The Short Story Thread.

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Fairee

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Mar 25, 2009
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Steelfists said:
Trivun said:
Steelfists said:
Geek@Heart said:
Steelfists said:
Once upon a time, a thread was created that required people to use their brains and come up with something more interesting the "fail" or "TL;DR".

It faded into obscurity.
Really? Cool.

But that won't happen to this thread. We'll keep it going, even if it's just to prove you wrong!! (Cos I'm stubborn and annoying like that XD)
I dont really mind either way.
Fair enough, but we who've posted here so far have great creativity in us and that's why we've done these stories and posted them here. It's like that 'The Artist in Thee' thread. It'll go for days without anyone posting then suddenly it springs to life and there's a flurry of people posting there. This will be the same. And that art thread's been going for a good while now... :)
THIS IS THE INTERNET CALL ME GHEY OR SOMETHING FOR GODS SAKE!
Oh no, this is the Escapist. We're way too mature to do that.

Also, I doubt God wants to be dragged into this. He has bigger problems to solve.
 

Rascarin

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Feb 8, 2009
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Trivun said:
Rascarin said:
Something I wrote last night.

Personal space was something she obviously had no concept of.

Or, perhaps more likely, she saw my desire for personal space and delighted in invading it. I wondered if standing too close, hugging me and even trying to kiss my cheek were all part of some twisted game of hers, the aim of which was clearly to try and make me squirm in her presence. I knew for a certainty that it was nothing more than that; her interests lay in a completely different direction. The sole purpose was making me feel uncomfortable.

Needless to say, it was a game I didn't particularly enjoy.

I stood in the corridor one evening, listening to a conversation between two friends, arms folded across my chest, when she rounded the corner. She called my name loudly when she saw me, unable to mask the mirth from in her voice as she stretched out her arms to try and trap me once more in one of her dreaded hugs. I sneered and backed away, only to find my escape route blocked by the two talking friends. She caught me, wrapping her arms around and squeezing far too tight for comfort. I squirmed.

She leaned back to look at me, and I scowled as fiercely as I could manage. She laughed and asked in her silly, cheery, girly voice, "Did that make you feel violated?"

"A little," I growled in return. She laughed again as she let go, eyes sparkling with mischief, and I sensed she had claimed another victory. I was outraged. I considered her for a few moments, eyes narrowed, before suddenly reaching a decision. Perhaps the way to win her stupid game wasn't to not play along, but to beat her at it. I seized her by her upper arms and shoved her back against the opposite wall, the length of my body crashing against hers. I seized her mouth before she could voice her surprise, my tongue forcing through her lips. I plundered her mouth in a few angry sweeps, trying not to taste her.

She raised her arms to try and push me away, but I merely released her biceps and grabbed her wrists instead, immobilising her against the wall. I was stronger than her, and she knew it. I maintained my vice-like grip even after she stopped struggling, determined to show her that I was in control now... that I was winning.

"I'll give you violated," I thought to myself. I nudged her legs apart with one of my own, pressed a thigh into the gap and pushed, my whole body up moving against hers. I ignored the shudder than ran through her and the sensation of her heartbeat pounding through her chest into mine, withdrawing from her mouth and biting her lower lip, hard. She made a noise then, finally, a shocked little whimper as sharp teeth pinched soft skin. I wasn't gentle, stopping just short of actually drawing blood. I shifted my thigh again, causing another shudder.

I forced my way back into her mouth again, eliciting a second bout of struggling from her arms, but I held her firm. It wasnt a kiss, far from it. A kiss was affectionate and sensual, and those were the last things I wanted to be. This was punishment. I was punishing her; I was raping her mouth with my tongue. Abruptly, I withdrew and stared into her face, and I was pleased to see genuine fear in her eyes. I smirked as another idea came to my mind, and when I pushed against her again it wasnt her mouth I sought, but her neck. I bit and sucked the pale flesh, determined to leave a mark, my mark, on her. She whimpered again, squirming.

Satisfied, I pulled away, releasing both neck and wrists and leaving her to sag against the wall. One hand shakily rose to touch the red mark on her neck as she tried to get her breath back. I wiped my mouth on my sleeve, trying to purge the taste of her from me. Our audience in the corridor stood with eyes wide and jaws agape, stunned. I let the silence build for a few minutes as they all watched me.

"Two can play that game," I told her finally, as I took my car keys from my pocket and turned to leave. As I walked away, I muttered to myself. "Checkmate."

That never actually happened ^ , but it IS based on a real person who delights in tormenting me, and I was imagining all the various revenges I might take. Short of bludgeoning her with a stick, I thought this would be most effective. I don't really like the last line, but I wasn't sure what else to do with it...

Anyway, critique is welcomed.

I absolutely loved this. When I first read it it was interesting, then I took a quick look at your profile and found you were a girl (no offence, if this seems a little sexist or anyhting). That made the story and the subtext a lot more intriguing actually, especially as you said yourself it was based on someone you know. It just seemed to be really engaging and sensual and the story was great. Very well written and one of my favourites so far.
Thanks! It was actually really difficult to write. I was really worried that it was just going to read like some horrible, poorly veiled slash fic, when I wanted to convey the opposite. Hopefully I've gotten the sense of violation across well enough...

Thanks for reading, anyway!
 

Trivun

Stabat mater dolorosa
Dec 13, 2008
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Rascarin said:
Trivun said:
Rascarin said:
Something I wrote last night.

Personal space was something she obviously had no concept of.

Or, perhaps more likely, she saw my desire for personal space and delighted in invading it. I wondered if standing too close, hugging me and even trying to kiss my cheek were all part of some twisted game of hers, the aim of which was clearly to try and make me squirm in her presence. I knew for a certainty that it was nothing more than that; her interests lay in a completely different direction. The sole purpose was making me feel uncomfortable.

Needless to say, it was a game I didn't particularly enjoy.

I stood in the corridor one evening, listening to a conversation between two friends, arms folded across my chest, when she rounded the corner. She called my name loudly when she saw me, unable to mask the mirth from in her voice as she stretched out her arms to try and trap me once more in one of her dreaded hugs. I sneered and backed away, only to find my escape route blocked by the two talking friends. She caught me, wrapping her arms around and squeezing far too tight for comfort. I squirmed.

She leaned back to look at me, and I scowled as fiercely as I could manage. She laughed and asked in her silly, cheery, girly voice, "Did that make you feel violated?"

"A little," I growled in return. She laughed again as she let go, eyes sparkling with mischief, and I sensed she had claimed another victory. I was outraged. I considered her for a few moments, eyes narrowed, before suddenly reaching a decision. Perhaps the way to win her stupid game wasn't to not play along, but to beat her at it. I seized her by her upper arms and shoved her back against the opposite wall, the length of my body crashing against hers. I seized her mouth before she could voice her surprise, my tongue forcing through her lips. I plundered her mouth in a few angry sweeps, trying not to taste her.

She raised her arms to try and push me away, but I merely released her biceps and grabbed her wrists instead, immobilising her against the wall. I was stronger than her, and she knew it. I maintained my vice-like grip even after she stopped struggling, determined to show her that I was in control now... that I was winning.

"I'll give you violated," I thought to myself. I nudged her legs apart with one of my own, pressed a thigh into the gap and pushed, my whole body up moving against hers. I ignored the shudder than ran through her and the sensation of her heartbeat pounding through her chest into mine, withdrawing from her mouth and biting her lower lip, hard. She made a noise then, finally, a shocked little whimper as sharp teeth pinched soft skin. I wasn't gentle, stopping just short of actually drawing blood. I shifted my thigh again, causing another shudder.

I forced my way back into her mouth again, eliciting a second bout of struggling from her arms, but I held her firm. It wasnt a kiss, far from it. A kiss was affectionate and sensual, and those were the last things I wanted to be. This was punishment. I was punishing her; I was raping her mouth with my tongue. Abruptly, I withdrew and stared into her face, and I was pleased to see genuine fear in her eyes. I smirked as another idea came to my mind, and when I pushed against her again it wasnt her mouth I sought, but her neck. I bit and sucked the pale flesh, determined to leave a mark, my mark, on her. She whimpered again, squirming.

Satisfied, I pulled away, releasing both neck and wrists and leaving her to sag against the wall. One hand shakily rose to touch the red mark on her neck as she tried to get her breath back. I wiped my mouth on my sleeve, trying to purge the taste of her from me. Our audience in the corridor stood with eyes wide and jaws agape, stunned. I let the silence build for a few minutes as they all watched me.

"Two can play that game," I told her finally, as I took my car keys from my pocket and turned to leave. As I walked away, I muttered to myself. "Checkmate."

That never actually happened ^ , but it IS based on a real person who delights in tormenting me, and I was imagining all the various revenges I might take. Short of bludgeoning her with a stick, I thought this would be most effective. I don't really like the last line, but I wasn't sure what else to do with it...

Anyway, critique is welcomed.

I absolutely loved this. When I first read it it was interesting, then I took a quick look at your profile and found you were a girl (no offence, if this seems a little sexist or anyhting). That made the story and the subtext a lot more intriguing actually, especially as you said yourself it was based on someone you know. It just seemed to be really engaging and sensual and the story was great. Very well written and one of my favourites so far.
Thanks! It was actually really difficult to write. I was really worried that it was just going to read like some horrible, poorly veiled slash fic, when I wanted to convey the opposite. Hopefully I've gotten the sense of violation across well enough...

Thanks for reading, anyway!
No problem :) Not sure why it would sound like a slash fic though, unless you're imlying more than I thought with the narrative... :s
 

Rascarin

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Feb 8, 2009
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Trivun said:
Rascarin said:
Trivun said:
Rascarin said:
Something I wrote last night.

Personal space was something she obviously had no concept of.

Or, perhaps more likely, she saw my desire for personal space and delighted in invading it. I wondered if standing too close, hugging me and even trying to kiss my cheek were all part of some twisted game of hers, the aim of which was clearly to try and make me squirm in her presence. I knew for a certainty that it was nothing more than that; her interests lay in a completely different direction. The sole purpose was making me feel uncomfortable.

Needless to say, it was a game I didn't particularly enjoy.

I stood in the corridor one evening, listening to a conversation between two friends, arms folded across my chest, when she rounded the corner. She called my name loudly when she saw me, unable to mask the mirth from in her voice as she stretched out her arms to try and trap me once more in one of her dreaded hugs. I sneered and backed away, only to find my escape route blocked by the two talking friends. She caught me, wrapping her arms around and squeezing far too tight for comfort. I squirmed.

She leaned back to look at me, and I scowled as fiercely as I could manage. She laughed and asked in her silly, cheery, girly voice, "Did that make you feel violated?"

"A little," I growled in return. She laughed again as she let go, eyes sparkling with mischief, and I sensed she had claimed another victory. I was outraged. I considered her for a few moments, eyes narrowed, before suddenly reaching a decision. Perhaps the way to win her stupid game wasn't to not play along, but to beat her at it. I seized her by her upper arms and shoved her back against the opposite wall, the length of my body crashing against hers. I seized her mouth before she could voice her surprise, my tongue forcing through her lips. I plundered her mouth in a few angry sweeps, trying not to taste her.

She raised her arms to try and push me away, but I merely released her biceps and grabbed her wrists instead, immobilising her against the wall. I was stronger than her, and she knew it. I maintained my vice-like grip even after she stopped struggling, determined to show her that I was in control now... that I was winning.

"I'll give you violated," I thought to myself. I nudged her legs apart with one of my own, pressed a thigh into the gap and pushed, my whole body up moving against hers. I ignored the shudder than ran through her and the sensation of her heartbeat pounding through her chest into mine, withdrawing from her mouth and biting her lower lip, hard. She made a noise then, finally, a shocked little whimper as sharp teeth pinched soft skin. I wasn't gentle, stopping just short of actually drawing blood. I shifted my thigh again, causing another shudder.

I forced my way back into her mouth again, eliciting a second bout of struggling from her arms, but I held her firm. It wasnt a kiss, far from it. A kiss was affectionate and sensual, and those were the last things I wanted to be. This was punishment. I was punishing her; I was raping her mouth with my tongue. Abruptly, I withdrew and stared into her face, and I was pleased to see genuine fear in her eyes. I smirked as another idea came to my mind, and when I pushed against her again it wasnt her mouth I sought, but her neck. I bit and sucked the pale flesh, determined to leave a mark, my mark, on her. She whimpered again, squirming.

Satisfied, I pulled away, releasing both neck and wrists and leaving her to sag against the wall. One hand shakily rose to touch the red mark on her neck as she tried to get her breath back. I wiped my mouth on my sleeve, trying to purge the taste of her from me. Our audience in the corridor stood with eyes wide and jaws agape, stunned. I let the silence build for a few minutes as they all watched me.

"Two can play that game," I told her finally, as I took my car keys from my pocket and turned to leave. As I walked away, I muttered to myself. "Checkmate."

That never actually happened ^ , but it IS based on a real person who delights in tormenting me, and I was imagining all the various revenges I might take. Short of bludgeoning her with a stick, I thought this would be most effective. I don't really like the last line, but I wasn't sure what else to do with it...

Anyway, critique is welcomed.

I absolutely loved this. When I first read it it was interesting, then I took a quick look at your profile and found you were a girl (no offence, if this seems a little sexist or anyhting). That made the story and the subtext a lot more intriguing actually, especially as you said yourself it was based on someone you know. It just seemed to be really engaging and sensual and the story was great. Very well written and one of my favourites so far.
Thanks! It was actually really difficult to write. I was really worried that it was just going to read like some horrible, poorly veiled slash fic, when I wanted to convey the opposite. Hopefully I've gotten the sense of violation across well enough...

Thanks for reading, anyway!
No problem :) Not sure why it would sound like a slash fic though, unless you're imlying more than I thought with the narrative... :s
Well, I was worried that less discerning readers might just get carried away with the fact that its about two girls, and not realise that my intention was to convey the opposite (i.e, the sense of revulsion/disgust from the main character, and how UN-sexy it was for both characters).
 

Sevre

Old Hands
Apr 6, 2009
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Personally I'm at a drought when it comes to ideas, I'm thinking of starting a small series of short stories based in the same universe for this thread. What do you guys think?
 

Trivun

Stabat mater dolorosa
Dec 13, 2008
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Sevre90210 said:
Personally I'm at a drought when it comes to ideas, I'm thinking of starting a small series of short stories based in the same universe for this thread. What do you guys think?
Very nice idea, go for it :) Kind of coincidentally, I was thinking something similar, since ages ago I came up with an idea for a series of short films based around the lives of a group of university students (it would have been kind of like Skins but crossed with my own life at university). Anyway, idea never got off the ground but it didn't go away either so I was thinking the other day about turning it into a series of stories for this thread...

But your idea definitely sounds good, I eagerly await seeing the results :D
 

Sevre

Old Hands
Apr 6, 2009
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Trivun said:
Very nice idea, go for it :) Kind of coincidentally, I was thinking something similar, since ages ago I came up with an idea for a series of short films based around the lives of a group of university students (it would have been kind of like Skins but crossed with my own life at university). Anyway, idea never got off the ground but it didn't go away either so I was thinking the other day about turning it into a series of stories for this thread...

But your idea definitely sounds good, I eagerly await seeing the results :D
I'll start writing this week and see where it goes from there, in the mean time I can't wait to read other stories people have in store!
 

Trivun

Stabat mater dolorosa
Dec 13, 2008
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FireOnTheHemisphere said:
You guys need to go on Adjective diets, most of the short stories have potential but are glacial as a result.
Sometimes the use of adjectives was justified and pretty good (see Rascarin's story as an example), but otherwise I agree. Some people's posts have way too much description and there's no point. I think my problem was too little description, although that's just my style and it leaves the reader to use their imagination which is much better IMO. I suppose using fewer adjectives would allow more concentration on the plot or characters though. I'm involved in a film-making society at University and it's been said there that making a short film is like doing a cutaway scene from any random film, or a short ten minute segment of someone's life. You're interested in what's happening, focussing too much on character development or backstory isn't good as it bores the audience. And writing a short story is exactly the same, you need to get straight to the point, rather than develop things when there's no need.

Sorry for a slight Wall'o'Text, but I just wanted to make that point...
 

Sevre

Old Hands
Apr 6, 2009
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Drakenian said:
He had to try.

As he burst through the edge of the forest, his blue-black cloak ripping behind him on stray branches, only one thought entered his mind.

He had to try.

The sound of his falling feet was muffled by the grass, alive and green. The owls hooted as they began their nocturnal hunt, and the creatures of the darkness began to rise from their slumber. But he heard none of this. The only sounds he heard were the thumping of his heart and his own voice echoing in his head.

He had to try.

On his face, a look of determination. In his heart, a frantic need. This was something that he felt he needed to do; if he didn't at least attempt this seemingly impossible feat, he knew that he would never be happy, and he would never be able to live with himself.

He had to try.

He barely noticed the sound of his feet falling to the ground changing from a dull thud to a sharp click. He had only one thing on his mind.

He had to try.

He reached the house he had been so desperately searching for. With his heart beating in his ears, he approached the door.

He had to try.

With a flick of his wrist, he opened the door before him.

"Victoria!" he shouted. Or, at least, he tried to shout. Because before him, on the very bed where he had first proclaimed his love for her, Victoria was on the bed with another. It had not even been two days since Victoria had left him, and the person she was with? One of his friends, Mageria.

Victoria instantly sat up, as did Mageria, and they covered their naked bodies with the blanket on the floor. The same blanket, he grimly noted, that he and Victoria used their first night.

"Draeth!" Victoria said, surprise evident in her voice. "It's not what you think!"

"Really?" Draeth's once proud-now-turned-monotone voice said. "Because it looks to me that you gave me up for someone that had treated you like shit."

Mageria buried her face in the covers, stifling her cries. Victoria looked over at Draeth, and knew that there was nothing she could do to repair the wound that was now in his heart.

"Everything you said to me, Victoria," Came the emotionless voice. "Was but a lie, was it not?"

"No, that's not-"

"Yes it is!" Draeth shouted as he turned from the doorway. "I never want to see you again, you understand me?"

Through her cries, Victoria nodded and said, "Yes..."

Draeth exited the house, slamming the door behind him. Victoria knew that she had given up the best thing in her life...

He had tried...


Sorry if it's a little long, but I just couldn't stop myself from writing. Give me some pointers, tell me what I need to improve.
This post seems to have been overlooked but I think it is actually a good scene. We don't have any back story and you use "He had to try" a bit too much( you could leave it out once or twice to make it shorter as it loses its effect). We don't have much description either so that can be worked on, I don't know what these characters look like, I'm imagining generic Twilight vampires. The dialogue is quite good too, but I think the character Mageria deserves a few lines.
 

Trivun

Stabat mater dolorosa
Dec 13, 2008
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Kukul said:
I don't know if I should continue my story (it's somewhere in the middle of 1st page). Anyone interested?
Of course, go for it, we're definitely interested :) This is a thread for everyone to show off their creativity, after all, don't ask us to post something, just go ahead :D
 

Sevre

Old Hands
Apr 6, 2009
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Kukul said:
I don't know if I should continue my story (it's somewhere in the middle of 1st page). Anyone interested?
I think you should! It's quite interesting and I'm looking forward to the next installment.
 

Trivun

Stabat mater dolorosa
Dec 13, 2008
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Nicely written, Kukul, and very surreal. Well done, I'm looking forward to seeing more :)
 

D_987

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Jun 15, 2008
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It was a well known fact that the land was haunted. After all, Tom has said so, and his word was held with the utmost esteem amongst the children. The land itself appeared perfectly calm, and awoke each morning with a gasp and a cry as the sun shone down on the large rows of corn ? a golden gleam emerged everyday ? one that was replicated in almost all the numbering fields. Yet this one was haunted.

The children all knew the tale as to why. Tom had explained many times of his old friend?s disappearance many years ago ? how they had been playing in that field for many an hour, until the sun had set and the corn grew weary. Slowly and slumped, they headed back home. Yet Tom?s friend had never arrived back ? in fact, Tom swore he heard a ghastly shout amongst the rows of endless corn that stretched out as far as their young and foolhardy eyes could see.

It was from this tale that the seven stood around the fence, feet aching and hands shaking in the afternoon light. They had spent a long while playing in the next field before stopping and staring into the abyss of corn. Nothing but an old shed and a long abandoned well blocked the corn from dominating the vast plain space ? and without a breeze the corn lay still, as though it recognized their presence. The children followed this process for hours on end, simply watching, waiting ? even hoping ? that something would occur in this field. Tom wouldn?t lie to them ? his friend had disappeared and they would keep watch over the haunted field.

Yet the corn stood still, almost mockingly at the children as they stood still contemplating an adventure, a fight, a war, against the corn and its mocking gleam ? screams of a child, just like them, rang in their ears as they stood, rooted to the spot as though they were trees that could cancel out the sun?s damming effect on the corn.

The sun began to set behind a large hill to the east, it was late. Yet a few children remained ? to see the mocking corn in a state of pain. Of redemption. The corn could not laugh whilst it could not shine, yet still they would not enter the field. It was as though an invisible barrier had trapped them, forcing them to stop and stare, at the impossible field and its sea of mysteries.
Something I wrote off the top of my head in 10 minutes just for this thread. Yes I know its not very long, or even very good. What I'm interested in is what you make of the writing style.
 

Trivun

Stabat mater dolorosa
Dec 13, 2008
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D_987 said:
It was a well known fact that the land was haunted. After all, Tom has said so, and his word was held with the utmost esteem amongst the children. The land itself appeared perfectly calm, and awoke each morning with a gasp and a cry as the sun shone down on the large rows of corn ? a golden gleam emerged everyday ? one that was replicated in almost all the numbering fields. Yet this one was haunted.

The children all knew the tale as to why. Tom had explained many times of his old friend?s disappearance many years ago ? how they had been playing in that field for many an hour, until the sun had set and the corn grew weary. Slowly and slumped, they headed back home. Yet Tom?s friend had never arrived back ? in fact, Tom swore he heard a ghastly shout amongst the rows of endless corn that stretched out as far as their young and foolhardy eyes could see.

It was from this tale that the seven stood around the fence, feet aching and hands shaking in the afternoon light. They had spent a long while playing in the next field before stopping and staring into the abyss of corn. Nothing but an old shed and a long abandoned well blocked the corn from dominating the vast plain space ? and without a breeze the corn lay still, as though it recognized their presence. The children followed this process for hours on end, simply watching, waiting ? even hoping ? that something would occur in this field. Tom wouldn?t lie to them ? his friend had disappeared and they would keep watch over the haunted field.

Yet the corn stood still, almost mockingly at the children as they stood still contemplating an adventure, a fight, a war, against the corn and its mocking gleam ? screams of a child, just like them, rang in their ears as they stood, rooted to the spot as though they were trees that could cancel out the sun?s damming effect on the corn.

The sun began to set behind a large hill to the east, it was late. Yet a few children remained ? to see the mocking corn in a state of pain. Of redemption. The corn could not laugh whilst it could not shine, yet still they would not enter the field. It was as though an invisible barrier had trapped them, forcing them to stop and stare, at the impossible field and its sea of mysteries.
Something I wrote off the top of my head in 10 minutes just for this thread.
If you can write this in 10 minutes off the top of your head, then you must be a pretty damn good writer when you have more time :) Pretty good, language needs tweaking a fair bit and you seem to use the word 'corn' a lot too much, but otherwise I can't find any major faults. I quite like the story and it gets straight to the point, talking about the plot instead of wasting too much time with backstory. Simple in terms of characters, you haven't overcrowded the story, so that's a good thing. Overall quite a good effort, well done :)



Ironically I was watching Primeval earlier, which for anyone who doesn't know it's about 'anomalies' which are portals in time. Characters occasionally disappear through them, and never come back...
 
Aug 13, 2008
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i sat and gazed at the stars, thinking of a journey lost forever. shame. i missed them, every day, for awhile. i still today remember their hollow smiles and fake laughs, yet these qualities intrigued me. but not anymore. im glad they're gone now, when i look back, they're nothing more than memories of pain and sorrow.
so why cant i forget their presence? why cant i move on? am i really so shallow, such a drama king that i need something wrong to always be happening?
i ran my hand through my hair and simply stared emptily at nothing. i smiled and took a long blink. whatever, fuck this shit - let's get blazed.

-just started writing for like 5 minutes and ended up with this, i think of it as a parody of all those writers who think they're sooo totally deep because they have emotions
 

seamusotorain

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Dec 14, 2008
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How does one do a spolier box? Anyhow...

?And the winners are??

??numbers 2, 29, 17, 6 and 34. The bonus number 20. Those winning numbers again?? I muted the radio. I didn?t need to hear twice. I didn?t want to hear twice. I just wanted to keep drinking down this beautiful feeling you get when you win ten million euro. I?m guessing that you?ve never experienced his, so I?ll try to explain it. As a child, did you ever run down a hill so fast that you couldn?t actually stop? If you haven?t, go now. It?s quite the experience, and costs less than comparable highs, such as glue. Now, imagine that you are running down that hill, but to cushion your inevitable faceplant you have a massive pile of ?50 notes. Are you giggling? You should be. I know I was.

I had strolled into the local Spar, receiving the nod from the manager, fluorescent light reflecting from the sweat on his bald head. He had frowned when I detoured from my usual aisle - Bargains and Sell-By-Date​ Specials ? and went toward the ?Vice Counter?, as I like to call it. A parade of dazed and pasty soap opera ?stars? had gazed back from the shiny scandal-rags​, trying to convince the overweight and middle-aged that celebrities were ?just like us!? but with better publicists. Calorie-lade​n sugar highs had jostled for attention with authoritativ​e cigarettes, who wore their warnings with indifference​. Damages sperm? Who wants kids anyway?

I wouldn?t call myself a gambling man, but buying the occasional lottery ticket was my Dadaist way of getting back at the Man. As Keith had told me

?Buy food? That?s what He wants, man. All those E-numbers? Frickin? mind control, man!?

It seemed that the manager cared deeply about my health, though. He had punched those numbers in himself, claiming that

?Fugghan Quik-Pik?s a bleedin? scam boss. Never seen a Quik-Pik winner, ?n oive sold thousands of the feckers!?

I was grateful ? and not a little freaked out ? by his kindness. His head seemed to be getting shinier by the minute, so I duly made my escape to my lodgings.

?Lodgings? are the best way to describe them. Once you lodged yourself in the narrow confines, it was very hard to become dislodged. The general design approach I had gone for was ?cluster bombs filled with rubbish?. Several pizza boxes lingered in the corner from the heady days when I could afford such luxuries. They were on the cusp of sprouting legs and marching off to the bin anyway, so the scientist within me refused to dismantle the important experiment. In lieu of a sofa, I had piled all my clothing in the general shape of a beanbag. Next to the ?beanbag? was a coffee table ? so named for the elaborate pattern of coffee-rings​ on the surface ? with the Leaning Tower of Cigarette Butts perched precariously​ on the top. A desk slumped in the corner of the room like a tramp. It had been bought in a whirl of freshman enthusiasm, but I was quick to realize that ?student? was a misnomer: the true student couldn?t find a lecture hall with a map and compass. And that was just the Geography students. I?d describe the smell of the room, but I?ve just eaten, and the manuscript wouldn?t be accepted with recycled scrambled eggs on it, now would it? In short, it was a place Stig of the Dump would turn his nose up at.

I had crouched over my wind up radio - my landlord, who bears an unfortunate resemblance to an anorexic stick insect, rivals Ebenezer Scrooge for fuel consumption - and those glorious numbers had filled my box room. Not that that was an incredible feat. I smiled. What would I buy first?

?Oh Christ? moaned my liver.

I took out my 1980?s cop movie surplus mobile and dialed Keith?s number. I needed to get very mindless on as many illicit substances as possible, and Keith was the only man up to the task. His brain had long succumbed to the tug of various narcotics, and now his psychedelic-​Swiss-cheese​ noggin responded to only three things: shiny objects, primary colours and more narcotics.

No signal. Honest to God, stepping into this flat is like going back to the Industrial Revolution; all that?s missing is the flat caps and elaborate facial hair. I ran down to the street, and Keith answered. I waited a few seconds for him to work out which end he spoke into, and began.

?Keith!?

A noise like a badger snuffling through leaves.

?Keith, come over to mine, we have to plan a night to forget!?

Notice how I start every sentence with his name; he thinks that you?re talking to someone else if you don?t address him.

?Dude, can we even, like fit in your apartment at the same time??

?For someone who couldn?t pick himself out of a police line-up, you?ve got a clever mouth?

?Uh??

Long sentences that aren?t punctuated by the word ?like? tend to confuse him.

?Come. To. Mine. Now.?

End call.

I skipped back up the steps to my apartment, held my breath, turned sideways and stepped in. It?s hard to gasp when you?re holding your breath, but I did when I realized my ticket wasn?t where I had left it. I searched the room from top to bottom. It took roughly 47 seconds. I happened to glance towards the window and there it was. It looked like a tarred-and-f​eathered potato with random twigs for legs. But its seemingly scruffy body contained an evil, scheming brain and a black, shriveled excuse of a heart. The Magpie.

I ask you, dear reader, to recall the idea of running full tilt down a hill, only to land in a pile of ?50 notes. Imagine if that pile turned out to be a very cleverly disguised pack of rabid wolverines that had just got root canal. They?re angry, they?re in pain, and you appear to them to be a punching bag full of painkillers.​ Moments before you are torn apart, your heart attempts to escape through your mouth, your internal organs try to vacate the premises by the ?emergency exit? and your brain cryogenicall​y freezes itself. That moment of sheer terror has enveloped your plucky narrator. Now multiply it by a number with lots of zeros. That?s what it?s like to watch ?10 million fly out the window in the mouth of a vindictive villain.

I tore down the stairs, crashing through Keith.

?Dude?? Are you on America?s Most Wanted or something??

?Follow! Magpie! ?10 million! Now!? I screamed over my shoulder as I exploded through the door.

?Is the magpie on America?s Most Wanted??

Keith?s car was pulled up on the pavement. He could only have parked closer if he had crashed through a wall or two. Being Keith, the car door was open and the engine was running. He must have thought he got a taxi or something. I leaped into the car, and was about to screech off Starsky & Hutch style till I noticed Mr. Potato Bird across the road, staring at me malevolently​ with its one eye. It performed a little jig of victory, flapping its tattered wings and stepping from one misshapen leg to the other. I hurtled across the road, followed by Keith. The bird took off through the park. I elegantly flipped over the fence and came to a soft landing in a pile of grass clippings.

?Good thing they didn?t lock that gate, man? Keith said, as he strolled past. It was a good thing that I had a football field worth of grass in my mouth, or someone would have got seriously offended. My battered little buddy wheeled toward a copse of trees, and we followed.

It landed in its lair: the upper branches of a monkey puzzle tree. Keith stared at the tree and scratched his head in confusion.

?How are you gonna get up there?? Keith asked.

?Assuming that I?m the one who?s climbing it??

?It?s not my ticket, man? he grinned.

Back seat drivers. I don?t drive (how could I afford the insurance?) but I still find them annoying. However, back seat climbers rank on the annoyance scale around the same level as ?railroad-sp​ike-through-​forehead?.

?Dude!? he called, ?move your foot to the right!?

It was as if some malevolent animal had greased that exact spot up.

?Advice. Not. Wanted.? I grumbled through gritted teeth.

Several splinters, a torn pair of jeans and enough cursing to give a convent of nuns a heart attack later, I reached the nest. The numbers looked back at me from different parts of the nest. ?10 million worth of refurbishmen​t. Once again, I ask you to remember those enraged wolverines. A twist of fate has placed a machinegun and 10,000 rounds in your hands. You feel a grim resignation to the task that lies ahead. Sure, the wolverines are just angry because they got painful dental work done. Maybe on a different day, you?d find a shared love of the work of Gary Newman, and sit around drinking beer and singing ?Cars?. But not today. Your trigger finger twitches. You are, to put it indelicately​, gonna tear these sons-of-bitc​hes a thousand new holes to breath through.

I didn?t have a Gatling gun, but I did have 10 tonnes of unrefined anger to spill on this miserable excuse of a nest. I was about to do a demolition job on the lair, when I noticed the trophies of his various evil shenanigans.​ Watches, earrings, gold chains?the Magpie had tangled with the wealthiest and had won. The once-evil spud had ? indirectly ? decided to go Robin Hood, and I was a lucky benefactor.


I got out of the tree the easy way. Once the dust had settled and I had checked my ribs, I dusted myself off, checked the time on my two new Rolex?s, confirmed it on my diamond-embe​dded Cartier and adjusted my Chanel earrings.

?An interesting look, I must say? murmured Keith.

It wasn?t exactly ?10 million, but Keith and I managed to get hangovers sufficient to turn the Great Wall of China into a pleasant rockery, and the little Potato Bird keeps me in steak and cider. If only I could get all these needles out of my-
 

Trivun

Stabat mater dolorosa
Dec 13, 2008
9,830
0
0
seamusotorain said:
How does one do a spolier box? Anyhow...

?And the winners are??

??numbers 2, 29, 17, 6 and 34. The bonus number 20. Those winning numbers again?? I muted the radio. I didn?t need to hear twice. I didn?t want to hear twice. I just wanted to keep drinking down this beautiful feeling you get when you win ten million euro. I?m guessing that you?ve never experienced his, so I?ll try to explain it. As a child, did you ever run down a hill so fast that you couldn?t actually stop? If you haven?t, go now. It?s quite the experience, and costs less than comparable highs, such as glue. Now, imagine that you are running down that hill, but to cushion your inevitable faceplant you have a massive pile of ?50 notes. Are you giggling? You should be. I know I was.

I had strolled into the local Spar, receiving the nod from the manager, fluorescent light reflecting from the sweat on his bald head. He had frowned when I detoured from my usual aisle - Bargains and Sell-By-Date​ Specials ? and went toward the ?Vice Counter?, as I like to call it. A parade of dazed and pasty soap opera ?stars? had gazed back from the shiny scandal-rags​, trying to convince the overweight and middle-aged that celebrities were ?just like us!? but with better publicists. Calorie-lade​n sugar highs had jostled for attention with authoritativ​e cigarettes, who wore their warnings with indifference​. Damages sperm? Who wants kids anyway?

I wouldn?t call myself a gambling man, but buying the occasional lottery ticket was my Dadaist way of getting back at the Man. As Keith had told me

?Buy food? That?s what He wants, man. All those E-numbers? Frickin? mind control, man!?

It seemed that the manager cared deeply about my health, though. He had punched those numbers in himself, claiming that

?Fugghan Quik-Pik?s a bleedin? scam boss. Never seen a Quik-Pik winner, ?n oive sold thousands of the feckers!?

I was grateful ? and not a little freaked out ? by his kindness. His head seemed to be getting shinier by the minute, so I duly made my escape to my lodgings.

?Lodgings? are the best way to describe them. Once you lodged yourself in the narrow confines, it was very hard to become dislodged. The general design approach I had gone for was ?cluster bombs filled with rubbish?. Several pizza boxes lingered in the corner from the heady days when I could afford such luxuries. They were on the cusp of sprouting legs and marching off to the bin anyway, so the scientist within me refused to dismantle the important experiment. In lieu of a sofa, I had piled all my clothing in the general shape of a beanbag. Next to the ?beanbag? was a coffee table ? so named for the elaborate pattern of coffee-rings​ on the surface ? with the Leaning Tower of Cigarette Butts perched precariously​ on the top. A desk slumped in the corner of the room like a tramp. It had been bought in a whirl of freshman enthusiasm, but I was quick to realize that ?student? was a misnomer: the true student couldn?t find a lecture hall with a map and compass. And that was just the Geography students. I?d describe the smell of the room, but I?ve just eaten, and the manuscript wouldn?t be accepted with recycled scrambled eggs on it, now would it? In short, it was a place Stig of the Dump would turn his nose up at.

I had crouched over my wind up radio - my landlord, who bears an unfortunate resemblance to an anorexic stick insect, rivals Ebenezer Scrooge for fuel consumption - and those glorious numbers had filled my box room. Not that that was an incredible feat. I smiled. What would I buy first?

?Oh Christ? moaned my liver.

I took out my 1980?s cop movie surplus mobile and dialed Keith?s number. I needed to get very mindless on as many illicit substances as possible, and Keith was the only man up to the task. His brain had long succumbed to the tug of various narcotics, and now his psychedelic-​Swiss-cheese​ noggin responded to only three things: shiny objects, primary colours and more narcotics.

No signal. Honest to God, stepping into this flat is like going back to the Industrial Revolution; all that?s missing is the flat caps and elaborate facial hair. I ran down to the street, and Keith answered. I waited a few seconds for him to work out which end he spoke into, and began.

?Keith!?

A noise like a badger snuffling through leaves.

?Keith, come over to mine, we have to plan a night to forget!?

Notice how I start every sentence with his name; he thinks that you?re talking to someone else if you don?t address him.

?Dude, can we even, like fit in your apartment at the same time??

?For someone who couldn?t pick himself out of a police line-up, you?ve got a clever mouth?

?Uh??

Long sentences that aren?t punctuated by the word ?like? tend to confuse him.

?Come. To. Mine. Now.?

End call.

I skipped back up the steps to my apartment, held my breath, turned sideways and stepped in. It?s hard to gasp when you?re holding your breath, but I did when I realized my ticket wasn?t where I had left it. I searched the room from top to bottom. It took roughly 47 seconds. I happened to glance towards the window and there it was. It looked like a tarred-and-f​eathered potato with random twigs for legs. But its seemingly scruffy body contained an evil, scheming brain and a black, shriveled excuse of a heart. The Magpie.

I ask you, dear reader, to recall the idea of running full tilt down a hill, only to land in a pile of ?50 notes. Imagine if that pile turned out to be a very cleverly disguised pack of rabid wolverines that had just got root canal. They?re angry, they?re in pain, and you appear to them to be a punching bag full of painkillers.​ Moments before you are torn apart, your heart attempts to escape through your mouth, your internal organs try to vacate the premises by the ?emergency exit? and your brain cryogenicall​y freezes itself. That moment of sheer terror has enveloped your plucky narrator. Now multiply it by a number with lots of zeros. That?s what it?s like to watch ?10 million fly out the window in the mouth of a vindictive villain.

I tore down the stairs, crashing through Keith.

?Dude?? Are you on America?s Most Wanted or something??

?Follow! Magpie! ?10 million! Now!? I screamed over my shoulder as I exploded through the door.

?Is the magpie on America?s Most Wanted??

Keith?s car was pulled up on the pavement. He could only have parked closer if he had crashed through a wall or two. Being Keith, the car door was open and the engine was running. He must have thought he got a taxi or something. I leaped into the car, and was about to screech off Starsky & Hutch style till I noticed Mr. Potato Bird across the road, staring at me malevolently​ with its one eye. It performed a little jig of victory, flapping its tattered wings and stepping from one misshapen leg to the other. I hurtled across the road, followed by Keith. The bird took off through the park. I elegantly flipped over the fence and came to a soft landing in a pile of grass clippings.

?Good thing they didn?t lock that gate, man? Keith said, as he strolled past. It was a good thing that I had a football field worth of grass in my mouth, or someone would have got seriously offended. My battered little buddy wheeled toward a copse of trees, and we followed.

It landed in its lair: the upper branches of a monkey puzzle tree. Keith stared at the tree and scratched his head in confusion.

?How are you gonna get up there?? Keith asked.

?Assuming that I?m the one who?s climbing it??

?It?s not my ticket, man? he grinned.

Back seat drivers. I don?t drive (how could I afford the insurance?) but I still find them annoying. However, back seat climbers rank on the annoyance scale around the same level as ?railroad-sp​ike-through-​forehead?.

?Dude!? he called, ?move your foot to the right!?

It was as if some malevolent animal had greased that exact spot up.

?Advice. Not. Wanted.? I grumbled through gritted teeth.

Several splinters, a torn pair of jeans and enough cursing to give a convent of nuns a heart attack later, I reached the nest. The numbers looked back at me from different parts of the nest. ?10 million worth of refurbishmen​t. Once again, I ask you to remember those enraged wolverines. A twist of fate has placed a machinegun and 10,000 rounds in your hands. You feel a grim resignation to the task that lies ahead. Sure, the wolverines are just angry because they got painful dental work done. Maybe on a different day, you?d find a shared love of the work of Gary Newman, and sit around drinking beer and singing ?Cars?. But not today. Your trigger finger twitches. You are, to put it indelicately​, gonna tear these sons-of-bitc​hes a thousand new holes to breath through.

I didn?t have a Gatling gun, but I did have 10 tonnes of unrefined anger to spill on this miserable excuse of a nest. I was about to do a demolition job on the lair, when I noticed the trophies of his various evil shenanigans.​ Watches, earrings, gold chains?the Magpie had tangled with the wealthiest and had won. The once-evil spud had ? indirectly ? decided to go Robin Hood, and I was a lucky benefactor.


I got out of the tree the easy way. Once the dust had settled and I had checked my ribs, I dusted myself off, checked the time on my two new Rolex?s, confirmed it on my diamond-embe​dded Cartier and adjusted my Chanel earrings.

?An interesting look, I must say? murmured Keith.

It wasn?t exactly ?10 million, but Keith and I managed to get hangovers sufficient to turn the Great Wall of China into a pleasant rockery, and the little Potato Bird keeps me in steak and cider. If only I could get all these needles out of my-

Right, first, to do a spoiler box, simply type 'spoiler' (without the apostrophes) in square brackets []. To add a title to the spoiler, simply have 'spoiler=title', whatever title you want. Nice and simple.


Anyway, as for your story. Very well written, I loved the language and the little witticisms. Simple characterisation, there were only a couple of main characters and you explained just as much as you needed to for the story about each of them. That's a good thing, of course, and there wasn't too much backstory clogging up the narrative. Again, good. Interesting plot, and a bold but good choice to break the fourth wall a few times, which is again a good thing. Overall it was an enjoyable read and a very good piece of work, so well done :D
 

D_987

New member
Jun 15, 2008
4,839
0
0
The large clichéd hills dropped wearily in the distance. The traveler had been moving for days on end ? his large white robe that could been seen for miles amongst the infertile ground was stained with sweat, and one of the numerous tree branches he had used for leverage had eroded away on the harsh landscape. The man glanced upwards at the sun that had risen amongst the hills and boar down on everything in the valley. Despite the increase in temperature, the traveler smiled eagerly. The hills meant home.

Home was always a far away place, yet now he was close a magical aura of familiarity flew through his body as he stepped past every stone, trod through patches of dry, dark mud. Despite living here for only a brief time in his life, he felt more alive here than at any of all the places he had traveled. The man came to rest at the top of a reasonably sized hill. His feet, dark from mud and sand lay rotting on the side as he glanced out onto the horizon. Home. He thought softly ? a word still not familiar to me . Glancing up at the sky, his torn and rugged clothes shining, he slowly remembered that time when he felt alive ? warm, and happy.

It was twenty years ago to the day that the traveler had come to rest in this very village, nestled amongst the dropping hills. The meadow was calm and welcoming ? a world away from the hustle and bustle of large scale towns. Not to mention war.

Shaking his head at the memory he had pushed back for so long, the man glanced down at the ground, staring at a nearby earthworm that was slowly wriggling amongst the dirt. The traveler almost wished he were a worm ? with little worries, responsibilities ? nobody to face up to at the bottom of the valley . The traveler grabbed his stick and heaved himself upwards ? the view was picturesque ? by now a dark shade of crimson red had taken over the sky, detracting attention from the nearby hills. A brief walk later, and the man found himself surrounded by rows upon rows of large white buildings. Every house was carefully arranged ? as if in a battle with its neighbour ? yet the man knew within his heart what home he wished to find. Strolling casually, as though he were a local, the man came across the small, warm cottage. It was situated at the far end of the town ? hidden behind the white buildings that dwarfed it.

The traveler stopped.

His mind was trapped; his feet ? still aching ? had long since given up on reaching his appointed destination. Staring almost wishfully at the house, he turned on his heels and left. Why would she take me back?. Why, after so many years, would she want me ? I?m not good enough for her?

Back on the hill. The man glanced down at the little village one last time before heading off into the darkness ? another trip full of regret. He had not yet found his home, but then again ? was he really even a traveler. A word that implied he had somewhere to go ? no ? he felt sure he was a wanderer, doomed to stroll throughout the earth until his day of judgment had passed. He hadn?t the courage to return home.
Trivun said:
I took a little longer on this one.
 

frank220

New member
Dec 25, 2008
433
0
0
Short stories aren't my thing. How about a kawaii desu haiku or two?! ^________^

This is a haiku
I am pretty sure it is
It still sucks, though.

Red flowers, oh joy!
The children cry with glee
Hooray for bright plants.

Each tell a certain short story, in my opinion.