Showing posts with label story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label story. Show all posts

Friday, July 13, 2012

Good News, Not So Good News

In the spirit of the Friday the 13th


At the end of the last week, I applied for a job as a writer for an online magazine for women. A couple of days ago, I found out they didn't accept me. Too bad.

On the other hand, yesterday I found out that my story was accepted for a vampire-themed anthology in Serbian; it should come out in September. Yay!

For the end, something that's not writing-related: on Monday, I made a pizza for the first time in I don't remember how many years, and it turned out good. Another Yay!

Have a nice weekend, everyone! And remember to be nice to cats!

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Flash Fiction Challenge: The Bone Cathedral



Blame it on Chuck Wendig and his flash fiction challenge!

Fine. Don't blame him, he just gave me the idea -- and if you wish to blame someone, blame me for clumsy writing.

Anyway, you can read about the challenge here (basically, pick one of the 6 possible settings, and write a story around it in no more than 1000 words), and here's what I came up with:


The Bone Cathedral

“Honey, I really think you should talk to him. I know that some boys torture bugs, but this is freaking me out.”
“I’ll take care of it.”
*
“Son, this is... Impressive.”
“It’s just a model.”
“A model?”
“Yes, it’s tiny. No real people could get in to pray. I just wanted to see if I could do it. If I could make it so it would stand.”
“So, it was a one-time thing? Well, you certainly made it. Where did you get all those little bones?”
“Mice and rats.”
“Live mice and rats? How did you...?”
“Well, they’re not alive anymore. And Mrs. Smith is no longer complaining about mice in her kitchen.”
“But how did you... Oh, never mind, once you set your mind to something, you do it. But tell me, why bones? You little cathedral is impressive, but why didn’t you just use matches or something?”
“Because we’re all made of bones. We should pray among the bones.”
“What... Oh. I didn’t think that seeing that Roentgen photography of your brother’s leg would upset you so much.”
“It didn’t upset me.”
“Well, did you pray for his fast recovery?”
“I told you, it’s a model. It’s too little. I’d need bigger bones for a real one.”
“We don’t have to pray among the bones, and besides, we’re not made just of bones, we’re also flesh and blood and nerves and other stuff.”
“But when we die, isn’t it bones that remain?”
“After a while, yes. But after some more time, there’s only dust.”
“At the end, we’re dust? Like, after a fire, when everything burns?”
“Something like that, yes.”
“Oh.”
*
“Honey, when I said you should talk to him, I didn’t mean that you should give him more ideas.”

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Forty Days -- Protect Yourself From Vampires!

The vampires from the Serbian folklore don't look like this.


Last night I watched a short documentary in Serbian called Forty Days. It was a fascinating insight into Serbian folklore.

According to the old custom, after a person dies, the soul stays around for forty days -- it's normal. The soul revisits the favorite places and watches over the family (often coming into the dreams of the oldest members) and, if it was a good person while alive, makes no trouble and peacefully leaves after 40 days, to unite with the older ancestors so all of them watch over the family.

However, if the person was bad -- a thief, or, the worst, a murderer, those 40 days don't go quietly, the soul gives the trouble all the time, and the deceased might raise as a vampire.

The vampire of the Serbian folklore is neither sparkly nor a creature of the Anne Rice novels. They're not pale, either -- they're very red, from all the blood they've taken, and swollen from it, too (swollen like a tick). If the wife of the vampire is still alive, he might keep visiting her, even getting her pregnant (that was one of the explanations as to how a widow could become pregnant and have a baby). The vampires are prone to revisiting their old homes, but also other homes, looking for food and/or women. They also pester people, cause them trouble, blood-drinking being only one of them.

If the trouble starts in the village the vampire is from, people figure out what's happening and start looking for the vampire's grave, to dig him out and to destroy the body. However, the vampire of the Serbian folklore doesn't mind the sun (they usually appear between the midnight and the dawn, but sunlight does them no harm), so they can travel far enough -- which is, to some other village, where nobody knew them while alive so nobody knows they've died. There they start new lives, it is possible for them to marry again and to have children. The jobs they usually take are that of a butcher or a blacksmith -- the things associated with the unclean or the underworld.

If you listen to the old, old stories, those telling them know a lot which is unfamiliar to you; for example, you can listen to a story about a hero solving many problems in order to achieve whatever, and then the last trouble comes, the hardest one -- he gets into a village full of butchers. And if you don't know this part about the vampires, you have no idea why would a village full of butchers, other than being a bit unusual and not very logical, be a problem, let alone the most difficult part.

Those old stories can be quite contradictory; the neighboring villages can tell different, even contradictory stories, and even the stories themselves can be self-contradictory. An example: a vampire can leave his old village and become a butcher, a blacksmith or the like. On the other side, one of the best defenses against a vampire is a sharp object (not necessarily a stake and not necessarily made of wood), they are afraid of them and tend to avoid them. A butcher or a blacksmith who stays away from sharp objects, tools included? And there's no solving this; too many of the old stories are lost, not much is written (there's more than enough for a life-time study, but not enough to fill in the holes), and the villages are dying. Pretty soon, there will be nobody left to tell those stories, nobody who remembers them. A pity, really.

We heard all that, and more, in that 20-minutes documentary. It was fascinating, really -- and there's so, so much more.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Backup!

Never forget the backup!


It looks like my computer is dying (I'm writing this from my netbook). The Windows won't start, and I have no access to my stuff there. Maybe I'll be able to save my data, maybe not; Significant Other will look into it.

And, you guessed it, I was an idiot enough not to do the backup.

Now, don't get me wrong: whatever was related to paying work (translation, editing and so on) is safe -- already sent where it should be, mostly payed for, and while I was doing that particular work, I was always careful to save it in more than one place. When it comes to work I get money for, I'm extremely careful.

But. My stories, the photos I took, some other stuff -- I made no backup of that.

It turned out I was pretty lucky: some other stuff I can get again, most of the stories were either already sent to my publisher as a short story collection (it also means I have them in the attachment of my sent mail) and some of them were published on my blog, so, if I can't retrieve my data, I'll lose one or two very short stories and some photos. Some of those photos were really nice, but it won't break my heart if I have to lose them; as for the stories, I might be able to write them again -- they wouldn't be exactly the same, but it's not the end of the world.

Still. I should have been more careful. I knew my computer was ancient and it was matter of time before something like this happened, and even if it wasn't, I should have saved important work -- and my writing is important, right? Right.

On top of all that, the flu refuses to leave either me or Significant Other (by the way, my computer decided to crash on his birthday), I can barely breathe, and this time flu managed to make my gums bleed. Ouch.

Rant over.

So, has it ever happened to you to forget the backup of the important (or not so important) stuff?

Friday, October 14, 2011

A Book and a Story

A book and a story on the same day!


I received my copies of the translation of the Cassandra Clare's City of Glass today. It still feels great being able to hold my translations in my hands!

Also, it's Friday today, meaning Flash Fiction Friday's at Karen Wojcik Berner's blog -- and this Friday, my story Golden Eyes made it there. It's a Nightmare month over there, so if you're in the mood for it, go check it out!

Friday, May 06, 2011

Keep Movin' (Romania, Here I Come, Part 2)

Plans don't always turn out the way I intend them to. - photo by Ethan Hein


Plans. Gotta love them. While I never make strict plans, as in, writing from 9 to 13h, then cooking, then... I do normally have some sort of a plan for the day or the moth, the plan which looks like a bunch of things to do in the given period of time. And it goes with the assumption that I will be able to do all that in the given period of time, and we all know what they say about assumptions.

There I was, having a plan. I'll finish the translation, send it, and if the money comes quickly enough, I'll go and visit my family in Croatia, and get back in time for the appointment with my doctor.

Yeah, right.

I was having a cold for moths because the weather was terrible, the temperature kept going up and down and up and down and... But I was still able to work. I managed to finish the translation, and the only thing I had left before sending it was to proofread it. Then the cold got worse, it was so bad I was barely able to look. My eyes kept hurting, I could only read one or two sentences at a time. No way to proofread a translation of an entire novel with the eyes like that. So I had to rest for a few days, and what I intended to end on Monday or Tuesday I finished and sent today. In the meantime I also got an appointment with another doctor, and those two appointments mean I'll go to Croatia at the end of the month, instead in a few days.

Of course, it's not the end of the world. Croatia and my family won't run away, they will still be there when I get there, and they're happy to see me whenever I get the chance to come. Still, I had some sort of a plan. And that's what often happens to my plans, I manage, just not quite the way I planned.

However, something else also happened. My story, the one which was published on a Romanian website, was translated into Romanian, and if you speak the language, you can read it here. During the time I was barely able to look. And it's comforting, that knowledge that, once set in motion, things keep moving. I don't have to be there all the time and to keep pushing. Of course I should stick around and do something, from time to time at least, but things will keep moving, and that's a good thing to know. It's a good feeling.

So, what now? Now I wait to get the reply from the publisher I did the translation for (keep your fingers crossed for me so they like it!), then I go to see the doctors, then I go to see my family. And in the meantime, I do another translation, and hopefully some writing, and get the money for the translation, and whatever else comes up. Maybe I get another book to translate, that would be great.

Oh, and I try not to feel annoyed when my plans don't turn out exactly the way I intended them to.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Romania, Here I Come!

My story published on a Romanian website!


Well, not really.

I don't normally blog day after day, but today I got great news: my fantasy story Cold was published on a Romanian SRSFF website, and will be translated into Romanian too.

I have never had anything published in Romanian before, so... Err... I don't really know what to say, other than that I'm very happy about this.

If you wish, go read it!

Friday, December 29, 2006

Another Old Story of Mine

This is silly. :)

CALLING CTHULHU

“Whoa, man! Cool colors!”

“Yeah, well, I had to prepare the temple.”

“How did your folks react when you painted your room like this?”

“Dad was puzzled. Mom was happy, of course, that the walls and the ceiling were not black anymore. She thinks I’m in love and ocean green is my love color. Or that my girlfriend has green eyes or that she loves green. Something like that.”

“But you don’t have a girlfriend.”

“Yes, Tom, I know, but mom doesn’t. She just thinks whatever she wants to think.”

“Moms. I bet she keeps asking to meet her. To invite her for dinner or something,” Harry laughed.

“Yup. Have you brought the candles?”

“Sure. Seven of them, our lucky number. Searched half the town to find the right color.”

“The search will more than pay off if we succeed. Give them here.”

“Umm, you sure this will work? I mean, we don’t know any real spells,” Tom asked, hesitantly.

“Of course I’m not sure. But I talked to this witch girl, you know, the Wiccan? Asked her if she knew any spells that might work. She told me she wasn’t really interested in summoning and stuff like that, but I should invent my own spells, anyway. That’s the way it works, you have to find out what works best for you.”

“Tom, he already explained it to us. Even if she was interested and knew some great spells that worked just fine for her, they might not work at all for us. As if we were trying to wear her clothes.”

“Yuck! I’d rather die!”

Harry smiled to himself as he observed the three of them dressed in green robes. The bath oil with the scent of ocean, which he had stolen from his sister, made the room smell real nice. He sure hoped this worked out, it would be really funny to rule the world.

“All right, everything is ready. Have you guys memorized the words?”

“Sure.”

“Yeah. You sure your folks won’t be coming soon?

“Of course I’m sure. They won’t be home until morning. Don’t worry, no one will interrupt us. Oh, and guys, please remember, we are learning by trial and error. If this doesn’t work, we’ll try to find out something that does. We read more...”

“Oh no.”

“Shut up, Tom. We research more. Until we succeed. If it was really easy to summon Cthulhu, everyone would be doing it, right? We are only sixteen, none of us will die of old age any time soon, so we have plenty of time. Whatever happens, we don’t give up. Okay?”

“Sure.”

“Yeah, we ain’t no sissies to give up.”

“All right, lets begin then. Harry, give the sign.”

Harry waved his hand, and the boys began chanting.

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn."

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn."

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn."

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn."

Their voices raising until it hurt them, but the boys never stopped, only chanted faster and faster.

Something moved. The flames flickered. The boys paused for a moment, exchanged significant looks, and kept chanting.

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn."

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn."

The flames died, but not the light in the room. There was no obvious source of the light. The walls seems to emanate some sickly green light, but that wasn’t possible, was it? The summoners exchanged puzzled looks and kept chanting.

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn."

Something began to appear in the middle of the room. Something huge. The room was big, but no room built by human hand could be big enough for that.

Still chanting, the boys stood up and moved towards the window. Harry opened it, eyes still on the thing that was materializing in his friend’s room. Good thing that the room was on the ground level, not on the fiftieth floor.

Tom got out first, than the others. The chanting no longer seemed necessary. The boys looked in awe as the creature materialized, crushing the walls and finally the house. The creature, as big as a mountain. The flabby claws. At the top, an awful squid-head with writhing feelers. With trembling voice, the first boy spoke:

“We have summoned thee, oh mighty Cthulhu.”

It seemed impossible that the thing could hear such a weak voice, but somehow, it did. Or it looked down at them for some other reason; the boys would never know. It bent down and reached for them, carefully picking them up with one clawed hand.

“We made it,” the first boy whispered. “We are his masters now.”

“Then we can command him to put us down, right?” Tom whispered back.

“Relax, he probably just wants to hear us better,” Harry replied, though he wasn’t sure of it. God, it was so huge!

Cthulhu swallowed them in one gulp and went into the night.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

An Old Story of Mine

There's no particular reason for posting this story. Not that it matters. :)

THE MOTHER’S TALE: COCKROACHES

I’ve always loved Grandfather’s visits. Mamma didn’t, though. He was my Daddy’s father and had never really liked her, but was too polite to say so. Grandfather was always more than happy to tell me stories, mostly about his Foreign Legion days, and Mamma hated them. She didn’t think that the stories about killing people were good for a little girl; she was never able to understand they were just adventure stories for me.

One evening, I was seven at the time, Mamma complained she couldn’t get rid of cockroaches. Grandfather told her he knew an excellent sailor trick.

“Oh?” Mamma asked. “And what’s that?”

Grandfather looked at all of us, to make sure he had our attention.

“You take a jar, a big one. Then you oil it from the inside. You catch several cockroaches, they have to be alive, and put them in the jar. The walls of the jar are slippery from the oil, so they can’t escape. And then you wait.”

“Wait for what, Grandfather?” I asked. I’ve always called him ‘Grandfather’. Anything shorter than that would be, like, lack of respect. And I’ve respected him; he was a hero and he knew everything.

“After a while, they get hungry. Of course, you don’t provide them with any food. So, when they get hungry enough, they start eating each other. You wait until there’s only one left. You take that sole survivor and you set it free. By that time, it has developed taste for the flesh of its own kind, and it will eat nothing else. You’ll notice that it’s bigger and quicker than any other cockroaches. Quite soon you’ll have no more problems with these little pesters. No problems at all.”

While Daddy was calm as always, I’ve realized that Mamma was pale, and covering her mouth with her hand.

“You monster!” Mamma gasped. “How can you? How can you tell such a disgusting story while a little girl is present?”

I was always ‘a little girl’ for Mamma.

“But it’s not a story, it’s real! And it works! Come, now, you underestimate your own daughter, she’s smarter than that. I haven’t scared you, have I?”

Everyone was looking at me. I hated it.

“No,” I said, even though I knew it would make Mamma angry. ”Grandfather, can I ask you something?”

“Sure.”

“If you can teach cockroaches to eat other cockroaches, can you also teach them to eat humans?”

Grandfather never got a chance to answer me. Mamma screamed me out of the room. I didn’t go to bed like she told me, though; I stayed at the other side of the door and listened. Mamma was yelling at Grandfather. She forbid him to ever come to our house again. It took Daddy quite a while to calm her down and convince her to let Grandfather to keep coming. As soon as I’ve heard that, I ran to my room. I knew Mamma would come to check out if I had obeyed her. Which she did, and was pleased to see me in bed, looking scared.

“You have to watch your mouth, young lady,” she said. “You’re not a baby anymore.”

“Yes, Mamma. I’m sorry.”

“Well, you should be. I’m glad you realize your mistake. Sleep now.”

She kissed me goodnight, turned off the light and left the room.

It wasn’t until six months later that the nightmares began.

I woke up, but I “knew” I was still dreaming. I tried to turn the light on, but I couldn’t find the switch. I couldn’t find my slippers, either, but I knew I had to get up, something was terribly wrong and I just had to get up. So that’s what I did. Something tickled my foot, but the sensation was soon over, so I didn’t pay any attention to it. Groping, I managed to find the door, and to open it. The corridor light was on. The cockroaches were everywhere. I turned around to see them swarming my room. The floor. The ceiling. My bed. The table. Everywhere. And I knew, in an instant, that they were after the baby. My baby sister. So I ran to her room, not caring about the cockroaches I stepped on with my bare feet. I opened the door to find her little bed full of them, eating her alive. They were all over her; actually, I couldn’t even see her. That’s when I began to scream.

I woke up, this time for real, and Mamma was next to me (Daddy was away on business). She looked really worried. I told her about the dream. Only after that I realized I had no sister. Even at the age of seven I knew something was wrong with Mamma, she wasn’t well and couldn’t have any more children. So I expected she would yell at me because I reminded her of that, but she didn’t. She just told me it was a bad dream, I should try to sleep, kissed me goodnight, turned off the light and left the room. I wished Daddy was with me, he would stay with me until I fell asleep again, and he would permit me to have the light on. But he wasn’t, so I trembled and haven’t slept until morning.

Grandfather was never permitted in our house again, but that didn’t stop the nightmares. I kept having the same dream again and again. I learned not to scream, though, because screaming made Mamma quarreling with Daddy.

Not that it stopped her from quarreling. I say ‘her’ and not ‘them’ because Daddy never started. Most often he would leave the house; by the time I was ten, they were divorced.

Daddy moved out of town, so I didn’t get to see him often. Three years later, he got married again, and soon had a baby daughter. His new wife died at the childbirth. It made me really sad; I’ve never had a chance to get to know her, since I’ve only seen her once, at the wedding. Mamma was jealous because Daddy had another child, and she kept telling me that Daddy would now forget me. I knew it wasn’t true. Daddy still loved me, but he couldn’t travel often with such a small child. And she was beautiful, my little baby sister, she looked so much like Daddy.

I was afraid I would have nightmares again, now that I did have a little sister (I stopped having them soon after the divorce). But I didn’t, and Daddy loved me, and I had a beautiful little sister, and even if I often quarreled with Mamma (she thought that a girl of fifteen shouldn’t travel on her own), life wasn’t so bad.

Then the accident happened. The car crash. Both Daddy and my little sister died. I blamed Mamma for not letting me see them more often; we hardly even talked after that. I started to wear black clothes, to use amazing amounts of make-up, and to hang out with weird people. I began to read occult stuff. I knew it annoyed Mamma, but she never said a word. Not even when she noticed I had several tattoos (snakes around my wrists, a demon on my belly, a skull on the shoulder and a red rose on the arm) and a pierced nipple. Mamma never commented on my boyfriends, either. She just told me, if I had an abortion, she didn’t want to know about it.

I was eighteen when she died of a heart attack, and I felt a relief. I had the house just for myself. I thought to get rid of my friends, since I’ve never really liked them anyway, but I felt too lazy for that. And they were sort of fun.

Then I discovered I was pregnant. As soon as I told my boyfriend, he left me. He told me he never loved me; he made me pregnant because he agreed with some people to do so. I asked, as calm as possible, what did he mean, since I had been using pills. He said they told him they could make sure he gets me pregnant on a certain night. I told him he was crazy and to get the fuck out of my life. Which he gladly did.

At first I thought about aborting the child, but the more I thought of it, the less I liked it. I decided to stop fooling around and to do something about my life. I had a job at a video-club, the pay wasn’t much but, with Mamma’s and Daddy’s pensions, it would be enough for me and the baby. I would finally get rid of my so-called friends and devote all my time to the baby. And all would be just fine.

I did get rid of the jerks. And I didn’t have any problems with the pregnancy. Until the nightmares came back.

At first, I dreamed the cockroaches swarming all over my place. There wasn’t anyone in it they could attack...Except for me. And after a while they realized that, and came for me. I couldn’t move. Soon they were all over me, I screamed and they entered my mouth and went down my throat. They didn’t bite me; it didn’t hurt. They were just all over me and inside me, and I would scream until I woke up.

My doctor said it was all right, I was young and scared of raising the baby all by myself, and gave me some pills to help me sleep.

As if I wanted to sleep. As if I dared to sleep...and to dream.

After a while, the dreams changed. I began to dream the childbirth. It didn’t hurt, but I felt terrified anyway. I knew something was wrong. The doctor was telling me to push, and I kept pushing, but the feeling was so...I don’t know. Strange. Weird. As if my baby wasn’t normal. And then it was over and I nearly fainted from exhaustion and I realized I haven’t heard the cry. My baby wasn’t crying. So I raised myself up to ask the doctor what’s wrong with my baby. He was smiling and holding a big larva. He congratulated me on having such a healthy and big larva. Needless to say, I screamed.

Again, my doctor told me everything was all right, I was doing fine, I would feel much better after the childbirth. Thanks, doc.

Finally, finally, I had my baby. The childbirth was far from painless, but I survived it. I had a big, healthy boy. It was such a relief, and I really didn’t have nightmares anymore.

He seemed to smile at me when he was seven days old. I know that such a small baby can’t smile, but that’s what it looked like. And he sure was a troublesome baby. He wouldn’t accept any delays, oh no. Whatever it was he wanted, to be fed or changed, he would scream at the top of his lungs until he got it. But how could I refuse anything to my son? So I would rush to fulfill his needs, and he was happy. And I was tired all the time but I didn’t have nightmares and I had a wonderful son, so I was happy too.

I felt so proud the first time he managed to sit in his bed. The biggest smile was on my face, and I turned around as if I expected someone else to be there, someone to whom I could show how well my son was doing. I don’t know why I did it. Maybe I wanted someone to be there.

I spotted a cockroach on the floor. And another one. And another one. And...I screamed and ran to squash them, but they avoided me and gathered around his bed. They didn’t climb on the bed, though. They were on the floor, a dozen of them. He looked at them and laughed. It was the first time he laughed. I fainted.

When I opened my eyes, the cockroaches were nowhere in sight. I looked at my son. He smiled at me.

“Mamma,” he said. His first word. I wanted to believe that the cockroaches were just a hallucination, but I knew they weren’t.

“Just keep them away from me. I really hate cockroaches,” I told him. He was still smiling at me. I smiled back. He laughed, and I knew everything was going to be all right.

The cockroaches keep coming to him, but they never enter my room. He laughs as he watches them running around, fighting each other, or trying to climb the walls that I have oiled. Sometimes they are divided into big groups when they fight. And my son is so happy with his toys.

One day, I know, it will be people he’ll command. And they will obey him just as the cockroaches obey him. And they will fight for him, and die for him. Their lives for him.

I sure am proud of my son.