
(Photo: Jim Moore)
He now possesses
Every want:
A hat, a sweet
Face coat.
For Sammi’s Weekend Writing Prompt: Possess in 11 words

(Photo: Jim Moore)
He now possesses
Every want:
A hat, a sweet
Face coat.
For Sammi’s Weekend Writing Prompt: Possess in 11 words

She always knew the road could end.
Rickety throughout, it got almost impassable in places. It was a folly, she’d been told. A fool’s errand. Doomed to fail.
The way had never been fully completed, quite possibly never fully traversed. So many had abandoned it that there would be no rest stops, no soft places to lay one’s head.
Indeed, each step confirmed the lack of maintenance.
Still, it was her path to take, her journey to attempt.
And when she faced the maw, the utter void of all support, she knew.
She could turn back.
Or she could leap.
For Rochelle‘s Friday Fictioneers
Photo Prompt: © Alicia Jamtaas

Heart Stone was in the path so people would slow pace as they neared Sentinel Rock.
It was a caution.
And a point of respect.
One did not pass by without giving Sentinel Rock at least that much in respect, and almost all knew better than to try and trick the ancients.
Oh, you could gallop past without a care in the world, but care was sure to catch up with you soon enough: A broken foot, a crack in your mount’s hoof, an ache that kept you up at night and led to carelessness the next day or the one after.
Heart Stone was there for a reason, and only fools rushed in.
Fools like him.
He should have known better.
Now he nursed a bee sting in a place no bee should sting, and he had no one to blame but himself for the carelessness and the ensuing punishment.
He told no one. Ashamed at his foolery.
Tossing in distress upon his pallet he pledged to pay his respect the very next day, and to bring with him an offering. He should have known.
Sentinel Rock saw everything, and Heart Stone kept no secrets. Stone spoke to stone.
On the other side of the hut his grandmother placed her hand upon the rock wall’s foundation and sighed in quiet realization. It was the price of youth.
She knew.
Long ago she, too, had to learn to heed the ancient’s lessons and slow her pace to match. Her crooked wrist still carried her own scars of hard earned wisdom.
For Sue Vincent’s Write Photo
Photo: Sue Vincent

(Photo: Dustin Humes on Unsplash)
She knew when she opened the window
That day
That it would be
One
For the way.
The frost on the petals
The chill in the air
The way that stray branches
Scraped against the stair.
The breath of new winter
Kissing her hair.
For the dVerse quadrille challenge: Way

He didn’t think much of the place at first. A chance to put his head down at night under more than just the stars or rain or ice. A plot of land to grow some food on. A space to store the crops and foraged goods that would hold him through those seasons when there was far less available that required far more effort to find.
The paperwork bequeathed him the abandoned croft and several boggy acres around it. The right to hunt and fish. The responsibility to repair and maintain the stone walls and the property, now a historical site, without altering the landscape.
“No villas, no mansions. No golf courses,” the solicitor had stated, only half in jest.
“No worries,” he’d answered.
All he ever needed was a room, a roof, a hearth.
And solitude.
For sanity.
Crowds made his belly flutter and his ears ring and his feet fidget with an ache for fleeing. The chatter made him cringe. The swift ticking of clocks made his heart skip some if its own beats.
The open spaces slowed his panic.
Calmed the bickering voices that would otherwise ricochet between his ears.
He built. He farmed. He slept. He woke. He walked.
He didn’t think much of the place at first. Then the old house became a home, the plot of land became his gem, and the hills became both fort and fortitude.
His very spirit soothed.
For Sue Vincent’s WritePhoto challenge – Welcome back, Sue, we missed you!
(Photo credit: Sue Vincent)

(Photo: Michael Carruth on Unsplash)
They stumbled
Broken
On the wind,
Dragging behind
A shattered wing.
Still chanting with
The roar of
Mobs,
Dispersed a faction
That from the
Truth’s been
Robbed.
Their memory
Fogged
By lie’s
Remorse,
Will they attempt to
Correct course?
For Sammi’s Weekend Writing Prompt: Faction in 39 words

“Is he asleep?” Andy’s small head spun toward Elisha’s, but only for a second. The boy did not dare, or couldn’t bear, to look away. What if in the one second that he wasn’t looking, he would miss a blink?
Elisha shook his head, and Andy, eyes already on the ice, felt more than saw the movement. He shuddered in part-awe, part-terror.
The last time they met was in summer, when Uncle Morris and Aunt Samantha came with Elisha for a visit. Andy hadn’t quite believed Elisha’s stories about ponds that swallowed giants and ensnared them under icy waters, leaving them forever blinking at the sky.
The eye, however, proved it.
“Can he come out?” Andy croaked. His throat felt frozen.
“Not before spring,” Elisha soothed, sated by his younger cousin’s fear and feeling a tad guilty for it. “And you’ll be home and far away from here by then.”
For Crispina‘s Crimson’s Creative Challenge

The audience filed in. Excitement filled the air. A buzz of swishing coats and hushed conversation. Flash of cameras.
A few fans sidled reverently to the still-empty stage.
“I see his water bottle!” Millicent pointed.
“I know!” Brenda answered breathlessly.
The two grabbed hold of each other, starry-eyed with anticipation.
Their idol.
They could hardly believe they were about to breathe the same air as he.
A curse sounded. A figure stumbled into sight. Two men rushed behind to all but drag it back offstage.
“Could it…?” Brenda whispered, crestfallen.
“No!” Millicent demanded. “He won’t. Let’s find our seats.”
For Rochelle’s Friday Fictioneers

(Photo: Karen Forte)
At the very fringe
Of hope,
And even as embers
Of warmth
Barely flickered,
A marginal way
Lived on
In her heart,
Its waves crashing
Full of breath
Against
Life’s rocks.
For Sammi‘s Weekend Writing Prompt: Marginal in 31 words

“Simply look down instead of up,” Manny pushed his hands deeper into his pockets and hiked his shoulders up against a chill no one else probably felt. It was 99F outside.
“But the basilica is right here, and so beautiful!” Danielle exhaled wonder.
My point exactly, Manny thought, but did not say. Recruiting was a subtle thing.
Instead he nudged the water with his shoe, rippling the surface to distort the reflection of the edifice. Almost spitefully the puddle settled back into the sharpest mirror, and Manny half expected his superiors to appear in frowning disappointment at his dismal conversion pace.
“What it is?” Danielle responded to his sigh, her eyes still gazing in the opposite direction of the Netherworld, and therefore opposite to where he needed them to be.
“Nothing,” he muttered, deflated.
Her softly luminescent hand appeared. “How about we go into the church and pray about it?”
For Crispina‘s Crimson’s Creative Challenge
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