Alternative-Read.com: January 2009

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Today's Feature Post

FREE SHORT STORY: That Which is Without Words by Brian Joseph

That Which is Without Words

by Brian Joseph

Strange how a word or phrase used in a certain way can evoke a memory. That is how it was for Marissa as she sat on the beach. It was early Fall and late in the day so there weren't many people around. She sat close to the shore a few feet from the reach of the aftermath of the waves. This was something she did from time to time. It was relaxing to hear the rhythmic sound of the waves interspersed with the occasional cawing of seagulls. Sometimes she would come to this spot to watch the sunrise. It would look like it was rising out of the water out on the distant horizon. But on this day the sun was behind her. She was lost in empty thought and thinking nothing in particular when she heard the voice.

"Joey, Joey !" Marissa looked up and a dog was running towards her. A man was a short distance behind. When the dog reached her the man said, "He doesn't bite." The dog nuzzled her face with his wet nose. He was black and looked to be a Lab or part Lab. Marissa patted him on the back of his head, "Good boy, what a nice doggy you are."

The man said hello to Marissa and then called, "Come on Joey. You got a pet, leave the nice lady alone." The dog frolicked away and continued on his walk.

In her mind's eye Marissa drifted back to a day forty years before when she was six years old and in first grade. Her teacher was Miss Foyer. At that time she was the smartest person that Marissa had ever met. Marissa's father had left shortly after Marissa was born. Her Mom had told Marissa that it was his loss. Her Mom was not very intelligent, not in an academic way. This was more than compensated for by her Mom's generous and caring heart. Her Mom was heart smart.

Miss Foyer seemed to know just about everything and she was also kind and gentle. It was a big city school. The classes were divided up by number. The lower the number the smarter the kids supposedly were. The first grade had classes ranging from went 1-1 to 1-9. Since Marissa had not been to kindergarten they didn't know where to place her. She ended up in class 1-7. Marissa loved learning and thought it a stroke of luck that her teacher was probably the smartest person in the world.

On the day that Marissa was remembering she could see herself at her desk. Miss Foyer had written down an alphabet and word exercises on the chalkboard and the children were to copy it on wide lined paper. Miss Foyer sat at her desk looking through papers as the students sat writing. A few minutes into writing Marissa felt a tear trickle down her cheek. A minute later both cheeks were wet and tears dripped down on her paper. Marissa looked around the room. No one else was crying. She continued to write, having difficulty when the pencil hit the wet spots on the paper. Miss Foyer looked up from the papers she had been reading. She noticed Marissa's tears and walked over to her. " Are you okay Marissa?" Marissa shook her head to say yes. "Do you feel sick?" Marissa shook her head to say no. Miss Foyer picked up the paper that Marissa was writing on and looked at it. "Why Marissa, you are doing a wonderful job! You aren't crying because of this work, are you?" Marissa shook her head to say no and wiped at her cheeks with the tissues that Miss Foyer had given her. Miss Foyer patted her on the back and the tears stopped.

Later that day it happened again. The class was taking turns reading the Alice and Jerry book. Marissa looked around the room again. No one else was crying. The other children were following the words in the book, waiting for or dreading their turn to read aloud. Miss Foyer noticed the tears again and asked the class to read quietly for awhile. She walked to Marissa's desk again. "Marissa, You are one of the best readers in the class. are you worrying about reading out loud?" Marissa shook her head to say no. Then Miss Foyer asked her if her tummy hurt. Marissa shook her head no again. "Do you want to go to the nurse?" Marissa shook her head and said, "I'm not sick." The tears stopped again but they started up again towards the end of the day when the class was singing the song about a farmer who had a dog. When the song ended Miss Foyer walked to Marissa's desk and felt her forehead. "Doesn't feel like you have a fever." She handed Marissa tissues and hunched down. Looking Marissa in the eyes she smiled and said, "You sing so beautiful dear." The tears stopped and turned to a smile as Marissa stared at Miss Foyer's smile.

The school day ended at 3 o'clock, the same time that Mom got out of work. It was a fifteen minute walk from Mom's work to the school so Marissa was usually one of the last kids picked up. She would stand in front of the school and wait. On that day she noticed Miss Foyer standing inside the school looking out through the part of the door that was glass. When Marissa's Mom arrived Miss Foyer walked outside and asked her if she had some time to talk. All three walked back into the school. Miss Foyer and her Mom went into Miss Foyer's classroom while Marissa stood in the hall looking in through the narrow strip of glass on the closed door. Marissa thought it looked a bit funny to see her Mom sitting on the chair beside Miss Foyer's desk. It was the chair where students sat when Miss Foyer graded a paper or gave individual help.

After a few minutes Miss Foyer came to the door and asked Marissa to come in. Miss Foyer sat at her desk while Marissa stood beside her Mom. "Marissa, I've been talking with your Mom about your crying today. You said you weren't sick. Did you feel sad today Marissa?" Marissa shook her head to say no and softly said, "Your sad." Miss Foyer gave Marissa a quizzical look. "Why do you think that I'm sad?" Marissa shrugged her shoulders and hesitantly asked, "You lost something?" Miss Foyer's expression changed to one of dismay. "Why Marissa, you are a very special little girl."

Miss Foyer lifted Marissa onto her lap. She opened the clasp on her pocketbook and removed a photo. It was a picture of Miss Foyer hunched down beside a black Cocker Spaniel. Marissa smiled, "He looks like Jip." Jip was the dog in the Alice and Jerry reader. "Yes he does Marissa. His name is Joey." Marissa looked at the big smile on Miss Foyer's face and whispered, "You love him." Miss Foyer's eyes got a little glassy. "Very much. You see Marissa I don't have any children. Joey is like my baby." Marissa noticed a tear start to trickle down Miss Foyer's cheek. Marissa's eyes started to tear. "Did he get lost?" Miss Foyer's tears became more than a trickle as she said, "Joey went to heaven yesterday."

Marissa stared intently into Miss Foyer's eyes and began to cry as she smiled, the same as Miss Foyer was doing. Marissa's Mom sat quietly watching. Later she was to tell Marissa that her facial expression became the same as Miss Foyer's. Miss Foyer passed some tissues to Marissa and took a few for herself. "Why Marissa, how did you know that I was sad today?" Marissa wiped at her tears, smiled and said, "I felt your sad." Miss Foyer gave her a surprised look, "You are a very special little girl." When Marissa and her Mom were leaving and half way to the door Miss Foyer called Marissa's name. When Marissa turned around Miss Foyer held the picture in her outstretched hand. "Would you like to have this picture Marissa?" Marissa walked back to the desk. "But its yours." Miss Foyer smiled , "I have plenty more Marissa. You keep this one."

That wasn't the first time that Marissa had such an experience. It wasn't only sadness that she could pick up on. There were all different kinds of feelings that she could pick up on. To her it was a normal thing and part of who she was. To others it was somewhat of an oddity. There were times when she would mention what she picked up on to people and they would be frightened or embarrassed as if they had been caught picking their nose. Most people were not like Miss Foyer and more than once Marissa heard, "What are you crazy?" Once a neighbor yelled at Marissa and some other kids for writing with chalk on the sidewalk in front of the neighbors house. When the other children walked away Marissa asked the women what she was unhappy about and the women responded with, "You are a very friggin weird kid." Experiences helped Marissa to bury her gift. The final nail in the coffin was when a young child in the neighborhood died after falling out of a third floor window. Marissa was ten years old. The funeral home was packed with people. Though her 'gift' had faded the collective sadness of those present filled her and she ran out the door. The funeral home was loaded with flowers, more flowers than Marissa had ever seen in one place. She had loved the smell of flowers but after that they became the smell of intense sadness and she came to be repulsed by the smell of flowers.

By the time Marissa was twenty years old the gift had become a distant, almost forgotten memory. That changed one day when she was surfing. There was a storm on the way and the waves were high. She couldn't resist. One moment she was on top of a large wave and the next moment she was off the board and it smashed into her head. The next thing she knew was that she felt like she was moving through a tunnel. Then she heard a once familiar voice. "Why Marissa, now you've gone and lost something." Marissa spoke back, "Miss Foyer where are you?" There was a sound like a bunch of birds chirping in the background then she heard Miss Foyer's voice again. "I'm with Joey. What you lost came from God, like everything else, like Joey, like flowers." The chirping sound grew louder and an intense white light became all that there was. Then next thing Marissa heard was the sound of someone yelling, "She's alive, she's breathing." Later she was to find out that the tether connecting her ankle to her surfboard saved her. When the board washed into shore it had pulled her along. She was dragged from the surf by two surfers one of whom was a medical student who performed CPR.

When Marissa told a doctor at the hospital of her experience he told her that the mind can play all sorts of tricks and that it sounded like a dream. Marissa did know that she could feel a small kernel of the gift. She could remember what it had been like. When the hospital chaplain checked in on her he left a small bible. It had a built in red strand cloth bookmark. Later in the day she picked it up off the nightstand and opened it to the page where the bookmark was. As her eyes fell upon the page she read what was to become one of her favorite bible passages. The apostle Paul's 1st Corinthians 13:11&12

"When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things. For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known."

During the weeks that followed the accident Marissa's longing for the return of her gift grew greater. And the more she longed the more the kernel grew. She eventually recovered it. It wasn't quite the same as before. She had more control over it. She likened her early experiences to a child learning to walk, a bit clumsy, and not quite mastering it. Now she could. When she wanted to turn it down she called it putting her antennas down. She was quiet about it most times. She didn't generally tell people all that she felt. It could frighten some. It wasn't like she could read minds or know what people were thinking. It was feeling what they were feeling. This allowed her to say things to people that most others could not get away with. It was also difficult for people to successfully lie to her but she rarely confronted anyone and almost all of the time just played along. Marissa came to realize that the gift came from Love. The more she loved the more she could pick up on how others felt.

This empathic perception was not imagining how she would feel if she were in the other person's situation. That would sympathy. It was feeling what the other person felt in their situation, not what she herself would feel in that situation. One of her favorite Rumi quotes was, "I have heard it said that there can be a window from one mind to another, but where there is no wall there is no need for fitting a window or fastening a latch." Marissa could look in windows. Sometimes it was as if she could enter the house. What she felt a lot in others was fear. Most people had a portion of it. Some were full of it and didn't even know. To them it was normal. Her meditation teacher had likened it to love and fear being on a see-saw. The more fear went down the higher love rose. The more fear rose the lower love went.

Two years after her near death experience Marissa traveled across the country back to her old neighborhood. She stopped by her old school and asked if Miss Foyer was still there. The secretary in the office told her that Miss Foyer had died of breast cancer about four years before. At times Marissa had wondered if Miss Foyer's voice had been real or just something in her head. After much wondering she realized that the whole thing was in her head. It was real for her. She came to love the smell of flowers and sometimes called them the smell of God's Love. She sometimes referred to the period of time that her gift had been buried as the dark years.

Marissa's reminiscing was interrupted by the wet nose of a dog sniffing at her cheek. She patted his head and he sat beside her. The man who had been walking him was not far behind. "Lets go Joey. I see you got another pet." She watched as they walked down the beach. Then she sat and listened to the sound of the waves and thought of how everything in existence existed in the largest house, the house without walls, a never ending project of the Architect present as Its Creation. Tears streamed down her cheeks as she raised her antennas full mast and once again felt That Which Is Without Words.

A few minutes later she walked towards where the car was parked, feeling grateful that the "friggin weird kid" was now a friggin weird adult. She started the car, looked through her CD case, put George Harrison's Somewhere In England in the player, and listened to That Which I Have Lost.

Brian Joseph is the author of the mystical musical novel,The Gift of Gabe. More of his short stories can be found at http://www.giftofgabe.com/

If you would like to see your story here so it is available as a FREE READ online please email Sassy.Brit@ gmail [dot] com. If successful, you could be a featured author with your own bio page.

THE 1ST AR ROUND ROBIN STORY!

The 1st Round Robin Story

Below is an Alternative-Read with a difference. It's our 1st ever AR Round Robin Story - written by the authors of our Yahoo group. To take part just join our group and add your name to the list. Once confirmed as the next person to write (by Sassy) you can follow on with the story where the last person left off. The ulitmate goal is to have a complete story made available as a free read on this site, with the final edited copy being made into a PDF to giveaway in order to help promote both AR and each participant of whom their contribution will be credited (bylines and bios) at the end of the story. Finally, please be aware that as a contributor you must be happy with the copyright being handed over to AR.

Thank you! Now, grab a cuppa, sit back and enjoy - the 1st ever AR Round Robin Story. (The working title -- subject to change).

The Beginning...

From his perch high within the shadows of the church steeple, he waited, listened and observed. Moonbeams illuminated the land and intensified the silhouettes. Fallen leaves swirled and danced amidst the shadows. Playful wind tiptoed across the water and skated through the darkness. Darkness. It was what the humans called it when night fell, when their sight was inhibited, when they huddled in fear. Darkness was what his kind called peace, a moment of silence, a chance to breathe undisturbed. For those who breathed anyway. A smile tugged at his lips then faded. Something slinked closer.

Ignoring that something, he raised his head and slowly drew in a deep breath. Her. Forged in his mind like an unspeakable act, her scent lingered, caressed, devoured. The past gnawed, the present teased and the future toyed. A shift in his black duster whispered against his powerful thigh as the leather slid down and lightly flapped in the soft breeze that announced its occasional presence. Strands of unbound silver hair played with the wind then tickled his cheek. It reminded him of her silken caresses. Every move slow and deliberate, he tucked the wayward wisps behind his slightly pointed ears. Longing for her touch stirred.

Black leather boots murmured as he stood and faced the night. Yes, face the night. It was what he was bred to do, loved to do, needed to do. Predator and prey. Hunter and target. His target was out there somewhere in the night. In the darkness. Alone. Unprotected.

“She curses you to ends of the earth, sire.”

He refused to answer.

“She thinks your kind is the scum of the earth, my lord.”
“Hush.”


“I knew you’d respond.”


“Be silent or I’ll silence you, wretch.” He turned his head and leveled an icy steel grey gaze on the something that slinked to his side. “Never forget I am not your sire.”

“But her—”

“She is my concern. I will find her.” He faced the empty night. Rest assured, I will find you, woman. The fact her scent lingered meant life still beat in her veins. It was the end of that scent he feared above all else. Even death. Unsure what might happen if she fed, he had to find her because that which bit her was no normal creature. No normal were, vamp or beast indeed.

“Why do need a Werewolf to hunt her? They are evil.”

“Not all of them. Some are no different than us…” He broke off mid-sentence and looked on the pathetic servile creature seated beside his foot.

“I take no offense, my lord. That you allow this privilege is more than I have the right to even dream of. If I dreamed.”

“Your loyalty gives you the right to be where you are. It takes a Werewolf to find something that lurks in the shadows, hunts at night and sleeps through the day.” His burden heavy, he again faced the night and sighed. One day you will dream.

A shiver glided down his spine as the scene flooded his mind. No sooner had he passed the house than an ear-piercing scream rent the air. He crashed through the living room window, did a quick shoulder roll and came to his feet in a ready stance. The sight of the sickly misshapen beast, its jaws sunk into the struggling redheaded woman’s arm, earned not only his growl, but the plunge of his lowered shoulder into the beast’s own. With the vicious animal knocked aside, he froze as it dashed through the shattered window and into the night.

Pursuit of the horrid fiend crossed his mind, until a feminine moan garnered his attention. In that split second, his world changed. Pursuit equaled no less than the death of the attacked redhead whereas tending her wounds required his blood and meant her future. He took the time to close her wounds, feed her from his wrist and help her through the next few weeks. A bond of trust formed between them during the time he watched over her.

Fate interceded three nights ago after he left to verify the rumored reports local authorities discovered a dead monster. That mere glimpse at a mangle corpse was all he needed to recognize what he once hoped never to see again. He dashed home, but it was too late as that two hour excursion was all his little she-beast needed to escape.

Back in the moment, he crouched down in the shadows of the steeple to await the one Werewolf he trusted above any other to help. Yes, her future hung in the balance of whether he found her before the others or not. But her future as what? And for how long? The woman who once trusted him enough to help her over her attack now prowled the shadows, her mind agonized confusion, her wits lost, her sanity in the balance.

Chapter Two



Huddled inside a thicket, she watched as creatures went past, oblivious to her presence. It would be so easy to jump out and attack them.
No!
And just why not? I am hungry and they would satisfy me much better than those tiny creatures in the cave.

At this point, her mind became confused. There was a good reason she shouldn¿t attack these creatures but she couldn¿t remember why anymore than she could remember what kind of creatures these were. She only knew these two voices inside her head that would not quit arguing with each other. So far, the one that says no, has been the strongest and guided her actions. However, the one that wants to attack is gaining strength.

The breeze shifted directions for just a moment, bringing with it a scent that sent shivers of both pleasure and fear. She knew this scent. It belonged to a creature she had once trusted, but now hated and feared. If this creature caught her, it would kill her. It would have to kill her, as it would never trust her again. Why should it trust you? You don¿t trust it. This thought ran briefly through her mind before confusion wrapped around her like a cloak. Her body operated purely by instinct. When there were no creatures in sight, she left the thicket and headed for the copse of trees that surrounded the area.

Contributors


Story started by Paula Calloway
http://www.paula-calloway.com

Bo Perkins
http://www.alternative-read.com/arediting.htm

Your name?

Your link here?

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The Desk Dare Challenge!

The Desk Dare Challenge

Part of my MySpace Project: Sassy's Desk Dare Challenge
http://www.myspace.com/sassy_brit


Whatever sort of person you are we'll be able to tell just by looking at your desk. This is your space and it says a lot about you. It's where authors create their masterpieces, churning out thousands of words from the depths of their imaginations just for you to read, enjoy and escape from reality. In my book, that's quite an achievement.

If you have a computer at home this could be where jobs are completed, money is earned and friendships are made. And if you are not working but should be, behind all those open windows you're probably playing games, sending instant messages to your friends or reading eBooks.

Are you are student studying through the night? By your text books we could probably work out what you are studying and how much coffee you are drinking to help stay awake.

If you work in an office are you the one with the private room, sofa bed, expensive rug, drinks cabinet and a hidden button under the desk that opens a trap door in the floor to get rid of those annoying little employees that keep coming to you with their nonstop nagging complaints?

Maybe your desk is in a secret location, an empty warehouse perhaps? You could be planning the next big greatest train robbery and mistakenly left the plans laid out on the table. Or maybe not. We'll just have to wait and see what you send in.

I love the fact that some desks are personalised, adorned with novelty items that have the underlying message of 'Keep off' and 'Mine!' Especially in large offices. Your territory is marked with ornaments that have meaning. Photos, stuffed toys, action men, cards, calendars and desktop games all tell us something about your personality. This is where you probably spend most of your time so it's inevitable your physical space will be crammed with memories of people and places that hold a special place in your heart.

On the walls are good luck charms, inspiring quotations from your heroes, postcards from far away destinations and pictures to aid positive visulisation techniques. Paintings and drawings by you, or your favourite artist. Framed awards are evidence of your determination, intelligence and achievements. All these things scattered on and around your desk make it yours. They are part of you, your lifestyle and represent what you believe in and what sort of person you are, or perhaps aspire to be.

We can see if you are a tea drinker, a webcam fanatic, what sort of pens you like to write with, what you eat, and sometimes even what you are working on.

Are you messy? Is your desk one big jumbled up heap, but move anything and it's lost forever? Or are you a believer that a tidy paperless desk leaves you more room to be creative and able to get things done and goals achieved?

See what I mean? I could go on forever about the wonders of what a desk holds. Don't even get me started on what type of desk floats your boat! I could, however, just be a nosy old bird, but to be honest I'm not the only one. Mention an author has sent in a picture of their desk, and just see how many readers flock to check what books stand proudly on their shelves, what their room and computer is like and hopefully if there is any sign of what is install for the next big blockbuster of a novel.

Interested? You don't have to be rich and famous to send a picture of your own desk in. Although you might be, if not now, one day in the very near future.

So what are you waiting for? Take a picture and send them in to DESKDARE@gmail.com, with a few lines about yourself, and links to your website. Then stay tuned. If successful you could see your desk on the Alternative-Read blog, MySpace and on the AR Flickr Photo site. (All credits are given to the person who sent in the photos, and can currently be found on the Flickr page. Soon to all appear on the blog.

Before you go and start snapping, please see read the information below just so we know we are on the same page.

Please ensure that by sending in your picture you are aware that you are also agreeing for AR to use your photo elsewhere, and that you are allowing us to have permission to do so.

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