Philip K. Dick said it best:
“Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn’t go away.”
(#00121)
“This,” announced the Doctor, “is the Monestary of the Believers.”
“The believers in…?” prompted Sally.
“Everything. Everything that is. And a few things that aren’t. They devote a lifetime to it. Each devotee is not allowed to have the item they’re meant to believe in.”
Sally peeked through the slot. A monk knelt on the floor, writing or praying or both.
“So they’re a believer in chairs?”
“Yes. Fella three doors down believes in tables. Poor man has to do his writing on the floor.”
“Ouch…”
“I feel sorry for the lady at the end of the hall. She believes in cushions.”
“Why go to all this bother?” Sally asked. “Things had to exist before people believed in them.”
The Doctor gave her one of his smirks. “Did they? Or were they just collections of atoms with a convenient shape and a familiar name?”
Sally would spend the rest of her life asking herself that question.
[Muse food remaining: 18. Submit a prompt! Ask a question!]
A new take on an old classic.
To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
To a man with only a hammer, a screw is a defective nail.
To a man with only a nail, everything looks like a hammer.
(#00120)
She ran through the darkened streets, harsh breathing absorbed by the endless fog of Lower Cogtown. She’d lost the whistles of the gendarmerie five streets ago, but that was no reason to stop.
It was no reason to even slow.
To a man with a hammer, every problem looked like a nail.
To a man with a screwdriver, every nail was defective.
But heaven help you - and only heaven could help you - if all you had was a hex nut.
[Muse food remaining: 14. Submit a prompt! Ask a question!]
Challenge #00119: Strategy and the Zen of Faking it
The surest way to hit your target is to shoot first and call whatever you hit your target.
“That’s a long way down. You must be pretty determined.”
“Thanks. I wanted to make certain this was one thing I couldn’t fuck up.”
“Finals?”
“Finals is only the start of it,” she said. “I lost my flat, my girlfriend, my car, my pet, my parents… failing finals just means a lifetime of student debt and a suck-ass nowhere job in the middle of fail town.”
“What was your major.”
“Business and pre-law.”
Jones whistled backwards. “That’s a high target to hit.”
“I had to get outta fail-town. Business and law are lossless industries.”
“So’s porn, but few actually aim to get there.” Jones peeked over the edge. “You’re getting a crowd.”
“First time for everything.”
“Big family or social issues?”
“I dunno.” She sat on the edge. “I’m just… invisible. I’m not pretty. I’m obviously not smart. I’m not talented. I wasted all my time on stupid photomontages instead of studying. I wish I’d never even thought of OwlBearGryphon.”
“No shit. You did OwlBearGryphon? That stuff’s the bomb! You gotta be making tons of money.”
“No, that’d be the people who put OwlBearGryphon on shirts and badges and crap like that. I never put a pixel towards the OwlBearGryphon game or did a frame of that stoopid cartoon… Hundreds of people are making millions and I can’t see a cent…”
“My Nanna always said, ‘The surest way to hit your target is to shoot first and call whatever you hit your target.’ Seems to me you’ve got things a little backwards. Especially all the 'can’t’s and 'not’s.”
“…and here comes the bullshit…”
“It’s just my opinion, mind,” said Jones. “But you are talented. You are smart. And… Ithinkyou'repretty… I bet you’ve got lots of stuff on your computer or whatever that can be just as great as OwlBearGryphon. And nowhere near as… vulnerable.”
“…yeah…?”
“Yeah. Like… if you want to keep something as your intellectual property, you shouldn’t put it up on FreeToPlayWith dot com.”
“See? I told you I was stupid.”
“There’s a difference between stupid and uninformed. While we live, we learn.” Jones sidled closer. “I’d like it a lot if you gave living another go.”
She wiped her face. Looked at Jones for the first time. “You aren’t a cop.”
“No, I’m a failing artist with an ear for business who came up here with similar ideas. And then I saw you and my whole world changed.”
She swung around. Put her weathered sneakers on the gravel of the roof. “So how about a failed business lawyer and a failed arts major team up and see what we can make with each other?”
“Sounds like a deal to me,” said Jones. “And you know the best thing about meeting someone on the worst day of their life?”
“What?”
“It can only get better.”
[Muse food remaining: 15. Submit a prompt! Ask a question!]
Challenge #00117: And That’s Why a Platypus.
A Mage teaching their Apprentice an ancient Bio-Hazard Disposal spell for failed experimental breeding subjects (as we all know, the traditional answer for a ridiculous and/or ridiculously dangerous creature is “A Wizard Did It”), and why Australia’s wildlife is so… unique. (At least, according to the rest (Real Life - Australia portion) of the world.
“Co-ordinatum expelarmus…”
“Co-ordinatUS, expel-ee-ar-am-us,” corrected the master. “One wrong syllable, Mistress Caduceus, and this hazardous waste winds up lining your wardrobe interior.”
“What happens to it normally, Master?”
“IF you pronounce the spell correctly, IF you manage the correct grasp of your wand, Master Gask…” The master grasped the offending wrist and moved two fingers an occultly significant few millimeters. “The dangerously mutational waste winds up in a distant land that neither magic nor science can normally reach. Fortunately for everyone, you lot are practicing on harmless, coloured sand.”
“What happens to the distant land, sir?”
The master pinched his nose. “Caduceus…”
“Please, sir?”
“Waste magic is toxic. If anything’s even alive in there, the cross-firing magics will inevitably create dangerously toxic flora and fauna. Bizarre conglomerate animals like no other on this Earth. Even revivification of ancient animals long since dead. Depending on the spells interactive quotients, of course. You could even wind up with a venomous amphibious mammal that lays eggs!”
The rest of the class giggled.
“Sir?”
The master groaned, “Yes, Caduceus?”
“Have we… Have we thought of -um- making the spells and potions less… toxic?”
The master glared at her. “If we did that, magic itself would be reduced to useless herbology, crystals and mumbo-jumbo. And then science would take over. We don’t want that, do we?”
[Muse food remaining: 17. Submit a prompt! Ask a question!]
The Writing Process - In Pictures
COULD THIS BE ANY MORE ACCURATE
THIS IS THE MOST WONDERFULLY ACCURATE THING I’VE EVER LAID MY EYES ON
If anyone ever asks to compose my biography as a writer, I will just refer them to this.
Right now I’m at David Tennant in a spacesuit.
THIS COULD NOT BE ANY MORE ACCURATE OMFG. im at david in the spacesuit eugh.
I’m at Tulio #2 idk about you guys
I laughed so hard I think I coughed up half a lung. THIS is the background radiation of my life.
(via callmegallifreya)
Challenge #00116: Impressions
Anywhere in the story:
Some people are like Slinkies - Not really good for anything, but they still bring a smile to your face when you push ‘em down a flight of stairs
(alternatively, substitute “see 'em fall” for “push 'em”)
Sara objected to formal fundraisers at the best of times, and tonight wasn’t one of them. Her target, multi-billionheiress Egypt Ritz[1], was the exact sort of person Sara had grown to despise on sight. Therefore it was something of a supreme effort not to do so to the woman’s carefully sculpted face.
“Darling,” cooed Egypt. “I simply can not believe you organized the entirety of this gorgeous little soiree.”
“It’s not as hard as you might think,” Sara faked a natural smile and resisted the urge to grit her teeth.
“Obviously. The rare times that the paparazzi snap you, you’re always wearing hideous and cheap pret a portier.” Translation: street clothes for the plebs.
“I prefer to reserve my budget for more worthy goals, dear,” If she believed in heaven or hell, tonight she earned years off of purgatory for not adding a snarl to that sentence.
“Well obviously, it would be difficult to salvage that figure and that face,” smiled Egypt.
_ I will kill you, later. After a thorough kharmic realignment._ “Yes. Well. Anyone who can afford ten thousand dollars for a dress she wears once can certainly afford the underwear to match. Or did you leave it somewhere and forget about it when you chose to show it off, last week?”
Egypt’s bland, botoxed half-smile faded into a semi-sneer. Point to Sara.
“And speaking of thousands of dollars,” Sara continued, taking joy in pretending she had no clue about what had previously issued from her mouth, “there is the issue of sponsored nutrition for the -ah- less than affluent kiddies. You can hold a giant cheque to make sure nobody can see up your dress.”
“How kind,” Egypt snarked. “I’ll think about it.”
“The Adrien family will be donating an even million, to begin with,” added Sara. She knew without a doubt that Miss Ritz would not allow herself to be overshadowed by someone less telegenic than herself.
Daddy collected her by the elbow as Egypt swanned off to get photographed with prettier people. “That came close to homicide…”
“Some people are like slinkies, Daddy,” said Sara. “No functional use whatsoever, but such fun to watch fall down the stairs.”
“No pushing her.”
“Yes, Daddy,” Sara sighed.
[1] Any resemblance between this lady and certain others named after a city and a hotel are strictly imaginary. I swear. Cough.
[Muse food remaining: 7. Submit a prompt! Ask a question!]
Challenge #00115: Letter v Spirit
A story in which this:
“It’s time to do the right thing!”
“By which you mean commit a major felony.”
“Think of it as a series of 208 rapidly successive misdemeanors!”
Occurs.
“This is not right,” said Sara.
“It is legal, sweetheart,” said Daddy. They both knew it, but he had to remind her. Her near-reality orbit frequently ignored things like that which was legal.
“That which is legal is not always right. That which is right is not always legal.” Sara looked over the papers in her folder again. “It’s time to do the right thing!”
Daddy sighed and rolled his eyes. “By which you mean, commit a major felony.”
Sara managed a manic rictus. “Think of it as a series of 208 rapidly successive misdemeanors…”
“..which, I have no doubt, you have already planned before the case started in court?”
“I never start any plan without a plan B, Daddy.”
“…oh dear. At least let me have plausible deniability?”
“Already part of the works.” Sara closed the folder with a menacing smirk. “And I promise I won’t break any of the big laws.”
“Thankyou.”
[Muse food remaining: 7. Submit a prompt! Ask a question!]
Challenge #00115: One Fine Day on a Planet That Looks a Lot Like a Quarry Somewhere in England
Anywhere in the story, possibly as a result of a situation originating from Forge tinkering:
If we can confirm its existence, then it interacts with the physical world. If it interacts with the physical world, we can, theoretically, blow it up.
“Sara Louise Adrien, what a surprise seeing you here,” said the Doctor. He’d just literally run into her as the worlds changed.
“Ah,” said Sara. “You again.”
“Still dimension-hopping?”
“Yes, although, this time, I somehow managed a double hop. Not my fault. Sergeant Slash, over there, thought the integrator was a bomb.”
“My name,” said the body armor with a face in its depths, “Is Captain Carnage.”
Sara rolled her eyes. “Everything we imagine is a reality I can fade into. She’s from a video game.”
“And I’m television. You tell me last month.”
“Ugh. Nice to know it *still* won’t be solved.”
“Wait,” said Captain Carnage. “What?”
“Temporal mechanics,” said the Doctor and Sara together. Sara added, “Don’t think about it too hard, dear, you might lose some hearts.”
“Yes. Well. Glad to know we’re all acquainted. Can we get back to running, now. We have a slight problem with an ectoplasmic temporal echo.”
“What?” said Captain Carnage.
“Technically speaking, and dumbed down to the lowest denominator,” said Sara, “a ghost.”
“And this one’s very cross with me about something I haven’t done yet.” The Doctor glanced behind him and broke into a run.
Sara started jogging next to him and Captain Carnage lagged behind. Looking behind her every three steps. “Well, the good news is, you have plenty of time to go and fix it. Unless it’s a fixed point, in which case, it’s very bad news indeed.”
“But what can it do?” said the Captain. “It’s a ghost.”
“Well… currently, it’s throwing things. Sharp things, mostly.”
“If we can confirm its existence, then it interacts with the physical world. If it interacts with the physical world, we can, theoretically, blow it up.”
“Very nice logic, dear,” said Sara. “The only problem with that is that blowing things up isn’t the go-to solution in this universe.”
“That’s not a lot of fun,” complained Carnage. “I should rescue you. You’re clearly NPC’s.”
“No! You’re in a cut-scene! This man has been in this universe for well over nine hundred years, faced down every kind of Boss and did it all with a screwdriver,” Sara desperately babbled. “And he did it all on two hearts!”
“Two?” repeated Carnage.
“Just two,” said the Doctor.
“So… he’s like a technomage.”
“A lot like a technomage. Do try to keep up! Physically, too!”
[Muse food remaining: 5. Submit a prompt! Ask a question!]
My scoring system: words per day
- No words written anywhere: Well, today sucked. Unless I'm having a day off. In which case, enjoy myself.
- Just the instant story: Advertising done! Squeak through at the bare minimum.
- <500 words: Meh. At least SOMETHING got written.
- 500 words OR instant story: At least I got one thing done.
- 500 words AND instant story: Quota achieved.
- 500-1000 words and instant story: YES!
- >1000 words and instant story: Party time :) Have a treat.
- Housework on top of all that: The entire household had better be grateful.
Challenge #00114: A Scene in the Library
Whoever said words can’t hurt you has never been pegged with a dictionary.
Sara was drawn to the child’s tears. She knew that kind of crying, having done a lifetime of it herself.
“Something the matter, dear?”
“…go ‘way.”
Sara knelt. “I promise I won’t tell you that you’re overreacting if you promise not to tell me I can’t understand.”
The kid looked up. “…kay.” Tears smeared her face. “They said I’m fat an’ I gotta eat nuthin’ but chocolate 'cause I’m that colour anyway an’ I tried to tell on 'em but… m’ teacher said it was just words.”
“Hm. Anyone who says words can’t hurt you has never been smacked by a dictionary.”
A shy, wan smile lit her face. “Not 'lowed to hit 'em.”
“More’s the pity,” agreed Sara. “You have to hit them where it hurts them the most. In their egos.”
“What’s an ego?”
“It’s that part of your brain that keeps telling you that you are the sole reason the universe exists.”
This time, a giggle. Anyone telling this darling little girl that she was ugly aught to be strung up by their nether hairs.
“I’m guessing these are the mean girls of the school? Already proficient at makeup and fashion at -what- eight?”
“Nine.”
“Oof.” Sara shook her head. “Let me tell you a little something about mean girls…”
*
Sara was just about to sign out from her volunteer duties when she spotted Shanice again. Holding an ice-pack over one eye.
“You didn’t start a fight, did you?”
Shanice grinned. “Nope. They did.”
Which meant the mean girls hit first. Which meant that Shanice had won. Sara grinned and gave her a high five. “Good job. Pro tip, try not to look so smug. Act like a kitten is very sick. Makes you look like the wronged party.”
Shanice nodded and did her best to snivel.
[Muse food remaining: 5. Submit a prompt! Ask a question!]


















