Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Nifty Newly, featuring Leslie Heath
Writing interesting characters is much easier when you've met a few. And as a night shift emergency nurse with over a decade of experience, Leslie has met more than just a few. Please welcome fantasy author, long-distance runner, pet-rescuer, and people-watcher Leslie Heath.
What's the title of the book you're currently working on? I'm working on the second installment of the Nivaka Chronicles, but I haven't settled on a title for that work yet.
How many books have you written? Published/unpublished? The Last Mayor's Son was my first novel. I'm editing my second book, and have outlined and begun to write the third.
What inspires you, as a writer? I love people-watching. Whether I'm at a mall, a theme park, or a Renaissance Faire, I pay close attention to the people around me: how they walk, how they talk, how they interact with each other, and how they handle challenges. They inspire me to create interesting characters who react to the world and events around them, as well as events that push those characters to their breaking points.
How do you come up with names? Sometimes, I use online name generators. Other times, I've spent hours playing in translator apps, searching for just the right combination of letters. I even named one of my characters after my dog; I just translated his name to a different language.
How do you come up with ideas? I usually start with an interesting detail, whether it's plot, character, or setting related varies from story to story. For example, The Last Mayor's Son was borne from a day at a treetop adventure park. I wondered what it would be like to have a whole town built at that height, and the story evolved from there.
Why is originality important in fiction? Or is it important? It's important to develop characters that stand out in readers' minds. If you manage that, along with a plot that engages the readers, you'll have a winning combination.
What would you consider a good example of originality in your fiction? In The Last Mayor's Son we meet Aibek, a young man raised by his aunt and uncle in the city. We get to experience the wonder of discovery when he arrives in Nivaka and sees how glorious a village in the treetops can be. Nothing in his previous experience has prepared him for the shock of a fully developed civilization built fifteen feet off the ground, and most readers haven't read anything similar, either.
Thank you so much for joining us Leslie, and for sharing your approach to writing original fiction! If you would like to experience more of Leslie's work, please check out the excerpt below. At the bottom of the page are links to her websites, as well as links to where you can purchase her book, The Last Mayor's Son. Please show your support!
Excerpt from The Last Mayor's Son:
None of the travelers spoke as they carefully picked their way along the narrow trail. After a few minutes of walking, Aibek began to hear sounds of small animals moving in the brush, then birds singing overhead. He relaxed somewhat now that the silence was broken by
what he assumed were normal sounds. A short time later, he heard a new sound—the soft tinkling of water flowing somewhere nearby. The sound gradually grew louder as they walked, and soon Aibek saw a narrow stream with a rocky bed just to their left. He picked up the pace and hurried toward the welcoming brook.
When he reached its banks, Aibek dropped his pack on the mossy ground and stooped to drink from the cold, clear water. Beside him, Serik and Faruz did the same. Though the trees shaded them from the midday sun, the heat and humidity were oppressive, and the travelers smiled as they splashed the icy water over their sticky faces.
Aibek knelt on the stony bank and dunked his head under the swiftly flowing water. He gasped as he sat up, his hair dripping the cold water down his back and soaking his white linen shirt. He sat for a moment and stared up into the dense foliage above him. How could a village exist among those branches? What would the people have to eat? He looked down at the stream again and watched as a school of colorful fish swam downstream. How would they cook food in the trees? He hoped he wouldn’t be expected to eat raw food from now on. He shook some water from his hair, then bent and used his hands to drink from the cold stream again.
“It’s not much farther from here,” Serik announced.
Aibek smiled to hide his apprehension, then rose to his feet and gathered his pack. He barely noticed Faruz’s anxious expression as he waved his friend on by. They carefully picked their way over the crumbling bridge one at a time, with Serik leading the way. Faruz went next, and Aibek followed close behind.
As they walked, Aibek kept looking up into the densely-packed branches, trying to spot some sign of the civilization he knew somehow existed up there. He thought about his earlier imaginings of rope bridges and small treehouses. Was that what his new home looked like? Would he be able to see it among the heavy branches and thick leaves? He’d need to learn to navigate above the ground before he could consider taking over as the mayor. A new stab of apprehension struck him. What if he humiliated himself trying to learn? At least the thick moss on the ground would cushion his landing if he fell.
His thoughts kept his eyes trained on the foliage above the trail for long minutes. He looked down just in time to avoid colliding with a tree. He stopped short and looked around; his friends had continued around a bend in the path. Maybe he should pay closer attention to where he set his feet.
After that, he made sure to lower his eyes to the path at least once every three or four steps. Aibek certainly didn’t want to arrive at his new home bloodied and bruised from a mishap on the trail. Still, his thoughts remained distracted. He’d grown up in an area with few trees, and he’d never seen anything like the tall, thick trunks packed close together in this forest. The heavy foliage overhead obscured every trace of sunlight, leaving the path below shrouded in shadow and darkness.
Finally, Aibek peered into the leaves above the path and thought he could make out a wooden railing between patches of leaves. It was high in the trees; a large house could easily fit underneath the hidden structure. It looked like some sort of walkway—a sidewalk made of wood suspended in the trees. As he stared and continued walking, more of the wooden structure came into view between the branches and leaves. He slowed his steps and nudged Faruz, mutely pointing up at the mostly-hidden structure.
Find out more about Leslie at:
Website: www.leslieeheath.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LeslieEHeathAuthor/#
Twitter: @leheath_author
Buy the Rest of the Book Here:
Publisher’s website: http://www.classactbooks.com/young-adult/the-last-mayor-s-son-762-detail
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Last-Mayors-Son-Leslie-Heath-ebook/dp/B01N0RQ3VZ/
Saturday, April 22, 2017
Review of David Gowey's Jire
I recently finished David Gowey's short story, Jire, a beautiful piece that defied a lot of my expectations. He avoided all the easy answers to the problems he raised, and the result is a very well-thought out, heartstring-pulling piece. You have to feel something for Jire. You have to want better for her. Her pain is so real, and her situation so familiar. The decision she makes at the end, whether you agree with it or not, begs the question: "Would I have had the strength to do that?"Here's the review I wrote for Goodreads:
In Jire, Gowey takes a serious look at poverty, colonialism, and the endurance of the human spirit. With the odds stacked against her, Jire has to balance, every day, between the weight of caring for a father who bleeds her dry, and the weight of a society that demands every bit of effort she can muster in exchange for food. Every choice she makes influences her chances for survival.
Gowey offers us a day in the life of Jire, a day that turns out differently in many respects, and yet the same in others. The language is elegant and yet real, the dialogue terse and believable, and the message is universal.
If you would like to experience the world of Jire for yourself, check out the link below. As of the time of this posting, Jire is free for those with Amazon Unlimited.
https://www.amazon.com/Jire-David-Gowey-ebook/dp/B06X9RHG4W/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8
And if you would like to learn more about David Gowey and his other fiction, check out the interview I did with him just a couple weeks ago:
http://www.darksomethorn.com/2017/03/nifty-newly-featuring-david-gowey.html
Nifty Newly, featuring Kenneth Gordon
Ken is a fellow Class Act Books author, with a focus on science fiction titles. If that weren't enough to take up all his time, he's also a web designer, an app and game developer, and he has a brown belt in kung fu. Right on! Please welcome to Nifty Newly, the one and only Kenneth Gordon.
What's the title of the book you're currently working on?
In My Blood is about to come out in May.
How many books have you written? Published/unpublished? What genre?
5 books so far. One is coming out in Aug. My 6th book, I'm still working on. All are Science Fiction.
What inspires you, as a writer?
It could be almost anything. This book coming out was inspired by my cat scratching me in a particular pattern.
How do you come up with names?
For me names are quite specific. I will spend time looking at baby name sites, sometimes name generators are helpful. I have a meaning in mind, so it can be difficult to find a name that matches that meaning. Most lead characters, however, have common names so the reader can more easily identify with them.
How do you come up with ideas?
All I need is one flash of inspiration and I'm off and running.
Why is originality important in fiction? Or is it important?
I'd say it is very important. It's up to us as writers, especially in the sci-fi realm, to take what is known and expand on it, to look towards the future. Originality will keep people coming back to your books. If each one follows the same formula, what is in it for the reader? If you know the detective will solve the case in five minutes every time, what is the point of reading it?
What would you consider a good example of originality in your fiction?
From my soon-to-be-released In My Blood, the ship that travels to the alien planet performs a series of quantum jumps. During them, the ship appears transparent and you can see the stars whizzing by. I do not think that has been seen before.
Thank you so much for sharing with us today, Ken! If you would like to learn more about Kenneth Gordon and his newest book, please check out the bio, blurb, and excerpt below. I've also included links to his website and social media pages.
Web Site: http://kennethgordonnovelist.com/
FB page: https://www.facebook.com/KennethGordonNovelist/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/KennethGordon69
Publisher’s website: http://www.classactbooks.com/index.php/our-authors/manufacturers/kenneth-gordon
About the Author:
Kenneth Gordon grew up in Milford, NH and still lives in that state. When he isn’t writing scifi-infused horror novels, he plays PC games, electric and acoustic guitars, and drums. He also holds a brown belt in Kung Fu.
Blurb:
There is a plague on an alien world and emissaries have been sent to all inhabited planets to find the Chosen One. It is he that will cure that plague that now afflicts so many.Thomas Anderson, from New Hampshire, is just about to start his third year of pre-med at Emory University when he meets a strange little man.
Tom is whisked away to the whirlpool galaxy as he starts researching the plague and begins working towards a cure. Little does he know that the cure will cost him everything! He must decide if he is willing to give up his life for a people he doesn’t know on a world that is not his own.
Excerpt:
“This is what we know currently. The disease originated on the second planetary orbit. The Crown Prince and two companions went to the jungle world on an exploratory mission. The Prophet had already told him before he left not to eat from the Faluth tree. After a couple days of exploring, they came upon one of those trees. He was warned again not to eat it by one of his companions, but I suspect his pride overcame his good judgment. I postulate that he may have said ‘I am the Crown Prince, I can do anything I want.’ Thus mocking the words of the Prophet. Six months later, he was dead."
“I don’t understand. How could a fruit kill him?”
“Not only him, but his companions and the royal physician who treated him. Now it has spread to the rest of the province. There are even reports it is in the other provinces as well. If you do not act, our entire species is doomed, along with the other people groups on our world.” The alien lowered his head, closed his eyes and made some sort of humming noise.
“That is our ‘Jick-now,’ funerary song,” Kai explained.
“Again, how can a fruit kill?”
El stopped humming and continued, “We don’t know. He presented with gah-fla symptoms for a couple of days, but seemed to recover. Six months hence, he was at a gathering, took a drink, and dropped to the ground, dead. It was only after we performed a post mortem that we found his heart was completely black.”
“What is the normal color?”
“Red to pink.”
“So, much like us; humans, I mean.”
“Indeed.”
“I really don’t know what exactly I can do. I’m only in my third year of pre med with one infectious disease class under my belt.”
“My son tells me that you are the Chosen One, therefore you will cure this plague. I must confess to you, human, that I have my doubts about you.” Thom stood up and took off his shirt. El-min’s eyes grew wide and his mouth opened wider. “You are indeed the Chosen One. Forgive my doubts.” El-min bowed his head low.
“Nothing to forgive.” Thom said as he put on his shirt, “Truth be told, I’m not sure I can live up to your ideal, but I’ll try my best. Can I get—”
El-min raised his hand. “I just received a message from the ship that we are about to make our first jump. Please sit down and prepare yourselves.”
The three sat down in the chairs.
“Don’t we need seatbelts or something?” Anderson asked.
“Remember the car?” asked Kai-min.
“Yeah.”
“Passive restraints?” the younger alien said.
“Oh, yeah. Ok, same deal.” Thom said as his body stiffened, not knowing what to expect.
“Jump in 3…2…1…JUMP!”
Thom closed his eyes tight and gripped the chair with a white knuckled grip. There was a strange rushing sound. He dared not look, but his curiosity got the better of him and he peeked open one eye. It was as if space itself were passing through the ship and him. He could see stars, constellations, planets; like the ship was invisible, and he was traveling alone in the dark, cold, vastness. Particles passed by him; he felt he could reach out and touch the very fabric of spacetime itself. In an instant it all compressed and whirled past him at incomprehensible speed, yet the ride was as non eventful as sitting on his own couch. Then the wall of the ship came back into view, and the trip continued as if nothing had even happened.
In My Blood will be released in May by Class Act Books. It will be available from the publisher’s website and Amazon.com.
Saturday, April 15, 2017
Nifty Newly, featuring James Austin McCormack
Welcome to another Nifty Newly! James is a Class Act Books author, like me! Unlike me, he's also a
college lecturer from Manchester, England. In addition to writing, he loves hiking
and playing the guitar, though not at the same time. Please welcome James Austin McCormack.
What's
the title of the book you're currently working on?
The
Clockwork Man,
a sort of Arabian Nights/sword and sorcery fantasy novella. I have
also just finished the last book in my science fiction series,
Dragon.
The book is called The
Prisoner of Valathia
and will be out in June this year
How many
books have you written? Published/unpublished? What genre?
I have two
novels, four novellas and a quite a lot of short stories in various
anthologies. published so far. I also have about twenty or so
unpublished short stories which may or may not see the light of day
sometime in the future. I write speculative fiction, mainly science
fiction, horror and fantasy.
What
inspires you, as a writer?
Escapism,
pure and simple, the more I can create my own worlds, setting and
characters the better.
How do
you come up with names?
I often
look up real and ancient names, then give them a twist. It's too easy
to come up with cheesy sounding names when writing science fiction,
especially of the space opera variety. I try to avoid this at all
costs.
How do
you come up with ideas?
I'm not a
prolific writer by any means. I tend to write 300 to 500 words over
the course of the day. I find when I do this the ideas keep coming.
All I need to do is give my subconscious time to work on plots and
themes. This wouldn’t happen if I set aside a writing hour or
couple of hours like a lot of authors do.
Why is
originality important in fiction? Or is it important?
I think it
all depends on what you are trying to do. Personally, I enjoy writing
pulp flavored speculative fiction (mostly sci-fi). I'm not trying to
break new ground or write a post- modern classic. I write the type of
stories I enjoy reading. I don’t worry too much about being that
original.
What
would you consider a good example of originality in your fiction?
Well, if I
had to point to something it would be the blending of genres. Several
reviews of my first science fiction book, Dragon,
have mentioned how different and original the ending is, as much
fantasy as science fiction. The last installment is even more of a
mix, equal parts science fiction, fantasy and also with more than a
touch of horror in there as well. There is also, as with all the
books in the Dragon
series, a large dose of humor.
Thank you
so much for joining us, James! If you'd like to find out more about James's fiction, please check out his social media and author pages here:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jimbomcc69
Class Act Books: http://www.classactbooks.com/index.php/our-authors/manufacturers/james-austin-mccormick
There are more purchase links following the excerpt.
After the death of the Tuolon
Ambassador Lagua and the failure to bring the non-humanoid worlds
into the Alliance, Sillow and Brok’s long partnership is finally at
an end. Now a reluctant solo agent, Sillow is called upon to
undertake his first mission, investigate the Tower, a high-tech
prison complex along with the oligarch who runs it, a mysterious
nobleman who calls himself Tamerlane.Seeking evidence to prove Tamerlane is responsible for a series of terrorist attacks, Sillow quickly uncovers the sheer scale of his plans, a lethal military strike on all four humanoid home worlds. Caught and imprisoned however, the Sylvan finds himself helpless to warn the Alliance of the coming danger.
All the while, something has been evolving, growing stronger inside the Tower, something intangible yet far more dangerous than Tamerlane ever could be, a being implacably opposed to all life in the galaxy.
And only Sillow has any chance of stopping it.
EXCERPT from Dragon:
The Tower of Tamerlane:
Laser fire and shouts echoed as
Sillow was thrown headlong into the cell.
“What are you?” a female
voiced asked. “Some type of green midget?”
Sillow groaned and tried to get
up. He settled for a slumped kneeling position.
“I’m a Sylvan,” he replied.
He squinted into the shadows and saw a figure seated on the upper
berth of a bunk. He could make out little apart from a muscular, yet
shapely pair
of legs. “Who are you?”
The figure jumped down from the
bunk. She was an Amazonian, strong and athletic with an impressive
cleavage and long chestnut hair falling around her shoulders. She was
also extremely pretty despite the
artificial eye and cheek implant. She stretched out a perfectly
formed silver arm, extending her hand. “Titanya.”
Sillow’s eyes widened. “The
Pirate Queen?”
The woman nodded.
The Sylvan took her cybernetic
hand and let himself be hauled to his feet. He found himself head
high to her magnificent chest.
“Sillow,” he replied, smiling
at her breasts. “I’m from the Alliance.”
“Up here, short stuff,” the
woman told him.
Slowly and very reluctantly,
Sillow turned his attention upwards. He grinned. “Nice to meet
you.”
Outside, cries and weapon fire
continued to echo through the halls.
Titanya frowned. “Any idea what
all that’s about?”
“Whole place is going crazy,”
the Sylvan replied. “Something got into Tamerlane’s AI system.”
The woman took a couple of
tentative steps toward the door. Screams echoed through the walls.
“Sounds like a warzone out
there,” she remarked. “You sure the AI is causing all this?”
Sillow frowned. “You know, this
is going to sound kind of crazy but…” he paused, running a hand
over his pointed chin.
“What?” Titanya demanded.
“Well, it kind of looks like
the one causing all this is Darius Drake. You heard of the guy?”
“Oh yeah,” the Earth woman
answered. “We’ve met.”
“Well, somehow he’s put
himself into the computer system.” Sillow gave an embarrassed
shrug. “Sounds sort of off the wall I know.”
There was a sudden explosion and
flames tore through the slits at the top of the door.
“Look out.” Sillow threw
himself at Titanya, knocking her off balance and sending her tumbling
to the floor. The Sylvan landed on top of her, head buried in her
thick auburn locks. A fireball tore past them, turning the bunks into
cinder.
It was some moments before Sillow
glanced up. He found himself looking at the stern, beautiful features
of the Terran woman.
“You okay?” he asked. “Just
so you know, that was me protecting you.”
“Just so you know,” Titanya
replied, “under any other circumstances I’d have busted your jaw
for that.”
Sillow grinned. “You mean
saving your life?”
Titanya flung the little Sylvan
back onto his feet. “Yeah, right. I can’t believe a pipsqueak
like you got the drop on me.”
BUY LINKS:
Publisher’s website:
http://www.classactbooks.com/index.php/component/virtuemart/science-fiction/dragon-the-tower-of-tamerlane-593-detail?Itemid=0
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
Nifty Newly, featuring Ruth Crook
Some authors have a gift for natural-sounding dialogue that makes the rest of us jealous. Ruth Crook is one of those authors. I met her briefly at Southern Virginia University before I graduated, and as I read through her sample for this interview I couldn't help but wish I'd gotten to learn more from her before I left. She definitely has something to share with the world. That said, let me introduce you to my friend, Ruth Crook.
What's the title of the book you're working on? It doesn't have a name yet. Working vague idea is 'my dragon book;' because I only have one so far.
How many books have you written? Published/unpublished? What genre? I've got at least three completed manuscripts, two of which are co-written. All of them are fantasy, one also somewhat meta-fiction.
What inspires you, as a writer? Music, great stories of any medium, friends who enjoy brainstorming. Sometimes random life experiences that suddenly seem to fit characters that may or may not have been there before.
How do you come up with names? Depends. Sometimes I go research mode and go to sites like behindthename.com. Other times I just throw random letters together until something feels right or gives me an idea of a personality. Also looking at credits of movies is fun.
How do you come up with ideas? See my inspiration. Oh and research. I love doing research on something pertinent at the time, whether it be sharks or a historical event or new technologies. Everything has a part in a story; the question is which one is yours.
Why is originality important in fiction? Or is it important? Originality is making someone think about something in a way they haven't before. It is important because it will make the story mean something to the person who reads it. It is also not the only important thing, because almost no perspective has not been covered before. It is just how many people do you manage to help see things anew?
What would you consider a good example of originality in your fiction? Um... Well the main character in my dragon book has a horrible stutter that partially drives some of the anticipation and actual plot. I haven't seen a lot of that problem in fantasy.
Another might be... One of the manuscripts has a character who is really ambiguously neutral except for their own self interest, but does care about others, but also manipulates them to help protect them?
Or the fact that one of my villains is a rather horrible person to all except his daughter, who he still isn't great to and doesn't hide the fact that he's a murderer, but she still manages to have normal morals and they love each other in a great father/daughter way? Somehow?
I suppose if you generalize it all sounds done before. But it is the perspective I enjoy sharing that could perhaps be original.
Thank you so much for joining us today, Ruth! Please support Ruth by checking out the excerpt below, after which you'll find a link to some of her fan-fiction.
Excerpt from Ruth's 'Dragon Book,' Title TBD.
NOTE: The following excerpt is not from a finalized draft; all content is subject to change.
“You sound… tired, Grehsn.”
“Graysen,” he automatically corrected, then swallowed. “I-if you please, Lady Almyra.”
“Right, Graysen.” She glanced out the cave. “The sun is getting lower. Come back tomorrow and I will have something for you to do.”
Graysen blinked and chewed his lip. “…R-right. Of course.” He had forgotten to ask if she needed anything today. But he would probably spend the next ten minutes trying to get the sentence out.
“Yes. G-good day, Lady Almyra.” He bowed gratefully, and left.
As he left the clearing, he saw the remains of the bonfire again and heaved a sigh to himself. He’d meant to bring up the embers, the smoke, how she would attract attention. He should actually probably bring that up. He considered going back-
“Graysen!”
He jumped, fell over, and scrambled to get near a tree. Breath heaving, he looked and saw Pieter somewhat close. He relaxed a bit, trying to get his breathing easier again.
“P-Pieter! Pieter, wow, um. You… you scared me.”
“I scared you?” Pieter scoffed. “Yeah; and you are a clodded lucky idiot! That… was what I think it was? In the cave?”
Graysen’s heart rate flew. “W-what do- do you think- um, what-”
“A dragon, Graysen!” Pieter hissed, coming close.
Too much, too soon. Graysen felt faint.
“… Graysen?” Pieter asked, sounding a bit distant.
Graysen breathed a bit, thankful he was already on the ground, closed his eyes, focused. Breathed again.
“Um… O-ookay. S-sorry. Ah... what?”
“I said, a dragon,” Pieter repeated. “And you were talking to it. So no fainting on me because that won’t work. I will wait.”
He sat down to prove his point, watching Graysen.
Graysen had been so tired and muddled before, but this, Pieter’s gaze, set him on edge again, though didn't clear any thoughts. Graysen looked everywhere else, trying to find an escape, trying to find an excuse not to talk about it, about her. The dragon. Lady Almyra. Was that even a proper way to address a dragon? She wasn’t a lady, was she? Or maybe she was- why was he worrying about that now?
“Um.”
He cleared his throat, put a hand through his hair, breathed again. Glanced nervously at Pieter.
“Y-you… you heard? Saw?”
“Heard. And saw, a little. I’ve not gotten too close, tried to stay downwind.”
Graysen nodded, thankful for that, still not focusing well. “Um… How did- W-why- Um. Y-you’re here. Why?”
“Answer me first, Graysen. That is a dragon? And not some… I don’t know, a… strange… bear, or something?”
He sighed, obviously not even believing himself.
Graysen shook his head. “Sh-she’s real. Definitely. I… I- there were flames. Once, maybe twice. And- and the fire was gr—” Oh. The embers. He swallowed. “… Did you… see it? Smoke?”
“What? Where?”
“O-outside.”
“Oh, you mean the bonfire outside the cave? Yeah, that certainly got my attention a day or so ago. I figured it might be something to do with the festival, since it was kind-of closer to town than we were— I was asked to look into it, though no one is real worried about it. Well, they aren’t right now. They will be when I tell them.”
His face was somber.
“N-no, no! No, Pieter!” Graysen grabbed his friend’s shoulders. “No, please-- Y-you can’t. Please, don’t- don't d-”
“Graysen!” Pieter glared at him, confused. “It’s a dragon! You can’t just- just hide it! Especially in a forest! Close to town!”
“She’s not- She- Aaaahh…” Graysen floundered. Pieter couldn’t go gather people right now, when Graysen still had no idea why she was there, what she wanted. “Pieter, please.”
“Why?” Pieter demanded. “You aren’t making sense, Graysen!”
“She-”
“Who?”
“The dragon! Lady Almyra! She- she’s the dragon. She’s… here, for… I don’t know. But- but I’m trying to… to find out. She’s… um, asked me to… to do things for her. Sort-of.”
“Graysen…” Pieter said. “I’ve never heard of a dragon in the forest. Or speaking. Now I've just seen both, but-”
“And she’s not done anything!” Graysen interjected. “Other than… than boil leaves! And- maybe eat a-a deer or something!”
“Graysen, she’s a dragon,” Pieter repeated, looking his friend in the eyes. “Even if she talks. Even if she hasn’t done anything so far. Even if- wait. What sort of things does she ask you to do?”
Graysen shrugged. “I don’t know, just… things! I-I've gotten leaves for her, those pots I asked for, a-a bell…”
Pieter gave him a strange look, but Graysen just shook his head.
“I-I… don’t know, understand, much. Yet. But… I-I’m trying. And… I think- she’s getting used to me. Um. She hasn’t eaten me, at least. Even... when I brought Duncan.”
“You brought your dog?”
Graysen grimaced. “Once. Father insisted.”
“Your father knows?!”
“No! No, no, nobody knows!” Graysen insisted. “N-nobody- at all! Just… just me.”
Pieter looked at him incredulously.
Graysen sobered a bit. “If- if I just came to you, and said I’d found a dragon, would you believe me?”
Pieter rolled his lips.
“And said- that I talked with her?”
“Okay fine,” Pieter said, letting Graysen go. “Point. But…”
He looked back in the cave’s direction.
“But…” he looked back at Graysen, confused. “How are you still alive?”
“I-I told you,” Graysen said. “She… she’s asking me to- to do things for her. Because… I don’t know. Um. But… but she is. Has.”
“Why?”
“I don't know!”
“Right. Sorry. I mean…” Pieter trailed off, rubbing his neck, then shook his head and sighed. “Okay. Fine. But… why haven’t you, you know, tried… doing something?”
“I am!”
“I mean, you know, acting on something, or-”
Graysen looked at him despairingly.
“… Okay right. You. Alone. And… dragon. Dragon.” He sighed. “Wow.”
“Look, I’m- I’m trying to find out why she’s here, but… but it’s hard. And- and she’s not really… Um… Helpful?”
He grimaced. That wasn't the right word.
“She’s a dragon, Graysen.”
“I heard you the first fifty times!” Graysen snapped.
Pieter raised his eyebrows.
Graysen looked down, slightly red, from all of who knew what.
“S-sorry…”
Pieter went on. “Okay, so… it’s- she’s a dragon. With a name? …Did you-”
“No,” Graysen cut him off. “She gave me her name. She does talk.”
“… Lady?”
Graysen turned more red. “W-well, that part I added. Because… well… she sounded… noble? I mean, how do you address a dragon?”
Pieter grimaced. “Right. Well… does she seem, I don’t know, hungry? Or… flame-ish?”
“No. Wait. What?”
“I don’t know. Does she seem about to attack anything?” Pieter asked, gesturing.
“No.”
“Are you sure?”
Graysen threw his hands up.
“I don’t know! I-I don’t exactly have- experience in this kind of thing! Do you?”
“No… Right.” Pieter sighed again, ran a hand over his head. “What- ...We should go to Lord Straub- But Lord Blodgett is there too. Felsen! I doubt Lord Blodgett would do anything to help.”
“W-well, he might-”
“No, because even if he did, he'd then take credit and place blame and we’d end up with an even worse monster, over both lands.” Pieter retorted.
And then Graysen practically saw an idea hit his friend. “P-Pieter…?”
“Graysen… How… ‘reasonable’ is this dragon?”
“Pieter.”
“Tell me.”
“Pieter.”
“Graysen.”
“Pieter.”
“Graysen.”
Graysen sighed. “She… I don’t know. I- I can sort-of talk with her… but, not- not… um, I don’t know about reasonably. Though, that is probably because… w-well.” He shrugged. “Me.”
“Then, do you think that someone else could-”
“Pieter no.” Graysen interrupted, eyes wide. “No g-going and talking to her! No!”
“Graysen, if she’s reasonable, then maybe-”
“Pieter! Listen to yourself!” Graysen plead, grasping Pieter’s arms.
“And listen to yourself, Graysen!” Pieter retorted. “You’re defending a dragon with a proper name and everything! Trying to... keep her hidden! And not doing a great job at it, either!”
Graysen turned red and looked down, but didn’t let go of Pieter. “… Pieter, she- I don’t- I don’t know what she’ll do with other people. With- with people, really.”
“… Well, what kind of mood was she in when you left?”
“What?”
“Just now. When you left.”
“Um, not- not bad, but-”
Pieter shook Graysen’s hand off and stood up.
“But Pieter! She, um, she… seemed tired! A-and… grumpy! Yes, mad at the world. Not safe.”
Pieter ignored him.
“Pieter, I- I’m not- I don’t-” Graysen scrambled up and grabbed Pieter’s arm again.
Pieter looked at him, face set.
“Graysen. We are desperate. Lord Blodgett is a blot on the land with his own name, and now he’s trying to expand that to your land. Don’t you want to do something about it?”
Graysen’s mouth opened and closed.
“Usually we can’t, I know. It’s the lords that own the land and the merchants who run it. But maybe, just maybe, we can. Maybe this is The Great One sending us help!”
Graysen looked at him dubiously.
“I- I don’t- I mean, Pieter… I don’t think that- that the Great One… uses dragons.”
“Well? Do you have a better idea?”
“Well, maybe… um.” Maybe dragons weren’t what people always thought they were. Although he still had no evidence for that. He was still very afraid that she was just what everyone said dragons were. But she hadn’t been so far, not in the least. Except for the frightening bit. She definitely did that. Although it wasn’t as if she had to try very hard.
“I’m going, Graysen,” Pieter pulled out of Graysen’s grasp.
Graysen watched, his mouth taut as his friend strode towards the cave. Then, he tackled Pieter.
“Graysen,” he automatically corrected, then swallowed. “I-if you please, Lady Almyra.”
“Right, Graysen.” She glanced out the cave. “The sun is getting lower. Come back tomorrow and I will have something for you to do.”
Graysen blinked and chewed his lip. “…R-right. Of course.” He had forgotten to ask if she needed anything today. But he would probably spend the next ten minutes trying to get the sentence out.
“Yes. G-good day, Lady Almyra.” He bowed gratefully, and left.
As he left the clearing, he saw the remains of the bonfire again and heaved a sigh to himself. He’d meant to bring up the embers, the smoke, how she would attract attention. He should actually probably bring that up. He considered going back-
“Graysen!”
He jumped, fell over, and scrambled to get near a tree. Breath heaving, he looked and saw Pieter somewhat close. He relaxed a bit, trying to get his breathing easier again.
“P-Pieter! Pieter, wow, um. You… you scared me.”
“I scared you?” Pieter scoffed. “Yeah; and you are a clodded lucky idiot! That… was what I think it was? In the cave?”
Graysen’s heart rate flew. “W-what do- do you think- um, what-”
“A dragon, Graysen!” Pieter hissed, coming close.
Too much, too soon. Graysen felt faint.
“… Graysen?” Pieter asked, sounding a bit distant.
Graysen breathed a bit, thankful he was already on the ground, closed his eyes, focused. Breathed again.
“Um… O-ookay. S-sorry. Ah... what?”
“I said, a dragon,” Pieter repeated. “And you were talking to it. So no fainting on me because that won’t work. I will wait.”
He sat down to prove his point, watching Graysen.
Graysen had been so tired and muddled before, but this, Pieter’s gaze, set him on edge again, though didn't clear any thoughts. Graysen looked everywhere else, trying to find an escape, trying to find an excuse not to talk about it, about her. The dragon. Lady Almyra. Was that even a proper way to address a dragon? She wasn’t a lady, was she? Or maybe she was- why was he worrying about that now?
“Um.”
He cleared his throat, put a hand through his hair, breathed again. Glanced nervously at Pieter.
“Y-you… you heard? Saw?”
“Heard. And saw, a little. I’ve not gotten too close, tried to stay downwind.”
Graysen nodded, thankful for that, still not focusing well. “Um… How did- W-why- Um. Y-you’re here. Why?”
“Answer me first, Graysen. That is a dragon? And not some… I don’t know, a… strange… bear, or something?”
He sighed, obviously not even believing himself.
Graysen shook his head. “Sh-she’s real. Definitely. I… I- there were flames. Once, maybe twice. And- and the fire was gr—” Oh. The embers. He swallowed. “… Did you… see it? Smoke?”
“What? Where?”
“O-outside.”
“Oh, you mean the bonfire outside the cave? Yeah, that certainly got my attention a day or so ago. I figured it might be something to do with the festival, since it was kind-of closer to town than we were— I was asked to look into it, though no one is real worried about it. Well, they aren’t right now. They will be when I tell them.”
His face was somber.
“N-no, no! No, Pieter!” Graysen grabbed his friend’s shoulders. “No, please-- Y-you can’t. Please, don’t- don't d-”
“Graysen!” Pieter glared at him, confused. “It’s a dragon! You can’t just- just hide it! Especially in a forest! Close to town!”
“She’s not- She- Aaaahh…” Graysen floundered. Pieter couldn’t go gather people right now, when Graysen still had no idea why she was there, what she wanted. “Pieter, please.”
“Why?” Pieter demanded. “You aren’t making sense, Graysen!”
“She-”
“Who?”
“The dragon! Lady Almyra! She- she’s the dragon. She’s… here, for… I don’t know. But- but I’m trying to… to find out. She’s… um, asked me to… to do things for her. Sort-of.”
“Graysen…” Pieter said. “I’ve never heard of a dragon in the forest. Or speaking. Now I've just seen both, but-”
“And she’s not done anything!” Graysen interjected. “Other than… than boil leaves! And- maybe eat a-a deer or something!”
“Graysen, she’s a dragon,” Pieter repeated, looking his friend in the eyes. “Even if she talks. Even if she hasn’t done anything so far. Even if- wait. What sort of things does she ask you to do?”
Graysen shrugged. “I don’t know, just… things! I-I've gotten leaves for her, those pots I asked for, a-a bell…”
Pieter gave him a strange look, but Graysen just shook his head.
“I-I… don’t know, understand, much. Yet. But… I-I’m trying. And… I think- she’s getting used to me. Um. She hasn’t eaten me, at least. Even... when I brought Duncan.”
“You brought your dog?”
Graysen grimaced. “Once. Father insisted.”
“Your father knows?!”
“No! No, no, nobody knows!” Graysen insisted. “N-nobody- at all! Just… just me.”
Pieter looked at him incredulously.
Graysen sobered a bit. “If- if I just came to you, and said I’d found a dragon, would you believe me?”
Pieter rolled his lips.
“And said- that I talked with her?”
“Okay fine,” Pieter said, letting Graysen go. “Point. But…”
He looked back in the cave’s direction.
“But…” he looked back at Graysen, confused. “How are you still alive?”
“I-I told you,” Graysen said. “She… she’s asking me to- to do things for her. Because… I don’t know. Um. But… but she is. Has.”
“Why?”
“I don't know!”
“Right. Sorry. I mean…” Pieter trailed off, rubbing his neck, then shook his head and sighed. “Okay. Fine. But… why haven’t you, you know, tried… doing something?”
“I am!”
“I mean, you know, acting on something, or-”
Graysen looked at him despairingly.
“… Okay right. You. Alone. And… dragon. Dragon.” He sighed. “Wow.”
“Look, I’m- I’m trying to find out why she’s here, but… but it’s hard. And- and she’s not really… Um… Helpful?”
He grimaced. That wasn't the right word.
“She’s a dragon, Graysen.”
“I heard you the first fifty times!” Graysen snapped.
Pieter raised his eyebrows.
Graysen looked down, slightly red, from all of who knew what.
“S-sorry…”
Pieter went on. “Okay, so… it’s- she’s a dragon. With a name? …Did you-”
“No,” Graysen cut him off. “She gave me her name. She does talk.”
“… Lady?”
Graysen turned more red. “W-well, that part I added. Because… well… she sounded… noble? I mean, how do you address a dragon?”
Pieter grimaced. “Right. Well… does she seem, I don’t know, hungry? Or… flame-ish?”
“No. Wait. What?”
“I don’t know. Does she seem about to attack anything?” Pieter asked, gesturing.
“No.”
“Are you sure?”
Graysen threw his hands up.
“I don’t know! I-I don’t exactly have- experience in this kind of thing! Do you?”
“No… Right.” Pieter sighed again, ran a hand over his head. “What- ...We should go to Lord Straub- But Lord Blodgett is there too. Felsen! I doubt Lord Blodgett would do anything to help.”
“W-well, he might-”
“No, because even if he did, he'd then take credit and place blame and we’d end up with an even worse monster, over both lands.” Pieter retorted.
And then Graysen practically saw an idea hit his friend. “P-Pieter…?”
“Graysen… How… ‘reasonable’ is this dragon?”
“Pieter.”
“Tell me.”
“Pieter.”
“Graysen.”
“Pieter.”
“Graysen.”
Graysen sighed. “She… I don’t know. I- I can sort-of talk with her… but, not- not… um, I don’t know about reasonably. Though, that is probably because… w-well.” He shrugged. “Me.”
“Then, do you think that someone else could-”
“Pieter no.” Graysen interrupted, eyes wide. “No g-going and talking to her! No!”
“Graysen, if she’s reasonable, then maybe-”
“Pieter! Listen to yourself!” Graysen plead, grasping Pieter’s arms.
“And listen to yourself, Graysen!” Pieter retorted. “You’re defending a dragon with a proper name and everything! Trying to... keep her hidden! And not doing a great job at it, either!”
Graysen turned red and looked down, but didn’t let go of Pieter. “… Pieter, she- I don’t- I don’t know what she’ll do with other people. With- with people, really.”
“… Well, what kind of mood was she in when you left?”
“What?”
“Just now. When you left.”
“Um, not- not bad, but-”
Pieter shook Graysen’s hand off and stood up.
“But Pieter! She, um, she… seemed tired! A-and… grumpy! Yes, mad at the world. Not safe.”
Pieter ignored him.
“Pieter, I- I’m not- I don’t-” Graysen scrambled up and grabbed Pieter’s arm again.
Pieter looked at him, face set.
“Graysen. We are desperate. Lord Blodgett is a blot on the land with his own name, and now he’s trying to expand that to your land. Don’t you want to do something about it?”
Graysen’s mouth opened and closed.
“Usually we can’t, I know. It’s the lords that own the land and the merchants who run it. But maybe, just maybe, we can. Maybe this is The Great One sending us help!”
Graysen looked at him dubiously.
“I- I don’t- I mean, Pieter… I don’t think that- that the Great One… uses dragons.”
“Well? Do you have a better idea?”
“Well, maybe… um.” Maybe dragons weren’t what people always thought they were. Although he still had no evidence for that. He was still very afraid that she was just what everyone said dragons were. But she hadn’t been so far, not in the least. Except for the frightening bit. She definitely did that. Although it wasn’t as if she had to try very hard.
“I’m going, Graysen,” Pieter pulled out of Graysen’s grasp.
Graysen watched, his mouth taut as his friend strode towards the cave. Then, he tackled Pieter.
If you enjoyed this and would like to experience more of Ruth Crook's writing, please check out Simply a Backstory, a work of Princess Tutu fan-fiction, available here: https://www.fanfiction.net/s/10523176/1/Simply-A-Backstory
Tuesday, March 21, 2017
Nifty Newly, featuring David Gowey
David is an author I look up to. He has this self-publishing thing down, and I think part of the key is that he has a compelling style and a tone that encourages reader trust. I'm sure it helps that he knows his way around the best publishing and promotional platforms. For a take on originality that rings of personal experience, please welcome David Gowey.
What's the title of the book you're working on? That's the big question, isn't it? I usually end up working on too many things at once and gradually finish one or another. Instead of listing all of those, I'll just say that the one I should be working on is The Work of Souls, which is the sequel to my first book.
How many books have you written? Published/unpublished? What genre? I've written and self-published two so far. Kaschar's Quarter is novel-length fantasy and First Instance is novella-length science fiction, though I might extend the latter at some point. The third, a fantasy novelette called Jire, is unpublished but will probably go up on Amazon in the next few weeks. [Jire is available now! Click on the image below.]

What inspires you, as a writer? I've always been telling some story or another, whether it's doing voiceovers with LEGO as a kid or doing something a bit more complex now as a graduate student. What I really want to get at is creating character experiences that feel authentically human, and putting them in a world that seems not so far removed from our own. It's about taking the weird things that go on inside my imagination and breaking them down into little chunks that characters can relate to in their own unique ways, and letting readers feel like they're peeking in on something real.
How do you come up with names? Usually, it's to fit the feel that I want each society in the story to have, or what Earth society I want it to bring to the reader's mind. This is done through either using a list (say, Spanish men's names) and changing them slightly to also give a feeling of newness with the familiarity. I also derive some from constructed languages, like how Jire's name means “red” and this has some implications about her characterization.
How do you come up with ideas? What I try to do in my stories is find some balance between relatable characters and unique situations. These situations usually come from reading history and trying to put myself in them, which then gets turned into a character. A recent example was reading about the Mt Tambora eruption in 1815, and trying to see what that aftermath would entail for a character who was really just a regular guy. There was no way for him to save the world, fix things by fighting against anthropomorphized forces of nature, or really change much at all except how he reacted to something that he only somewhat understood. I guess this could be a clue as to why not many of my stories have happy endings.
Why is originality important in fiction? Or is it important? What would you consider a good example of originality in your fiction? Originality is only as good as the execution, and the same can be said about being unoriginal. It would be easy to make just another fantasy story about talking dragons, dwarves, and halflings (not hobbits, though, since at least that word is copyrighted) but what's more difficult is for the author to make a good case that their story is different. Changing up the set dressing, as in pulling from a variety of sources beyond just the standard medieval/Renaissance Western Europe fantasy ideal is one way to do this, although it requires a lot of research to present non-Western (or really, unfamiliar) societies and culture in a way that isn't cheap or exploitative.
Thank you so much, David! I'm reading Jire right now, and I've been really enjoying the tight prose and thoughtful characterization. If you would like to learn more about David Gowey, check out his stories, or keep up to date on all his latest projects, you can check out his Amazon page here:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01CPNH7DM
And here's his blog! Along with a number of writing excerpts for your reading pleasure:
https://davidgowey.wordpress.com/
The following excerpt is taken from “Waiting on the Rain”, a short story you can find in its entirety here.
It always rained on Lorakast. Something about the orbital distance or screwy atmospheric modeling, they’d said in the preliminary report on the way here, but there had to be more to it than that. Years in the business had taught Rell that much. She watched the rain pattering and pinging off the thick window that separated her from death by hypoxia and wondered where they’d gone wrong. Interplanetary Resources Incorporated only sent upper-level inspectors like herself when something had gone wrong, so it was her first assumption. But the colonial governor wasn’t cooperating, and that made things tricky.
She’d been in situations like this before. There was the riot a couple years ago, where the Thevashi ambassador had thrown such a fit over IRI’s installation on Gasin b that only the threat of RSA navy support had called off what promised to be a slugfest in orbit between prospector escorts and a surprisingly large contingent of alien scouts and their human buddies. Rell could deal with aliens and had on plenty of occasions; it was her fellow humans for whom she couldn’t find an ounce of patience.
Nothing had gotten out of hand. The translators had done their job with consoling the vaguely ursine attackers that this wasn’t just a smash-and-grab operation by IRI, that the terraforming operations were proceeding on schedule to bring about a human-tolerable atmosphere and not just a Thevashi-intolerable one. By the end of the little scuffle, the aliens packed up and headed home, appeased but not for long. What bothered Rell the most was that some people out there still thought she was some kind of monster.
And for what? For accelerating nitrogen production on a cyanide-and-sulfur wasteland that not even a Josikan would look at twice? For pushing out a bunch of claim-jumpers like the Thevashi whose only dog in the colonization fight was getting there first, and not preserving natural habitats as they claimed? And natural habitats for what? The only things alive on Gasin b were extremophilic bacteria that were already found across half the system anyway. Let the xenobiologists—and yes, Rell would still call them that, no matter how often she was told it was insensitive—take their samples and move on. It wasn’t like they were paving over Ryosh c, for heaven’s sake. Her boss might even balk at that one.
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Nifty Newly, featuring Cassiopeia L. Fletcher
Destined to be one of the coolest names in fiction, Cassiopeia is also an old friend and former classmate from Southern Virginia University. She helped me beta-read my first book a couple years ago, and right now I'm beta-reading one of hers. I'm excited to share with you her take on originality, idea-generation, and inspiration, but I'm even more excited to see the book she shared with me in print. Let me introduce you to Cassiopeia L. Fletcher.

What's the title of the book you're working on? I have an attention span problem so I’m always working seriously on several books at a time. I’m currently focused on two specifically: The World Over and The Book of Ages.
How many books have you written? Published/unpublished? What genre? Three, none yet published. One was a superhero book, one a science-fiction thriller, and the third a chicklit romance.
What inspires you, as a writer? I never know until I’m inspired. I suppose it’s cliché to say ‘life itself,’ but that’s generally it.
How do you come up with names? It’s hard to say. Most of the names I have for characters started so long ago that I can’t remember where they came from. I do know that most of the time, especially for main characters, the name just sort of happens. In those cases, I often have ‘filler’ names before the ‘real’ name manifests through my writing while other times the name and character come before the story itself. On very rare occasions, I look for names in a babyname book or app that has the meaning I’m trying to convey. Of course, if I’m writing High Fantasy, I usually just make up a name, but I always try to assign that name a meaning in the language it originates from.
How do you come up with ideas? Ideas are a lot like names for me; they usually just appear. Sometimes I pull them from a dream, other times from a TV show or movie that had an abandoned plot-thread that I thought needed explored, and a lot of the times through conversations with family and friends that pull up ‘what if’s or ‘wouldn’t it be cool’s.
Why is originality important in fiction? Or is it important? I am in the school of thought that there is no such thing as an original story. All of the greatest tropes and narrative arcs have been done since the very beginning of human literature and so there is very little to be written—if anything—that is truly ‘original’. Even those few stories that have never been done before aren’t really original, they’re just too boring for anyone to want to read. That being said, originality in fiction is very important, not in spite of the lack of original stories, but because of it. Readers have an emotional connection with the things they read and that connection is what makes them want to keep reading. Having a story that everyone can connect with—boy meets girl, girl hates boy, boy and girl fall in love, break up, get back together and live happily ever after—makes it easier to create a narrative that people find interesting and characters that they want to root for. What makes each individual story unique is not the story itself; it’s the way it’s told.
What would you consider a good example of originality in your fiction? I like shaking up the common tropes just enough to surprise. For instance, if I have a character that is well loved by both the people in the story and the readers of the story, I’m probably going to kill them (assuming it’s the kind of story where that makes sense) or put them in some sort of peril that makes it very possible that they will die. Not because I like hurting my characters, but because it creates an emotional reaction in readers that resonates. Even when I’m not killing characters, I’m still trying to create a strong emotional context between my characters, their situations, and the readers, because as long as the reader is invested in what is happening, the situation is unique and original, no matter how cliché or routine the story may be.
Thanks again, Cassie! If you would like to learn more about Cassiopeia's work and keep up to date on her writing projects, you can check out her blog here:
http://www.cassiopeiafletcher.com
Excerpt from the first chapter of Book of Ages:
Excerpt from the first chapter of Book of Ages:
Alexis
came back from the dead with a friend. At least, that’s what he
kept calling himself. He appeared as a soothing voice that echoed
through her lethargic brain, wrapping her up in mental arms to
comfort and protect her. At first his words were indecipherable, just
a meaningless murmur whispered insistently, the way a parent would
try to reassure an inconsolable child, repeating the same strain over
and over and over.
It
was not your fault. It was not your fault. It was not your fault.
It
was weeks before Alexis was coherent enough to understand the words.
It
would be years yet before she believed them. If she ever did.
Of
course, Alexis knew that Emrys wasn’t real. He was a subconscious
manifestation she had created in the wake of having her entire life
deconstructed in one horrible, world crushing moment. A manifestation
that Dr. Harris had promised would be reabsorbed in time. Though how
much time was anyone’s guess. It had already been six years.
Maybe
her new therapist would have a more solid hypothesis. Supposing she
ever got around to finding one. Despite the constant companionship of
her neurological guest—or maybe even because of it—Alexis didn’t
appreciate the idea of someone poking around in her head. Not even a
trained psychologist. Her mind and thoughts were her own.
Alexis
shook her head and stepped back to admire her handiwork. The sky-blue
paint on her new apartment’s wall was hardly visible behind the
masterful collage of black framed photos that now covered it. She had
originally planned to use the silver frames she brought from home,
but the large picture window allowed copious amounts of light to
bathe her picture-wall at nearly every hour of the day. The glass
would reflect enough sunlight without adding metallic frames into the
mix.
“Well?”
Emrys
grunted, as he always did when he disapproved. Early in their
relationship, Alexis would have fallen into a tirade against his
apparent lack of enthusiasm for her family, but their time together
had soothed her temper in most ways. If not all ways.
“What
has your knickers in a twist?” she asked, taking a jab at Emrys’s
inexplicable British accent. She pulled her mass of blonde curls away
from her sweaty face and neck with a groan. Hair-ties were clearly a
must in this awful place.
Must
you be so vulgar? Emrys asked in his detached, almost echoing
voice.
“That
was hardly vulgar, you old prude,” she bit back, resisting the urge
to smile at their usual banter. Ironically, despite being a vivid
reminder of her failing mental health, Emrys and his ever-present
complaints had become the only source of stability, and even
normalcy, that Alexis had in her life. On a good day, she might even
admit that he made her feel sane. Or at least not completely insane.
“Well?”
she asked again.
You
know what I think, Emrys returned, his disembodied voice
decidedly bitter. It is what I have thought since you first
concocted this…ludicrous idea.
“Doth
my ears deceive me?” Alexis asked, though she knew full well that
she couldn’t physically hear him. “The Neuron Cloud is
questioning my sanity?” She pressed the back of her hand to her
forehead and feigned a swoon. “Oh the humanity!”
She
could almost feel Emrys bristle at her mocking and she imagined how
he must look, sulking from her tone. Obviously, as an insubstantial
(and psychological) being, Emrys couldn’t be seen. But there were
moments, especially now with the sun streaming in through the large,
black paned window, that Alexis would almost swear she could see him
as he might have been.
It
was a faint image, more of an outline really, of a tall, athletic man
with dark skin and shaggy, light colored hair. He stared past her,
almost glaring at her collage, his arms folded resentfully as he
stood with his broad back to the window. As if sensing her eyes,
Emrys looked away from the picture covered wall and caught her gaze
with a frown. His eyes glowed gold in the sunlight reflected off her
mass of glass-faced frames.
Alexis
blinked and the image disappeared. All that greeted her was a
merciless flood of red sun.
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