Short, unedited, mostly-weekly fiction by Liana Brooks, Amy Laurens & Thea van Diepen
Sunday, December 21, 2014
Breaking For Christmas
Just a reminder that the Darkness and Good blog will be closed* from now through to the end of January. We'll be back with the next story on the 2nd of February, bright and bushy-tailed as ever! In the meantime, have a happy and safe holiday season, in whatever form you choose to celebrate it.
All the best,
Amy and Liana
*As in no-new-posts closed, not blog-will-be-turned-off closed. You'll still be able to access all your favourite stories from 2014, and maybe catch up on the ones you didn't get a chance to read! :o)
Saturday, December 20, 2014
The Quilt-Maker's Scrap
Once, in a
Quilt-maker’s basket, there lived a scrap of fabric. All the other scraps in the
basket had something special about them: some were smooth and soft, others were
warm and furry, and still others had bright colors or pretty patterns. But this
scrap was dull and ugly and rough.
The other scraps
teased him. “The Quilt-maker will never choose you,” said a scrap of silver
satin. “Not when she could choose me. Look how I glimmer in the light!”
“Or me!” said a
golden scrap who had shining sequins sewn onto her. “I could dazzle anyone!”
“Any quilt with you
in it,” said a scrap of sensible navy wool, “would be an embarrassment.”
The little scrap drooped.
The other scraps were right – he was dull and ugly and boring. No one would
want him in a quilt. A piece of cream poplin brushed past him. “You never
know,” she said. “Maybe the Quilt-maker will make a quilt for someone she
doesn’t like. Then it wouldn’t matter if it was ugly.”
Even though she had
meant to be mean, the poplin’s words gave the little dull scrap hope. Maybe the
Quilt-maker would make an ugly quilt. He wouldn’t mind, not at all. At
least then he’d have a home – and no one would tease him anymore. So he waited
near the top of the basket, hoping that someday the Quilt-maker would choose
him.
Months passed, and
many new scraps came and went. The beautiful scraps, the ones that were silky
or shiny, warm or soft, didn’t stay for very long, some spending less than a
day in the basket before the Quilt-maker took them out again. The little dull
scrap began to grow tired of the other scraps’ taunts, but still he stayed near
the top of the basket, waiting and hoping.
One day, just before
Christmas, the Quilt-maker’s hand reached into the basket. She sifted through
the scraps, looking for the right one to use. She picked up a scarlet scrap of
silk.
“Ah ha!” he called
to his friends. “She likes my color. She’ll choose me, no doubt!” But as he spoke,
the hand lowered him back into the basket.
Next she chose a
warm, soft piece of fleece. “She likes my warmth!” he called. “She’ll use me
for sure.”
But he too returned
to the basket.
At last the
Quilt-maker came to the little dull scrap. She lifted him gently out of the
basket and peered at him through her glasses.
“Yes,” she
whispered. “This is just what I need.”
The little dull scrap
could hardly believe it. How could Quilt-maker need him?
Soon the Quilt-maker
finished the quilt. Everyone who saw it exclaimed over its beauty, and the Quilt-maker
entered it into a quilt show. The little scrap knew that he didn’t make
the quilt beautiful, but the idea of going to a show excited him so much that
it didn’t matter.
The day for the show
arrived, and all the entrants hung up their quilts. The Quilt-maker hung her
quilt opposite a large window and placed her nametag on the wall next to it before
wandering off to have a look at the other entries.
The little scrap of
fabric sat contentedly, watching the people pass by. Many of them stopped to
admire his quilt. Some even stepped forward to examine it closely. He’d never
seen so many people before, and it was all very exciting.
At last it was time
for the judging. The sun sank towards the horizon and the crowds thinned,
giving the little dull scrap some time to think. He couldn’t believe how many
people had come to see the quilt that he was so fortunate to be a part of. He’d
even had a sneaking suspicion that a few times, some of the people had been
looking at him.
But he must have
imagined it, considering how ugly and insignificant he was. And after all, he
was just one piece in the whole quilt.
The judges arrived,
and inspected every inch of the quilt with great care. They stopped to admire
the lovely colors of the fabric that the Quilt-maker had used for a woman’s
dress. They exclaimed over the brightness of the star at the top of the quilt.
They wondered at the detail in the people’s faces.
Finally, they turned
to the middle of the quilt where the little dull scrap waited nervously. A
gentle finger reached out to touch him, moving over his rough, unfinished
surface.
“It’s perfect,” they
whispered to each other.
The little scrap stared
in disbelief.
The judges drew away
to confer with one another, heads bowed, whispering. Then they straightened,
and addressed the room. “This is the final quilt,” they said, “and it is by far
the best. We declare this quilt the winner.” A cheer went up from the crowd and
they parted to let the Quilt-maker through.
As they did, the little scrap looked up at the window. Night had
fallen, turning the glass into a mirror.
He hadn’t seen the
quilt before, and he stared. There he sat, right in the very centre of the
quilt. A golden glow streamed out from all around him, and people knelt and
presented gifts of gold, incense and myrrh. But that wasn’t the best part. Just
above him lay a small scrap of purest white, sewn in the shape of a baby. And as
he sat watching the reflection while the crowd celebrated below, he realised
what he had become.
He was the manger, and
even though in the basket he’d been ugly and boring and rough, the Quilt-maker
believed he was special enough to hold the newborn saviour.
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Not Quite Cinderella
“The prince is giving a ball!”
“In the middle of a war?” Marian
looked at the thin, sallow, pastry chef who didn’t look like he’d ever tasted
his own wares. “Are you serious? A party during a major offensive?”
The sallow chef nodded eagerly.
“Oh, yes! The prince will choose a bride, the king will abdicate, and the whole
war will be over.”
Marian nodded slowly. “So, what
I’m hearing is… your side is losing?”
“My side?” The thin man looked
confused.
“The king is losing, isn’t he?”
The man’s eyes widened. “I would
never say something so traitorous!”
“Of course not.” She gave him a
polite smile. “A fudge brownie please.” She pointed a the rich confection and
waited as he bagged her purchase.
“Three coppers, if you please.”
She slid a silver piece across the
counter. “The stars shine on those who show charity today,” she said and walked
out, skirts swirling around her.
The baker wasn’t the only one with
the news. The whole square was buzzing with people rushing to prepare for the
upcoming party. Dress shops had lines of customers and coaches waiting outside.
The grocers cart was empty. Flower sellers were scarce, or possibly just
waiting in line for a seasonable dress.
One very determined hat seller
stepped into Marian’s path, advancing at her with a bright green horror stuffed
with purple feathers. “Have you something fetching to wear to the ball,
Milady?”
“No,” Marian said, trying to
sidestep the feather tickling her nose.
“Have you considered green,
Milady? It would be a most becoming color on you.”
“Yes, if I had darker skin or
fairer hair I’m sure it would be. But, since I have neither, I think perhaps
another color.”
“Purple?” The hat seller waved the
plumes closer to her face.
“No, lime and plum aren’t the
right shades for me. Thank you.”
The hat seller pounced, placing
the hat on her head and stabbing it in place with a five inch hair pin.
Marian glared as she counted, in
Greek, to ten. “Remove the hat.”
“But for just a few silvers…” the
seller wheedled.
“REMOVE THE HAT!!!”
Thunder cracked through the clear sky.
The seller grabbed the hat,
ripping the felt, and ran.
Marian removed the pin from her hair and tossed it
on the ground. Around her the natives edged away, fearful of what she might do
next. She rolled her eyes and walked back to the inn she’d checked into late
last night. It wasn’t the fanciest place she’d ever spent the night, but it
wasn’t the worst.
She tossed a small bag of silver
pieces to the innkeeper for a hot bath and a warm meal and walked up the
stairs, musing over the worst place she’d spent the night. Probably in the
burnt out hovel last year, the one where the ruins were still smoking and the
air smelt of burnt flesh. She slept in the stone cellar, on the floor, waiting
for the pain to stop.
Opening the door to her small room
she paused. No, the cellar was the second worst. The first worst had to have
been that palace three years back, the hideous pink silk and white lace
covering everything affair. That was the worst. Definitely.
Someone knocked. “Water, miss, for
your bath.”
She opened the door and smiled at
the fresh-faced maid carrying two buckets of steaming water. “Please, bring
them right in.”
“Here you go, miss. Getting ready
for the ball, are you?”
“Me?” Marian shook her head. “I wasn’t planning on
going.”
The girl sighed, starry eyed. “Oh,
but a ball. Doesn’t everyone want to go and dance the night away?”
Marian wrinkled her nose. “Pinched
shoes, creaking corsets, and the smell of old women marinating in their
perfume. It really isn’t all that grand.”
“But, to meet the prince!” The
girl put the buckets by the fireplace, not spilling a drop. “I’d love to go,
just to see everything. To maybe see the prince.”
“And I suppose your wicked
stepmother is making you stay home and polish the silver?” Marian asked.
The girl blushed. “No, mother
wouldn’t mind if I went. But I’ve nothing to wear. Nothing nice. I wouldn’t get
past the guards.”
She waved her hand. “Nonsense!
You’re quite a lovely girl. Hurry and fetch my bath and perhaps I can find a
suitable tip for you.”
The girl curtsied. “That’s quite
all right, miss. Even if we had a spare silver or two all the nice dresses have
been bought up.”
Marian shooed her out. “Get my
bath and let me worry about the tip.” She opened the door to the room’s armoire
and studied the dresses inside. Fine blonde hair, pink cheeks, deep blue eyes
and brown muddy feet…. The girl needed something full length and dusky. Marian
discarded the idea of dressing the girl in red, to wanton. And pink was just
cruel, the poor girl would look like a shepherdess who’d lost her nursery rhyme.
Blue was the obvious answer, but too obvious.
From the back of the armoire she
pulled out a lilac gown with silk, seed pearls, and diamonds fastened around
the low collar. Perfect. Even if the girl didn’t net the prince in this affair,
which might be a blessing considering the political situation; she’d find some
suitor willing to marry her for the dress alone.
The maid backed into the room,
carrying the wooden sitting tub and turning red in the face.
“Just set in down there by the
fireplace,” Marian instructed. “It’s to warm for a fire, but it does seem the
proper place for a bath. Do you have a screen, perchance? The windows are
lovely but, well, a maiden and her modesty and all that…”
The maid turned around, nodding
again, and stopped to stare at the gown. “Oh! That’s the most beautiful thing
I’ve ever seen! Are you wearing it tonight?”
“This?” Marian made a show of
regarding the gown with great skepticism. “It really isn’t my color. Far to
regal, and to pale, for my skin I think. Do you like it?”
She maid wiped her hands on her
own brown skirt and gently fingered the hem of the lilac gown. “It’s so
lovely…”
“I really do think it’s a tattered
old thing. You can have it if you like.” Marian tossed the dress at her. “Go
and try it on, if you hurry your mother will have time to fit it to you before
the ball.”
Her eyes went wide. “But, your
bath…”
Marian shrugged. “I can handle
that. Go on, have fun tonight.” The maid left and Marian started humming
herself. She bathed, ate a leisurely meal, taking pleasure in watching people
bustle through the streets rushing to prepare for the festival, and then she
took a nap.
She woke when the bell on the
tower tolled ten, she had two hours to midnight. With great care she dressed in
a perfect white gown with a belled skirt and a low neckline. Out of her
traveling gear she picked a fine gold chain with a white opal pendant that
flashed fire in the candlelight. In the window she could see her reflection,
the perfect vision of a mysterious princess arriving late for the ball. Down in
the alley she could even see the perfect coach, just waiting to whisk her away.
How banal.
Marian swept down the stairs and
out the back door, unnoticed by the snoozing innkeeper. The coachman didn’t say
a word as she touched her necklace and tucked her head like a coy innocent. She
smiled as they clattered through the cobblestone streets, charms were almost
cheating. Well, not charms plural, Marian reminded herself, Charm, singular,
and not the kind that witches and sorceresses used. A single simple charm to
make everyone love her.
There was a momentary twinge of
guilt, what if the nice little maid had charmed the prince? Marian furrowed her
brow, wondering how she would work that one out. As the coach rolled to a stop
at the palace gates, the tower bells chimed eleven, the page ran up to open her
door, and with a sigh Marian gave up worrying about the dilemma. All she could
do was hope for the best, and kill anyone who got in her way.
With innate grace she swept up the
stairs, walked down the halls, and paused at the grand entrance waiting for the
final flourish in the music and the perfect dramatic entrance. She tapped her
foot. The music hit its crescendo and the she walked through the door.
The prince’s hand dropped away
form the blue-clad beauty’s waist he’d been dancing with. Marian curtsied at a
distance, hiding a snigger. A pale blue dress on a blue-eyed blonde with
upswept hair, really? How clichéd could a fair godmother get? If she had a
copper for every time a well-meaning interloper put a blue dress on a blue-eyed
girl she’d have enough for a retirement fund, or at least a vacation somewhere
tropical.
She forced a blush as the prince
ran up the short staircase to bow low over her hand.
“May I have this dance?”
“I’d be delighted,” she simpered.
It took practice to simper, and it paid off. The prince danced her around the
room, staring deeply into her eyes like a fool in love. And then danced her
into the moonlit gardens.
“Am I really in love? Or is this
some magic? A dream?” he whispered as he leaned close.
“Magic,” Marian whispered back. “A
charm enchantment.”
“Do you love me?” The prince
tenderly brushed a finger along her cheek. “I love you.”
“I know.” She stepped away from
him. “But it won’t last past dawn.”
He stepped closer. “If we have
only to dawn, let us dance the night away.”
She smothered a laugh in her hand,
pretending to cough. “Virgin!” Recovering herself she smiled at the prince. “I
have a carriage, let’s run away together.”
He put his hands on her hips and
pulled her close. “I’ll do anything you say.”
“Smart kid.” Marian patted his
cheek. “Take my hand and lead me the back way to the carriages. And then pick
the fastest one.”
“Where are we going?” he asked,
showing the first real sign of independent thought, which wasn’t promising. A
strong willed person would fight the charm enchantment, the prince wasn’t
fighting at all.
Really, she was doing the kingdom
a favor by removing him from the line for the throne.
“My love?”
“We’re running away together,”
Marian told him as he led her through dark rose gardens and down marble steps
to the courtyard full of carriages. “By the way, you have a beautiful castle.”
“We have a beautiful castle,” he
told her. “Forever we, you and I together in love.”
“At least until dawn or death do
us part.” Marian let him hand her into the carriage. In a high up window she
saw a young woman, radiant in lilac and diamonds, flirting with a powerful
young duke.
At least someone got a happy
ending.
Saturday, December 6, 2014
Seven Reasons I Said No – A List by Kelly Ann Morginstein
- It was Josh.
- He
stumbled the proposal and my father finished for him.
- Instead
of a nice dinner out and a ring my mother invited him to dinner and he
asked during the salad course. With no ring.
- Josh
wears yellow socks.
- I’m
pretty sure he snores.
- Mallory
would murder me if I said yes.
- Josh
is dead.
I mean, seriously??? A zombie? How’s a nice Jewish girl
supposed to respond? Sure, I’m his last hope for a nice relationship because
every other girl has either turned him down or waived a crucifix at him.
I get that. Really.
But did he need to tell me I was his last choice? Not only
would he not ask me out if I were the last girl on the planet, but he wouldn’t
ask me out until he was dead and I was the last girl who hadn’t said no on the
planet.
That’s just hurtful.
And having my parents there? Is it to much to ask for a real
proposal? You know, a romantic moonlit walk on the beach. Or a day at the
museum followed by a luscious dinner. Something impressive.
Sweet potato latkes are tasty, but they aren’t romantic. Not
when you help make them and have to wash the dishes afterward. And not when the
best compliment of the evening is a dead guy telling you that you seem very
obedient.
Obedient? Gosh, Josh! That’s just what every girl wants to
hear.
Maybe.
When they’re three >.< Not when they’re twenty-four
and the only single girl in the whole community. Single, and living in my
parent’s attic. Anne Frank never had it this bad.
Right now, I’d welcome the Nazis.
Anything to keep nosey Mrs. S from dropping by tomorrow for
breakfast where she will, I guarantee, casually grab my hand to inspect the
rock. Boy is she in for a shock!
Josh brought over a bracelet. One of his. From the hospital.
And his original toe tag. So I could be near him or something? I have no clue.
It was creepy. I wanted to set fire to him but my mom grabbed the candles
before I could.
Back-stabbing mother! Does she really want a half-rotted
corpse as a son-in-law? Is she really that desperate?
I need to move out. It’s the only choice. I need to go find
my own place and stop dating the undead.
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