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The Librarian’s Code, Part 5

12 Thursday Nov 2015

Posted by lexilogical in NaNoWriMo, The Librarian's Code

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Creative Writing, Librarian, NaNoWriMo

“Kelcie, we will not bother the Falconers over this. We can handle this ourselves,” I said firmly.

“You’ve been saying that a lot Rachael, but I’m not sure you’ve quite realized the scope of the problem,” Kelcie said.

“It’s just some missing books, Kel,” I said confidently, striding over to where Karen was sitting, an unused study room. It was a quiet Tuesday afternoon, I was grateful for that much. None of us seemed to quite have our head in the game when it came to keeping up the charade. “We’re librarians, we can find the books without interrupting the Falconer’s retirement.”

“We should at least let Kinder know,” she said, trying to keep up with me. “He’d-”

“He’d be obligated to let the Falconer’s know,” I finished for her. “No, we can handle this. Come with me.”

She grumbled but followed me anyways as we approached the slight woman. Karen wore thick, black glasses and her short hair was dyed a vivid pink. The kids at the library all loved her, and she’d let them picking the colour of her hair as a prize for our March break read-a-thon. She was also our specialist on the creatures of nature.

“Rachael!” she said when I came close, her voice a mixture of panic and fear. “I’m so sorry, I can’t believe that I fell for that trick! I totally understand if you want to fire me.”

“If I fire you, I need to get a whole new order,” I sighed. “They managed to hit all of the primaries.”

“All of us?” Karen asked, glancing around the room at the other librarians.

I nodded. “I only noticed because one of the books got returned.”

“One of th… How many books are missing, Rachael?” Karen asked, wringing her hands.

“Twenty five.” I’d gone back and counted while I waited for the off-duty librarians to show up. Twenty five out of forty nine books missing before I’d even noticed a problem. I’d had Kelcie check me for glamours too, but unfortunately I didn’t have a convenient excuse for my oversight. Although I had noticed that the orange books were nearly entirely missing as well, in particular Alchemy and Wands. Some of the things in that book could have easily created a compulsion to stay away from that section.

Karen mouthed the number twenty five back to herself. “Did you tell Kinder yet? Or the Falconers?”

“No,” I replied. “And if we’re lucky, we won’t have to.”

“Won’t have to… Rachael, are you crazy?” Karen said, standing up.

“That’s what I said,” Kelcie muttered.

“I think you called me dumb,” I corrected out of habit.

“That too,” Kelcie retorted.

“Either way, I’m not dumb or crazy,” I said, pulling out the paper towel. “Both of you, rack your brain and tell me if this looks familiar.”

I handed the paper towel sketch to Karen and she gave it a quick glance. “What is it?”

“According to Amber, the person she saw was wearing it,” I said.

“And how am I supposed to know what it is?” Karen asked.

“It’s a leaf sigil,” I said, “A leaf that was probably worn by a fae. I’m sure you two must be able to work out something.” Karen gawked at me while Kelcie spluttered. “That… That’s not how it works, Rachael!”

“Why not?” I pressed, putting my hands on my hips. “You are the expert on Fae, aren’t you? It looks like a clan symbol to me.”

“Yes… And yes but…”

“But what?” I demanded.

“But Fae don’t work like that! They change alliances like you and I change clothing! Even if this was a clan symbol, it doesn’t mean it’s a current one!”

“Creatures in the books can’t switch alliances, Kelcie” I said, tapping my foot. “That’s why they’re in the books. To be contained.”

“Well clearly, some of them aren’t contained.” She was getting loud now, and trying to make herself taller. It might have worked if she wasn’t the shortest librarian we had. “And if those ones aren’t contained, they may well have created a new sigil. Or combined two older ones. Or revived one that we already captured. Or even just picked one that belonged to another guy to settle a grudge!”

“You should at least know enough to know if it’s in the book,” I said, miffed.

Kelcie scowled. “Have you memorized every rune and sigil in your specialization?”

“Yes,” I said, begrudgingly. Kelcie scowled more.

“Even then, it’s not the same,” Karen said gently. “There’s at least a dozen creatures that might have used a feather or oak leaf in my field alone. Then you add in Kel’s-”

“So get me a list of possible suspects then,” I said, throwing up my hands. “At least give me something to work on.”

Kelcie sighed. “You know there is another copy of the books…”

“Let’s at least exhaust all possibilities first,” I said firmly. “Maybe get Amber in on this, maybe she can help with the feather.”

“It. Doesn’t. Work. Like. That,” Kelcie growled, but I was already walking away towards the back room. The other librarians turned to look at me as I walked through the lobby. We’d had them separated while we broke the glamours, but now they were all slowly emerging from the rooms. Presumably to discuss how collectively fucked we were.

“Where are you going?” Karen called, following me out of the study room. Kelcie just shot daggers at my back.

“I’m going to get suited up,” I said.

“We don’t even have a target yet!” Karen yelled, stopping in her tracks. I saw Mark walking towards me from the far side of the library, but he would only try to talk me out of this. I added a bit more speed.

“Then find me one!” I yelled. “Because if you don’t, then I need to start looking for one.”

I pushed open the door to the backroom and slipped behind the rows of used books and extra chairs. There, nestled in the back, was a massive wrought iron gateway. The gate was solid, backed with thick, black wood. The iron designs etched out a seven pointed star, with runes and sigils marking every point. I did know what they meant, even without having to look them up. But then, these runes were easy. They were one of the first secrets any of us learned.

I reached into my blouse, pulling out an ornate key on a long chain necklace. The key was black, just like the gate, and held a large, indigo gem in the bow. Even in the dim light, I could see that it swirled with reds and blacks in it’s core. Before Mark or Karen could catch up, I fitted it into the keyhold in the centre of the star, turning it with a satisfying click.

“And if I need to start asking questions,” I whispered, “I still want to be armoured up.”

The Librarian’s Code, Part 4

10 Tuesday Nov 2015

Posted by lexilogical in NaNoWriMo, The Librarian's Code

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Creative Writing, Librarian, NaNoWriMo

“Why did you bring your sister?” Opi asked.

Syra shrugged, “When I told her what we were doing, she wanted in.”

“You wanted my class ring!” Rou said, “I’m not going to let you trade away my class ring for magical powers without at least getting in on this.”

Syra rolled her eyes. “I told you, it’s not going to work anyways. But they wanted a tourmaline for this.”

“And lucky you, I own one,” Rou said, plunking herself down in the corner of the clubhouse.

“Still think it’s an ugly stone,” Syra muttered.

“Luckily, no one asked you,” Rou said, working the ring off her finger. She passed it to me and I inspected it. It was a silver ring, with our school’s crest stamped into the side. The other side had the year 2013 imprinted in it. In the middle was a large, orange starburst stone. It was one of the school’s colours, but Syra was right, it wasn’t a terribly pretty colour. Although looking at Rou’s electric blue hair, I thought maybe it suit her perfectly.

“Thank you for letting us use it,” Sam said, smiling at Rou.

She squirmed uncomfortably. “Only if you let me join in the ritual,” she reiterated.

“Of course,” Sam said. “You know you’re always welcome to hang out with us, Rou.”

She’d gotten the nickname years ago, back when she used to hang out with us more. Before we had met Opi too. She’d been the best double-dutch player on the school yard, and everyone knew it. In a jump-a-thon for heart disease, she’d gone for 6 hours straight and earned a ice cream day for her entire class. Of course, then she’d gone off to high school two years earlier than we did, and by the time we got there too, she was too embarrassed to hang out with us ‘Minor niners’. Personally, I’d always thought it hit Sam the hardest out of any of us. But Sam didn’t seem concerned now.

On the other hand, Rou did seem uncomfortable. Well good, I thought nastily. Maybe she feels guilty about ignoring us.

“What about you Mary, did you get your components?” Opi asked.

I pulled out a small glass jar, filled with a few dribbles of water. “I hope you all appreciate how hard it is to collect dewdrops at sunrise.” I said, plunking the jar into the middle of the room. I’d had to get up at 5 AM to do it, just to get out of the house on time. It had looked pretty, at least, with all the grass sparkling when the sun hit it.

“Is that going to be enough?” Opi asked, tilting the jar.

“It better be,” I replied. By the time I had to leave for school I’d just barely got enough to wet your fingers, and my pyjamas had been soaked through. “What about you?”

“I couldn’t convince my parents to start a fire last night,” he complained. “They said it was too warm.”

“So what, this was for nothing?” I asked. We’d assigned Opi to the component to collect ’a spark of rebirth.’ We’d all agreed that an ember that could be used to rekindle a fire would be the most effective. Opi had promised that he’d get his parents to set up a fire last night, then grab one of the embers in the morning.

“I grabbed these instead,” he said, pulling out a book of matches and a box of birthday candles. “When I called Sam she said maybe they would work instead.”

I looked at Sam and a quick explanation poured out of her mouth. “Well, I thought maybe since birthday’s are like, the day that you’re born, and we blow out the candles to signify that you’re a year older, maybe it would work? I know it’s not really rebirth but it’s kinda on the same themes…”

“I don’t know…” I said.

Syra scoffed. “Mary, if this doesn’t work it’s not going to be because he didn’t get the right kind of spark. It’ll be because magic isn’t real and this is dumb.”

“I’m going to laugh if this works for everyone except you, because you didn’t believe in it,” I said, sticking my tongue out at her. “Fine, close enough. What about you Sam?”

Sam opened her hands to reveal a handful of milkweed fluff. I counted the dark seeds to ascertain she had seven. They were there.

“And all of them were caught out of the air?” I asked, “The book was clear that they had to be plucked from the sky.”

“Yup!” she said proudly. “My mom always called these ‘wishies’. If you caught them you were supposed to make a wish then let them go. If they touched the ground, it wouldn’t come true.”

“I wonder if that’s relevant,” Rou said. “Can I see the book?”

I passed it over to her, pulling some stolen chalk out of my backpack. “You should draw the runes too,” I said.

“Why me?” Rou asked.

I shrugged. “Sam collected the milkweed. I collected the dew. Opi got the candles and Syra sort of got the tourmaline. So if you draw the diagram, we all contributed.”

Opi nodded and Sam added, “Plus, you were always the best artist. I still can’t make a circle.”

Rou took the chalk, studying the book. “Yeah, I can probably draw this. Sam, make sure you don’t put that milkweed down though.”

Sam nodded, sliding back into the corner of the clubhouse as Rou began to draw.

“Were we supposed to say something while we draw this?” I asked, “Or maybe sing something?”

“I didn’t see anything in the book,” Rou said. “But I guess you can if you want.” “What would you even sing for something like this?” Syra asked, stepping back so Rou could finish her circle.

“Hocus Pocus by Focus,” Sam said. We all giggled nervously as Rou drew the lines.

In the corner, Opi started humming a quick paced tune. I wasn’t sure what it was right away, but suddenly it clicked into place. I wasn’t sure why he’d jumped to Offspring, but I hummed along with him.

“You guys are weird,” Rou said. She leaned back again, comparing the sketch to the book. “Does this look right?”

I looked over her shoulder and couldn’t spot anything that seemed out of order. “I think that’ll work?”

Opi leaned over as well, inspecting the lines carefully. “You missed a line here,” he said, pointing out the missed rune.

“Good catch,” Rou said leaning over to fix the drawing. She and Opi pored over the tomb for a bit longer before agreeing it was complete.

“Who goes first?” I whispered, staring at the lines.

“I will,” Sam said.

The Librarian’s Code, Part 3

08 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by lexilogical in NaNoWriMo, The Librarian's Code

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Creative Writing, Librarian, NaNoWriMo

“They got Karen too,” Kelcie whispered in my ear. She’d come in, arm cast and all when I called. So had most of the other librarians.

I groaned, writing another name on my list. “At this rate, it might be easier to name who they didn’t get, Kelcie.”

“Uh… Well, they didn’t glamour me, so far as I can tell,” Kelcie replied. “And Mark seemed clean too.”

“Okay, that’s good information,” I said, turning the list over and writing the names upside down.

“And they didn’t glamour you either,” Kelcie added.

“Of course not,” I muttered, “Faeries hate salt.”

I heard the woman snerk under her breath and I grinned at her. “Did you figure out anything about who took out the rest of the books, Kel?”

“Beyond that they were fae?”

“Well yeah, if they’re casting glamours then obviously we have fae,” I replied. “I meant something useful that could track them down.”

Kelcie snorted at me, making her dark bangs fall over her eyes. “I appreciate your faith in me, but even other faeries have trouble spotting glamoured faeries. Your best bet is probably in that brooch that Amber described.”

I flipped up the top sheet of my clipboard, looking at the paper towel doodle under the list. It was loose and sketchy, but still better than the other reports we had gotten. “An old woman” according to Jeff. “A blond boy” according to Nate.

“Did Karen say who she lent the book to?” I asked, “Any descriptors would help at this point.”

Kelcie shrugged. “She said they smelled like rain and wanted one of the blue books. “Haunting Melodies” she thinks.”

I wrote that down too, she was the first one to remember the book title. “Looks like Jeff and Nate got hit the hardest out of everyone so far. Do you think they could have been the ones to loan out multiple books?”

“I think you’re making assumptions we can’t afford to make, Rach,” Kelcie replied. “They might have just been generally less observant than the other two. Most men wouldn’t notice a perfume or brooch on a good day.”

“Well give me something, Kel!” I snapped. “So far, I’m cruising the city looking for a boy or woman wearing a brooch who smells like rain. I think most people would agree this isn’t feasible, and that I need more to go off.”

“You have the design of the sigil,” Kelcie retorted. “That’s probably enough to identify which house the faeries hailed from, and potentially what they were looking for.”

“Which would be great,” I said, rolling my eyes, “If they hadn’t stolen the reference to the house sigils as what I can only assume was their first act.”

“Sometimes, Rachael, you act really dumb for smart person,” Kelcie said, rubbing the inner corners of her eyes.

“What are you talking about?” I asked.

“Yeah, we’re missing the books. But we aren’t missing the book’s source.”

“If you tell me to just go ask the fae, you’re pretty dumb as well,” I retorted. Not my wittiest moment, granted, but in that moment Kelcie was shaking her head.

“Just go to the Falconers. See what they remember.”


“Where did you say you got this?” Syra asked, running her hands over the tooled leather cover. The vibrant orange leather seemed to glow in the dim light of the dusty clubhouse. We were getting a little too old for the clubhouse, but it was still the best place to go for privacy in Sam’s house. Her parents were nice enough, but they could be a little over-bearing at times.

“It was in a garage sale that my parents took me to,” Opi said, leaning over the book. “I found it in a stack of lame romance novels.”

“But what is it?” I asked, grabbing at the leather book. There was an golden ribbon tied around the book and knotted near the front. I tugged the ribbon open and the book bounced up in my hands, barely held shut by the weight of the cover.

Opi shrugged. “I dunno Mary, I hadn’t opened it yet. I was waiting until I could show you guys.”

“So you don’t even know what’s inside?” I teased. “What if it turns out to be like, some dumb romance story with a fancy cover?”

“That could be cool too!” Syra said. “It might be like, ‘Avery grabbed Henry’s throbbing member, stroking it gently…’”

“Eww, Syra, why is that where your brain goes?” Sam said, cutting her off. Her face had gone so pink her freckles had nearly vanished.

Syra shrugged, “I just think it’d be funny if it was all porn.”

“Well, no luck for that,” I said, peeking inside the cover. “Opi was right, this book is cool.”

Sam leaned closer to me. “What’d he find?”

I spread the book wide on the floor of the clubhouse. “It looks like a book of magic spells.”

“What?” Sam said, craning her head around to look at the page. “Be serious, Mary.”

“No really, I think it’s a spell book!” I said, pointing out the runes on the page. “Like, read this bit. Locust of air. To cast this spell, you will need 5 wings of the mayfly, 7 maple keys, and the breath of a sleeping cat. You will also need to connect to a leyline of air.”

“That just sounds like gibberish,” Syra said, pushing aside her long, blonde hair, but Opi was leaning over now as well.

“I knew this book was going to be awesome,” he said, a smile creeping across his face to reveal crooked teeth and braced. I smiled back at him shyly.

Sam pulled the book towards herself, flipping back the pages. “What’s the first spell? Maybe we can try these.”

“Do you really believe these are spells?” Syra frowned. “It’s probably all nonsense and fairy tales.”

Sam gave her a sheepish look. “Maybe? If they don’t work, then no harm, right?”

I flipped through to the beginning. “The first spell says it’s some sort of initiation?”

Opi practically pushed me out of the way to look. “Seriously?”

“Yeah,” I said, moving back a bit to give him more room.

Opi started to read the book out loud. “One of the first things any new sorcerer should do is perform an initiation ritual. Such a ritual will allow them to see beyond the mortal veil and into the leylines that cross the globe. This initiation process is crucial to learning any further spells within this book.”

“Okay, that’s the spell we should try,” I declared.

“I don’t believe you’re taking this seriously,” Syra scoffed.

I stuck out my tongue. “If you don’t think it’s real, you don’t have to do it.”

“If she doesn’t think it’s real, it won’t really matter, will it?” Opi said. “We’ll just do it and nothing will happen and she’ll be able to tell us ‘I told you so.’”

“See, Opi speaks my language,” Syra said, leaning in towards the book.

“So, are we all doing this?” Sam asked, crowding around the book. I pushed my way into the circle as well.

“We should all do this,” I said firmly. “Otherwise, someone can just lie and say it worked and we can’t prove it.”

“That’s a really dumb reason,” Syra said, but it wasn’t a real protest.

“Are we all in?” I pressed.

“Yeah,” Opi said. Syra and Sam nodded as well.

“Cool. Let’s see what we need,” I said, looking for the steps.

The Librarian’s Code, Part 2

06 Friday Nov 2015

Posted by lexilogical in NaNoWriMo, The Librarian's Code

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Creative Writing, fae, fantasy, fiction, Librarian

“Mark, it can’t be the fae,” I argued, despite myself. “We’d have seen more. It would have been obvious earlier.”

Mark just shrugged. “Rach, half the bookshelf is missing and there aren’t that many creatures that are that sneaky.”

“Not that sneaky?” I asked, “Have you read Witchcraft and Brooms? Hobgoblins and Gnomes? Creatures of Smoke?”

“Gnomes and Hobgoblins are still fae, Rachael. In fact, every book on the fae is missing.”

I sighed. If he was right, then we were in trouble. The fae were tricky things and their goals were rarely obvious. If he was wrong… Then the book was probably missing off the shelf already, and I’d forgotten what it contained.

“Where is Amber now?” I demanded. Mark pointed out of the room.

“She was hiding in the bathroom last I checked. She may have been persuaded to come out by now, but you scared her pretty badly.”

“I am not evil,” I grumbled, “Come on, we need to go talk to her.”

“And ask what? ‘Hey Amber, are you under a glamour?’”

“Well, we need to ask her something!” I said, striding between the rows. “We need to get those books back and it’s not happening staring around at the empty shelves.”

“Maybe we should get Kelcie then,” Mark said. He was struggling to keep up with my long legs, but I didn’t bother to slow down for him. “She is the expert on glamours.”

“Kelcie has been out all month with a broken arm,” I said. Not that I couldn’t still call her in. If Mark was right about all this I’d probably need to. I hoped it wouldn’t come to that though.

Mark bit his lip. “Could that be relevant? Maybe the fae specifically went out to disable our glamour specialist before they-”

“She was walking the dog,” I cut in. “Come on, we can’t afford to go assuming every coincidence is a plot.”

“If we’re dealing with the fae,” Mark said, “we can’t afford not to.”

I gave him a dirty look before pushing open the bathroom door.

Amber jumped to her feet as soon as I walked in, wiping at her face with a scrap of kleenex. “Hi Rachael, Mark,” she stammered.

“Amber, I need to ask you some quick questions,” I said, a little too forcefully. Mark punched me lightly in the arm but Amber just nodded.

“Question one. What is this book?”

I held up the red leather book that I hadn’t even bothered to reshelve. Amber licked her lips nervously as she looked at it.

“It’s one of the books in the section 11. It’s on loan from the Falconer family and should not be lent out,” she recited. I recognized my own words from earlier in the day. Had I really scared her that much?

“Well, good,” I muttered. “Question two. What did you think it was when you lent it out?”

Amber mumbled something under her breath.

“What was that?” I asked. Amber didn’t speak up any louder the second time. I sighed loudly only to get punched even harder by Mark. “What?” I snapped.

“No wonder everyone is claiming you’re salty these days,” Mark said. I glowered at him but leaned back into the wall.

“Fine, your turn then.” He put out his hand for the book and I passed it over, crossing my arms.

“Amber, we aren’t angry with you,” Mark began. Amber gave me a hesitant glance out of the corner of her eye and Mark sighed in frustration. “Rachael isn’t mad-”

“Yes she is,” I interjected, netting myself a dirty look from Mark.

“-Rachael isn’t mad, she’s just worried,” he continued, still meeting my eyes. “And taking it out on you, I might add.”

I frowned, breaking the gaze first.

Mark continued on. “She just needs to hear what you thought this books was when you lent it out.”

Amber’s lower lip quivered slightly as she spoke, making her words wobble in the middle. “I thought it was a book of fairy tales.”

“But why would you think that?” I blurted out. “We just went through the training! How did they even get the book out of the restricted section?”

Amber burst out into tears again as Mark glowered at me. I looked away, trying to burn a hole in the corner of the bathroom.

“She does raise some valid points though, Amber,” Mark said diplomatically. “Your initiation training was two days before you checked this out. Did you not recognize the book? How did you even check it out?”

Amber’s voice wavered. “I don’t know. I remember someone asking me for one of the books in the back and he pointed through the gate and described it. And I remember thinking how odd it was that we had childrens’ books back there. So I went back and grabbed it.”

“How did you check it out?” Mark pushed. Amber shook her head.

“I don’t remember.”

“Do you remember what the person looked like?” He asked. Amber just shook her head again. “Was he wearing anything distinctive? Interesting piece of jewelry, a funny t-shirt? A suit?”

Amber almost shook her head again, then paused. “He had a brooch in the shape of a stylized leaf.”

“Could you draw it?” Mark asked. When Amber nodded he grabbed a paper towel off the wall, passing it towards her with a pen. Amber quickly doodled the shape onto the towels. I leaned over to look at it as she drew. It was a oak leaf, I was pretty sure, despite her shaky hand. It wasn’t the most artistic leaf I had ever seen, but it was obvious enough. Over it she crossed it with a sketchily drawn feather. I didn’t recognize the symbol off hand, but I was sure it had been in one of the books. That book was now likely missing. Mark’s paranoia was already wearing off on me.

It’s only paranoia if he’s wrong. I reminded myself, seeing the image Amber had drawn. Mark’s lips pursed as he inspected the paper towel that she handed him.

“This is all you remember?” he asked. Amber nodded. Mark passed the paper towel to me and I folded it carefully. “Do you at least remember how you checked it out?”

“No,” she said, rubbing her eyes and nose with her cuff. “I didn’t even remember I’d done it until it came back in. And I didn’t remember why it was a big deal until Rachael yelled at me.”

“I didn’t yell,” I muttered, looking at the paper towel so I wouldn’t have to see Mark’s disapproval. I could still feel it in my peripheral vision though.

“And then what happened?” Mark asked, still glowering.

“I finally looked at the book and realized what it was,” Amber said. “I did listen in the training, Rachael.”

I hurrumphed at the girl, neither approving nor disapproving.

“Sort of like you were purposefully ignoring it before and it suddenly came into focus?” Mark asked.

“Yeah,” she replied.

Mark sighed. “We need to call in Kelcie, Rachael.”

I nodded in agreement.

“One last question, Amber,” I said. She looked at me expectantly. “Were there any other books missing when you grabbed this one.”

Amber’s hand flew to her mouth. “Yes… Plenty.”

I sighed, thrusting the paper towel into my pocket. “Stop looking at me like that, Mark. You know I hate when you’re right.”

Lexi’s Rules for Starting Writers

09 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by lexilogical in Writing Advice

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Creative Writing, Writing

This blog is now a little over a year old.  Unfortunately, it’s original purpose as a place to showcase my writing, has been abandoned in that time.  It’s not because I’ve stopped writing, but a lot of my writing is now focused on larger projects, and fewer short stories.  This unfortunately makes it hard to keep up regular posts.

Instead, I’m going to start using this blog to help answer some of the more common questions I hear.  Alongside the writing I’ve been doing, I also help moderate on /r/WritingPrompts, a community of over two million subscribers, many of whom are various stages of amateur writers themselves.  Many of them who are just starting to write for the first time.  Today’s post is for them.

Lexi’s Rules for Beginner Writers

  1. Start Writing.  And I mean start writing now.  I would urge you to stop reading this post, find a word processor or notebook you like, and start writing something. You probably won’t, but the only way to become a writer is to stop thinking about it and to go do it.  Don’t worry, we’ll come back to this.
  2. Write Every Day.  This is a hard one, but it’s also an important one.  Don’t just write ‘when the mood strikes,’ aim to write something every single day.  Even if it’s bad.  The best way to track this is to get a calendar and cross of every day, but only after you’ve finished writing something.
  3. Don’t beat yourself up if you fail rule #2.  Okay, so #2 is important, but this point is just as important.  It’s really important to try and write every day, but don’t let your past failures encourage you into just giving up and never starting again.  So you messed up once.  Do better tomorrow.
  4. Publish everything.  And I don’t mean through a proper publishing channel, but put your work out on the internet.  This is a great case for the community I linked above, Reddit’s /r/WritingPrompts, but you can just as easily do it here on WordPress.  It takes maybe 5 minutes to create a blog or a reddit account, and start posting your work.  Post your story in the comments here if you want.  The reason for this is to counteract fear.  Most people fail to develop a new ability when they get scared that they’ll do it badly.  They worry that their stuff isn’t as good as everyone else’s.  No one’s work starts out perfect or even decent.  The only way to get past that is to keep doing it.  Publishing your work, even when you’re just starting out, even when your writing is bad, ensures you’ll never get caught in a loop of hiding your stuff away until it’s ‘perfect’.  Sure, it might suck.  Someone might even tease you.  But they don’t know you.  They don’t know that you’re going to get better, and this is just the first step to that.
  5. Ask for people’s opinions.  Especially when you liked your piece.  This one can be hard, because a lot of people don’t want to give away their time.  Don’t make them give away their time for free.  There’s plenty of communities out there that will offer a critique for a critique, many of them on Reddit such as /r/WritingCritiques.  There’s other writers who want feedback, offer an exchange.  You read their work, you read theirs.  Or ask a friend.  Friends are good for that.
  6. Critique your own work.  Read what you’ve written back to yourself.  Do it out loud.  Do it carefully.  Does it still sound good?  Do parts of it make you cringe?  Go back and try to fix them, make them sound better.
  7. Read and critique other people’s work.  Read other people’s writing.  Read lots of it.  Re-read your favourite book, and try to isolate the parts that make it your favourite.  What was the author doing?  What details did he elaborate on?  What did they skim?  How did they fill up so many words?  Join a critique group, find what issues other people had.
  8. But mostly importantly, START WRITING NOW.  If you can’t think of a topic, go to /r/WritingPrompts to find one.  If you don’t like the prompts, take half of one.  Twist it around until you do like it.  Pick one where ‘What happens next?’ feels painfully obvious and just write it.  No more excuses, no more talking about writing.  Just write.  Procrastination time is over and this article is finished.

The Lake

26 Tuesday Aug 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Odds and Ends, Stories

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Tags

Creative Writing, fiction

“You dropped the soap? What do you mean you dropped the soap?”

She floated in the lake water as she asked the question, her perfectly level head at odds with the long white legs and arms treading beneath surface of the water. I shrugged sheepishly from the over-inflated toy.

“It just shot out of my hands! I’m sorry, I wasn’t expecting it to be so slippery!”

“Well of course it’s slippery! It’s a bar of soap! What were you expecting?”

“Alright, alright, I get it.” I said, my cheeks heating up. “So now what?”

She shrugged, the water making an odd ripple as her legs and arms continued to churn. “We get another bar of soap, I guess. The lake is 25 feet deep, it’s long gone.”

“All the way up the hill?”

“Well, you dropped it,” she said, sticking out her tongue. “Only fair.”

“I have a better idea.” I pushed myself up onto the floatable and out of the cold lake waters.

“Oh?”

“Yeah.” I lay back just as the sun poked out from behind the clouds, beaming down rays of warmth to chase away the chill. “Let’s just swim. You can take a shower later.”

A sharp splash in the water and a spray of cold water droplets answered my question. Oh well, can’t win them all.

Nightfall

22 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Stories, water

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Tags

Creative Writing, elements, fantasy, fiction

The monster would come at nightfall, they told her. At the moment when the sun just touched the ocean outside, and the horizon turned green. It wouldn’t be long now, Katrina knew. The sun filtered into the observatory at a harsh angle, barely a hand’s width away from the edge of the water and turning her hair as red as the dress they’d put her in. Not much longer now.

The flat stone floor was still wet from the morning’s high waves, but she ignored it, sinking to her knees as the cold seeped through the thin dress. Bowing her head, she started to pray.

Not to the old gods, they’d already failed. Praying to them had been the first thing her people had tried, and look where it had brought them. To the point of human sacrifices every new moon. No, they would get no more prayers from her, and no more tears.

To new gods then. To gods who would bring back the happiness and joy. To gods that would stop the drought, stop the fires and bring back the rains. To gods who would reassure her parents that her death wasn’t in vain, reassure her sisters that they wouldn’t be next. And maybe, just maybe, gods that would save her. She was so deep in prayer she barely noticed the sun slipping past the edge of the world, or the darkness that engulfed her.

The footsteps on the stone steps however, those broke her out of her trance. She whipped around to see a young man climbing the steps to the room, silhouetted against the dying light of the sunset.

“You aren’t a monster,” she blurted out before quickly covering her mouth with her hand. The man chuckled as he approached.

“Are you certain about that?” he asked as he reached the top step. It was then that she noticed his long, scaled tail as it flicked over the steps, wrapping around one of the pillars. She lowered her hand in horror.

“What are you?” She whispered. The man just laughed more as he crossed the floor towards her, holding out a hand towards her. She placed her hand in his and he pulled her to her feet.

“I suppose,” he said as he guided her towards the ocean, “You could say I’m a new god, looking to find a disciple.”

A Pokemon Story – Part 2

01 Tuesday Apr 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Established Universe, Pokemon, Stories

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Tags

Creative Writing, fanfic, pokemon, Story

Part 1

Last night when I went to bed, my life was spinning it’s wheels. No job, no plan, just sitting around hoping my cards would change. But today when I woke up, everything was different. Today when I woke up, my cats were pokemon, and according to my husband, that was normal. So today, things were going to change.

I quickly tossed on some clothes and headed towards the kitchen. Jewel and Katie nearly bowled me over trying to race me up the stairs. “Girls, calm down!” I said, petting Katie’s between her tall, lavender ears, just above the jewel on her forehead. “I’m not used to you guys being so tall.” Jewel, same as always, despite being turned into an Umbreon, just meowed at me to hurry up and put down some food. I ate an apple while the two tore into their food, then got curious and checked out my fish tank.

“Huh…” Well, they weren’t the same fish, that was for sure, but they didn’t look like any pokemon I knew of. Guess not everything was the same as the games. I decided it was time to turn to the internet for some quick research.

Some time later, Jewel strolled up at the computer, licking her lips and meowing. Still my talkative little one. “Come here, Jewel.” I said, palming her pokeball, “We’re going to see if we can help earn our keep.”

Katie was easy enough to round up, she came running when she heard the door open. She always had loved to go outside. She followed me in step as we headed to the meadow nearby. It was muddy, and snowdrifts still covered heaps of matted down winter grass, but it should still work. Katie began wandering immediately into it and I followed her. She still had the instincts of a cat, it seemed, but I wasn’t really sure what we were looking for.

A patch of grass wiggled off in the corner of my eye and Katie pounced on it faster than I could turn around. When I looked, a massive rat stood in front of her, with teeth as long as my fingers.

“Gah!!” I yelled, glancing around to see if anyone had spotted my reaction to my first live Raticate. “I mean… Um, Katie! Tackle it!” The commands came easier after that. I’d had years of experience, playing with cartoon versions safely behind a little glass screen. But when the Raticate stopped moving, I had my first glimpse of reality as Katie went to bite it’s head off.

“Katie! No!” I grabbed her by the scruff of her neck, hauling her off the fallen prey. She looked at me confusedly as I checked if the Raticate was still moving. Still breathing. Guess it had just fainted. I hauled Katie away a safe distance, then let Jewel out of her pokeball too. The two stared at me curiously, as if to ask “Now what?”

“Now… I don’t know girls. Maybe I’m just not violent enough to get into pokemon training. Let’s just go home.” We headed back, detouring along the spring-swollen river. Everything was covered in a layer of ice, thanks to the frequent thaws and snow squalls of the past week, but it was starting to look like spring was winning again. I bent over to pick up a stone, planning on breaking the layer of ice still hanging over the river, when I noticed Katie and Jewel’s ears were both upright, and both of them were staring at a point just behind me.

I turned slowly to see a majestic sight. A tall buck stood behind me, with a massive rack of antlers. His fur was tufted white about his neck, but I could see small pink flower buds covering his antlers, ready to bloom. My breath caught in my throat. I was new to this whole pokemon thing, but moose were dangerous, especially in spring. I slowly took a step backwards, hoping to show I was no threat.

The moose snorted and lowered his antlers, pawing the ground. Well fuck, that was clear body language. I started looking about for somewhere to run, when a blur of black and gold hit the Sawsbuck in the side.

“Jewel!” I cried, worried. The Sawsbuck reared, tossing her off. He turned to charge her, but stopped dead in his tracks, a glowing wall in front of Jewel. I looked beside me to see the jewel on Katie’s forehead glowing brightly. Jewel charged again, biting at the Sawsbuck’s legs and rear. “Good girls! Keep it up!” I quickly dove into my backpack, hunting for something to help. I needed some way to end this fight before the Sawsbuck got hurt, or worse, my babies. My hands closed around a spare pokeball. Perfect! Just one shot though, better make it count.

As I watched, Jewel bounced about the buck, harrying it’s flank like she’d done it all her life. Perhaps she had, given the way she chased Katie about the house at home. The Sawsbuck turned to chase her, stumbling slightly on his rear leg. That was my chance. I threw the pokeball hard, just as Katie let off a flash of light that left the buck disoriented. When the light faded from my eyes, I saw the pokeball on the ground as it shook once, then stood still with a click. I sighed a breath of relief.

“Okay girls, now we’re really going home.”

Back home, my husband was less than impressed with my conquest.

“Where are we going to keep a Sawsbuck? We don’t even have a backyard in this apartment.” He asked, staring at the pokeball in my hand.

“Well, I was thinking about that.” I said, “You know that property we bought up north?” He grunted in agreement. “How would you feel about starting our own Pokemon petting zoo?”

 Part 3

Drums of War #2 – Interactions

31 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Stories, The Drums of War

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Tags

Creative Writing, fantasy, part 2, Story, The Drums of War, tropes

Part 1

Keita curled her hand about her mug of ale and looked at the two men sitting across from her. The two men appeared to be polar opposites of each other, the one young and fair and the other old and rugged, but that didn’t stop the easy camaraderie between them. “So it’s a story you want then,” She began. “I suppose I can oblige.”

“You see, I am a member of the Ora tribe. My parents were amongst the Chosen whom wander about the Irati plains.” Lucien started slightly, though Turgis simply looked confused. Noticing the older man’s confusion, he explained.

“They’re barbarian tribes, Turgis. They roam about the plains in packs, killing off anyone they come across. The Crown’s Guard has been trying to stop them for years so we could settle the lands.” Keita glared daggers from steely grey eyes at the young prince. Turgis scoffed, interrupting Lucien’s rant before he gained steam.

“I think you’ve offended the lady. Please, continue with your story Keita.”

“As I was saying,” Keita began, still glaring at Lucien, “My parents were among the Chosen whom wander the plains, as our people have done for generations upon generations, defending our lands from those whom mean to take it.” Lucien muttered something under his breath about travellers and merchants, but Turgis fixed him with a glare of his own and he opted for a stubborn pout as Keita continued her story.

“Among the Chosen there is a tradition that when a child has come of age, they must set out on their own journey towards our sacred site. There, they will meet with the Elders of the Ora, and their destiny will be decided. Most do not return to their parent’s tribes after their journey.”

“Two months ago, I set out on my own journey to the sacred site. Our tribe was far from the site when I began, but the path is simple. The sacred site is at the head of the Medina river, which begins in the woods beyond the plains, but forks and flows throughout the plains. But when I arrived, there were no elders to greet me. Instead, there was a town wall and Avesta guards.” Keita focused her gaze on Lucien. “When I requested entry through the gates to visit the sacred site, the guards instead chose to open fire.” Lucien began to turn a brilliant shade of red.

“I brought down one man with my throwing knife, he was clearly not expecting me to fight back…” She smiled wickedly as her fingers traced a small blonde braid woven into her hair, “But then they opened the doors, and ten more men charged out at me. I…” She paused, biting her lip, “A stranger came running out of the gates behind them. He was armed with a bow and not dressed like a guard. With his help, I killed the rest, but he urged me to come with him to a small hut outside the gates.”

“As we walked, he explained that the town had been formed recently, under the order of the King. When the first of the Ora came asking permission to see the sacred site, they had let him in, but upon arriving at the river head, the man had flown into a fury, killing many villagers before he was killed himself. Since then, they had erected a fence, and turned away any Ora who came.”

“The stranger believed that the villagers had unknowingly destroyed what was once the sacred site but said that many others had died trying to turn away the journeying Oras. When he met the Elders while hunting, he had warned them not to go to the town. Instead, the Elders had scattered, each leaving in a different direction to seek an answer from the sacred sites of their ancestors. The oldest, Elder Rosenth, remained behind, hidden in the man’s hut. Alone, she was only able to give me part of my destiny. To reclaim our sacred grounds.”

Turgis turned to Lucien, cutting off the young man just as he opened his mouth. “Lucien, I believe I’ve won this bet, go buy the next round of drinks.” Lucien spluttered, his face having grown steadily redder and angrier for several minutes.

“What? No, Turgi-”

“Go.” Turgis forcefully pushed him out of the booth until both men were standing. “Before you do something stupid.” He said quietly. Lucien glared at the older man and whispered fiercely,

“You heard her, she killed several of my men. Those are good people in Avendale, and some traitor in the village helped!”

“She ran.” Turgis said firmly. “Now go get the drinks before you do something stupid like start a fight in neutral territory.” Lucien glowered at him before turning and pushing his way towards the bar. Keita smiled smugly at his back as Turgis sat back down.

“Now my dear, that is an interesting tale, but what brings you so far out this way? Cetrius is neutral grounds, the druids won’t take kindly to you building an army in this town.” Keita’s smile faded for slightly embarassed one.

“Ah well, it was only part of the destiny. Rosenth insisted I find the other six Elders to hear the rest of the destiny before taking action. One of them was headed this way.” Turgis smiled.

“You really have no idea how you’re going to take on a whole town, do you?” He asked. Keita blushed, making the scars along her cheek stand out sharply, and opened her mouth to say something angrily, when three mugs of beers plunked down on the table. Turgis grabbed one. “Welcome back, Lucien! I retract my question, Keita. Perhaps now would be a good time to move to lighter topics.” He smiled warmly at the two younger people’s perplexed looks.

To Be Continued

Continue reading →

A Silly Wish

24 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Odds and Ends, Stories

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Tags

Creative Writing, genie, Story, wish

“And the winner of this next award goes to… Jeanie!”

Jeanie danced down the aisle to accept the trophy, her golden wings blending with her golden dress

“Thank you! Thank you everyone!” She gushed. The gauzy wings fluttered behind her. They always did when she was excited. “I’d like to thank my mother for this award, for always supporting me, and my father, for giving me my first taste of fame!”

It was the truth, she reflected on the next day, as she placed the award on the mantle on the mantle beside the others. Her father had been the one to call the papers that morning, when his daughter- She was still called Anna back then- had come down the stairs sporting glowing fairy wings. She’d tried to explain about the genie she’d found, and how he’d granted her one wish after she hugged the teddy bear her mom had found at a garage sale last week, but the papers didn’t want to hear the story. She’d found the headlines years later, all suggesting that she might be some super human, or the next evolutionary branch. She kept them all for a time, but eventually they all went into the recycling bin. Except for one. That reporter had taken the time to listen to a little girl’s story about a genie in a bear wishing for fairy wings, and her big dreams to be a dancer/actress/model. That article she had framed, right beside her first award, a small medal from her school play. She’d played Tinkerbell, and she still remembered the gasps in awe from the audience as she fluttered across the stage.

Her mother had been the one to shoo the reporters out of the house, and the scientists that followed them, tutting the whole while about how she would find clothes that fit now. In the end, she ended up being the one to alter most of her clothes, adding snaps and holes down the back to accommodate the wings. She was also her biggest fan, bringing her to all her auditions, and cheering her up when they just weren’t looking for a girl with fairy wings for the part.

But the parts she had gotten had all struck big. It was a curiosity thing at first, she figured. Come see the girl with wings! But her movie had hit it big, an instant cult classic, and the fans followed their new idol to movie after movie. Lucky break, considering how terribly her silly wish could have turned out.

She stepped out on her balcony and looked out at the house her fame had bought. With a smile on her, she spread her wings and took to the sky. Even 20 years later, her morning fly was still her favourite part of the day.

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