Saturday 30 March 2013

FRIDAY FICTIONEERS - THE DIRTY BOMB - MY 100 WORDS, BY LINDA PALUND


THE DIRTY BOMB

            In daylight, the neighbourhood looks perfectly normal, like nothing had happened.
            When the bombs hit, the power went out.  People panicked.  Our neighbourhood went all to hell. Literally.
            We’re the only ones left.
            We’re not from around here. We’re aliens, but our neighbours never knew, even though the kids gave Marie a hard time at school, calling her a “Vampire” because of her pale skin. Called her weird.
            We liked them anyway and meant them no harm. 
            They did this on their own. 
            They invented a “Dirty Bomb”, killed each other off and left their structures intact. 
            Talk about weird!

Friday 22 March 2013

FRIDAY FICTIONEERS - A DAY IN THE LIFE - MY 100 WORDS BY LINDA PALUND



New Version 1.

Day and Night

            People don’t understand what happens in these fields at night, behind these fences.  
            Fences cannot stop the big cats.  They slither under like snakes.
            In terror, we run like the wind, pursued by the speed of death.  
            Leaping from the darkness onto our backs, their teeth sink into our necks; their claws pierce our shoulders. 
            We carry them until our great hearts give out and we fall, pumping the last of our blood into the grass.
            We lost Gypsy last night.  The people found her by the fence. 
            They left the hose running, but it won't wash away her memory.

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These are my first ideas, but I was not up to myself on Friday and should have waited, but they are part of a horse diary also:


A Day in the Life

            I slept under the oak tree, shivering thorough the chill desert night.
            I woke with the dawn and nibbled at the few green shoots sprouting around the watering trough, waiting for the kid to bring breakfast. When I heard the rumble of his truck, I headed for the gate.
            He liked to rub my ears before dropping the chunks of alfalfa that would hold me until dinner.
            He filled the trough, but forgot to turn off the hose.
            After he left, I dragged the hose around, feeding the dry grass.             
            Humans are so stupid. Haven’t they heard about drip irrigation?

After reading about Doug and Mystic, I added these notes from the horse's diary:

Version 2:


            I wake with the dawn and rise up on all fours. Horses prefer to sleep lying down, but we can only do that when we feel safe. 
            This field is small and dry, but it’s safe. 

            I don’t get many visitors. Just a kid, who brings me alfalfa, and the nice man called Doug.
            I summon Doug with my hoof against the wire of my fence. He brings me apples and he’s good company in the evening. 
            He knows how dry the grass is so he leaves the hose running.  Now I’ll have fresh green shoots to nibble before breakfast.



Friday 15 March 2013

FRIDAY FICTIONEERS - THE SIGNAL - My 100 Words by LINDA PALUND



THE SIGNAL

            What a mess.  The focus so poorly set, how could we discern the signal from this picture?  What were we supposed to make of it?
            Was it the plant?  Or were we supposed to decode the drops of rain that clung to the window like spider’s eggs?
            What was the significance of the purple foil? Or the three blossoms, the two unopened pods?
            With focus this poor, it was like trying to hear the roar of the ocean from the top of a skyscraper. 
            They’ve translated the signal. Lilies.
            Lilies mean peace. We understand now. 
            We won’t attack this planet.

Friday 8 March 2013

FRIDAY FICTIONEERS - THE MOVING STAIRCASE - 100 Words by Linda Palund



The Moving Staircase

            “I’m so happy you’re here,” Jonathan’s stepmother said, leading him into the foyer. “Look, here’s the spiral staircase.”
            Five-year-old Jonathan craned his neck and gasped. The swirl of railings stretched to the heavens.
            “We don’t have to climb them, do we?”
            “Of course not.  Since we lost the remote control, the stairs just shift wherever they please.”
            She sighed regretfully. “Your father should never have programmed them with Artificial Intelligence.  He was the last to climb them and he never returned.  He's lost without that remote.”
            This surprised Jonathan. He could see the remote poking out of her apron pocket.

Saturday 2 March 2013

FRIDAY FICTIONEERS - MY JUNK MAN - 100 Words by Linda Palund



My Junk Man

                 At first, I was worried he’d become a hoarder.  The mountain of junk in the garage kept growing.

            Then I decided he was being wonderfully creative, building all kinds of contraptions out of the stuff he had collected. 

            I marvelled at how inventive he was.  He was so happy when he showed me that amazing car, although it didn’t actually run the way he claimed.

            When I discovered our neighbours’ belongings together with mine hidden among his inventions, I knew I had to do something.

            The day they took him away was the worst day of my life.