We've all done it. Every single one of us has done it at least once during our lifetime - whether when we were kids or as grups.
"It" is that moment of waking when you think, "Ahhhh, it's Saturday." You snuggle down under the covers and settle in to go back to sleep and then reality leaps in, shouting and waving its hands. "Aw, crap! It's only (name the day of the week)!" A frantic look at the clock usually followed by "Oh, spit! I'm late!" Which is then followed by an even more frantic game of Beat The Clock.
Happy, happy day for me! I had that moment, only I woke up, snuggled and thought, "Crap. Today's Sunday already." I started planning my day, what I'm going to make for lunches, the chores I had to do (which are done which is why I'm sitting here, writing this). I started thinking about Monday, what I have to do there, what I need to do there (damn that Gantt Chart, anyway!).
After a few minutes Sam started crying piteously from the next room. Poor thing sounded so forlorn that I had to get up. I threw off the covers, turned my hips and hit the floor, then took a double-take look at the clock. No. No way! It couldn't be eight forty-five already! I pulled the iPad over and, sure enough, it was. Poor Sam! No wonder he was crying, he probably thought he had been abandoned.
Still thinking it was Sunday I took care of him, did my upstairs chores - scooped the boxes, fed the cat, watered the cat (standing at the bathroom sink so he can drink from the palm of my hand). I made the bed, straightened the room. Then headed downstairs and turned on the heat, cleaned the counters, emptied the dishwasher. In other words, nearly an hour passed before I had a sudden thought followed by a disbelieving, "Nah. No way. It can't be Saturday, can it?" A quick search through the TV listings (since my computer wasn't on and the iPad was still upstairs) and my suspicion solidified. When I stumbled across the QVC shopping network with its 'Saturday Q' I almost jumped for joy. It is only Saturday. Yee-haw!!!
It was the cookery plan that threw me off. I always do my cooking for the week on Sunday, but here it was, Saturday morning and I was thinking of cooking.
I still have a boatload of not-such-fun stuff to do: laundry, folding, putting away. Hubby wants to move furniture and clean. But I also have that much more time for the fun stuff, too. For doing this and shopping at Costco (dare I say I love Costco?), and writing and other stuff I get to choose to do.
Such a nice day. Such a cold day. While I was choring* around the kitchen this morning I looked out the window. There was a scrub jay in the yard. The poor thing was trying to hide a seed for future eating but the ground was too hard. He tried one place, then another, then a third. I got started pouring my coffee so didn't see the end of his attempts but when I looked out the window again, he was gone. I hope that he did find a soft spot for his seed and, more than that, I hope he remembers where he left it when it's wanted.
*Yes, I know that it's not a verb, but it's what I was doing, so I made it work for me. Sorry.
And look at that! That resolution I refused to make yesterday, the one rejecting the use of the words "hope" and "so" has paid off. I didn't toss them in like confetti.
I won't even use it now. Instead I'll be firm and direct: have a lovely day!
Best~
Philippa
Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PhilippaStories
Showing posts with label Surprise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Surprise. Show all posts
Saturday, January 2, 2016
Thursday, August 27, 2015
Mouth Agape (Not Pretty, But Honest)
What the HELL just happened here?
I opened this up, planning to post a couple of flash pieces because I haven't a clue what to write, again, and discovered that I seem to have been 'discovered'.
From 12.5 views per post on average yesterday, I'm suddenly "popular" with almost 15 views per post, average.
I'm thrilled - I think. I'm delighted and gratified and humbled, but it's strange.
Between yesterday, when I was getting around 15 or 18 views per day, up from 10 or 12 a week or two ago, I suddenly have 285! Quite a jump, isn't it? And a surprise - pleasant, I hope.
Is it my dissertation on the markets and what's happening with China? Was it the post about baseball? The Cubbies fans are all upset with me or something? Is it the NSA or the Central Bank wondering who's saying what? Or is it something else?
I don't know, but it is a little disconcerting.
Oh, well, ho hum, nothing illegal was said, nothing plagiaristic or untoward. Simple facts and opinion so I shan't worry.
Now, back to what I was going to do. Over on WEbook, which I discovered through Twitter, I posted a short piece. It's an excerpt from a book currently hiding on my laptop and, because it was a vignette rather than a story it was received well from the technical standpoint - I write well, according to one commenter, but not from the literary since it didn't really introduce itself before sitting down.
The guideline for this submission is 850 words max, and the prompt is 'Confession'. With that, I'll let you decide which you prefer by posting both versions. And, to help you as I didn't help the readers when I posted this, this is an except from one of my sequels to 'Pride & Prejudice', so it's set in the early 19th century, the scenes involve Lizzy, Darcy and their sisters (in the first, anyway).
Confession
At dinner I was withdrawn and sat, staring at my plate. What my sisters thought I could not tell, because I could not look at them. Rarely, I glanced at Darcy. When I caught his eye, he would smile. Once he reached under the table and found my hand, holding it for several seconds.
Afterward, we retired to the
drawing room. There, Kitty came to kneel in front of me, her hand on my knee, a
look of worry etched her countenance.
"Lizzy? What is troubling you?
Can I help? Please?" Her words were gentle, so soft that, for the first
time in months, I could meet her gaze. There was her compassion and her fear.
Without thought, I lifted my hand,
laying it against her cheek, unable to speak. So we sat until she turned her
head, and brushed my palm with her lips. My reserve broke. Sobbing, I leaned
forward, embraced her while my shoulders shook. A small piece of confidence
fell into place when her arms enclosed me. Long minutes passed before I calmed.
Then, I sat back. Taking her hands, I held them, gathering strength.
"Oh, Kitty." There is
another step to take if I will be whole. I must trust. "Do you recall
what happened at Jane's?"
She nodded.
"It affected me, far more than
I first knew. It was not until Lord Matlock’s ball that I felt the full effect.
That night I was frightened. What would people think or say? From almost the
first moment, I saw looks of disdain, of disgust. Even, among some of the men,
looks of speculation."
At my side, Darcy stiffened. I paid
him no attention. This was to answer Kitty's questions, and Georgiana’s.
"That fear had built for
months, since the night of Mr. Sheffield’s assault. I was uncertain, unsure of
everyone around me and distrusted everyone. I believed that everyone thought
ill of me, that no one believed my innocence." My hands tightened on hers.
"Before supper that night at Uncle William’s, I overheard Edward say
something about it. By then, my confidence was so frail, so undermined that the
wound of a friend speaking so struck me deeply.
"Edward, others of the company
and I retired to Lord Matlock's library. There, I tried to defend myself."
I smiled, bitterly. "Indeed, I was so lost to everything that I spoke
plainly, far more than I should have. It shames me now, but then it was
strengthening. When I was finished, I was so cold, so sick, and weak that I
could not stand it. I thought I would be ill. I left the room, intending to
leave the house. But I could not. I could not because of you, Kitty, and
because of Georgiana. I did not wish to reduce myself before you as I already
had before everyone else whose esteem I valued and had lost." Tears
overtopped my lower lids to slip down my cheeks. "Outside, I could not
bring myself to walk down the front steps. I stood there, reliving what had
been done, and I cried. A crowd gathered, watching me, whispering. Unable to
face them, either, I went back inside. I wanted to hide.
"And that was when I was lost,
Kitty, that night. I did not realize how deep I had sunk, how far I had fallen.
"The next morning I asked
Darcy if I could come here. He agreed and I left. My feeling of isolation
strengthened because no one said good-bye or seemed to care." My head
dropped and my shoulders shook while fresh tears fell. Despair loomed, the
abyss opened, threatening. Arms came up, holding me, preventing me from
falling. "I wanted to die. I wished to die. I wished to kill myself and I
spent days plotting and planning how and where, convinced no one would
care."
I broke down. Leaning forward, my
face buried my hands, curling over my unborn child.
Kitty held me, offering strength
and compassion while Darcy's hand rested on my back.
I moved. Sitting up, I wiped away my tears. "And that is what has been wrong with me. I have been ill. Indeed, I believe that I have been almost mad. All that kept me from harming myself is this child. I could not condemn myself before God by killing this child, too. But that was all that stayed my hand. That was all." Lifting my eyes, I looked into my sister's.
Tears wetted her cheeks, swam in
her eyes. Her mouth worked. "Oh, Lizzy!" She leaned forward, pulling
me against her. "Oh, Lizzy!"
I held her while she cried. Then, I
lowered my arms, cupped her tear streaked face in my hands. "I am sorry. I
am so sorry for the pain I have caused." Raising my eyes to Georgiana, I
said, "Georgie, I am sorry."
Her face, too, was pale and
stained. She stood. Three steps brought her to where I sat. Kneeling next to
our sister, she leaned forward and, with one arm around my shoulders and the
other around Kitty, we hugged, our tears mingling.
* * * * *
(Untitled)
I opened this up, planning to post a couple of flash pieces because I haven't a clue what to write, again, and discovered that I seem to have been 'discovered'.
From 12.5 views per post on average yesterday, I'm suddenly "popular" with almost 15 views per post, average.
I'm thrilled - I think. I'm delighted and gratified and humbled, but it's strange.
Between yesterday, when I was getting around 15 or 18 views per day, up from 10 or 12 a week or two ago, I suddenly have 285! Quite a jump, isn't it? And a surprise - pleasant, I hope.
Is it my dissertation on the markets and what's happening with China? Was it the post about baseball? The Cubbies fans are all upset with me or something? Is it the NSA or the Central Bank wondering who's saying what? Or is it something else?
I don't know, but it is a little disconcerting.
Oh, well, ho hum, nothing illegal was said, nothing plagiaristic or untoward. Simple facts and opinion so I shan't worry.
Now, back to what I was going to do. Over on WEbook, which I discovered through Twitter, I posted a short piece. It's an excerpt from a book currently hiding on my laptop and, because it was a vignette rather than a story it was received well from the technical standpoint - I write well, according to one commenter, but not from the literary since it didn't really introduce itself before sitting down.
The guideline for this submission is 850 words max, and the prompt is 'Confession'. With that, I'll let you decide which you prefer by posting both versions. And, to help you as I didn't help the readers when I posted this, this is an except from one of my sequels to 'Pride & Prejudice', so it's set in the early 19th century, the scenes involve Lizzy, Darcy and their sisters (in the first, anyway).
Confession
At dinner I was withdrawn and sat, staring at my plate. What my sisters thought I could not tell, because I could not look at them. Rarely, I glanced at Darcy. When I caught his eye, he would smile. Once he reached under the table and found my hand, holding it for several seconds.
I moved. Sitting up, I wiped away my tears. "And that is what has been wrong with me. I have been ill. Indeed, I believe that I have been almost mad. All that kept me from harming myself is this child. I could not condemn myself before God by killing this child, too. But that was all that stayed my hand. That was all." Lifting my eyes, I looked into my sister's.
* * * * *
(Untitled)
I put the last flower in my hair while Bess hovered in the
background. “I do not like it, Darcy. The man forced the introduction.”
My husband sat by the fire, his reflection showing me his
semi-amusement at my irritation. “He is a friend of Bingley’s, my dear. I am
sure he thought it would not be taken amiss…”
“Had you seen the way he spied upon me!”
“Spied upon you?” He unfolded from the chair, “Is that not a
bit melodramatic?”
In normal circumstance, I admitted to myself it would be.
Not now, however, not when I thought back to that afternoon.
I had been sitting in the sun, enjoying its warmth and
musing before the scent of a cigar intruded. Startled, my eyes flew open and
there, perhaps ten feet away, stood a man of slender build. His look of
self-assurance warned me and I stood.
“I am sorry.” He glided forward. “I did not mean to startle
you. I am Sheffield, Stephen Sheffield and I beg your pardon, but I could not
help but admire you there.”
Stiff, uncomfortable, I curtseyed. “Elizabeth Darcy. Pray,
excuse me.”
Hurrying past I felt his eyes following me. At the steps I
turned, confirming the sensation.
Days passed and as time went on, my discomfort around the
man increased. The first night I wondered. The third, I suspected. A week later
I knew.
“I have been called home, my dear.” Darcy held the paper the
servant had delivered just a minute before. “Barnes wrote to me, but I shan’t
be gone long. No more than a day or two.”
Fear swept in like a gust of icy wind. “Take me with you,
husband.”
He laughed and asked why but took none of my reasons
seriously. “I shall be back as quick as I may and this is not worth disrupting
Jane’s party over.” I shivered against him as he spoke over my head, “I shall
have a word with Bingley and with Blackwell. I shall ask them to keep an eye
out. Will that do?”
I wanted to trust, to believe, so I agreed even though fear
whispered it was wrong.
By the time Darcy returned all had changed. I was not the
woman I had been. Sheffield had caught me in the hall upstairs while the others
were downstairs. I fought him. I bore the marks he laid upon me for my fight.
There were cuts on my cheek where his fists had landed, the bruises, deep
purple and red on my arms and throat. Only by the grace of God was I not
changed more than marks and fear. Blackwell had saved me from worse.
The guilt of it remained. I had been caught, through no
fault of my own, but the stigma of being seen in such a place – another man’s
bed chamber – in such a way – my skirts above my hips, his trousers at his
ankles. It was enough to burn, to wither the esteem I had felt for myself, to
question my value to my husband and sisters.
Darcy held me no blame. Indeed, he was supportive and
loving, taking care of me and assuring me, but assurances were thin. Of course
he would not accuse, but I did, and others.
Through the fall and into the winter, wherever we went it
followed. Those who were there, those who had seen spoke of it. The whispers
circulated and speculation grew, certainty that I had been complicit took root
and denial was pointless.
“I wish to go home, Darcy.” Reduced to begging, with no
shred of pride remaining, I looked at him through tear-filled eyes. “I cannot
stay here, can you not see?”
He assented, the pain in him evident, but we could not reach
across to cure the other of us. It was too fresh, too raw and healing had not
yet begun.
To Pemberley I returned and sequestered myself from my
housemates, existing in the confines of my rooms, not speaking, not seeing,
refusing humanity in all of its offers.
Chill January brought storms and, resolve. I would let Fate
choose.
The storm was strong, the winds gusting around the compass
with abandon while I stood there in its buffeting courses. My toes peeped over
the edge of the parapet, nothing between them and the terrace four stories
below. The wind caught my skirts, tugging, encouraging me to step forward but I
did not.
If Fate would have me fly, it must be decisive and sure, a
shove in the back not a child’s play at my knees.
Through the gloom and the swirls of diaphanous white
appeared a glow, bobbing along from the corner of the house. Enough! The spell
was broken. I stepped back, turned and left Fate alone on the leads. I would
live.
* * * * *
So, there you have it, and I'll let you decide which you like. After all, that's only fair.
Have a lovely day!
Best~
Philippa
Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PhilippaStories
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