#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 2/22

February 21, 2013

Every Wednesday Rundown Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt challenging writers to create a 100-word story, poem, or whatever works for you.  After posting your work on your blog,  go back to her site and add your link on her Friday Fictioneers post.  Place.  Page.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

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 copyright-janet-webb

The Barn

Two children sit in a barn loft.

“Granpa Wilson demolishing this tomorrow,” he complains.

“Why?”

“Building a new one.”

“After all these years?” she whines.  “Where we gonna play?”

“I’m staying right here.  He don’t scare me.”

“He’s knocking it down ‘cause he hates us playing here.”

He drops from the loft.  “He don’t even know we’re here.”

Sure he knows,” she smiles.  “Hands shaking,” she mimics.  ”Holding his gun when we get too loud.  Let him knock it down.  Ain’t chasing me away.”

Next morning, backhoes dig the foundation, then stop.

“Ho-ly Christ.”

“What’s that?”

“Bones.  Go get Wilson.”

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100 words

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#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 2/15

February 14, 2013

Every Wednesday RenShui Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt challenging writers to create a 100-word story, poem, or whatever works for you.  After posting your work on your blog,  go back to her site and add your link on her Friday Fictioneers post.  Place.  Page.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

As has happened before, I forgot to keep my original version and edits, and I’m kicking myself because of what – I think – would have been educational.  Yeah, but that’s patting myself on the back.

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 dsc04876

11 A.M.

Xi, about half the elderly man’s 80 years, approached slowly.

“Pardon, Sir.  You seem lost.  Can I help?”

“I come each Sunday to remember my son.  Gone 29 years today.  We sailed boats in the fountain, here, especially Sundays.”  Exhale.  ”Now –  I come for memories.”

Xi looked away, then back.  “What happened, may I ask?”

“Foolishly, I hit him for disrespect.”  Eyes distant.  “Then, one morning.  Gone.”

Xi blinked.  “Perhaps he too was wrong.”

“I must go.  My empty house waits.”  The man turned, shuffling from the fountain.

“Sir?”  Xi touched the man’s arm.  “Isn’t it this way?”

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100 words

I did a little playing with words here.  The name of “Xi” was chosen very specifically but also numerically.  I was stuck with what to do about Xi.  I originally thought maybe he would learn a lesson from the elderly man and then go buy a boat for his own son, but that would be too much for only 100 words.  So instead I made him the long-lost son who had come back to find his father.  However, I was worried that it might be too easy for people to figure that out while reading.  But then I thought that there is no reason to be so “mysterious.”  And, more importantly, it felt good to write it that way.

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#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 2/1

January 31, 2013

Every Wednesday Rodin Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt challenging writers to create a 100-word story, poem, or whatever works for you.  After posting your work on your blog,  go back to her site and add your link on her Friday Fictioneers post.  Place.  Page.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

I had some great editing challenges this week, and I’m kicking myself for not saving them for those who like to see the progression.

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 copyright-claire-fuller

The Sculptor

“Sorry.  Haven’t seen them since Tuesday,” The son says.

“Any idea when they’ll be back?” Detective asks.

“Nah.  They’re retired.  Always going places.”  Son washes hands thoroughly.

“Did they say where they’re going?”  Detective scribbles.

“Not usually.”  Son wipes hands on apron.

Detective leans closely.  “What’s this?”

“Soapstone.”  Detective scribbles more.

Son precisely arranges hammers, chisels.

“That’s them.  I’m sculpting my parents .”

“Nice.  So, you’ll call me if you hear from them?”

“Certainly.”

Detective leaves.  Son sits, a drastic grin, exhales.  Then, fist tight, he punches the table.

One chisel is gone.

Detective hurries to his car, pocket slightly heavier.

________________________

100 words


#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 1/25

January 24, 2013

Every Wednesday Roughskin Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt to challenge writers to create a 100-word story or poem or anything that works for you.  After you post your work on your blog,  go back to her site and add a link to your post on her Friday Fictioneers post.  Place.  Page.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

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 ff

Lunchtime in Florida

“Lookit the chest on the blue one!”

“Red bikini got perfect legs.”

“Legs?”

“Yeah.”

“Legs are okay, but I love a big rack.  Watch ‘em bounce when she runs to the water.  Nature’s built-in buoys.”

“You got issues.  Think about where those legs go.  That soft, round, fleshy-”

“You’re into butts?  I thought you meant something else.”

“Wanna get that soft spot.  Can’t wait to taste me some juicy-”

“Shhh.  Calm down.  She’s coming.”

Me calm down?”

“Dude, you’re scaring them.  You come on too strong.”

“Relax.  It’s SpringBreak.  They’re everywhere.  And I’m hungry.”

Two sharks lurked beyond the breakers…

________________________

100 words


#newyorker magazine caption contest #366

January 23, 2013

So, like last time, you can put your caption here as a comment.  But better yet is to click on the picture, go to the New Yorker magazine website, and enter your caption in their contest.

130128_contest_p366

“I dunno, Phil.  I think your tip expectations are a little too high.”

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#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 1/11

January 10, 2013

Every Wednesday Rachmaninoff Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt to challenge writers to create a 100-word story or poem or anything that works for you.  After you post your work on your blog,  go back to her site and add a link to your post on her Friday Fictioneers post.  Place.  Page.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

________________________

copyright-roger-cohen

Showtime

Moments before the 8pm show, tremors shook Karnagee Hall.

Tiny, “IT’S GONE!”

Dust rained in the basement as he stomped his feet.

The stagehand, “We’re looking, Tiny!”

The agent, “Get him a chair!”

The seamstress, “Get him a couch.”

Tiny, “Whaaaa!”

First clarinet, “Please change my seat.”

Tiny, “Whaaaaaaaaaa!”

The conductor, “Keep him quiet!”

“Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!”

The stagehand, “I’ll get tissues.”

The custodian, “I’ll get a mop.”

The seamstress, “Maybe a towel.”

The agent, “Call the producer!”

Tiny stomped harder.

The producer, “Call the carpenter!”

The mover trudged carefully, lugging an oaken cello.

The mover, “Found it!”

Tiny smiled, “My violin!”

________________________

100 words

This would have been a good one for me to have kept track of the revising because I had originally written ...said the agent  and …said the stagehand after each line of dialogue.  Then I realized I could get away with removing “said” from each line because we can tell that it’s being said.  It’s dialogue.  Then I shifted the attribution to be beginning, like a script.  Like this:

Producer:  Call the carpenter!

The problem there was that it did not give me the same visual impact without quotation marks, but I didn’t like having the quotes with the name and colon because it just isn’t the right format.  By moving the quote after the title, it gave the dialogue more impact, which is what really drives this.  For me, it felt like a nursery rhyme, which is kind of what I wanted.


#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 12/28

December 27, 2012

Every Wednesday Renegade Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt to challenge writers to create a 100-word story or poem or anything that works for you.  After you post your work on your blog,  go back to her site and post a link to your blog entry on her Friday Fictioneers post.  Place.  Page.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

coffee_in_mirror_02-1

A Day’s Work

Gray jacket opens French doors, strolls balcony overlooking parade.  Cash-filled envelope in breast pocket.  Sunglasses hide darting eyes, scans crowd for Signal One – black fedora aside mailbox.  Signal Two – fedora scratches nose, crosses street.  Signal Three – gray jacket adjusts tie.  Fedora checks roof, pauses curbside, Signal Four – red bandana.  Behind sunglasses, gray jacket misses Signal Five – blue sneakers untied.  Parade noise covers single pop, envelope of cash fiercely penetrated, turns crimson, gray jacket crumples.

Hour later, black fedora, blue sneakers, red bandana having lunch.  Signal Six – tipped glass.  New waiter brings tainted lemonade.  Signal Seven – fedora checks watch…

________________________

100 words


#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 12/21

December 20, 2012

Every Wednesday Ralphie Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt to challenge writers to create a 100-word story or poem or anything that works for you.  After you post your work on your blog,  go back to her site and post a link to your blog entry on her Friday Fictioneers post.  Place.  Page.

I could not add revisions this week because I had too many things to do today and didn’t have the time to color-code and underline and such.  I wasn’t even sure if i would even write this until late tonight or tomorrow morning.  For those who liked the revisions, sorry.  For those who did not like it, Happy Holidays.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

copyright-scott-l-vannatter

Midnight

Neither moved.

One knew the other.

One – a mysterious, great beast.

Both calculated in milliseconds.

“If I move…”

“What if he tries…?”

Cat – fangs, silent speed.

Beast – far slower, but massive, stronger.

Both – fur, claws.

Both – eyes they’d remember, next time.

Both – determined to reach morning.

Only one absolutely had to get past the other.

Beast slowly extended his arm.

Cat hissed, tail tucked, ears pinned, feet planted, ready.

Cat squinted, focused.

The great beast’s gentle paw, Claus revealed, stroked cat’s head, spine.  Flashing an Elfin smile, the great beast moved past and began his jolly work.

________________________

100 words


#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 12/14

December 13, 2012

Every Wednesday Rocky Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt to challenge writers to create a 100-word story or poem or anything that works for you.  After you post your work on your blog,  you go back to her site and post a link to your blog entry on her Friday Fictioneers post.  Place.  Page.

PLEASE get a good look at the things in the picture before you read the story, or a couple of references might not make sense to you.  Oh, look at me, telling you what to do.  Sorry, sorry everyone.  Got carried away. 

Also – after the story – is a long list of the various versions when I first typed it out.  Each version has some crossouts, things I changed, adjusted, then the next version, and the next.  I tried to change some text colors to make it easier to see where I revised, but for some reason a lot of the changes kept disappearing each time I clicked “save draft.”  Must be a WordPress bug.  It seems I went through about 8 revisions and fine tunings.  I have to admit, I never expected to get some of the praise that comes my way for my effort, but the truth is that all that praise is due to revising, revising, and revising.  So, if you’d like a little writing instruction from someone who has been teaching for about 25 years – don’t rush it.  Take your time.  Examine word choices and phrases to see what you can change but still get the same – or better – meaning with fewer words.  Also sprinkled in there are comments about what I changed and why.  My thanks to the mystery person who suggested that I do this.  If she wants to take credit, terrific, but I usually choose to keep names out of it unless I’m sure they are okay with it.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

photo-15

The List

Nicholas scratches his head, peers at smartphone through half-moon glasses.

“What’s this?”  Whining.

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude sprays whipped cream on hot cocoa.

“They’re too lazy to write?  Sending pictures now?”

“Twitter.”  Sprinkles cinnamon.

“What is all this crap?”

She peeks over his shoulder.  “Laptop.”

“Thanks, Captain Obvious.”

“Shush.”  Glaring, handing the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“The yellow thing with chains?  A bondage device?”

“Enough egg nog, pervert.”

“And that giant globe?”

She squints, shrugs.  “Cow testicle?”

“Bull.”

“Saint Fresh Mouth!”  Slaps him.

“WTF?  Bulls have balls, not cows.”  Pulls on his red hat, heads for the sleigh.

Mutters, “Bitches.”

__________________________

100 words

______________________________________________

now, the revising -

First shot -

A large man scratched his head while peering through half-moon glasses at his smartphone.

“I don’t get it,” he gruffed.

“It’s how they make their Christmas list,” Gertrude said, topping his hot chocolate with whipped cream.

“Pictures?”

“And Twitter.”  Sprinkle of cinnamon.

“I can’t even tell what he wants!  What is all this crap?”

She peeked over his shoulder, same glasses.

“Laptop.”

“I know that one.”

“Quiet.”  Pausing, then handing off the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“What’s that big yellow thing in the back?”

“Not sure, but I saw the elves throwing things at one once.”

“And that big, round thing?”

She leaned closer, shrugged.  “Cow balls?”

107 words

……………………………

 Second try -

A large man Nicholas (name saves two words) scratched his head, peered through half-moon glasses at his smartphone.

“I don’t get it,” he gruffed. (“I don’t get it”  not needed with “What’s this“) “What’s this?” he gruffed.  “What’s this?” Gruffly.

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude topped his cocoa with whipped cream sprayed whipped cream on hot cocoa.

“Pictures?”

“And Twitter.”  Sprinkle of cinnamon.  “From Twitter.”  Sprinkling cinnamon.

“I can’t even tell what he wants!  What is all this crap?” two phrases were redundant, cut one.

She peeked  Peeking over his shoulder, same glasses.  “Laptop.”

“I know that one.”  “Thanks, Captain Obvious.”  more snarky, saved a word.

“Quiet.”  “Shush.” (more in character with an older woman) Pausing with attitude, handing off  over the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“What’s that Big yellow thing in the back.  Bondage device?”

“Not sure, but I saw the elves throwing things at one once.”

“Don’t get your hopes up.”

“No more egg nog for you.”  suggests drinking issue, better than both lines above it

“And that big, round thing?”

She leaned closer, shrugged.  “Cow balls?”  “Cow testicle?” (“balls” is a funnier word, but didn’t want it to get mistaken for “cow bells”)

“Bull.”

“Don’t be fresh.”

“WTF?”  He pulled on his red hat and headed out for the sleigh.

……………………………………

Third try - 

Nicholas scratched his head, peered through half-moon glasses at his smartphone.

“What’s this?” Gruffly.

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude sprayed whipped cream on hot cocoa.

“Pictures?”

“From Twitter.”  Sprinkling cinnamon.

“What is all this crap?”

Peeking over his shoulder, same glasses.  “Laptop.”

“Thanks, Captain Obvious.”

“Shush.”  Pausing with attitude, handing off  over (over seems more reluctant, unwilling but have to do it anyway)  the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“Big yellow thing in the back.  Bondage device?”

“No more egg nog for you.”

“And that big, round thing?”

She leaned closer, shrugged.  “Cow testicle?”

“Bull.”

“Don’t be fresh.”

“WTF?”  He pulled on his red hat and headed out for the sleigh.

……………………………..

fourth try -

Nicholas scratched his head, peered through half-moon glasses at his smartphone.

“What’s this?” Gruffly.

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude sprayed whipped cream on hot cocoa.

“Pictures?”

“From Twitter.”  Sprinkling cinnamon.

“What is all this crap?”

Peeking over his shoulder, same glasses.  “Laptop.”

“Thanks, Captain Obvious.”

“Shush.”  Pausing with attitude, handing over the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“Big yellow thing in the back.  Bondage device?”

“Pervert.  No more Enough (saved a word) egg nog for you.”

“And that big, round thing?”

She leaned closer, shrugged.  “Cow testicle?”

“Bull.”

“Don’t be fresh.”

“WTF?  Cows don’t have balls.”  He pulled Pulling (saving a word) on his red hat and headed heading (saving a word) out to the sleigh.

…………………………………

Make it five -

Nicholas scratched his head, peered through half-moon glasses at his smartphone.

“What’s this?” Gruffly.

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude sprayed whipped cream on hot cocoa.

Pictures?  Too lazy to write?”   “I expected texting, but not pictures.”

“From Twitter.”  Sprinkling cinnamon.

“What is all this crap?”

Peeking over his shoulder, same glasses.  “Laptop.”

“Thanks, Captain Obvious.”

“Shush.”  Pausing with attitude, Slaps him, Evil glare, (trying to save words) handing over the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“Big yellow thing in the back.  “Yellow thing with chains?  Bondage device?”

“Pervert.  Enough egg nog for you.”

“And that big, round thing?”  “And that giant ball?” “And that giant globe?”  trying different versions to see which sounds better while being shorter.

She leaned closer, shrugged.  “Cow testicle?”

“Bull.”

“Don’t be fresh.”

“WTF?  Cows don’t have balls.”  Pulling on his red hat, heading out to the sleigh.

…………………………….

 Not finished yet -

Nicholas scratched scratches (went through the whole thing, changing to present tense, more immediate, might save words too)  his head, peered peers at smartphone through half-moon glasses at his smartphone.

“What’s this?” Gruffly.

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude sprayed sprays whipped cream on hot cocoa.

“I expected texting, but pictures?”  “Too lazy to write?  Sending pictures now?”

“Twitter.”  Sprinkling cinnamon.

“What is all this crap?”

She Peeking peeks over his shoulder, same glasses.  “Laptop.”

“Thanks, Captain Obvious.”

“Shush.”  Evil glare, handing the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“Yellow thing with chains?  Bondage device?”

“Pervert.  Enough egg nog for you.”

“And that giant globe?”

She leaned leans closer, shrugged shrugs.  “Cow testicle?”

“Bull.”  Slaps him.

“Don’t be fresh.”  Slaps him  (just moved it)

“WTF?  Cows don’t have balls.”  Pulling on his red hat, heading out to the sleigh.

……………………………

 Lost count.  Seven?

Nicholas scratches his head, peers at smartphone through half-moon glasses.

“What’s this?” Gruffly.

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude sprays whipped cream on hot cocoa.

“Too lazy to write?  Sending pictures now?”

“Twitter.”  Sprinkling cinnamon.

“What is all this crap?”

She peeks over his shoulder, same glasses.  “Laptop.”

“Thanks, Captain Obvious.”

“Shush.”  Evil glare, handing the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“Yellow thing with chains?  Bondage device?”

“Pervert.  Enough egg nog for you.”

“And that giant globe?”

She leans closer, shrugs.  “Cow testicle?”

“Bull.”

Don’t be fresh.”  “Fresh mouth!”  Slaps him (saved a word)

“WTF?  Cows don’t have balls.”  Pulling Pulls on his red hat, heading out to heads (present tense and saved a word) for the sleigh.

……………………..

maybe eight?

Nicholas scratches his head, peers at smartphone through half-moon glasses.

“What’s this?” Gruffly.  Whining.  (wanted him more complaining than angry)

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude sprays whipped cream on hot cocoa.

“They’re too lazy to write?  Sending pictures now?”

“Twitter.”  Sprinkling cinnamon.

“What is all this crap?”

She peeks over his shoulder, same glasses.  “Laptop.”

“Thanks, Captain Obvious.”

“Shush.”  Evil glare Glaring, handing the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“Yellow thing with chains?  Perhaps a bondage device?”

Pervert.  Enough egg nog for you.”  “Enough egg nog, pervert.”  (saved two words)

“And that giant globe?”

She leans closer, shrugs.  “Cow testicle?”

“Bull.”

“Fresh mouth!”  Slaps him

“WTF?  Cows don’t have balls.” “Bulls have balls, not cows.” (added a word, but clarified too) Pulls on his red hat, heads for the sleigh.

………………………

finished?!

Nicholas scratches his head, peers at smartphone through half-moon glasses.

“What’s this?”  Whining.

“Christmas list 2.0.”  Gertrude sprays whipped cream on hot cocoa.

“Too They’re too lazy to write?  Sending pictures now?”

“Twitter.”  Sprinkles cinnamon.

“What is all this crap?”

She peeks over his shoulder, same glasses.  “Laptop.”

“Thanks, Captain Obvious.”

“Shush.”  Glaring, handing the cocoa.  “Toolbox, tools, bucket.”

“The yellow thing with chains?  A bondage device?”

“Enough egg nog, pervert.”

“And that giant globe?”

She squints, shrugs.  “Cow testicle?”

“Bull.”

“Saint Fresh Mouth!”  Slaps him.

“WTF?  Bulls have balls, not cows.”  Muttering, pulls on his red hat, heads for the sleigh.  Mutters, “Bitch.” “Bitches.”  Stuck here because “bitches” could get confused with all the reindeer.  but “bitches” also makes it sound like santa is complaining about women in general, which is what i specifically want.  tough call.


#fridayfictioneers via rochelle – 11/30

November 29, 2012

 

Every Wednesday Rickenbacker Wisoff-Fields posts a picture prompt to challenge writers to create a 100-word story or poem or anything that works for you.  Then post your work on your blog.  additionally, on friday, you go back to her site and post a link to your blog entry in the comments on her Friday Fictioneers post.

I’m going to try to keep up with this, as should you.  Give it a shot.  I prefer to stick to 100 words, but she doesn’t mind either way.  Not everyone has the time to sit and write, revise, edit, revise, edit, etc. until getting it down to 100 and telling everything you want to tell.

I don’t usually say anything about my own work, but I’m rather proud of this one.

Two things before you read:  1. I’m a stickler for keeping to 100 words, but I slightly cheated.  I wrote “alot,” as one word when it really is two words.  2. I started a sentence with the numerals 2000 instead of writing it out.  Not sure why, just felt like it.  So forgive those technical errors, even though they’re intentional.

 

Christmas

A tall man, burly yet soft, strode alongside his long-haired son.

“I’m having trouble getting used to this.  Not what I planned or expected.”

“Let it go, Dad. We each choose what’s best for ourselves.  You can’t control everything.”

“You sure?” Father smiled.

“Okay.  Shouldn’t control everything.”

“Would be alot easier though.”

“Wouldn’t be fair.  Have patience.  They’ll come around.”

“2000 years wasn’t enough?”

“It’s just a blink.”

“All these lights?”

“Safer than candles.”

“That guy in red looks nothing like me.”

“Let it go, Dad.”

Father exhaled.

“Happy birthday, Son.”

“Thanks. And relax.  You did good.”

WE did good.”

__________________________

100 words


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