Author: apoland

  • The Queen’s Skin

    “I haven’t seen you before. How many times have you inhabited that skin?”

    The girl looked up and slid her hood back to reveal the series of dark dots tattooed above the bridge of her nose, just above the fine lines of dark hair. “Seventeen, m’lady.” With that, she pulled the ivory fabric back up over her dark hair. The soft blue lights overhead danced over the fabric, like an oil slick on water.

    Nicoletta looked out the window to the planet below, at the churning swirls of cloud obscuring the landmasses she knew to be there. Two years ago the storms had been frequent, but now they were unending, the planet below deluged. Her chief advisor assured her time and again that her people below had been working around the planet’s unforgiving weather for centuries. A tug at her ankle brought the queen’s attention back to her servant. “Have you been below?”

    The girl didn’t look up from her work of winding and fastening the ribbon of the queen’s sandals. “I was remade below. We all are.”

    (more…)

  • Everything Changes

    She looked out at the building from the backseat and scowled. “It didn’t look like this last year.”

    Her husband killed the engine in their little car. Without the mechanical whining the vehicle, the lack of life in the outside neighborhood seemed that much more stark. “It looks fine. We’ll only be here for a few minutes.”

    Abby looked up and down the street at the neighborhood surrounding. The homes were all in disrepair – but it had been that way during college college, hadn’t it? The upstairs apartment they’d rented through her undergrad had always been falling apart. At the time it had seemed charming. They’d made do with what they had.

    It was different, though. Having the baby made it different.

    “It’s a tradition, Abby.”

    She swallowed her uneasiness. “Sure. Of course.” She unbuckled Maisy while Bart retrieved the camera and tripod from the car.

    The first Valentine’s Day they had taken this photo – their first Valentine’s Day, four years ago – it had been a selfie against the cement wall. A whim, nothing more. Someone had spray-painted hearts on the smooth surface, all different shapes and sizes to create the perfect romantic backdrop. When they eventually married, Abby featured it on their save-the-date card.

    When they were still together the next year, they did it again. That year Bart had the tripod and remote. The next year, the picture had announced her pregnancy. Abby supposed, if she looked back, she remembered the other graffiti too near the hearts that second year. The cracks in the wall when she was pregnant with Maisy. Abby had loved the neighborhood dearly, but the crumbling houses had always had feeling paint, it had always lacked the life and verve she’d invented in her nostalgia.

    She pulled her baby close to her chest, carefully adjusting the little flowered headband covering Maisy’s downy hair. By the time she climbed out of the car Bart was already setting up his tripod, muttering to himself.

    “Go on, hon – I need to frame the shot.”

    She did so.

    Maisy nestled her little head against Abby’s chest, rooting for the breast and yawning. They’d tried to plan the picture around her nap time, but the car always lulled her right to sleep.

    “Hey, baby – it’s time to take your picture.” She tickled the baby’s cheeks and nose, smiling as Maisy giggled and stretched her whole body in Abby’s arms. Bart joined them, the remote trigger nestled against his palm. He ruffled Maisy’s hair. For a moment, it was calm.

    Not far enough in the distance, a dog began to yap and growl – quickly joined by another. Abby startled and looked up at the camera, then down at the baby. “I don’t think this was a good idea,” she said quietly.

    He kissed her forehead and squeezed her around the waist. “Don’t worry. In the photo it’ll all look perfect.”

  • Paternity

    She had written the letter on pretty pink stationary and folded it into perfectly creased thirds. Each penstroke was precise, her handwriting as uniform as a font. It was so type-A, so her, that he felt fond even while he wanted to throw it away and pretend he’d never read it.

    All the same, he waited a day before climbing into the car with his stomach tied in knots. The letter included all the things you didn’t want to hear from an old friend: terminal, not much time, wish I didn’t have to write you. And then there was that one thing you didn’t want to hear from an ex-girlfriend: You need to come take him. My sister and my mother can’t take care of him, and he’s yours too.

    Ben had laughed. “Be glad, man! She could have spent the last thirteen years garnishing your wages, and instead you just have to put in five years of dad duty.”

    Ben had not been invited along for the trip to Sheboygan.

    The problem with visiting a terminal ex-girlfriend to demand a paternity test — other than the obvious — was the four-hour roadtrip with no company but his thoughts. In the first hour he planned an angry rant. What business of hers was it to keep this from him, and then demand he step in when she was unable? She had always been selfish. His needs had always taken the backseat.

    In the second hour that faded into sympathy, and a strange longing he hadn’t felt since their break-up was about eight months old. He imagined her heavily pregnant when he had finally finished up mourning and gone out with Cynthia or Cindy or Candi. If he had known she was pregnant, he would have mourned at least another few months. If he had known she was pregnant, he would have tried harder. (Probably. He wanted to believe it, anyway.)

    They had argued about children toward the end, locked in a disagreement of you’re too irresponsible and you’re too uptight. But he would have been a real father if she’d given him the chance. He should’ve sought her out instead of letting her leave while he licked his wounds.

    The third hour was all about the child, the mysterious he. No words as to what kind of kid he was. Was he smart like his mother? Did that mean he was bossy and uncompromising like her too? Who would he look like? Would he be angry that his father was demanding proof of paternity? Was he fat? Raising a fat teenager seemed like a more daunting task than any the rest of it. His brother had been fat growing up, until he blew his brains out at 23 in their grandmother’s garage.

    By the fourth hour he was sick of himself and his life and his imaginary son. He listened to podcasts on his phone instead of thinking.

    The sun hung low in the mid-evening sky when he arrived at the address on the letter. My mother is taking care of me. You’ll find us there. He paused at the doorstep, eyeballing the perfectly white wicker furniture. The house was silent, but her mother’s house always had been tomb-like. The woman didn’t own a TV. Listening to the radio was something of a special treat for Mrs. Cardozo.

    He went back to the car to get the envelope from his glove box. It was the right address. He brought it back with him and worked up the nerve to knock.

    The door opened almost instantly. Her mother was still thin and narrow, with shoulders like corners on her short frame. She stood there in her immaculately pressed slacks and wrinkle-free blouse, with a tissue in hand and puffy red eyes. Somehow, she still managed a glare for him. “Alan.”

    “Mrs. Cardozo.” He held up his envelope, as though that might explain everything. When she didn’t speak, he said, “I got a letter from Delia about — ”

    “She is dead now.”

    The post date on the envelope was just two days past. When she said there wasn’t much time, he had assumed she meant long enough for closure. “Wow. She really waited until the last minute to tell me.”

    Mrs. Cardozo’s stare could have withered plants, and he considered himself much less hardy than most household greenery.

    “I… Is he here? She said you can’t take care of him.”

    Mrs. Cardozo nodded. “She was correct. Follow me.” She stepped aside to let him in. Her home was immaculate at ever, though the signs of recent sickness showed. Pill bottles on the distant kitchen counter, an IV rack in the hallway as he followed her to the back of the house. “I kept him in her room.”

    “Where she died? You can’t just leave him there!”

    “He did not want to leave her. Edite and I are both allergic. I cannot have his hair all over the house.”

    He stopped short as she opened the door. “Allergic?”

    The cat looked up from a bed that had been stripped of the linens. The room smelled exactly like a hospital, but there were pictures and flowers all over the bedside tables, and a book with a marker three-quarters of the way through.

    Never before had he experienced rage and relief at the same time. It manifested as an odd hiccup.

    “I’ll get his things. I expect you will not stay for her funeral?”

    Fucking right I’m not staying for the fucking funeral, he almost said, as he remembered how much less stressful life was without her in it. “This isn’t my cat.” It looked as prim and ill-tempered as his former owner, though it had the most forlorn little meow when their eyes met.

    Mrs. Cardozo stepped past him into the room, and plucked one photo from the nightstand. She held it out without comment.

    They had been so young, now that he looked at them together. He hadn’t kept any of their photos; he had expected her to burn hers as well. Though he could see why she kept it. They had also been happy, and she held the little furball of a kitten as proudly as any new mother.

    He looked at the cat again. He had named their kitten Mr. Fuzzy before putting it in that little birthday box, because he had devoted more of his time to drinking than being clever in those weird post-grad years. He hadn’t thought more than a few days in advance, let alone that the thing would live 13 years with a name like Mr. Fuzzy. “That thing? I picked him up at a pet store. I didn’t think — ”

    “You never did,” Mrs. Cardozo said.

    He texted Ben from the car. I had forgotten how goddamn serious Delia was. With that done, he buckled the cat carrier safely into the passenger seat.

  • Being Real

    I have nothing to say.

    Inaccurate: I have a lot to say about how I feel about fiction writing, the goals I have for next year, or even the mild bitterness about my ex-husband’s support of those goals. But my immediate urge is to self-censor all that:

    This is a community blog; no one needs your bullshit. You’ve already used that “writing is hard” meme a dozen times. Making goals is a recipe for failure; just go with the flow. Stop thinking in thoughts separated by a semi-colon.

    I’m willing to bet if I pull up the Google Machine right now and search “writing self-censoring,” I’ll already find a dozen topics on the ways that writers shy away from opening themselves up on the page. I’m not going to do that, because it would be another reason not to write about it.

    (more…)

  • NaNoWriMo 2013: Mixed Success

    It’s time for a NaNo wrap-up post, and I’m mildly dismayed to say that I did not win. I came close, though:

    Ashley - NaNo 2013 Statistics

     

    The Bad

    You can look at that and see that the mixture of apathy and frustration are to blame — I had so many days where I had no words, or under 1,000 words. The end result was day 30: 10,500 words to go.

    (more…)

  • NaNoWriMo 2013: Day 20

    Oh hey, look at that! It’s Wednesday.

    • It is day 20 (nearly 21), and yet I have day 16’s word count.
    • I’ve stopped doubting my ability to write this novel; I can totally hit 50K this month.
    • I refuse to allow myself to suck.
    • I’m too awesome to suck.
    • When I explain my novel conceptually, it’s actually pretty fucking cool.
    • I’m beating my nemesis; this will be true every midnight for the rest of the month.

    Carry on.

  • NaNoWriMo 2013: Day 13

    My outlook on NaNoWriMo hasn’t really improved in week two — which doesn’t surprise me, really. I finally had a bit of an aha! moment in the chatroom the other night, which gives the story some direction. I can see it hitting 50K, maybe even my lofty (impossible) goal of 70K overall.

    That said, my stats look like this:

    Ashley Word Count - Day 13
    Par? What’s par?

     

    This is pretty atypical for me. On an average year I tend to hit par within a couple of days and then stay on top of it. My writing tends toward large bursts, so I keep up alright, and usually give myself a safe buffer to work with. In years past, I’ve been done before Thanksgiving so that I could focus on creating awesome food — which I do much better than writing, apparently.

    Some of my reticence with the writing is still feels and bullshit, which I’ve already mentioned. I even had a friend give me permission to stop writing for a while longer if I wasn’t ready. I wanted to yell, “But I haven’t in months! How much longer is that supposed to take‽” I’m really rather tired of myself at this point, but I still feel small and angry in the time between when I start to type and when I finally get involved in the writing.

    I’ve also developed this nagging fear that I’m rewriting the same story over and over and over again with tweaks to the setting.

    • There’s always a character at the cusp of making a large decision that affects other people more than it does them.
    • There’s always a character who has dual identities that are sometimes at odds.
    • There’s always some sort of social class dichotomy in the setting that keeps characters at odds.
    • There’s always some sort of dystopian/social unrest element that moves the story.

    It seems like no matter how many changes I make, I keep coming back to these things. I like writing them, but if I’m just rehashing the same shit over and over again — is there a point to pursuing this? I generally believe that there’s nothing truly unique to be told — we’re all writing Star Wars, guys — but I could at least tell slightly different stories from the ones I’ve already told.

    I’m not engaged in my main character. I’m literally plotting a climax that kills every single main character.

    I recognize that the purpose of NaNo is do something rather than to complete something, which is 10% of why I opted to do it this year. But it’s hard to write this while thinking, There’s nothing of value in this narrative. I don’t know when I got like that.

    That said, I’ll keep plugging at it because I really can’t fail at this too. I also want to beat my nemesis. He hates his story too and is slightly more prone to apathy than I am, so I think I can pull ahead of him soon. The stats have my back; he had a 3K lead at one point, but as of this writing he’s only about 1200 ahead of me:

  • NaNoWriMo 2013: Day 6

    Hello, sweethearts. We’re entering day six of NaNoWriMo. I haven’t done anything yet today, because I’ve had a slow morning. You see, yesterday I was too busy drinking to really focus on meeting word count goals.

    I’ve also been too busy working, cleaning things (sometimes), doing stuff with my kid, staring at my novel, having feels, running, et cetera. It’s so easy to find all sorts of things that have to get done in November!

    Everything was pretty much the worst in the first four days. I swear to god I used to be able to write, and now I don’t remember how the fuck a plot even works. What the hell are words? Why does anyone write for fun — it’s bullshit.

    By day five, writing stopped making me want to drink all the moonshine in my freezer. I even enjoyed it a little bit on day five. And I love the social spirit of NaNoWriMo, which is 90% of why I do this every year. I’m even sort of looking forward to the next couple of write-ins. And at least I’m kicking my nemesis straight in the ass.

    Knowing my luck, by the time anyone sees this post, he will have updated his word count and be ahead.

  • Reunion

    The girls trickle in one at a time, congregating for their customary visitation. My friends keep their distance even though I’d gladly have them close. The sullen expressions and awkward silence feel wrong.

    Words come slowly: first regrets, then jokes and memories of better times. I love their laughter but prefer their silence. I’m still the glue that holds them together. Now I’m also the inevitable.

    I’d happily join in on their banter, but I can’t speak their language. When they leave with the sun in their eyes and the wind on their faces, here I will lie, going to pieces.

  • Music Review: SUPERMEGAFANTASTIC

    This summer was the opposite of hectic, in that nothing big went on — but emotionally, it was busy. As such, I didn’t do a ton of writing. I would start something new, then the excitement (or catharsis) would fizzle and I’d find myself disinterested again. What I did was listen to a lot of music. I rekindled my love affair with owning CDs and whole albums. Music is a fairly big part of the way I write, and as much as I love The Glitch Mob, it’s not right for every situation.

    With that in mind, let’s talk about IAMDYNAMITE. Specifically, the album SUPERMEGAFANTASTIC. (Can I just say that the all caps names just make my day every time?)

    (more…)