Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Question of Spirit beginning - extended version

This takes you up to the first diary entry (the blog entry below this one), there will be more between the two diary entries written later but my head hurts right now. I've expanded this section by about 100 words from the "first expansion" that I'd mentioned below, so now it is almost exactly double the pitiful showing I made during Nanowrimo (this is the section I wrote, then it was only 599 words, it is now 1195, which still isn't even what you're supposed to write PER DAY during Nanowrimo, but hey, it's an improvement, right?). Hopefully the formatting will cooperate as I cut-and-paste from Word here or I'm going to be VERY annoyed. I'll try to remember to audioblog it soon, and will likely just include the first diary entry in the same file when I do (if you see the link here, then I've already done it and was too lazy/distracted to edit this text).

SO

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

Laying on my bed, fingers curled into my hair, I flip through the pages of one of the scrapbooks from the stack on my nightstand. Images of familiar faces in settings I don’t recognize flit before me, experiencing emotions I don’t understand but can’t deny. Lives that seems so alien, intangible.

The papers and layouts, chosen with such care, give details of tales that are stored in my body memory, yet inaccessible without this external trigger. Like a gun, it fires holes in my perception, filling the room with the smoke of yesterday and stinging my eyes until they tear. Letters, interspersed with the photographs, scribble out excitement I cannot share, sorrows that fail to tug at my heart. I reach out and trace the lines, trying to feel some lingering bit of the spirits that wrote them. The connection has been lost to time; they are now just cold words on a page.

Sighing, I roll over and look out the window. Night has fallen but the streetlight in front of the house blocks out the twinkle of the stars. The tattered lace curtains suggest the outline of a form against the window frame, ghost image of one of the inhabitants of the photographs, but then I move and the thought disappears. I feel the sudden, desperate need to feel the starlight and the bite of the cool spring night air on this flesh. The sleeping dogs lift their heads in interest as pass them, moving swiftly through the small, time-weary house. I grab my keys off the dingy kitchen counter and rush out the back door to the car that waits like a stallion, impatient to be ridden.

I know where I’m going. I’ve been there before, but as someone else. Something calls every cell of my being to this spot, magnetically. I take the same route she did, but with more care. I would walk there, but I don’t know any way except this high-speed road full of twists. I revel in the thrill of the sharp circle turn that takes me westward, my foot willing itself to press harder on the petal toward the more daring speed my predecessor required to feel alive. My nerves and muscles become alert for the outward force the turns of the road exert on the less cautious. I will myself to lighten up on the pedal, to go at a more sane speed, though there really is no point. Mine is the lone car on the road at this hour, just as it was that other night. Every sense is reliving the experiences, though it is less bitterly cold tonight. The bitterness is internal now. I wonder briefly if the taste in my mouth will ever change as I pull off the exit ramp and into the parking lot for the pier.

Leaving the car behind me, I walk up the solid concrete stairs and toward the cold metal railing, stopping under one of the main over-head lanterns. The lights of Cleveland’s skyline play in friendly competition with the brilliance of the stars over the grand lake. For a brief second I think I feel the waves below slapping across my face, angrily telling me to turn back and remember the lessons this form has already been taught, but I shrug it off. That’s not why I’m here tonight anyway.

“Hello, Artemis.” Her voice carries a metallic tone of boredom instead of the tinkle of bells it used to bear.

“Hello, Euryphaessa,” I respond with a slight bow of my head.

When I look up again, she is scrutinizing me. “You are not here to end your existence.” Her tone is matter-of-fact, not a question. “Have you found what you came here for?”

I turn my gaze back to the stars. Ghost-lights from thousands of years past play upon my eyes, dilating them enough that I experience a slight pain when I turn my gaze back to the brighter light bathing my companion.

“I don’t know what I was looking for,” I finally reply. “Does the dream exist beyond the dreaming?” An owl hoots from a nearby tree as we share silence. “If all we do is dream, do we exist at all?”

“Tales are built upon dreams of men, my dear,” she replies.

“But what use are tales?”

“They tell us who we are, the tales we tell of ourselves and others. They give our lives shape and meaning.”

“And what if we decide we don’t like those tales any more?” There is a sourness in my throat as these words rise on the frigid air.

“Worse, what if everyone stops telling the tales you know to be true?”

It is my turn to scrutinize, and I notice subtle differences. The gold of her hair has faded, not to silver but to a dull grey. The light that shone from her eyes in all the tales we used to tell has gone out.

“Your stories are still told,” I counter.

“Stories are still told, but they are not my stories. My name is used, but to describe a being I have never met, with desires completely foreign to my own.” She grips the railing, white-knuckled, and then looks me in the eye again. “Your stories still bear some resemblance to the girl I knew.” Her hand rises to my cheek, almost of its own accord, and the touch is as cold and insubstantial as the breeze.

“Euryphaessa -”

“My time has ended. I cannot even answer the call of my own name with the surety that it is I who is called. May your time continue, my child.”

With these last words, her arms rise to the heavens, the lantern above us sputters out, and she falls forward toward the waiting waves. When I can finally bear to look down, there is a glimmer upon the surface, glittering like flakes of gold. I blow a kiss to her memory and walk back toward the car, somehow unable to shed even a single tear.

The drive home is slower, reverent, a solitary funeral procession for Euryphaessa. I drive toward the shining spectacle of downtown, around the flirtatious curves of the highway as it follows the lake, past steaming smoke stacks of industry and the iridescent glow of the hospital and back to my home on Castle Avenue.

Once I am securely inside again and the dogs have been acknowledged to their satisfaction, I return to my bedroom. Instead of the scrapbooks, kneal beside the bed and I reach for a box hidden beneath. Opening it cautiously, I rifle through the contents, carefully set aside the delicate carbon-duplicates of hospital discharge papers, slightly crumpled bills, and some bland greeting cards mostly saved for the return addresses on their envelopes. My objective lies at the bottom, and sticks slightly to the elderly box, resisting my efforts. A delapitated diary, looking as if it has had several episodes of violence inflicted upon it, finally sits in my lap. I open it gently, but dispite my caution, a page falls partway out. I turn to it and feel submerged in the psyche of the woman who penned the words.

Diary entry 1

From the diary of Diane Thomas (fictional character, the person whose body Artemis is in habiting), this is planned to be fairly early in the book, most likely shortly after the opening scene I posted earlier (which has since been mildly revised and almost doubled in length, I'll post the revised version sortly).

- Sofie

(edit: trying to fix the formatting issues, hope this returns our friends the commas and apostrophes to the scene. ~SO)

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

November 3


Home from work and I can’t seem to shut off and go to sleep. It’s 3:30am and I need to be up & out of the house in less than four hours. The infomercials are on; beautiful, happy people stare at me at tell me how much better – how happy – I could be if I would just try. I’m tired, weary, used up, and no one cares. Me least of all lately. I heard through the rumor mill that my sister got married. The “family” didn’t make much of an attempt (if any) to let me know, much less invite me. I wonder if I’m really as much of an embarrassment to them as they are a disappointment to me.


The house just seems so empty, and I have to admit to some jealousy that Mary found someone worth spending time with. The last few attempts at a social life here have been a total wash. The nurses and receptionists at the office all keep trying to fix me up with one loser son or another, and I just don’t have the energy to make excuses not to go anymore. At least it’s generally a meal I didn’t have to cook. Sometimes I wonder how many of these “men” are having to borrow money for the date off their mommies.


How do I explain to these women that I’m simply not interested in trying to develop a relationship that will probably just turn out like my parents’ anyway? I really think I’m better off alone – at least then there is no risk of putting a child through what I went through. Human beings are just too messed up to be worth creating more of them, but these women seem to positively delight in pointing out how I’m not getting any younger. I wonder if precious Doctor Mary will manage to squeeze out a few perfect children in her spare moments. She is welcome to my breeding quota.


Last night I had the date with David. He’s the middle son of Georgia, the night shift nurse. Talk about people who shouldn’t breed. It started out well enough – at least he let me pick the movie – but I don’t know what his mother might have told him about me. He needs a serious lesson on respecting people’s personal space. I didn’t even finish the movie. His wandering hands freaked me out too much. I don’t know how I’m going to face Georgia next time our shifts overlap. Luckily, I don’t think that’s until next week sometime. One of the blessings of such a messed up work schedule, don’t think it balances out the damage it does to my sleep routine though.


Well, thinking of sleep, best I try again I guess. Staying awake is an implied part of the job description.


~Dia~

Diary entry 2

Probably should have sent these diary entries in reverse order (my perspective) so they'd show up on the blog in a way that makes it easier for the reader. Oops. If you're seeing this one below/after the Diary 1 entry, then I probably went in and changed the time of the post in the Blogger menu. I think I'll also have the last 3 entries show on the screen, so if I actually DO start posting a little more frequently, folks won't miss one in between.

~Sofie~


(edit: did that and now trying to fix the formatting issues that cropped up somewhere between my email client sending the files and Blogger turning them into posts *sigh* not fun - if I cut-and-paste the file so that the commas and apostrophes appear, line breaks get funky)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

November 22


Crap.


I got fired today. Apparently I’ve been running late more often than I thought and the Powers That Be are actually observant – if not caring – gods. I don’t know what I’m going to do. I just paid my student loans for the month and the mortgage payment is due in a little more than a week. My final paycheck will be direct-deposited sometime in the next few days and they’re deducting for the times I’ve been late, which apparently put me over my allotted sick leave somehow so this paycheck will be a small one. There is no food in the house – I was going to go shopping after work, but now I don’t know where I can find the money to buy even the basics. I’m dining on a few stale Ritz crackers I found in the back of one of the cabinets – no idea how long they’ve been there but they are at least the color they’re supposed to be.


The jerk next door is beating on his pregnant wife and kid again. I’ve been listening to the crashing and smashing sounds for the last 20 minutes at least. The little girl was screaming for a while – those all-too-familiar involuntary screaming-sobs that only stop when you pass out. I bet he actually broke one of her bones this time. Sounds like the wife was trying to get between his drunken rage and the kid again, and now it’s her turn since the kid is mercifully silent.


I’m staring at the phone. I truly disgust myself, you know that? I know what that kid is going through. How many times over the years were those screams my own? My mother’s? Mary’s? And I don’t even have the energy to call the police to come stop him. What the hell is wrong with me? How much of a total screw-up can one human being be?


Mary’s wedding announcement is staring at me from the top of the newspaper pile. It was complete with a large picture of the joyous couple. Perfect professional marriage – she’s a doctor, he’s a lawyer. Perfect teeth in perfect glossy smiles, held just long enough so as to start to seem forced at the corners of their eyes. She has it all, doesn’t she? She must have got all the ambition genes from our parents. Hell, we knew by the time I finished high school – when she was only in her 3rd year of undergraduate work at Case Western – that she was going to make it into med school on that “pre-professional” track thing they offer there, as much as she’d “confessed” to being afraid she wouldn’t be able to keep her grades up high enough to stay in the program. I swear, she actually thrives on the stress life gives her, the same stuff that makes my skin want to crawl off my body. I tried to follow in her footsteps, to be as self-assured (at least on the outside) as she always was, to pull myself out of that hellhole of a family, but I never did have the same kind of stick-to-it-ness that she was born with. Heck, I couldn’t even manage a full semester at CSU. If it hadn’t been for Mary passing along the Medical Assistant training pamphlet, I’d probably be flipping burgers somewhere. How stupid of me to dream that she and I might actually be a professional team someday, that she was passing that along so that I could work with her, basking in the reflected glow of being related to her sacred self around some tastefully decorated medical office somewhere (preferably far, far away from our parents).


The noise next door just stopped after the sound of some glass breaking and a door slamming. Mr. Alcoholic Idiot stormed out, swaggering in the general direction of the bar down the street. How nice for him that he doesn’t have to drive there. Maybe he’ll trip on a curb, fall in the street, and get run over.


I’m going to Edgewater Park. I need some time alone with the lake. If you don’t hear from me again, don’t come looking.


~Dia~

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

rough draft - start of Artemis novel

Figured I should post something here, this is the first draft of the start of my first novel, working title "Question of Spirit"... I'm not writing it linearly, I write the scenes that come to me when they come to me, and I have a (still only mental) outline of the plot that I'll fit them into once they're worth saving and keeping track of ;)

SO

(edit - tried to send this twice already, not showing up... third time's the charm?)

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

click the button to hear me read it for you: this is an audio post - click to play

Laying on my bed, fingers curled into my hair, I flip through the pages of one of the photo albums from the stack on my nightstand. Images of familiar faces in settings I don’t recognize flit before me, experiencing emotions I don’t understand but can’t deny. Lives that seems so alien, intangible.

The papers and layouts, chosen with such care, give details of tales stored in my body memory yet inaccessible to my own power without this external trigger. Like a gun, it fires holes in my perception, filling the room with the smoke of yesterday and stinging my eyes until they tear. Letters interspersed with the photographs scribble out excitement I cannot share, sorrows that fail to tug at my heart. I reach out and trace the lines, trying to feel some lingering bit of the spirit that wrote them. The connection has been lost to time; they are now just cold words on a page.

Sighing, I roll over and look out the window. Night has fallen but the streetlight in front of the house blocks out the twinkle of the stars. The tattered lace curtains suggest the outline of a form against the frame, ghost image of one of the inhabitants of the photographs, but then I move and the thought disappears. I feel the sudden, desperate need to feel the starlight and the bite of the cool spring night air on this flesh. I move swiftly through the small, time-weary house, grab my keys off the dingy kitchen counter, and rush out the back door to the car that waits like a stallion, impatient to be ridden.

I know where I’m going. I’ve been there before, but as someone else. Something calls every cell of my being to this spot, magnetically. I take the same route she did, but with more care. I would walk there, but I don’t know any other way but this high-speed road full of twists. I revel in the thrill of the sharp circle turn that takes me westward, my foot willing itself to press harder on the petal toward a more daring speed my predecessor used to feel alive. My nerves and muscles become alert for the outward force the turns of the road exert on the less cautious. I will myself to lighten up on the petal, to go at a more sane speed, though there really is no point. Mine is the lone car on the road at this hour, just as it was that other night. Every sense is reliving the experiences, though it is less bitterly cold tonight. The bitterness is internal now. I wonder briefly if the taste in my mouth will ever change as I pull off the exit ramp and into the parking lot for the pier.

Leaving the car behind me, I walk up the solid stairs and toward the cold metal railing. The lights of Cleveland’s skyline play in friendly competition with the brilliance of the stars over the lake. For a second I feel the slap of the waves below across my face, angrily telling me to turn back and remember the lessons this form has already been taught, but I shrug it off. That’s not why I’m here tonight anyway.

“Hello, Artemis.”

The croaking, rasping quality of her voice surprises me momentarily, but then I wonder why it should. Of course she’d know I’m here. “Hello, Hecate,” I respond, formally acknowledging her presence with a slight bow of my head.

When I look up again, she is scruitinizing me. “You aren’t here to end your existance.” Her tone is matter-of-fact, not a question. “Have you found what you came here for?”

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Artemis novel - early scene

Also first draft, this has been well-recieved by my hubby and the two other friends I read it aloud to.

SO

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

I awoke to find that I was no longer alone in the room and that someone had turned on the television while I was sleeping.  The set was tuned to a news show airing an interview of the head of some huge, international corporation that was presently being sued by a considerable percentage of current and former employees.

Contrary to the popular human misconceptions, a demon's horns are actually located more toward the crown of the head instead of the temples.  Experience has taught his breed that, with careful aiming of the camera, tilting of the chin, and a fuller hair style, the horns can be completely concealed throughout a live video feed.  I found myself laughing quietly as I recognised the tricks during the megacorp CEO's bland proclaimations regarding the company's public benevolence and community activism, carefully and well-salted with mentions of how they were abided by all applicable laws.

Having enough of such amusement, I turned away from the television to focus my attention on my roommate.  She was older, her mostly white hair shot with a few obstinant strands of jet and the dark skin around her eyes deeply etched by years of hepassionate emotions that continued to roll over her face as she watched the television program - disgust, amusement, contempt.  A faint smell of medication and cleaning chemicals wafted from her direction, along with an undertone of decay, but I was unsure how much of it was from her as an individual as opposed to the setting and furnishings.  Her right hand held a mug of hospital-grade tea with lemon, and her left compulsively reached across the rough-woven blanket for the remote as another mention was made of corporate belevolence and the smell of rising bile errupted from her lips.

"I worked for that company for thirty years, you know," she said to me, catching my eyes in her direction.  "Thirty years.  Never once did I see a saint such as he describes walk through the door."  Her eyes twinkled with merriment and she took a gulp of her tea. 

Visions of her greeting customers as if they were family members, visiting co-workers in the hospital when they were sick, and her own determination to continue working even as her health failed flashed before me.   Maybe they should have mounted a mirror by the entrance door.  I smiled a little to encourage her to continue talking.

"They'd do well to treat their own employees to a little of the charity they shower upon the masses.  Thirty years, and I'm not even sure this hospital stay will be covered by the insurance they so generously offer." The grumbling tone of her voice brought on wheezing which lead to a very wet-chested coughing fit, spilling drops of the tea on her hospital gown as she hastily set the mug asside to reach for a paper towel to mop up the phlem.

"Would you like some more tea?  I have more hot water in my carafe here," I offered, but she brushed it off with a wave of her hand.  Her breathing had become much more audible and painful.  "At least let me call a nurse for you."  To this she aquiesed with a nod of her head as another coughing fit took hold.  I reached for my own tethered remote and hit the large red button, finding no need to respond when the nurse over the intercom asked if she could help me only to be drown out by the wracking coughs of my companion.

Moments later a mass of pastel-clothed people entered the room to attend to the corporate saint, bringing all kinds of acrutriments to make her breathing easier - inhaling devices, humidifying tools, oxygen, and lots of attention.  They darted in and out of the room, issued commands, asked her questions that she couldn't possibly hope to answer through the hubub and paraphanalia, and generally made life more exicting and interesting than the now-ignored television.  What good it was doing her, I could not tell.  Finally, satisfied they had done everything medically possible, they left the room en masse with barely a look back. 

I heard muffled vocalizations coming from her, unintelligible now that there was a tube in her throat but recognisable as prayers, and found myself hoping that He was listening.  The dripping of her IV made a steady beat to her chanting, her lined and spotted hands clutched tight to the cross around her neck and her eyes squeezed shut in fervor speaking to the devote faith in her heart.  I continued to watch as, almost imperceptibly, her hands and face relaxed and she fell into a dream.  Her chest rose and fell in a spasmotic fashion, effort on the rise that took the appearance of one startled and so irregular that each time it rose again was a surprise.  I'm not sure how many breaths she took as I lay watching her, or at what point I realized that the one before had been her last. 



click the button to hear me read it to you: this is an audio post - click to play