Monday, September 12, 2011

Part IX is open & Part VIII posted

EDITED: The incorrect entry was originally pasted into this blog post.  This has been updated.  Thanks!





Deadline for submissions for Part VIII is: Saturday, September 24, 2011 at 11:59 PM, Eastern Time.  

Visit this post for more information on submitting content. 





Part VIII has been added to the Google Document.  You can click to read the entire story or scroll down to read this week's submission.

There was one submission this week - by 
Maria Fisher

*~* 



“She held the hat directly in front of me, showing me white satin interior, then turned it around and put it on her head.”

“‘I’m thinking of something’ she said, tapping the hat with a short-nailed finger. ‘You will see.’”

“I shivered then, the way you do right before a sneeze. She took off the hat, flipped it toward me, and inside was a large, round gold coin.”

“‘You take,’ she said. I reached for it, but the weight was all wrong, like it was made out of wood.”

“‘Chocolate,’ she said, and laughed. ‘It is my favorite. The only thing I can make.’”

“I opened the foil wrapper and took a bite. It was fantastic chocolate, rich and smooth with a slight cayenne kick at the end.”

“‘It’s a cute trick,’ I said, but I’m not much of a magic man.”

“‘You try it,’ she said. ‘Try now.’”

“I shook my head but put the hat on anyway.”

“‘Now, think of something,’ she said. ‘It has to be what you love most of all, but it can’t be a living thing. Those do not work.’”

“I thought about my father then. About the evenings on the porch when I was a child. We sat around his feet listening to the adults talk, listening to the radio play the ball game or the radio shows. But my favorite was the music. Sometimes my father would sing along, his voice a strong low bullfrog call in the night.”

“Rita shivered. ‘It is done,’ she said. I took off the hat, and looked inside. There at the bottom was a fine silver comb.”

“She looked at the comb then at me. ‘You want to be...’ she waved her hands vaguely at her head ‘... hair … cutter?”’

“‘Well, no ma’am,’ I said, chuckling. ‘I’ve always hoped to be a musician.’”

“Rita furrowed her brow for a moment. ‘Can... piene... play music?’”

“'Yes, I suppose, when held to a newspaper,'” I told her.

“‘Ah,’ she said. ‘You play this then. Very good music come from this.’”

“You’re letting me keep the comb?” I asked. “Si. Comb, hat, it is for you. But now you go.”

“She’d given me a good story to tell and a very fine comb I was sure I could hock for a week’s pay, so I left. I liked Rita, although how a housekeeper ever picked up such subtle slight-of-hand, I couldn’t imagine.”

“Did you ever play the comb with a newspaper?” Shannon asked.

“Well, now, that’s a funny story, too.” Nomad replied.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Part VIII is open & Part VII posted

Deadline for submissions for Part VIII is: Saturday, September 10, 2011 at 11:59 PM, Eastern Time.  

Visit this post for more information on submitting content. 



Part VI has been added to the Google Document.  You can click to read the entire story or scroll down to read this week's submission.

There was one submission this week - by 
Rob Ferguson

*~* 

“I give to you the magic.”

“What?”

“Si, it’s magic I give to you. Come, follow me.”

She started walking away but I just stood still, dumbfounded.

“Come, come,” Rita insisted, motioning me forward with her hand. Curious, I followed. She lead me
along more narrow hallways and dusty old passages that smelled of moldy potatoes. After several
twists, turns, and long straight passages, Rita stood infront of an old white door. The white paint of the
door was chipped and pealing in long curling strips that exposed a dark, redish-brown undercoat. Rita
stood in front of the door with her hand on the knob. “This is the room I stay,” she said in her heavy
accent. “Please, you wait me here.” Rita opened the door, darted over the threashold and close the
door with a quick snap. I heard shuffling and the sound of what I assumed to be boxes or crates being
pushed along the floor. I could make out a few words as I heard her mumbling in Spanish: “Mala. Verde.
Aciago.” Eventually she emerged from the room. Even in the dim light of the hallway I could see beads
of sweat on her forehead and upper lip. She was breathing heavily and forced herself to smile. “AquĆ­,”
she said, extending her hands forward. “For you.” In her hands she held this green bowler (Nomad
tapped the hat he now wore). I just looked at her, and laughed.

“Uh huh,” I said. “I suppose this is a magic hat?”

“Magic! Si, it’s magic. For you, for you. Now you leave and never come back.” Rita literally put her hand
on my back and started pushing me up the passage from which we’d just came.

“Sorry, sister,” I said, resisting her. “I’ve seen plenty of strange things in my day, but I’m not one to
believe in magic.”

“This hat is magic,” Rita insisted. “Here, I show you.”