, that's okay. I will definitely have this first draft done by the end of the year.

Hm... There goes the whole, submit to agents this year goal I had. *shrug* Oh well, I'll be ready next year. :)

Thanks for reading!


Wednesday, June 27, 2012

SFF Challenge: Leather, Ether & River 1856 words


Here is the second piece I wrote for the SFF Challenge.

This piece fits into my Dragons in Space WIP, but I'm not sure I'll actually include it since it takes place about 10 years before my story starts. I'm really hoping this makes sense and that you, the reader, can see the images I'm trying to create. I'm still building this world and doing a lot of research, so if anyone out there can help, I'd totally welcome it.

The first line is from a Tori Amos song, Leather.

~~~

“In a sense,” he said, “you’re alone here. So if you jump, you best jump far.”
            
Sonya Lee looked over her shoulder at her teacher Master Abdul. The light inside his helmet threw his broad smile into stark relief. She let out a shaky breath, the fog blooming against the glass of her helmet. “I don’t think I can do it, sir.”
           
“And why not?”
           
She swallowed a lump in her throat. “I’m afraid of heights, sir,” she whispered.
            
“What was that?” he asked as he tapped the side of his helmet with a gloved finger. “The com didn’t catch that.”
            
Sonya coughed and said, just a little louder, “I’m afraid of heights, sir.”
            
Master Abdul let out a belly laugh. “You want to fly in space but you’re afraid of heights?”
            
She shrugged, the leather of her uniform creaking beneath the snug space suit. “There’s no gravity in space, sir. No falling down.”
            
He continued to laugh. “I can see why you failed to Bond with a Flyer.” He struggled to contain his mirth for a few moments then finally cleared his throat and straightened his shoulders. “Nonetheless, you still have to do it. The Jin-saw won’t be complete until you do.”
            
Sonya nodded and turned to face the canyon they stood on the edge of. The yellow rock was bright in the direct light of the sun. She knew the heat was intense but her suit protected her from it.
            
She tried to tell her self that the gravity on this moon was less than that on the planet’s surface, but it didn’t help. She’d still be falling and if she wasn’t caught, she’d hit the rocky bottom and die. Taking deep breathes, she looked up into the ether and spent a few seconds counting the stars and willing her heartbeat to slow.
            
As she counted, Sonya felt a vague sense of worry in the back of her mind that she knew wasn’t her own. The worry came from below, but she couldn’t tell where. She tried to concentrate on the feeling but it slipped away like oil on water.
            
“Any day now, Trainee Lee,” Master Abdul said. “You will continue to be alone here,” he tapped the side of his head again, “until you make that jump. So just throw your self out there.”
            
Sonya nodded and took a few long strides backwards. Heart pounding, she closed her eyes and ran forward. She meant to keep her eyes closed, but when she felt her feet leave the solid rock her eyes popped open and she screamed.
            
Even with her space suit on, she could feel the air rushing past her. The yellow rocks below were coming up much faster than she expected. Flailing her arms and legs in a vain attempt to slow her fall, she drew in what she thought was her last breath for a final scream when she noticed a dark shape launch off the canyon wall.
            
Sonya’s scream died in her throat as she watched the Moon dragon dive beside her. He was small, for a hatchling, but still large enough to carry two humans on his back. His smooth hide looked like the star filled sky above; black with hundreds of white specks that covered him from sleek head to slender tail and across his wings.
            
For a moment, Sonya and the dragon were even in the air and she could see into his large black eyes. A wave of love and reassurance radiated from them and for the first time Sonya noticed silver flecks in their depths.
            
With a short flap of his wings, the dragon pushed him self faster. Sonya spread her arms and legs out and watched as the dragon turned to position him self below her and spread his wings wide.
            
She hit his back with a bone jarring thud and quickly locked her arms around his neck. Closing her eyes, she pressed her face to the glass of her helmet. Tears pooled beneath her nose.
            
Are you alright? The voice in her head sounded like a little boy’s.
            
Sonya gasped and sat up. They were flying through the canyon now. The walls flying by at speeds she wasn’t comfortable thinking about. The Moon dragon had his head turned so he could see her with one eye. The sense of worry in Sonya’s mind was still there but was being combined with more reassurance and an overwhelming sense of joy.
            
“Yes, I’m fine now,” she said aloud.
            
Good. He turned his head forward and the worry dissipated from Sonya’s mind. My name is Hey-song. Can we do some real flying now?
            
“This isn’t real flying?” Sonya asked with a grin.
            
I want to be up there. Hey-song jerked his head towards space. I don’t like how the gravity drags me down here on the surface.
            
“Me neither,” Sonya laughed. “Let’s fly!”
            
Hey-song opened his jaws and let out a roar that Sonya felt more than heard. He pitched up and pushed his wings hard. Sonya locked her arms and legs around him and kept her gaze towards the stars.
            
It wasn’t long before they broke through the moon’s thin atmosphere and began an orbit around the yellow satellite. Sonya felt the weightlessness of space tug at her and her muscles ached because of how hard she was holding on.
            
We shouldn’t stay out here too long. Sonya pushed the thought toward Hey-song as Master Abdul had taught her.
            
Ack! You don’t need to shout, he grumbled.
            
Sorry. Sonya said, mentally pulling back. We don’t have the right equipment for a flight like this.
            
We’ll just do one complete orbit and then we’ll head back, okay?
            
Alright, she said. She was going to ask a question but her mind froze as they came around the side of the moon and her home planet came into view. It looked so much larger from space than it did on the moon’s surface. A green and blue ball streaked with lines and swirls of white. An orb of life filled with both humans and dragons.
            
Agitation flared in the corner of her mind that was now always connected to Hey-song; disturbing her thoughts. Turning her eyes from the planet, Sonya saw two dragon hatchlings flying towards them. They were riderless, and for the first time, she realized how small Hey-song was compared to other hatchlings.
            
The two new dragons circled her and Hey-song. Sonya couldn’t hear what the other dragons said, but she could feel the tension in Hey-songs body and hear his angry responses.
            
Fly off, tolai!
            
Sonya winced against the words bouncing around in her head. What’s going on?
            
Hey-song snapped at a dragon that flew too close. They’re taunting me. They’re trying to get me to race them.
            
Suddenly, one of the dragons dove down and snapped its jaws right over Sonya’s head. She let out a little scream at the sight of those long, sharp teeth. 
            
That’s it, tongsal nom! You want a race, you got one. First one around the moon wins.
            
“Hey-song,” Sonya shouted. “Can you take me back to the surface first?”
            
No time, he said as he drew even between the other two dragons. This hapung ends now.
            
Knowing there was no way to change his mind, Sonya readjusted her grip, said a prayer to the Mother Dragon and made a mental note to talk to her dragon about his foul language. As soon as she was settled, all three dragons launched forward.
            
Hey-song’s body rumbled as pouches beneath his wings filled with a special chemical concoction. Once the pouches were full, a pair of moon rocks within the pouches struck each other and caused a spark. The ensuing explosion launched him forward as if a rocket was strapped to his back.
            
Hey-song folded his wings against his body and shot ahead of the other two dragons, leaving twin trails of vapor behind. Sonya looked back over her shoulder and saw the larger of the two gaining. His pouches were larger than Hey-song’s so he could sustain a longer burn.
            
The larger dragon continued to gain on Hey-song and was less than a tail length behind when he seemed to slow and fall back. He had burned off all the fuel in his pouches, and while he continued at his previous speed, the larger dragon had to wait for his pouches to fill before he could do another thrust.
            
Sonya could still feel the rumble between her legs. Hey-song was still burning his fuel and gaining speed. How are you doing that?
            
Doing what? Hey-song asked.
            
How are you still burning your fuel? Haven’t you run out yet?
            
Run out? Hey-song sounded appalled. I never run out. There’s always a continuous flow into my pouches. Do others run out?
            
Yes. Sonya turned her gaze forward and risked removing an arm from around Hey-song’s neck so she could lower her sun visor. They had come around the other side of the moon where the sun blazed bright and hot. It’s a safety precaution, she continued. Your body stops filling the pouch when it’s full so that you don’t run out of energy. It takes a lot for your body to make that stuff. Didn’t you know that?
            
Hey-song shrugged his shoulders. No one ever told me. I thought all Moon dragons flew like this.
            
Well most dragons have to drift for a while as they wait for their pouches to fill.
            
Huh. Well, sucks for them. He turned his head and gave her a toothy grin.
            
As they continued their orbit and turned their backs to the sun, Hey-song shut off the flow to his pouches and spread his wings wide to catch the solar winds. Tiny veins glowed orange between the white specks as his wings absorbed the sun’s radiation.
            
Sonya looked back again to see the other two dragons way behind with no chance of catching up. I’m pretty sure you won.
            
Of course I did.
            
Sonya laughed as they continued to sail on the river of solar wind. It didn’t take long for them to return to their starting position in the space between the moon and the planet.
            
We better get back soon, Sonya said. Master Abdul will be mad at us for being gone so long.
            
Let’s wait for the other two to show up. I want to see the defeat in their eyes.
            
Oh, come on, Hey-song. You don’t need to rub it in.
            
Yes I do. I’ve been getting crap from them, and others, ever since I hatched, just because I’m smaller than everyone else. I’m tired of it. I want them to respect me.
            
And beating them in races will do that?
            
Yes. Hey-song said as he turned to watch the other two dragons finish the last leg of the race. That wasn’t even my fastest. He called to them. I was taking it slow so as to not upset my human here.
            
Sonya couldn’t hear their responses but she did see the rude manner in which they flipped their tails at Hey-song. He laughed as he headed back to the moon’s surface.

Monday, June 18, 2012

SFF Challenge: Butcher 1976 words

As I have mentioned before, I doing a prompt challenge this summer. And as promised, I'm going to share with y'all what I wrote. The first prompt was Butcher and because I'm with a two year old all day the first thing I thought of was that nursery rhyme "Rub-a-dub-dub/Three men in a tub". So I went with it and this is what I got.

This is a fluffy, fairy tale type piece and not my strongest writing. But I found the story fun to write so I guess that's all that really matters sometimes.

~~~


Rub-a-dub-dub
Three men in a tub
And who do you think they be?
The butcher, the baker
The candlestick maker
All put out to sea.

The Butcher leaned against the port side railing of the ship and sighed as he watched the gray sea pass beneath him. He’d been on this ship, The Tub, for nearly three months and they seemed no closer to their destination than the day they left home.
            
Butcher drummed his meaty fingers on the railing and then turned away from the ocean view in disgust. “Shouldn’t we be there by now?” he asked two men standing behind him.
            
One of the men shrugged. “It’s on Wandering Island,” he said as he ran a hand over his round belly. “No one knows where it is exactly.” The Baker’s face could only be described as doughy and at the moment it looked tired with a tinge of sea sick green.
            
“People say it stays in this general area though,” said the second man. The Candlestick Maker, or Candle for short, was tall and thin. His face dripped sweat from the heat, but he didn’t seem to notice.
            
Butcher was about to say something when a sailor up in the crow’s nest cried out, “Land ho!” Everyone on deck looked up at the crow’s nest and then to where the sailor was pointing off the starboard side. There on the horizon was a tiny black speck against the clear blue sky.
           
 The captain gave an order and the helmsman steered the ship towards the speck. It took several hours before Butcher, or anyone else, could tell that the speck was indeed an island. The sun was setting by the time they got there. They found a deep cove that allowed the ship to settle close to shore. It didn’t take long for the crew to empty The Tub and make camp on the beach. The last rays of the sun saw everyone gathered around a fire eating and drinking.
            
Butcher, Baker and Candle sat a little away from the crew, eating in silence, each lost in their own thoughts.
            
“So what now?” the captain asked from across the fire.
            
The three men jumped and then looked at each other for a long moment. Finally Butcher shrugged and said, “We’ll start our search in the morning, I guess.”
            
“And how long do you plan on searching?” the captain asked.
            
“As long as it takes,” Baker replied with a glare.
           
“We can’t stay here forever,” the captain snapped.
            
Butcher laid a hand on Baker’s shoulder and said, “Give us three days. It shouldn’t take any longer than that to find what we’re looking for.”
            
The captain nodded and turned away from the three men.
            
“Is three days really going to be enough?” Candle asked.
            
“You saw how small this island is,” Butcher replied. “It won’t take us more than a day to cover it.”
            
“And what if the treasure is buried under some random tree in there?” Baker snapped, pointing a finger at the dense jungle that took up the middle of the island.
            
Candle shook his head. “The traveler said that the treasure is in a cave.”
            
Baker opened his mouth to argue more but Butcher held up a hand for silence. “We’ll go to the far side of the island tomorrow,” he said, “over where those cliffs are. That’s the best place to start as any other.”
            
Baker and Candle nodded and began to settle in for the night. No one got much sleep though. The sailors stayed up late drinking and laughing, enjoying the freedom of being on land.
            
When the sun rose the next morning, Butcher, Baker and Candle gathered their things and started their trek across the island. They made it to the far side before noon.
            
The day before, as The Tub circled the island looking for a place to drop anchor, Butcher heard one of the sailors comment on how the island looked like a wedge of Swiss cheese. One side of the island sloped gently out of the ocean and up to the other side where it dropped off a steep cliff face riddled with caves.
            
From the top of the cliffs the men had a magnificent view of the ocean and cloudless sky. They could also see how far of a drop it was down to the waves that broke against the rocky shore.
            
Without a word the men pulled climbing rope and gear from their packs and began their decent down the cliff face. At first, the caves they passed weren’t really caves at all, more like deep pockmarks in the rock face. It took until they were close to the bottom before they found a cave that looked promising.
            
The opening was narrow but they could see that the cave went deep into the earth. They crawled into the cave and lit torches they had in their packs. A few hundred yards from the opening a tunnel took a sharp turn to the right and down into the darkness.
            
Butcher led the way, with Baker and Candle following and exchanging worried glances. The tunnel continued to twist and turn and always went downward. After an hour they finally saw an orange glow ahead of them. As they drew closer waves of heat assaulted them. They turned the last corner and came into a cavern half full of lava. The heat was so intense the sweat that dripped off of them sizzled when it hit the ground.
            
Before the men was a long slender bridge that was made of a strange stone. The bridge led to a wide island that gently bobbed in the lava. Sprawled out on that island was a creature from nightmares.
            
The entire thing was black. It had the head of a ram, with long twisted horns. Its body was scaled and shinny and had six legs. The front pair was huge lion paws, the middle pair thick horse legs and the back were massive eagle talons. Feathered wings were folded against the creature’s body, making it impossible to tell their span. The tail was that of a scorpion, the tip large enough to impale a man.
            
Candle swore under his breath.
            
“What the hell is that?” Baker whispered, his voice trembling.
            
Butcher shook his head, fear keeping him from replying.
            
Before any of the men could move or even think about what to do, the Beast opened one red eye. The men fell back a step, fear making their hands tremble and causing them to drop their torches.
            
The Beast rolled its eye and sighed. “What do you want?” it asked, its tone bored.
            
For a long moment the men were too shocked to speak. It was Butcher who cleared his throat and spoke first. “Excuse me?”
            
“I said, what do you want?”
            
“Um, well,” Butcher said, looking to his companions for help. The other two just shook their heads. “We, um, came here looking for the treasure.”
            
The Beast let out a long stream of gray smoke. “Of course, the treasure. Men like you are always coming here looking for my gold.”
            
“It’s not gold we’re after,” Candle said, his fear half choking him.
            
The Beast raised its head and looked at the men with both eyes. “If you’re not here for the gold, then what treasure are you seeking?”
            
“We heard a story from a traveler that had been here before that amongst your gold was magical tools of various trades,” Baker said. “Including a magical rolling pin that could cause every pastry it made to taste like heaven.”
            
“And a candle mold,” Candle choked out, “that made candles that last forever.”
            
Butcher nodded. “As well as a meat clever that never failed to make the perfect cut of meat.”
            
The Beast regarded the three men for a long moment. “And how did you plan on obtaining these items?”
            
Butcher looked at his companions again and said, “Well no one said that the treasure was being guarded, so we thought we could just take it. But under the current circumstances…” Butcher shrugged.
            
“Is there something we could trade for them?” Baker asked.
            
“There is nothing in your possession I want,” the Beast said. It crossed its front paws and laid its chin on top of them. “But, I could use some entertainment.” A grin grew across its face, revealing a set of large sharp teeth. “I enjoy poetry. If you can help me finish a poem to my satisfaction then I will give you the items you seek.

Rub-a-dub-dub
Three men in a tub
And who do you think they be?
The butcher, the baker
The candlestick maker
All put out to sea.
           
Butcher, Baker and Candle huddled together for several long minutes, discussing their options. None of them were good at poetry but they figured they’d keep it simple and pray for the best.
            
Butcher stepped forward first and said,

Rub-a-dub-brave
Three men in a cave
And who do you think they be?
The butcher, the baker
The candlestick maker
All come to see me.
            
The Beast’s grin widened as he said, “Continue.”
            
Baker was next.

Rub-a-dub-fools
Three men seeking tools
And who do you think they be?
The butcher, the baker
The candlestick maker
All praying to go free.
            
The Beast laughed as Candle came forward.

Rub-a-dub-fits
Three men receiving gifts
And who do you think they be?
The butcher, the baker
The candlestick maker
All new friends to thee.
            
The Beast roared, flapped its wings and beat a paw against the ground. “Oh, that is wonderful! In all my years, no one has made a poem so amusing to me. I have had some of the best poets and scholars try to entertain me with their flowery verses, but never has anyone made me laugh.” The Beast rose and turned toward another bridge that had been hidden behind his bulk. “Follow me and I’ll give you what you seek.”
            
Butcher, Baker and Candle followed the Beast into another large cave filled to the ceiling with gold and jewels. Off to one side was a pile of plain looking objects, among them swords, shields, a sewing needle, armor, a plow, horse harnesses, clothing and various other mundane items.

The Beast picked out the meat cleaver, rolling pin and candle mold from the pile and laid the tools at the men’s feet. “Thank you for entertaining me, gentlemen, I am sure these tools will help you in your trades. But be warned, these tools will wear out over time. To keep them in perfect shape recite the poem we just created together over the tools every morning before you start working with them. If you do that, they will last forever.”

The men picked up their treasure, thanked the Beast profusely and made their way out of the cave and back to the beach where the crew of The Tub was waiting. The sun was again setting and the crew was shocked to see Butcher, Baker and Candle return so soon.

In the morning, everyone returned to the ship and began the journey home. Butcher, Baker and Candle returned to their shops and renewed their work with their new tools. Each remembered what the Beast had told them and they recited the poem every morning. Their businesses became profitable and the men were able to pass them, and their treasure, on to their children. But over time, the story of how the remarkable tools had come to be and how to take care of them was forgotten. The magical tools became just a plain meat cleaver, rolling pin and candle mold. And all that was left of the poem was that first stanza.

Rub-a-dub-dub
Three men in a tub
And who do you think they be?
The butcher, the baker
The candlestick maker
All put out to sea.

~~~

I'd love to hear your thoughts, good, bad or indifferent.

Thanks for reading and Happy Monday!