Thursday, December 13, 2007

Christmas Letter

‘Twas a dark and stormy afternoon (I jest not) as the scribe sat down, mug of tea beside her, to write a letter to her fairy godmother. Sleet and hail lashed alternately at the window, filling the room with a soggy drum-roll in place of light. Atmospheric, she thought. A bloody nuisance, because writing in the gloom can, as every writer knows, give you a stonking headache, but atmospheric all the same.

Dearest Fairy Godmother,

she began.

I hope that this yuletide greeting finds you in good health and spirits.

She paused, sucking on the end of her pen, pondering a decent beginning, because Fairy Godmothers are the sort to notice these things. The standard launch into the mundane trivia of life just wouldn’t do. She wondered whether the Fairy Godmother would appreciate sensationalised tales of Washing-up Mountains, of Essays Worse than Death, of Extra-curricular Quests which suck the very life from you until you wonder, as 100 school-kids pounce upon you, screeching wildly, why, exactly, you put your name forward. No, she decided, perhaps not. Although it would be rather closer to the truth than might be imagined. And yet, she couldn’t tell of buses which never arrived on time, or relaxing evenings in the student union with new-found friends; it would not make for a thrilling read. It would, in fact, be almost as heinous as ’all going swimmingly, here’ or some such tosh. But that was the thing. Apart from essays of doom, and organisational headaches, it was going swimmingly. Even the Attack of the Minors had been fun. They’d been terrified by her spectre-voice.

The writer sighed. It wasn’t easy, living up to creative expectations.

Outside, the sky had darkened further, tendrils of moist, black cloud reaching towards the warm, candle-light glow of the city’s buildings. Pressing her nose against the pane, she peered across the rooftops at the barely visible wind-bowed trees on the skyline, and shuddered; anyone out there was in for a rough ride. The phrase ‘weather here gloomy as ever’ flashed across her mind for an instant. She banished it to the cerebral recycle bin.

Back at her desk, she contemplated sketching out the characters in her new life – from the dumpy lecturer who’d trail off into a critique of fantasy novels and star-trek incidents at every opportunity, to the technophobic tutor who had, at the start of term, blown the projector instead of switching on the lights. But there were libel issues. Her friends might have fewer objections, perhaps, but the writer was sure she couldn’t do them justice.

She stared into ethereal space, awaiting that crashing block of inspiration. None came. She thought upon Christmassy things, the joy of which she hoped to bundle into her message. She thought of mince pies, and mistletoe and laughter, and enough snow to merit the season, without delivering hazard to the community. She thought of fireside tales and warmest wishes.

Warmest Wishes,

She wrote, hoping that the rest of her Christmas tableau would ooze wordlessly from the page. Fairy Godmothers got that sort of thing, right?

She scrutinised the page. Pretty standard stuff, and not nearly as informative as she’d hoped. Still, it’s the intent that counts. She read it again, and wasn’t satisfied. But the post would be collected any minute, and she still had to find her scarf, and the stamps, and...

She signed.

Your Fairy Goddaughter

And, in a flash of revelation, quickly but carefully inserted one last line above ‘warmest wishes’:

All going swimmingly here.

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Perspective Demo

Everyone knows the story of Red Riding Hood, right? And most of us would agree that the wicked wolf meets a deservingly horrible end. But what if I told you this version of events instead?

(credit to Richard Oxenham for the ending paragraphs!)

Maximus’ stomach growled viciously, for all the rabbits had been caught in the humans’ snares, and there was little left for an old wolf to eat. He’d eaten so little, in fact, that his ribs showed through his unkempt fur.

He’d tried rooting through the waste-bins of the people’s cottages, for the food they didn’t want, but he was spotted, and one of them aimed a gun at him. The shot had made such a racket that Maximus’ heartbeat was racing for hours. He’d avoided their buildings for quite a while after that, but it was getting to the point that, if he didn’t eat something, he would surely die.

He wandered along with his nose low to the ground, desperately sniffing for a tasty morsel, but there was none. Until, that is, he caught a whiff of something sweet and juicy. Instinct kicked in, and his snout followed the trail, weaving in and out of the trees until he reached a clearing.

Maximus skidded to a halt; in front of him stood a charming little cottage, with roses trailing over the doorway, and a thickly thatched roof. And on the windowsill, sat a steaming pie, with gravy bubbling from the top. Oh, it smelt good. Maximus’ mouth watered, as he cowered behind a particularly large tree. There could be a man with a gun in there. For ages, Maximus slunk around the edge of the clearing, getting hungrier and hungrier until he could bear it no longer.

Quickly, he darted out from the trees and leapt at the window-ledge to snatch the pie in his teeth.

Clonk.

A heavy pan swung out of nowhere at the wolf’s head, and he crashed to the floor in a heap

“That’ll teach you, coming after my pie!” the old woman exclaimed, shaking her fist at him angrily.

Dazed, the wolf tried to crawl away, but the old woman had hitched up her skirt and launched herself towards him, raining him with blows as she chased him towards the ring of trees.

Now, Maximus would have preferred to slip away, tail between his legs, even if it meant giving the old lady the satisfaction of victory, but that was not going to be an option; she had murder in her eyes.

Maximus weaved in-between trees, avoiding her heavy swings and soon enough, the overweight woman began to tire. She began to wheeze and Maximus slowed and turned around.

“I’ll get you!” The old woman belched.

Maximus wondered how many pies she had ate to get that large. He wondered how many she could have shared. Maximus felt something snap inside him and the old woman began to resemble a giant, steak pie. Maximus barred his teeth, snarled and paced forward.