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Month: July 2024

MIMOUNA by Caroline Thomas

PART ONE          THE BOAT

The sun slips down below the curved horizon, painting a path of glowing tangerine across the dark blue sea, illuminating a three-metre diameter inflatable boat bobbing around on the choppy water. Sixteen people are sitting in a circle, their backs pressed against the sides of the fragile vessel. Fourteen of them have their eyes closed. Several of the sleepers are sliding down where they sit, slumping onto the next one’s shoulder; muttering in their sleep; drooling. The fifteenth is beside a small engine bought from fishermen, holding limply onto the miniature wheel. But he’s not steering and the engine is switched off. In his other hand he’s holding something round and shiny. From time to time he stares at it in disbelief. See his pupils. They’re huge like two black planets. See the whites turned pink and veiny. See the sweat pouring down his face despite the chill of the darkening evening.  The 900 milligrams of Lyrica he took before the voyage was supposed to give him stamina and courage. Now the face of his first primary school teacher is looming across the water, duplicated a thousand times, each of them saying,                                                                          “Tarek! Pay attention!”                                                                                                                             He turns away from the faces, looks down into the flat bottom of the boat, where curled up between the sand-encrusted trainers of the sleepers is the puppy he found when he was seven, the one his father drowned.                                                                                                             The sixteenth occupant of the boat is a woman of twenty years. But though her skin is smooth and unlined, there is something ancient within her, not merely traces of ancestral DNA, but something very much alive and kicking. Shadows of frustration and anger flit across her sharp cheekbones, but they’re not the emotions of this bold twenty-year-old, they’re the emotions of an even bolder woman, a leader, a queen. Her name is Tin Hanan.  Since her own death around 1,700 years ago she has been jumping between bodies.                                 Two decades ago, when the mountain dweller who she’d inhabited for ninety one years took her last breath, Queen Tin Hanan, being curious about urban life, flew to the city and chose this about-to-be-born girl, who would be named Yara. But now Tin Hanan is furious. Yara wasn’t supposed to leave the country. The Tuareg queen would never even imagine abandoning the land where she ruled a vast tribe, over thousands of square kilometres of desert. As Yara boarded the inflatable twelve hours ago, Tin Hanan struggled to stop her from getting in, but without success. The young woman had done as she pleased, placing her navy blue holdall with a white stripe between her feet, smiling as she pictured her foul-tempered violent husband awakening to find her gone. And not only her. For inside the holdall with a white stripe is the secret seventeenth traveller, a three-month-old baby girl.                                                                                                                                 The faces of the schoolteacher have sunk into the waves, but the puppy remains, whimpering a little. Tarek tells it to be quiet for it may wake the fourteen sleepers and they‘ll check the time and remind him that he promised they’d reach Spain in two hours, and now twelve have passed. Then he will have to tell them that just after they lost sight of the North African coast he discovered that the compass was broken.

Despair by Zin Shandi

The weight of despair crushed her heart, shattering it into countless tiny fragments that sent waves of agony through her chest with every beat. No matter how much she screamed, the pain refused to release its grip. Drained and overwhelmed by sorrow, she sought refuge in the comfort of her bed, yearning for relief from the cruel sting of separation.

Her tired eyelids pleaded for rest, yet torrents of tears stole her dreams, leaving her eyes wide open, attesting to their collaboration with her heart, transforming her body into a temple of torment. After a fierce inner struggle, Leen finally closed her eyes, surrendering to the prospect of meeting him in her dreams. She found herself poised between wakefulness and slumber, where time seemed to hold no sway over her existence in that state of mind, in that ethereal realm. 

Thought Processes by Sandra Lloyd-Lewis

Prologue

The girl heard the key in the door and her mum stopped singing. ‘Clear that up, love, quickly now’ she said, and the girl started to pile her Lego into a box. Her mum laid plates on the table and pushed her hair back from her face. The girl could tell she was nervous, and her tummy started to feel funny.

Her front door slammed behind her father, and the girl knew it was not going to be one of the good nights. Her mum looked at her with scared eyes and jerked her head toward the hallway. She knew it meant ‘run upstairs’ but she didn’t want to leave her. Her father came into the room looking like thunder and swaying into the doorway. She knew that meant he’d been drinking, and she trembled, she knew this was when he was most dangerous.

Her mum tried to smile and said ‘Shall I put the dinner out?’ and with a mumbled ‘yes’, her father slumped at the table. Her mum served the dinner, with shaking hands. All it took was a splash of gravy landing on his trousers, and the girl knew what was going to happen, like it always did. Her father’s roar of rage, the swinging fist, her mother crumpling to the floor and curling up. But this time was worse, her father wouldn’t stop, and she could hear herself whimpering ‘Please daddy, please stop, please…’ but her father carried on kicking and punching.

A white light grew behind her eyes, a pressure building until her head felt too small and something had to give, she just wanted him to stop, he had to stop, stop, ‘STOP! she  was screaming, and the knife was in his hand and he plunged it into his stomach, again and again and again, he had to stop, stop and the blood was pouring over his trousers, much worse than the gravy and her father fell over onto the floor and she was screaming and crying, snot running down her face, and her mum looked at her father and at the girl and her mum picked up the knife and then there was a policeman and more police and she was so tired and her head hurt so much… she had to sleep…

The Circle of Fifths – Chapter 8. by Jason Davies-Redgrave

“The Coruscation named you human, you became last night’s prize, the final one and so, we hunted you.”

All eyes turned toward the new voice and a figure stepped out from a dark crevice. Emyr pulled his coat closer, Jynn shivered, even The Fang rippled: it was as if the figure took what little warmth was left in the cavern and kept it hidden for themselves.

“Shit,” whispered Jynn. “A Herald!”

8: The Herald

“She was amazing,” The Herald’s edges glistened as it spoke. “Your mother’s gifts were exceptional, her songs like no other, I am sorry that she is no longer with you.”

The glistening edges dulled slightly as the Herald looked into Emyr’s eyes, then the rhythmic pulse of light reasserted itself as it straightened it’s shoulders.

“My love for her will never diminish.”

“Hang on, you, knew her?”

“Emyr, I have known everyone in your line,” it touched Emyr’s shoulder. “I knew your mother from when she was a babe in her mother’s arms, I was there for her first song, I was there the day that you were born and every day thereafter.”

Emyr shivered.

Dark Sun: The Dawn of Earth’s Twilight – Chapter 25. by Martyn Winters

Part 1: I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, but I fear no evil

When they took him to his new cell, nearer the seat of government, Elias was surprised to find it overlooked the Square of Lost Heroes, a place, his studies revealed, which was dedicated to the contemplation of peace. Perhaps they were sending him a signal. Although he was getting used to their arcane way of thinking and doubted such a signal was as superficial as face-value would suggest. Defining the meaning of their message would require much thought.

He sat on the edge of his bunk swatting at the M’lee flies buzzing around in his cell’s thick air, his mind turning in circles of worry, trying to clarify the Moaik’s intent. Peace and acceptance of the misunderstanding would be preferable, but if needs be, he would be the Sword of God.

“I don’t need much,” he had said to Cimvric Ah-Mah when the invitation to attend the court of the Imperatorin came through. “Just a place to sleep, pray, and study.”

Ah-Mah just nodded and left, presumably to make arrangements.

The Imposter by Janet

Sarah and Richard stare numbly at their daughter lying on the hospital bed, tubes and monitors surrounding her, constantly beeping and flashing.

“Take as much time as you need to say goodbye,” the Neurosurgeon said after telling them that Lucy had suffered catastrophic brain damage.

It’s so unfair, Sarah rages internally. Lucy had everything to live for. She’d just graduated from Uni and was about to embark on a traineeship at one of London’s top law firms. A bright, happy and successful future was mapped out for her, she wasn’t supposed to die at twenty-one.

The Fallen Ones (pt. 5) – The Talisman Cont. by CJ

I called on old threads, the sensation of joy and care still clinging to the plant itself even after so many millennia. I rethreaded them into protection, a means to defend myself from the words of others, weaving the charm into its eternal fabric.

Fabric that has now been torn.

I stare at the minor crack in the flower’s protective surface, uncertain of how it was damaged. Perhaps it will cause the petals to rot – death is persistent and it’s possible that the ravages of time might exploit the gap, finally laying claim to its lifeforce.

The Circle of Fifths by Jason

Contents
Quotes*

1: Megan
2: The Ocean and the Stars*
3: The City of the River Fort
4: The Hunted**
5: The Clock Shop**
6: The End of the Ocean*
7: The Cave*

*Additions to the text since last meeting (27/06/24)
**“4: The Hunted” and “5: The Clock Shop” were “Emyr” in the previous incarnation.

Other sections have been edited or had parts re-written for continuity etc.

“For there is a musicke where-ever there is a harmony, order or proportion; and thus farre we may maintain the musick of the spheres; for those well ordered motions, and regular paces, though they give no sound unto the eare, yet to the understanding they strike a note most full of harmony.
Whatsoever is harmonically composed, delights in harmony.”
Sir Thomas Browne
1605-1682

“We did not sense the start of corruption.
Its tempo took hold so quickly and utterly.
It waited patiently in the shadows.
We understood it too late”
from the Preface of Towards a New Grand Composition
from the Conlectoris Family Archive

“Music doesn’t lie.
If there is something to be changed in this world, then it can only change through music.”
Jimi Hendrix
1942-1970

1: Megan

Street upon street of terraced houses are laid out in silent, regimented lines. Rubbish huddles in the damp corners and under the paint-cracked front doors that open directly onto the drab concrete. Front rooms seem permanently barricaded behind cheap curtains and lines of dead flies ranged on the sill like a phalanx of tiny warriors guarding the fortress within.
Anaemic light pulses at the edge of certain windows. The ghostly flickering of late-night electronic distractions numbing the lost, the lonely and the insomniacs with a bilge of entertainment.


Seeming to grow out of the torn rubbish bags and cracked food caddies – old telephone and satellite cables festoon the various ageing facades like undernourished vines dying quietly in the dark. Wires trail lazily from point to point up the tired houses, to the decaying leaves of the satellite dishes and the dry twigs of aerials These dirty vines are stretched across the streets from house to house and then to splintery telegraph poles, carrying with them the sagging webs of lost communication. Rusting downpipes punctuate the grim facades gurgling and spluttering their biliary discharge onto the rain slicked pavements.
Silence and fine rain filled the air, cold and insistent the mizzle would soak a late-night wanderer to the skin in a few deceptive minutes. Tall street lights, haloed with a sickly chemical glow, drape their thin light across the streets, reflected in the rain dappled windscreens and dull headlamps of the myriad cars crowding the narrow roads.
At this late hour these streets should be as empty as the eyes of the dead.
Yet, there they stand.
Each waiting calmly in the middle of a street. Featureless shadows, intensity personified, giving off a brooding potential under the nacreous light.

Andrea 1

I knocked on Mrs Askham’s door, I’d chosen my time well, having watched Mr Askham leave for work as usual. She opened it, and stared at me for long seconds before, grudgingly, it seemed opening it wide for me. I followed her into the kitchen.

‘Tea?’ she asked.

‘No, thank you’ I made it a rule never to take refreshments at a client’s house, especially when I was about to break bad news.

I plopped an envelope on the counter. She looked at it like I’d put a doggy bag of steaming shit on there, which in one way, I had.

Divine by Zin

 Everything was initiated from the divine consciousness, which emanated countless sparks to generate souls and broaden the Divine consciousness. Initially, light souls came into existence, but this alone didn’t suffice to expand the divine, prompting the sparks to grow stronger and produce dark souls. Each group coexisted peacefully within their own domain, engaging in a reciprocal exchange of the creator’s gifts of creation. The light souls were occupied with crafting universes, while the dark souls delved into exploring the darker aspects of these universes.

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