Skip to main content

The Twelve Ideas of Christmas #12

Black and White

Judging by the wheel ruts the caravan came through while I was working in the darkhouse, and dumped the body where I’d see it soon as I came out. Tinkas sold any healthy stray they caught alive, and burned the ones they found diseased or dead, so it had to be a cripple or a screamer. They also knew I took in both.

Lindy came hobbling down the steps while I stood over it. “Wha’s tha, Dae?”

“Tinkas left it.” I handed her the basket of tubers I’d dug up for dinner. “Tell Les scrub these good. I’ll be out back a while.”

They’d swaddled it like a child, but when I hoisted it over my shoulder it unfolded into bigger and heavier. Smelled scorched something awful, like they’d tried to burn it then gave up halfway along. It didn’t twitch or make a sound, but I could feel its chest moving.

I carried it out back to my fixing shed, where I had all what I needed for mending hurts. Wasn’t much, but I had wood and straps to splint breaks, gut and needles to stitch gashes and yallo salve to cure festering. Some couldn’t be mended, and for them I kept sleepweed and heartstop.

Once I put it on my table I went around and dropped the shadecloths. The dark scared stiff everyone but me, so I didn’t have to waste sleepweed on a thrasher. I used my blade to cut through the knotted swaddling and pulled it back from the chest. It was a man in black clothes, and that gave me true pause.

Couldn’t be.

I put aside my dagger and reached for my shears, snipping my way through the bundle covering the head. Bone-colored hair spilled out first, lots of it, and fell away from a white face with black brows.

I held onto my shears and picked up my blade. The oldun who’d taken me in had told me plenty about the snowfolk, but I’d never seen one even from a distance. The Tinkas sometimes traded with them; always at edge dawn, when they couldn’t cross over.

His eyes went from closed to open, and I saw two starbursts of blue before his inner lids snapped down. His lips cracked as he muttered something and tried to move his arms.

I spoke every lingo in the zone – with my strays, I had to – and tried Tinka on him first. “You hurting where, iceman?”

“Free me.”

No, I wasn’t going to do that, no matter how pretty he sounded. “Where?”

A slit of blue showed on the bottom edge of his inlids. “Walkers.”

I felt his lower limbs with my hands, but instead of breaks the ridges and bulges of iron grazed my palms. “Shackles?” He nodded. “What for?”

“Ambush. Traitors.” His arms twitched. “Free me.”

*

A 2011 story with the working title of Black and White was another of those shiny ideas I wrote down to get it out of my head. It had a fairly neat premise for a dystopian tale, and probably would have become a novella. Black and White is Idea #12.

So that's all I've pulled from the archives. I have a few more partial books, a couple dozen unfinished short stories, and too many unsold pitches to even count, but these twelve are my favorites. In the realm of things I'd like to write before I die, I'd say finishing a dozen unfinished ideas is a reasonable goal, too. Stop in after Christmas to vote for which one you think I should tackle first in 2020.

Comments

nightsmusic said…
Maybe you should just finish them all? After all, you have a whole year to do it ;)

Popular posts from this blog

Downsizing

This was my fabric stash once I sorted everything -- 22 full bins. I spent a day taking out and boxing up what I could part with, with the goal of trying to reduce it by half, so I'd have 11 bins. I was very strict with myself, and removed everything that for one reason or another I was sure I wouldn't be able to use. This is what I ended up with -- 12 bins of fabric that I'm keeping. It's not quite half, but close enough. Half of what I took out went to a local quilter friend, a school and Goodwill. These four tightly-packed bins will be going to the local quilting guild once I make arrangements with them for a drop-off place. I am relieved and a little sad and now determined to control my impulses to thrift more fabric. I don't want to do this again, so until I use up six bins, I can't for any reason bring any new fabric into the house.

In Progress

I promised myself I would show you the good, bad and ugly of my cleaning this year. This is what it looks like when you dump thirty years' worth of stashed fabric on the floor -- and oy, what a pain in the butt to pick up again! This is what it looks like after it's been sorted, folded and placed in containers, which took me about a week. Now the hard part is to downsize my stash by at least half, I think (that's my goal, anyway.) I've already e-mailed the president of the local quilting guild, a local friend who is a quilter, and a public school art teacher I know to see if I can donate some of the excess to them. The rest will go to Goodwill. Already I've reduced my vintage textiles from two bins to one, and my scraps from three bins to one. It's probably the hardest clean-out I've done, which is why I saved it until last. I know I have too much fabric, more than I can use in my lifetime -- but at the same time, I love it. So I have to

Other Stashes

Along with clearing out the spare bedroom and tidying my office and our guest bedroom, I decided to reorganize some of my stashes. This is all the yarn I have on hand, sorted by color. It looks like a lot, but lately I've been using up a minimum of half a bin every month, so this is approximately a year's supply. All of my solid color cotton perle thread. I go through a lot of this every year, too. I need a container in which I can fit all of it together, but I haven't found the right one yet. I won't show you all of my fabric -- I'm still reorganizing this stash -- but I went through everything and donated two bins of fabric I won't need to the local quilter's guild.