Welcome to WRITING WEEKEND PROMPT.
If you'd like to join or know more visit Sammi at sammi's scribbles
This week
Welcome to WRITING WEEKEND PROMPT.
If you'd like to join or know more visit Sammi at sammi's scribbles
This week
HAPPY Friday. Welcome to the Friday Fictioneers' blog hop, hosted by Rochelle.
Thanks to Keith for introducing me to this fun excuse to write our heart's out and share with so many talented scribblers.
This week's prompt
'Well, I certainly hope he's enjoying himself,' she thought.
Karen saw herself in a bark canoe paddling up the Orinoco with Alexander Von Humboldt in 1799. Windsurfing had been bad enough on her back ! She far preferred sailing on a twelve-footer along rugged coasts off Porquerolles or Belle-île. What was this crazy new fashion ! She rather pictured herself on a mirrored lake working oars with her Grandpa in Scandinavia or the Dordogne. Maybe she'd take a leap and go in for Kite-surfing.
"Is that the time! Gaspard, you're running in circles, let's take that walk," she said out loud to his ghost.
susanbauryrouchard, Toulouse, France.
Thank you to all my followers on Blogger and Wordpress for their support and praise for my poem Trapped by the Undertow, published 1st May 2021 on Bandit Fiction.com Read More section Poetry.
And for their encouragement on the publication of my poem CARTHAGE in ORBIS quarterly Literary Journal June 2021, Issue 196. Subscriptions on Orbis.com
Welcome to
Another writing day for the Insecure Writers' Support Group
The Fresco
1956 LEIPSIG
The hours ticked by, long, long, one crutch at a time; the needle seemingly stuck
on each scratch of the mantelpiece clock's face. He applied each downward strike
of his red imbibed brush as though it were a sword.
Frowns of brown appeared on the workers' brows. Straight jackets
and pressed pants, tight, encased their limbs. He shifted, a crick
in his lower back. Gustav's strain of concentration vibrated in each
strand of his nervous system to wheeze out of his throat in a hiss
of a high-pitched, barely audible whistle, like some alien signal nagging at his mind.
'At six sharp, the Master and the Herr Kommandant will stomp
into the Great hall to survey, eyebrows knotted, the martial mural,' he thought,
trepidation and dread beating like dissonant gongs in his chest.
'All I ever hopped for was a logged-walled home up on a lush hill
overlooking the thick, reassuring forests with white-capped peaks beyond;
greens, bright yellows and orange-streaked ochres in the shadow
of my eyelids to enhance beauty on a crisp canvas,' he daydreamed.
His reverie spanned a century, a whole lifetime, imprisoned
in these few endless minutes fixing the final touches on months
of intense labour: the sum of his apprenticeship
that would either enslave him or cut down all future prospects.
The double oak door exploded with the din of dictatorial hard boots.
“Let's see what you have to show me today, Klaus.”
“Um, Herr Kommandant, here is the result of our Workers' Union efforts,”
the Master crooned, turning his head sharply to Gustav
as a warning and hissed “step back boy.”
The Kommandant moved his eyes away towards the wall to his left,
feigning not to have heard this à parte, and raised his monocle
like an aristocrat from the past century.
While bending to examine a detail on the tunic of one of the Patriot Soldiers
depicted on the mural, he let out a gasp of horror.
“Was ist dieser Speck ab diesem Arm?” he boomed curtly.
The Master squinted behind his thick lenses and gazed intently,
straining to make out the offensive blob, not risking to take a step closer
so as to remain firmly behind his superior and not cast a shadow on the fresco
.
Gustav lowered his gaze to the toes of his galoshes, noticing as if for the first time,
the film of white dust on them. He heart lurched as it clonked in his chest
and he wondered that they didn't seem to notice, as it appeared to echo
and bounce from floor to ceiling.
He balanced from one foot to the other stealingly
rubbing each shoe behind his ankle while a mischievous smile twitched on his lips.
“It's a bird, a dove ! White ! What means this insult to Demokratisher Deutschland ?
Wer hat dieses getun ?”
Klaus, the Official Master Painter, fidgeted, rubbing his nail skin
with his opposing thumbs and looked fixedly at the floorboards,
an appalled face frozen on his features.
The Herr Kommandant wasn't expecting an answer, Klaus and Gustav knew.
They both waited, dreading what would come next.
“Master Klaus, you will get to the bottom of this and bring me the culprit
or it's your Kopff that will roll!”
With these definite words, the Herr Kommandant wheeled towards the open doors
and stormed out, Klaus tripped rapidly behind him, but not without a backward glance
at Gustav, eyes burrowing holes into his soul. Gustav, innocence itself painted
all over his cheeks, shrugged his lanky frame once
and shook his head decisively. Klaus resumed his march down the corridor,
momentarily convinced.
Gustav could still hear the ghost of the Herr Kommandant's outrage,
mingled with the click of his boots down each marble step of the majestic staircase,
long into the night.
Before disappearing down a side exit, he had quickly taken up the brush,
stuck it into a tiny mud of a puddle on the half-caked palette, raised his wrist,
digging his forefinger and thumb into the tip of the handle, took a step forward
and halted his intent. A thousand bursts of pure thought had ricoche'ed
through his brain. For a few seconds, he had stood there, mesmerised
by his own daring and had even feared his exhilarating sense of digression.
However, his disgust and craving for freedom that had somehow been buried
under eddies of space and time had erupted like a volcano. The rush of adrenaline,
his decision now fully formulated was like lava destroying any reticence
that still lingered in the rumble of his life. He had taken a step back, resolute;
eyed the dove, its uplifting wings, his poetic handiwork.
The grin on his mouth turned into a harmonious laugh, like a birdsong soaring
out of the door to its cage. Then followed a sonorous “Sheiℬe” as it had dawned
on him that he had no choice. The brush had clattered onto
the immaculate floorboard, his apron had been discarded halfway across the hall.
Gustav had calmly stepped through the concealed door to the workshop
and flew back home as if his feet hovered on an invisible breeze.
In the morning he would step onto the train with his pass to visit his grandmother,
born and still living in a small village near Göttinger. With the recent uprising
in Budapest, controls on the lines were notoriously rare.
There he would shout out the truth about the iron curtain
which had cleaved his homeland into two by painting a real picture
with his colours and his words.
©susanbauryrouchard
German
- what is this blemish on this arm ?
- who did this ?
- head
- shit
WORD COUNT 930 FCA
Welcome to another post from the Write, Edit Publish blogging community.
If you would like to know more about the WEP Challenge and how to participate
Thank you to Denise Covey and all the WEP team for this opportunity.
Submerged by a Wave of Relief
"Ouch". The screwdriver had glanced on the skin between nail and thumb. A vermillion pearl pooled. He stuck his thumb in his mouth and sucked. "Damn". He was putting the final touches on the new wireless radio set, he had constructed from scratch. On his first, he had needed, pre-war : copper wires, bolts and screws; dials, a bulb, a needle and finally the framing. Today, he used slightly more modern materials but the method was the same.
The first of six screws to close the lid fast was always the trickiest. Pressing down with his left palm and forearm, at the same time, he inserted the screw with his right thumb and forefinger; he really needed a third hand. The screwdriver lay on the wooden workbench biding its time, before it was set into action.
Grandpa Albert, still tending to the nick on his skin, took out the screw, lifted the lid and swore again. The afternoon light streamed in through the dirty pane from the back common; bees were dancing around the new-born yellow petals of the gorse bushes. The lid joined the screwdriver on the workbench, both abandoned for the time being. The planked door of the garage behind him, creaked invitingly. He brushed down his hands on his apron, hung it on its peg and followed the beckoning cool sea breeze out of his shed. Dust, mixed with sand, coated his old coupé car, bought secondhand and fixed up between odd jobs. The green paintwork captured the reverberating sun and glared reproachfully into his eyes.
He turned the corner and gathered up his tobacco pouch and pipe from the stool by the wooden wall, then sat down. His back rested on the the overgrown and invading ivy. The match fizzed as he sucked on the stem to fire up, his thumb, still smarting, and the heel of his hand firmly holding the polished cup of the pipe. Albert inhaled, brief puffs at first, so the leaves caught; then he released his grip and the reassuring aroma rose straight into the late afternoon air. No draft in his niche. He exhaled with a sigh of pleasure, well earned. A squabble of blue tits pricked at his ears and he turned his head towards the laurel bushes separating the square of back garden from the dirt track leading to the common. The birds suddenly flew off, startled, each taking a different trajectory, up towards the streaks of clouds above Albert's head. 'It will probably rain tonight', he thought. A bell tingled in the road, down beyond the front part of the house, 'the landlady has a visitor'.
Grandpa Albert's thoughts drifted back to memories of his childhood: his father in his workshop in Hackney. He could see him, as clearly as yesterday, fiddling with bicycle frames, hoses, tires, wheel spokes; Albert chuckled: he imagined him pinching one of his fingers while adjusting a bolt and screw. He would beckon to his son and say: "Don't just stand there, hand me that cloth. mind you run it under the tap first, you silly lad."
A frown appeared on Albert's brow and he looked up at the sky again: fluffy clouds were now drifting further inland, chased by the tide. "May rain, early morning", he muttered. To the North, they were building up, dark grey, over the downs. Showers, if they were to come, would catch house wives unawares, as they scrambled to yank the clothes from the lines, grab at the pegs and drop them in the basket, before pattering quickly inside before the first drops. Albert was enjoying his pipe.
His daydream was shattered by the clatter of tiny shapes on the steps from the house, then the rapid thumping on wood, as his youngest grand-daughter, still with boy-length hair around her ears, climbed up the slope to the garden and grabbed the swing; she then settled her bottom on the nail-ridden seat, all in an arc of a swoop. 'Blimey', thought Albert, 'what's she got under her bonnet !' the little girl was oblivious to his presence, intent on her play-goal. She soaked in the sun, the salty mixture of cool and stimulating air, the tobacco smoke, all up like a sponge, all senses alert.
Pushing off from the ground, her frail, long arms strongly gripping the ropes, she sailed away into one of her adventures, of which she was the sole keeper, humming some tune or other that Albert, far removed from her land, didn't recognise. He shrugged, slightly annoyed at having his peace and quiet interrupted, and watched on as she swung up and down, up and down, like a pendulum gaining momentum. Grandpa Albert, as her pace picked up, what with the smoke and the lingering taste of blood from his thumb, started to feel giddy. However, nothing could seemingly destroy the child's rhythm and energy.
"Not too high, dear, you'll fall off", said Albert, half mumbling between puffs. Higher and higher, the child rose, as if she hadn't heard, or maybe she hadn't.
"Be careful", he bellowed.
She turned her head sharply towards the shed behind her; the ropes twisted in her left hand and she lost her balance, flying from the swing. She landed in the rockery, smack onto stone, earth; crushing flowers, all in an instant. Albert had stood up, stepped forward, too late: the grandchild's knees were scrapped clean and starting to ooze. She let out a yelp, followed by a flow of tears and cries. Grandpa Albert drew forward to her side and picked her up by both arms: "stupid, stupid girl".
Just as sister, mother and grandmother burst up the slope, having emerged from the house, as if by magic, the little girl's lungs pushed out a loud wail, enough to wake the hedgehogs. The sister grabbed the freed swing, the mother knelt to brush down her daughter, tut-tutting and soothing at the same time. She then took hold of her hand and led her, still crying and protesting back to the house to clean and bandage the knobby knees. Grandpa Albert's wife didn't utter a word, arms crossed; bent down to evaluate the damage, shook her head then glanced sharply at him, a downward smile on pursed lips, sighing. She then turned away and followed the drama back down the steps, confident that the older child on the swing, now, could be left to her own devices and Albert's care.
Albert looked at his other little charge, just sitting there, and sat back down onto his stool. He picked up his pipe and lit it once more. As he drew in his breath, a wave of relief surged, then subsided in his breast. No harm come, this time; though, he could expect a dressing down that evening in bed.
©susanbauryrouchard FCA 1140 words.
Thank you for reading. All comments welcome.
Dear readers,
On first of May , my poem Trapped by the Undertow was published on Bandit Fiction, online magazine, Read More, Poetry.
Check it out.
Some beautiful and compelling Poetry and Short Fiction to read every day , on the site.
Enjoy
https://banditfiction.com/2021/05/01/trapped-by-the-undertow-by-susan-rouchard/