Checking It Twice

WordPress Prompters ask us to: List your top 5 grocery store items.

That’s kind of boring- so I thought I’d have a little fun and list the top 5 things

you would find on Krampus’ Grocery store items list:

1: Peppermint Schnapps ( 100 proof  OF COURSE )

2:  McCormick’s Smokehouse Maple Seasoning

3:  Earl Grey flavored Gelato

4:  Chicken Nuggets

5:   Microwave Popcorn

There you have it- Krampus’ grocery list.

Ho Ho Ho.

I’m Already There

Photo J.M. Moscoso

If I had a enough money  in the world to do anything I wanted to do, if I had a bank account healthy enough to go anywhere in the world ( or off world )-

I wouldn’t pay to go to the moon –

but if I could be convinced if we knew for sure that on the surface of the Moon there is a graveyard.

I would pull out my checkbook, my credit cards if you told me that once upon a time- thousands of years ago, maybe even millions of years ago a ship full of astronauts  went mad because the closer they got to the Moon they changed.

They howled. They ranted and raved. Some of them escaped from the ship without putting on their space suits and when they set foot on the moons dusty, chalky,  airless surface their blood boiled, they died and then they froze.

They  were dead  the  unafflicted  believed. So they buried them with their eyes open.

But of course, we know unless they put a silver bullet into their hearts, the bodies they buried  on the Moon were not dead at all.

You bet I’d go to the Moon for that and I  would take a shovel.

Photo J.M Moscoso

 

 

Good Neighbors

In response to WP Prompt: What makes a good neighbor,  I’ve posted these lines from Robert Frost’s poem Mending Wall from 1914.

Bringing a stone grasped firmly by the top
In each hand, like an old-stone savage armed.
He moves in darkness as it seems to me,
Not of woods only and the shade of trees.
He will not go behind his father’s saying,
And he likes having thought of it so well
He says again, “Good fences make good neighbors.”- Robert Frost

Saint Louis Cemetery. October 31, 2012 Photo A.M. Moscoso

 

Saint Louis Cemetery. October 31, 2012 Photo A.M. Moscoso

Saint Louis Cemetery. October 31, 2012 Photo A.M. Moscoso

The Writer’s Group

Experience Writing Visual Prompt for: Pulling Back The Veil

 

Brodie was on the bus ride home from his girlfriends apartment when the advertisement announced itself with a little ting  on his phone .

He looked down at the screen and saw a raven with a pen clenched in it’s claws and when he clicked the icon and read the message he smirked. Then he tapped his email address into the box that looked like parchment paper and when he was done  he had the same smirk on his face, only it was wider now.

Brodie decided to join the group that met at the Cafe /Bookstore /Art gallery  that was within walking distance from his apartment not because he wanted advice or instruction or even support. Brodie decided to join because he wanted to be in the same room with any  other writer who dared to trespass in his field. He wanted  to be there, in the flesh to  show anyone who wanted to play in  the pasture  that he had fenced, chained shut  and hung ‘no trespassing signs’  on every square inch of available space that they would never – no matter how many words they typed, no matter how many people read their posts on their blogs or on line magazine- that they would never  come close to replicating the genius that is Brodie Kaspin.

So on that first Saturday he sat in the back of the room with his notebook and laptop and his chesire cat grin and when some of the writers got up to read their work Brodie crossed his arms over his chest. Occasionally  he would put his pen to his notebook and scratch some notes- making sure that the person up front saw him of course.

At the end of the sharing session some of the other writer’s offered advice, some said they enjoyed what they heard, others weren’t ready to read their work yet and then Brodie raised his hand and when Vic – who had organized the group smiled and asked Brodie what he would like to add, Brodie looked down at his Steno pad and with the skill and precision of a butcher with using  a dull knife on a  to hack at a side of beef, he sliced and diced every single thing that had been read.

Next, Brodie  took out a meat tenderizer and he pounded the poems, the stories, the musings, until the dozen or so writers seated around the table were red faced. One woman looked down at her laptop with faded rock and roll band stickers on the cover and when she looked up she thanked Brodie of his input.

Brodie said of course- he was glad to help. Brodie knew thatthere was always a few like Rocker Chick in these groups. You could punch them in the face and they would thank you for taking the time to pound on their story to a bloody pulp because  real artists could take criticism  and people like Rocker Chick really wanted to be that person.

Vic thanked Brodie for his input and was trying to figure out how to wind this session up so that at least half the group would show up again after Brodie’s gutting when Sunny Longyear burst into the room.

Sunny was usually late, she always had something to share and if she didn’t she’d share why she didn’t have anything to share and that three or four minutes would be as interesting as the other stories that had been presented. She was the one who never said, ” I would have written it this way. ” she never said, ” I don’t get it-” Sunny would just sit there with her head tilted to the side and say, ” man that was a lot of words- kind of like when a bunch of cats that don’t live at your house bust in when they hear the can opener.”

Sometimes someone would ask her what cat should they chase out and when the group would break up for work sessions Sunny would listen and help that writer choose what cat to chase out and when they were done- the story was there and so was Sunny, with her face tilted down to the words on the page or the screen the way you or I would hold our face to the Sun.

 

Sunny sat right next to Brodie and introduced herself.

” So Brodie, ” she asked ” are you a beginning writer or- ”

” I’ve been published. ” he said crisply,  ” A few anthologies,  magazines I write horror and suspense. ”

Sunny  nodded “and you are-”

” Brodie Kaspin. ”

Sunny smiled and if she had never heard of Brodie, she didn’t let on. ” I write stuff like that too. I  mean. I try to branch out  and tell a regular story, but in the end some old lady  that was supposed to help bring her releatives together before she dies takes an ax to her family and after she goes to Greece and lives in a yellow house surrounded by olive trees instead.”

” What are you going to do.” Sunny shrugged.

” Focus. ” Brodie said.

Sunny laughed a warm laugh and she put her hand out and touched his forearm.

” Hey Brodie, look. I was wondering- she handed him a slip of paper ” If you’d take a look at my blog. Maybe chose a story or something that has a little promise. You know. Something I could develop. ”

Brodie held his hand out for Sunny’s website address and when the slip of paper was in his hand, it snapped shut like a steel trap.

After she and Brodie were done talking, Sunny had moved to the table where Rocker Chick was sitting.

Brodie saw Sunny ask Rocker Chick a question and when she shook her head Sunny put her hand on her laptop and Rocker Chick slid it away from her.

” Come on Mavis, ” Sunny  said, ” that talking wolf is fab, he reminds me of my Mom- I wanted to see where he went this week. ”

Rocker Chick closed her laptop and when Brodie looked over at Sunny, she was smiling- but her eyes weren’t.

The group met again two weeks later- and in that two weeks Brodie had burned through Sunny’s blog and her stories and her poems like a swarm of locusts.

He devoured her stories, he spat them out and then he went back for more and by the time he had finished he was very much looking forward to doing the same to  Sunny in person.

But of course Sunny was late for the meeting and Brodie saw her sitting in the corner with a cup of tea in front of her. ” Hey. ” she waved at him.

Brodie sat down across from her. He pretended to listen to pleasantries and then he took his steno pad out of his backpack. ” I have a few pointers for  you. ”

Sunny nodded. ” I thought you might. ”

Brodie had chosen a half dozen pieces and halfway through  his vivisection  on Sunny’s stories, Sunny slid her chair back.

Brodie thought she was going to get up and maybe storm off. But instead she tilted her chair back on it’s rear legs and she said, ” you know Brodie, you do have a talent for getting words and ideas that don’t like each other to sit in the same space without killing each other. I can’t do that. And I’ve been writing for ages. And I do mean ages.”

Brodie smile was smug.

“But do you know what I think my talent is Brodie?”

Brodie shook his head. ” I honestly couldn’t say.” he said pointedly

” My talent is that my stories get under people’s skins.”

” Well. That’s charming. ” he said not meaning it.

Sunny rocked her chair a little.

“For example Brodie, my stories are under  you skin right now in fact you could say I’m under your skin right now.”

Brodie felt his face get hot.

Sunny leaned over and put her nose right next to his. ” I”m not really here Brodie. ”

Brodie reached out  for her and as he did the  Sunny’s empty chair tipped back into place.