FrankenKitty 13 #wewriwar #amwriting

Frankenkitty

(Some assembly required)

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Welcome to Weekend Writing Warriors.  This is a sample from my work in progress, “Frankenkitty”, and I hope you enjoy it.  It started out as a young-adult superhero book, and well, you’ll see.  In last week’s snippet, Amber gave Mrs Jones a sample of the pink solution. This week starts with the girls in study hall, wondering what to do next.


“What did the book say?”

“It didn’t; he had to wait for the next thunderstorm.”

Mary cocked her head, trying to remember something she’d read, “Lightening; there was something odd about it; not just a big electric spark.”

A boy, one who was not very handsome, a rather gangly, spotty, and very shy fifteen year old, who had been sitting on the table near them, spoke up, “Anti-matter; there’s anti-matter in lightning.”

“Jimmy?” Jennifer recognized the boy from her neighborhood. He’d been quietly sitting next to them, almost every study hall for the whole term; hoping for a chance to exchange a word or two.

Jimmy turned away and looked at the book he was reading. Jennifer persisted, “Jimmy, what did you say?”


Jimmy’s right, by the way, there are positrons produced by lightning.

This is a work in progress. In other news, I’ve become a booktrope author, but more on that latter. It has meant a change in pen-name.

I’m also looking for reviewers for my nearly ready book “The Curious Profession of Dr. Craven” It’s moved out of layout to final assembly, and is now waiting only on the final cover.  There was a bit of a hiccough in production, but that’s sorted out.

Get Free Stuff and try out my landing page. There are two free complete short stories available after you’ve gone through the hoops.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

It’s all I have to bring today (26)

Emily Dickinson

It’s all I have to bring today—
This, and my heart beside—
This, and my heart, and all the fields—
And all the meadows wide—
Be sure you count—should I forget
Some one the sum could tell—
This, and my heart, and all the Bees
Which in the Clover dwell.

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The ThemeShaper WordPress Theme Tutorial: 2nd Edition

Watch the webpage.At some stage I’ll be moving from wordpress.com to another host (google analytics and sumo plugs, please, for free, maybe). That also gives me the ability to host unlinked pages and multiple websites. The free templates tend to be wonky, so I’ll probably roll my own.

Michelle's avatarThemeShaper

Preface

Many of you have written or commented to tell us how much you liked Ian Stewart’s original tutorial, “How To Create a WordPress Theme: The Ultimate WordPress Theme Tutorial”. You’ll be happy to learn that that we’ve created a second edition of the tutorial! Just like last time, you can expect one new lesson each day. What’s changed in the second edition? Keep reading to find out!

What’s new in the Second Edition:

  • Updated code samples that draw from the Underscores (_s) starter theme.February 2012 marked the release of the Underscores (_s) starter theme, and since then, it has gathered plenty of momentum. The code samples and file structure for the theme we’re going to create in this tutorial will draw from _s as a source of modern code that reflects current best practices.
  • New Lessons.Developing Your Theme Sense is worth reading if you’re…

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A Day

Emily Dickinson, 1830 – 1886

I’ll tell you how the sun rose, —
A ribbon at a time.
The steeples swam in amethyst,
The news like squirrels ran.

The hills untied their bonnets,
The bobolinks begun.
Then I said softly to myself,
“That must have been the sun!”

But how he set, I know not.
There seemed a purple stile
Which little yellow boys and girls
Were climbing all the while

Till when they reached the other side,
A dominie in gray
Put gently up the evening bars,
And led the flock away.

The Vantage Point

Robert Frost, 1874 – 1963

If tired of trees I seek again mankind,
Well I know where to hie me—in the dawn,
To a slope where the cattle keep the lawn.
There amid lolling juniper reclined,
Myself unseen, I see in white defined
Far off the homes of men, and farther still
The graves of men on an opposing hill,
Living or dead, whichever are to mind.

And if by noon I have too much of these,
I have but to turn on my arm, and lo,
The sunburned hillside sets my face aglow,
My breathing shakes the bluet like a breeze,
I smell the earth, I smell the bruisèd plant,
I look into the crater of the ant.

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Dartmoor story VI #amwriting #WIP

Elizabeth has a disturbed night.

 The start of the story can be found here.

Following from the last installment: Elizabeth overdid it on a visit to the exciting hamlet of Moreton Hampstead, and is ill. Mary has tucked her up in bed.


“I suppose I’m just tired and seeing things.”

“I wouldn’t worry about it, Miss Elizabeth. See what you feel like when it’s time for supper.”

Elizabeth was sound asleep when it was time for supper. So sound asleep that they left her sleeping while they ate. When her uncle and Mary looked in at her at dusk, he said, “Mary, I would like you to sit up with Elizabeth. Come find me if she has difficulty breathing. Poor girl, she must be exhausted, shouldn’t have sent her to town today.”

Mary saw the concern in his face and said, “I’ll keep an eye on her, but I’m sure she’ll be fine.” It took her no little effort to keep the doubt from her voice.

“I hope so. I’m not sure our visitors won’t be back. Best to be prepared.”

Mary nodded. While she didn’t like it, she understood what he meant.

Elizabeth finally stirred in the middle of the night. The noise at the window, the noise of cutting glass and working on the lock, awoke her. It also awoke Mary, who stood and pointed something at the window. Whatever it was, it gave an incomprehensible shout and then jumped off the window.  Elizabeth drifted back to sleep and missed the noise from the outside when her uncle said, “Got you, you bugger.”

When she finally awoke in the morning, Elizabeth still felt weak. So her uncle bundled her in a quilt and sat her in front of a fire in the parlour. He said, “Best if you take it easy today, my dear Elizabeth. Have a valetudinarian morning, if not an entire day.”

Elizabeth was in no shape to argue, and honestly enjoyed trying to read a novel, something by Trollope, while she stared at the flickering flames of the fire. It wasn’t until Mary came in and asked if she’d like some tea, that she said, “Mrs Trent, I had the oddest dream last night.”

“You did?”

“Yes, you were in it. There was a noise at the window.”

Mary stiffened, “There was?”

“Yes, and you were watching me, from a chair in my room. You stood up and pointed a rifle at the window. There was a scream. It sounded like nothing on Earth.” Elizabeth paused, “Then, well, I forget the rest. But it seemed so real.”

“You have a vivid imagination Miss Elizabeth. I did spend the night in your room, in case you took a turn for the worse. Whatever would I be doing with a rifle, now?”

Elizabeth looked at Mary and noticed, at last, how tired she looked, “Are you well, don’t you need to rest now?”

Mary said, “Nay lass. I’ve been up longer at lambing season. Have to keep something ready for George at all hours. I’ll catch my rest in between. Did you want that tea?”

“Yes, please. Oh, have you seen my Uncle? I’d like to thank him for the novel.”

“He’s gone into town Miss. Had to send a telegram, and said he’d be back for dinner.”

Elizabeth felt decidedly restless by mid-day, so she moved to a chair where she could see outside. Shortly after that, she saw Uncle Sylvester ride at a canter to the stable, dismount, and walk his horse inside. She waved when she saw him, and he waved back. Before he could come to the house and chat, a dark black closed carriage, one with bars on the windows and an armed guard as well as a driver pulled up. While the driver steadied the team of four strong horses, the guard climbed down and walked into the stables. A few moments later, both the guard and Uncle Sylvester reappeared. They escorted a short, stout, and decidedly foreign looking man to the back of the carriage. The guard unlocked the back and opened the door.  Over the man’s objections and struggles, they forced him inside. After that, the guard locked the carriage. He and her uncle chatted. The guard climbed back onto the carriage and with a shout it was off. The entire episode was over in a matter of a few minutes.

When her uncle came in, Elizabeth said, “What was that about?”

Normally abstemious, her uncle went to the sideboard and poured himself a large tot of whiskey. Then he tossed it off as though it were water. “You saw?”

“The black carriage and the man.”

Uncle Sylvester sighed, “Poor fellow, criminally insane.” He paused, “After what he did last night, it was best to keep him here until he could be picked up. That was his transport to Princeton. The Queen’s prison for the worst offenders.”

“Is that why you were in town?”

“Yes, and it’s why,” he paused to pour himself another drink, “I’m having this. I always feel dirty when I commit someone.”

“I thought you were just a doctor.”

“I am, but I’m the closest thing to an alienist in this part of Dartmoor. When there’s trouble, I am called to certify insanity. I testified this morning, along with Sergeant Hopwell, to the magistrate, and they took the poor fellow away. It’s not likely he’ll recover his wits, so they’ll lock him up and throw away the key.” He stared out the window and muttered, “I wish there was something I could do about it. There ought to be something besides locking them up.” Then he shrugged, and asked Elizabeth, “Can I see that bracelet of yours?”

“This one?” Elizabeth took off an ornate chain bracelet. “I like it, but it’s just a bit of trumpery I bought from a street seller. He said it would give me good luck.” She handed it to her uncle. To her surprise, he snatched it from her hand, took it to the window and examined it closely.

Saying, “I should have known,” he dashed to the fire and tossed it in. There was a greenish flash and it vanished in a puff of acrid smoke.
The next installment.

Image courtesy of http://www.inverarayjail.co.uk


Hoppin’ John and Stella’s Polish Cabbage. #recipe

Two New Year’s recipes.
Traditional food that’s good tasting.

    1. Hopin’ John.

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Hoppin’ John is a traditional Southern dish using blackeyed peas and smoked ham hocks. It’s an example of “poor food” that is both good and fills a cultural niche. Eat this on January first and the rest of the year you’ll eat better. Well maybe, I think it’s pretty darn good no matter when you eat it.

      • 1/2 pound dried blackeyed peas. Ideally soak these the night before in cold water.
      • At least one smoked ham hock.
      • One onion coarsely chopped and sauteed at least to the wilt stage
      • 1 tablespoon prepared mustard.
      • 1 tablespoon hot sauce

Put the ingredients in a pot, typically the one you saute’ed the onions in, and add enough water to cover the peas with about one inch to spare.
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Bring to a boil and simmer until done. It takes several hours for the meat and beans to be completely done with the meat falling off the bone. Periodically stir, and add more water if needed. I adjust the amounts of mustard and hot sauce to taste. This example is a bit rich in ham hocks because they came in a pack of three.

    1. Stella’s Polish Cabbage.

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Stella’s Polish Cabbage is a family recipe from my Irish mother-in-law. She figured out how to cook cabbage the way her husband, a Polish pilot in the RAF during world war 2, liked. My English wife has always called it “Polish Cabbage.” It’s not particularly New Year’s food, but goes exceedingly well with Hoppin’ John.

      • 1 Head Cabbage. Cored and coarsely chopped. Sprinkle with salt and set to wilt overnight in the refrigerator. In the old days in England, when the house had a single coal fire, she’d just leave it out on the counter.
      • 1 Onion, Coarsely chopped
      • 2 tablespoons butter and a teaspoon of oil. Melt the butter in the oil (avoids burning).

Thoroughly rinse the cabbage, to remove the excess salt. Saute the onion in the butter and oil mixture. When it is past the wilt stage add the cabbage and cover.

The cabbage will give off water as it wilts. The mixture will rapidly lose about half its volume. Stir to prevent scorching and periodically add a few tablespoons of water. The amount isn’t critical, you need enough to keep it from burning, and it will evaporate over time.

For the next hour, until thoroughly done, simmer over a low heat. Periodically stir and refresh water.

England in 1819

Percy Bysshe Shelley, 1792 – 1822

An old, mad, blind, despised, and dying king,—
Princes, the dregs of their dull race, who flow
Through public scorn,—mud from a muddy spring,—
Rulers who neither see, nor feel, nor know,
But leech-like to their fainting country cling,
Till they drop, blind in blood, without a blow,—
A people starved and stabbed in the untilled field,—
An army, which liberticide and prey
Makes as a two-edged sword to all who wield
Golden and sanguine laws which tempt and slay;
Religion Christless, Godless—a book sealed;
A Senate,—Time’s worst statute unrepealed,—
Are graves, from which a glorious Phantom may
Burst, to illumine our tempestous day.

FrankenKitty 12 #wewriwar #amwriting

Frankenkitty

(Some assembly required)

12241791_735836876546522_6197947469406170479_n

Welcome to Weekend Writing Warriors.  This is a sample from my work in progress, “Frankenkitty”, and I hope you enjoy it.  It started out as a young-adult superhero book, and well, you’ll see.  After blowing out the town power grid (temporarily as it turns out) Jenny reminds Amber with an IM that Mrs. Jones, the fons et origo, of the project wanted a sample of the pink solution.


In the morning Amber took a half-liter of the pink solution, still glowing though not as brightly as the night before, and put it in a bottle. On the way to the bus, she stopped at the Towers. She hesitated, then walked in and asked the attendant if he could give something to Mrs. Jones. He said he could;  Amber pulled out the bottle and he said, “Homebrew?”

“Not really; don’t drink it.”

“It’s not dangerous, is it?”

“I don’t think so; Mrs. Jones gave us a recipe and wanted to see a sample when we made it; perfume.” It didn’t look nor did it smell like the attendant would even know what perfume was.

“Alright.”


This is a work in progress. In other news, I’ve become a booktrope author, but more on that latter. It has meant a change in pen-name.

I’m also looking for reviewers for my nearly ready book “The Curious Profession of Dr. Craven” It’s moved out of layout to final assembly, and is now waiting only on the final cover.  There was a bit of a hiccough in production, but that’s sorted out.

Get Free Stuff and try out my landing page. There are two free complete short stories available after you’ve gone through the hoops.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Nightlife in Atlanta #kindle

Nightlife in Atlanta is vampire/sf/aliens book set in modern Atlanta. Not a bad novelette if I say so myself.

Without further ado, here’s chapter one as a teaser. (0.99 and free in KU)

Chapter 1, Brave New World

My department chair called me into his office.

“I have a course for you to teach”

“But I’m teaching a full load already”

“Yes, but you haven’t had much luck with the NSF lately, have you?”

“No”

“So the dean won’t let me keep your teaching load so low.”

“Which one?”

“Jennie needs a new section”

“Not that – vampire science!”

“Well, yes – that”

“No, please -I’ll do double sections of chem 1101 instead”

“You’ll enjoy it”

Vampire science was a popular, if not exactly respectable, course.  So that was that. I’d be teaching which chemical fraction of garlic repelled mythical creatures and which shape of a cross worked best – if it worked at all when the vampires were Jewish.  Actually it could be worse, with the explosion of interest in “alternative science” coupled with the complete lack of interest in real science meant steadily declining interest and research funds.  It was either learn Chinese (their 5 ways of saying “ma” were beyond me), find a real job, or teach vampire science.

So it was off to Jennie’s office to get the syllabus and coordinate lesson plans.  She was looking paler than usual. Her office had changed as well.  When I’d last visited it was a more or less normal chemistry professor’s office – a few knickknacks here and there, but mostly books, files, and papers – covering everything.  Instead, there was a wreath of garlic, a cross, an image of the cross painted in tar on the door, a holly plant, and a rose arranged with Hawthorne on her desk.  All it would take was a vial of holy water and a bit of consecrated host – but Jennie wasn’t Catholic so these were hard for her to get.  She wore a neck brace, but one inlaid with silver crosses and cryptic Transylvanian sayings. Not much to inspire confidence.

She was glad to see me, if for no other reason than that I could take the day classes and let her handle the night-time laboratories.  Lectures in the morning followed by laboratory classes at 10 in the evening quickly grow old. We quickly shifted from the mechanics of the class, since one class is much like another in terms of grades and tests, to the important question of grants and funding.

“You hike a lot the hills in north Georgia, don’t you John?”

“Well, yes”, backpacking was one of the things that kept me sane.  If you want friends in the game of faculty politics and finding funding – get a dog. “I was just up north of blood mountain”

“I can help you put together a proposal on the werewolves out there”

“But there are only black bears – and they’re pretty timid”

“Are you sure?”

“Absolutely – them and the occasional coyote”

“You need vision, John, no one cares about analytical chemistry any longer”

That was for sure.

“But Jennie, there really aren’t werewolves up there, not even a shampe, a chupachonga or big foot or anything.  I put my food in a bear bag and sleep soundly”

“Then you’ve been lucky”

“No I’ve just used good bear country discipline.”

“Well – think about it. You know the NSF will have a name change soon?”

“I’ve heard – National Psychic Foundation? – but that’s a joke”

“It isn’t”

Actually we were both misinformed.  The NSF formed a new directorate, which cannibalized the few remaining funds, the directorate for psychic studies with branches in paranormal creatures, telepathy and telekinesis, and (my favorite) séance science. Why bother with mundane issues like chemistry and biology when there were more exciting and less reproducible things like ghouls, magic and alchemy to study. Didn’t Schrodinger’s cat prove that ghosts could exist? At least as long as you didn’t try to look at them.

As I was leaving Jenny’s office my cell rang. It was my lawyer.

“Well, John, your divorce was finalized today.”

“Oh”

“She gets the house, the best car, and most of your salary”

“But we showed she was the one sleeping around and it was supposed to be an amicable split – we don’t have any children and she has better paying job than me”

“Off the record- I think she slept with the judge.”

“What!”

“He’s married, a pillar of his community and parish, but not above a little on the side”

“Is there anything I can do – any action?”

“No, and I’ll deny what I just said if you make a fuss – Can’t prove it”

“Just a suspicion?”

“It wouldn’t be the first time – now about my fees”

So I was free, at last, free of a real vampire who sucked my life dry, but at what a cost. Fortunately I’d developed a taste for Ramen noodles when a graduate student.

 

Friday started with the normal routine, shower, breakfast and the morning fishwrapper (i.e. the Atlanta newspaper). As usual I started with the obituaries, but no luck, my ex was still living.  Atlanta, being a transportation hub, has an ongoing problem with vagrant or migrant homeless who wander through and seek sustenance by petty theft and major begging. Two headlines caught my eye – The Mayor announced that his plan for controlling the homeless was making progress, and there was a nasty wild animal attack underneath the highway.  No one of importance was killed, but it was pretty grizzly and the police officer who discovered the attack saw a pack of wild dogs or coyotes running from the scene. The one man who survived for a few minutes mentioned something about being attacked – but was clearly delirious and didn’t live long enough to give a clear description. There was another article about trapping coyotes out in Dekalb County, as they had become a local problem – too many pampered pets were disappearing.

 

Off to work and the comfortable familiar lecturing of freshman chemistry, followed by the abysmal experience of “vampire science”. An hour explaining about balancing reactions and stoichiometry, an hour off, and an hour of, quite frankly, bullshit. This class was spent discussing whether the shape of the ends of a cross and its material had any effect on repelling the undead. It was, in my humble opinion a cake of superstition, layered on imagination, iced with make-belief and decorated with B.S. But, of course, I didn’t dare convey that idea to the students – they’d give me bad teaching reviews if I insisted on evidence-based thinking, you know, facts.

 

The students were a varied lot.  About a quarter of them were otherwise serious students, who were taking this class to meet a requirement in humanities or science. It was an easy ‘A’. The rest were true believers who dressed by and large in the Goth style[1]. The serious students sat in the back, smirked and played games on their laptops.  The Goth students sat in the front, riveted.  There seemed to be some divisions among them and they clustered into separate clumps.  I’d long ago learned never to ask questions about the sanity-challenged students.

 

Sanity-challenged was an accurate description of someone. This sanity-challenged individual kept leaving presents for me – presents like a bloody hank of hair wrapped around two chicken bones placed in my faculty mailbox, or a stuffed rat – with bat wings spliced onto it and left staring at me from my office bookcase. A scroll written in a dark brown ink that could be blood. A bundle of thorn bush twigs, wrapped in a dead snake-skin. Pleasant reminders of the less than rational. The campus police, as usual, were less than enthusiastic about finding out who and why. It could always be love messages from the ex.

 

The next few weeks continued in the same vein. Familiar chemistry, followed by crazy talk. The closest “vampire science” ever got to reality was when I gave the one lecture about fractionating garlic juice to find the active compounds. I remarked to the class

“It seems, however, that all the fractions are equally active – no vampires”

The Gothic students were not amused, complained, and I was called to account for my ‘flippant’ attitude.

“Look John”, continued my chair, “I know you’re frustrated but it is quite simple – just teach the course to the syllabus.”

“But it is so wrong – so crazy!”

“Just do it, and anyway now that you’re a free man – you can always chase a little undergrad tail”

“What?”

“Just pick a pretty one – they don’t complain if you give them an ‘A’ and don’t give them the clap”.

Seeing my incredulity, he continued, “Just think of it as a side benefit of teaching – like health insurance”

 

One of the more Gothic of the Goth students came up to me after class.  I was in a bit of a hurry because the weekend promised to be fine weather and a great weekend for exploring the back country. The way things had been going, of late, I needed the break.  No matter what I met, it wouldn’t be my ex or one of her manifold paramours – it got to be embarrassing when you went to a bar and half the men winked at you. It was even worse when you recognized the pole dancer.

“Dr James, I really enjoy your class”

“Thank you”

“Do you believe?”

“No – but this is how I pay the bills”

“You should – they walk at night”

“Who?”

“The night people, the undead, the walkers”

Oh – no, another true believer. Science doesn’t care about belief – it cares about what you can measure and observe.

“The undead, Dr James, they know about you now – so be careful”

I was intrigued, most of the students took this class as a joke – “Zombie U.” an easy A, but the real believers tended to take this seriously and felt they knew more that the professors. Actually, they probably did. Jenny had warned me to pay attention to them – if for no other reason than they might need to be watched[2].

“How do you – know this?”

She pulled the scarf down from her neck and revealed a scar.

“They tell me – ask about class”

Great – another cutter. We’d had a spate of students who dealt with the stress of classes by cutting themselves in various creative ways. There’d even been a campus email about it – warning the faculty to be on the lookout.

“What is that?”

“It’s not my time – so they let me still see the sun.”

I wondered,

“Did you know anything about these”, and pulled my stuffed rat with wings out of the filing cabinet.

She shuddered.

“They want you”

“What does it mean?”

“Was there anything else?”

I showed her my other presents – the hank of hair with chicken bones and the scroll.

She looked at the scroll, unrolled it, and started to read.

“neveah tra ohw rehtaf ruo”

She stopped, staggered and blanched.

“Dr. James – professor – please take care – these are powerful objects. They can harm you.”

 

Speaking of powerful objects, I needed to get more fuel for my stove.  I planned to get out on the trail this weekend and it is a melancholy situation when you can’t cook.  Fuel tablets are the lightest, easiest and cheapest solution for a short trip, and so, of course, the local outdoor shop was down to its last box.

A young woman, clearly another back-country aficionado, and I reached for it.

“It’s mine”, she said, despite my having a solid grip on it.

“Let’s share – I only need a few tablets.”

So carrying the box between us we approached the line at the front of the store. Waiting gave some time for conversation.

“Where are you planning to go?”, she asked

“The Pinhoti – in Alabama – I need some time alone, and you?”

“The smokies, a bunch of us girls from college get together for a reunion.”

“Sounds like fun, by the way I’m John”

“Oh, I’m Brittany”

 

We’d continued in this manner, even after buying and splitting up the fuel tablets. I gave her my card, and added.

“Call me – it would be fun to think about a trip together.”

“I will”

[1]               Black, leather and lace, miscellaneous piercings, pale (if white), and highly contrasting red or black lipstick (even the males).

[2]               It isn’t exactly good for the university if too many of the students commit suicide.