Hey! What Did the Blue Jay Say?

blue-jay-at-feeder

Photo by Faye Cornish on Unsplash

I heard the cry as I opened my eyes.

“Hey. Hey.” The call was sharp and incessant.

It was Saturday, the day I didn’t set my alarm intending to wake when I woke.

“Hey, what did the blue jay say?” Brandon sat in bed flipping the screen on his iPad.

“He says ‘there is no corn in the feeder’.”

“We put food in it yesterday. How can it be empty?”

“Between the squirrels and the jays?” I stretched, rubbed my eyes and squinted at the clock.

“You got an extra hour,” Brandon said swiping his finger across the tablet.

“Is the coffee ready?”

“I heard the buzzer a few minutes ago.”

I grabbed my robe, stuffed my feet into worn slippers and headed downstairs. First order of business was coffee. The aroma greeted me as I entered the kitchen. I took my favorite cup from its peg and filled it to the brim with hot, steamy java. The cup wrapped in both hands I leaned over and took a deep breath, allowing the steam to trickle into my fuzzy brain.

“Hey. Hey.” The call came from beyond the sliding glass door.

“Yes, yes. You want breakfast too.” I took a quick sip before reaching into the full container of corn cobs. We had gathered them from the field after the harvesters finished. My coffee cup in one hand and two big cobs precariously balanced in my arms, I opened the sliding door and stepped onto the deck. A jay sat at the feeder and tipped his head at me.

“Hey. Hey,” he called before he flew away. Another jay perched in the Norwegian Pine twenty feet away.

“Hey. Hey.”

I dumped the cobs on the platform feeder at the deck’s edge and took a seat at the table. A jay swooped in, landing first on the deck rail then hopping to the feeder. The sun was warm, but the air promised snow. I knew it was one of the last mornings I would share breakfast with the jays.

A squirrel chattered in the distance, wanting his share of corn. The jays and the squirrels agreed. It would be a cold winter.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Daily Quote

feel-the-force-let-it-flow-through-you-keep-writing.

Or let the words flow through your fingertips and onto the page. Today is a good day to write and when you think you are done write a little more. If you are doing Nano every little bit will help you get to your goal.

What is your word count today?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Sunset City

 

Photo by Max Bender on Unsplash

I press my hand on the glass. It stretches, floor to ceiling forming an invisible barrier between me and the city I love. The day is ending the sun is setting, painting a glorious color display in the sky while the city lights twinkle a light show of their own. I lean forward, my forehead touches glass and I close my eyes imprinting the image in my memory.

Tomorrow a plane will take me far away, and I will leave my city behind. New adventures, new friends, a new beginning for my life. But my heart will remain in the city I love.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Daily Quote

i-focus-on-the-writing-and-let-the-rest-of-the-process-take-care-of-itself-ive-learned-to-trust-my-own-instincts-and-ive-also-learned-to-take-risks-sue-grafton

This is a great quote on a normal day, but especially so this month. Focus on the writing, get words on the page.  Write with abandon, banish your critic to a galaxy far, far away.  Listen to your gut, focus on your instinct, invoke your muse.

What are you writing today?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

La Toussaint

Photo credit: cloud2013 on Visual hunt / CC BY

Mama spent the week in preparation. Each night after school we wove plastic Chrysanthemums with the greenery collected from the property into Couronnes de Toussaints.

On Thursday, we packed the couronnes and candles into the car for our pilgrimage. The candles filled the confines of the car with a heady aroma of incense that made my eyes water like Mama’s.

“Today is a holy day of obligation,” Mama said as we drove into the church parking lot.

Mass droned in my ears and I dreamed of the happy days we spent with Daddy. After mass, we walked to the cemetery. Daddy’s grave was first. We removed the old couronne, replacing it with the newly made one. We lit the candles, leaving them to burn in the darkness. Mama pressed her hand to the cold stone and closed her eyes. She was silent for a long time.

We visited other family members who preceded us in death, replacing couronnes and lighting candles at each grave. Mama said we should ask those at a state of grace, to guide us on our journey. I wasn’t sure what she meant, so I prayed, asking them to help Mama.

“Now, we must visit Aunt Odilia and Uncle Bertrand,” Mama said leading us among the graves.

“Mama?” I said tugging on her sleeve, concerned for our mistake. “There’s just one.” I pointed at the one remaining couronne I carried.

Mama gave my shoulder a squeeze.

“Why, child that’s fine. They’re buried in the same grave.”

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Spirit Journey — Thursday photo prompt

Title: Spirit Journey
Source:  Thursday photo prompt: Stark #writephoto
Word count: 210 words

The sudden wind tugged my braid, forcing me to look across the mesa. Where had I been that I did not notice the darkening sky, the gathering clouds or the falling rain in the distance?

My thoughts swirled in my heart like a Chiindii trapped in a box canyon. I lifted and examined each tiny pebble, hoping to discover an answer engraved in the stone. There were no secrets hidden there.

The rain approached, and I wrestled with my demons, determined to banish bad thoughts and bad words from my mind. The wise ones said I must respect the rain, or the sacred forces would punish me. Perhaps my punishment had already begun. The sacred forces drove me from my clan and married my love to another. They left me with nothing.

I faced the coming storm, arms spread wide to meet the assault. A scream erupted from my spirit, shattering the silence. Lightning flashed and thundered rolled across the land, knocking me deep into the abyss. Mother Earth folded her arms around me while a gentle rain washed away the pain. When I opened my eyes, my heart pounded with the beat of a thousand drums and I knew I was no longer doomed to walk this world alone.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Daily Quote

all-progress-takes-place-outside-the-comfort-zone-michael-john-bobak

Participating in NaNo is one way to step outside your comfort zone. But you don’t have to go to NaNo extremes to make progress. It might be as simple as trying a different format or writing in a new location, or perhaps setting a timer while you write.

What will you do today to mix it up?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

The Unforgettable Fire — 3 Line Tales

From Sonya’s 3LineTales at Only100Words.
You can find the original prompt here. Thank you, Sonya.

photo by Andre Benz via Unsplash

The Angel Adonai commanded, and he took up his spade, his tool of miracles, digging and planting his reminders on the mount.

He issued forth no plagues, for it was not the modern way, he meant to lead them unconventionally.

Every fall the mount burned with an unforgettable fire, showing his chosen people the path to the Promised Land.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Daily Quote

warning-writer-at-work

Today is the first day of my 30-day sprint to 50,000 words. The warning sign is taped to my door, I have done my finger warm-up exercises and I am ready to write.  There is one thing I keep wondering: When is lunch?

How many words will you write today?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Endgame — Friday Fictioneers

Title: Endgame
Source: Friday Fictioneers sponsored by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields-Addicted to Purple
Word count: 100 words

PHOTO PROMPT © Jeff Arnold

The tables sit in a straight line. Twelve tables, twelve chess boards, twenty-four opponents each with sixteen pieces, all three hundred and eighty-four pieces engaged in battle to decide the crowning of Grand Master.

The arbiters circled like vultures waiting for the dead, held in check by the tick-tock of the game clock. The opponents fall and regroup striving for the prize.

I am the endgame, unseen, observing, manipulating. My eyes level with the boards, I influence each move.

Achieving the 8th rank, passed pawn promoted queen I look to my twin, we push the king to check and victory.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer