Blogging from A to Z Challenge — Letter K

AtoZ2019K

Today’s Positive Adjective:
Kinetic: of or relating to the motion of material bodies and the forces and energy associated therewith

The ship rocked, rolling Captain Xavion from his berth and onto the floor. A second impact hit as he staggered to his feet, pulled on his boots and proceeded to the bridge.

“Report,” he demanded.

First Lieutenant Marcum rose from the Captain’s chair and saluted.

“Unknown alien vessel off the starboard bow. No response to attempts to establish communication. They’ve fired twice. No damage sustained. Shields are at one hundred percent.”

“Officer Tabil.  Establish contact with the foreign craft,” Captain Xavion said as he took the Captain’s seat.

“Captain, I have detected an unidentified life form in Cargo Bay Two,” Allie, the ship’s AI reported.

“Alien?” Captain Xavion probed.

“Yes sir, it emerged from the load transferred from Starship Morrissey.”

“What is it doing?” Captain Xavion asked as the main screen flipped to a view the cargo hold.

“Sensors indicted the being has injected thioureacinol into three of the six containers of phenoloxcolate.”

“To what end, Allie?” the Captain inquired.

“Kinetic molecular theory, suggests the combination of these two gasses will increase the ambient temperature in the container, thereby increasing the speed of the molecules and resulting in a rapid escalation of collisions between the particles and the tank walls.”

“Dear God, Allie, didn’t they teach you to speak English?” Captain Xavion shook his head.

“Yes, Captain. I am fluent in 748 known stellar languages,” Allie replied.

“Captain, I believe Allie is saying the containers are going to explode,” Lieutenant Marcum offered.

“That is a correct assessment Lieutenant Marcum. The force of the blast will destroy Cargo Bay Two. By my calculations, the explosion will disrupt our engine functions. This will initiate a chain reaction which will rip the ship in two in precisely one minute and fourteen seconds.”

Another salvo from the alien vessel rocked the ship.

“Captain, I have established communications with the alien vessel,” Officer Tabil interrupted.

“On screen,” Captain Xavion ordered.

“Finally. We have your attention. You are trespassing in Or’ans space. Surrender your ship,” the brown blob on the screen demanded.

“I will do no such thing. We are on a peace-seeking mission. I assure you we mean you no harm.”

“Balderdash,” the alien spat, and drool seeped into the matted hair surrounding its mouth. “The last peaceful explorers killed half our population. There is no accord. Surrender your ship or we will destroy you.”

“Allie, does he possess the firepower to make good on his threat?” Captain Xavion asked.

“Indeed, Captain. Scanners show they have locked their weapons onto our engine array. A direct hit will annihilate us.”

Captain Xavion turned back to the alien captain. “We come in peace. We don’t desire to harm you, or your people.”

“That’s what they all say before they open fire. My orders are clear. Surrender. Or do you wish to perish?” he asked as the drool formed a long trail to the floor.

“I do not intend to die today. We will defend ourselves,” Captain Xavion warned.

“Then prepare to be destroyed,” spittle flew from the alien’s lips as the screen turned black.

“Thirty seconds to detonation,” Allie called.

“Alien vessel has fired,” Lieutenant Marcum informed the Captain.

“All ahead full on heading 270. Beam the creature in the cargo hold to the brig. On my mark open external doors to Cargo Bay Two,“ Captain Xavion ordered.

“All ahead full. Mark 270. Our new friend is in the brig,” Allie repeated as the ship nosed up, arcing towards starboard.

The ship lurched, shuddering from acceleration as she swept toward the alien vessel.

“Captain, you’re giving them a clear shot at our engine compartment,” Lieutenant Marcum yelled.

“Yes, Lieutenant. They will also get an eyeful of what is behind Door Number Two. Allie open Cargo Bay Two.”

“Aye, aye, Captain. Cargo Bay Two. Open.”

With the doors open the vacuum sucked the contents into space, depositing them in front of the alien vessel’s rocket. When the containers exploded, they denoted the missile and crippled the Or’ans’ ship. Captain Xavion’s starship slipped into warp speed, unharmed.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Blogging from A to Z Challenge — Letter J

AtoZ2019J

Today’s Positive Adjective:
Jaunty: sprightly in manner or appearance: LIVELY

Jared stepped into the bright spring day. The breeze blew giant white clouds across a sparkling blue sky. It was a complete change from yesterday’s howling wind that drove ice pellets and freezing rain into his face as he went about his daily chores. Today’s gust playfully tried to snatch the hat from his head wanting to send it on a merry journey through the muddy field. Jared pulled the ten-gallon low and cinched the chin strap. He didn’t have time for that game.

He gave a short whistle. Ole Bob emerged from the lean-to attached to the barn and trotted to him.

“Hey there Buddy,” Jared greeted him with a scratch behind the ears and a heavy pat on his shoulder.

“You ready to work?”

Ole Bob barked twice and ran ahead.

Red whinnied as Jared slid the barn door open. Ole Bob raced inside barking at Red in his stall.

“Guess we are all looking forward to stretching our legs,” Jared said as he pushed Red’s nose away from his coat pocket.

“Hey, that’s for me,” he laughed. He popped an apple from its hiding spot holding it out of the reach of Red’s questing mouth.

“How ‘bout we share?” He took a huge bite then handed the remained to Red.

Ole Bob twisted his head to the right and stared at Jared.

“No, I didn’t forget you.” He tossed a biscuit towards him. Ole Bob caught it midair, swallowed it whole and gave his master a hopeful look.

Jared laughed and threw him a second one.

He whistled a jaunty tune as worked, taking care of the preparations for the day’s outing. He soon had Red saddled and led him from the barn.

“You boys ready to see what them cows have been getting into?” he asked his team.

Old Bob barked, circling Red as Jared mounted.

“Well, what are we waiting for?” He clicked to Red, nudging him with knees and the three of them ran with the wind.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Shadow World – Friday Fictioneers

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

PHOTO PROMPT © Roger Bultot

It was the Homecoming bash at Chi Sigma Kappa.  Judeth and her besties arrived at eleven, fashionably late. They drank, they danced and then they disappeared. Everyone, except Judeth. The ancient grandfather clock chimed midnight. Her vision blurred, and her world changed.

Today she would wander the empty campus, searching for the truth. She could hear them, echoes of her final day.  At eleven she and her girls would arrive at Chi Sigma Kappa for the seventh time. Reliving the fateful hour Judeth waited for the reset. Abandoned in the shadow world again, she hunted, prepared to kill her killer.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Blogging from A to Z Challenge — Letter I

AtoZ2019I

Today’s Positive Adjective:
Idiosyncratic: pertaining to the nature of idiosyncrasy, or something peculiar to an individual

My phone was blowing up, and I tried my best to ignore Sylvie’s texts. I checked the time and caught Professor Morton’s glare.  She had a strict “no phone” policy and I didn’t want to piss her off on the first day. The five minutes until class ended stretched to eternity. Sylvie’s texts pushed the vibrate feature from pleasure mode straight to frustration.

Professor Morton dismissed us, and I grabbed my bag. Bolting for the door, I headed towards the seating area at the end of the hall. As I walked if flipped to her messages.

“OMG No Prof K. He died or some shit.”

Professor Kennedy taught the required freshmen Composition 101 and 102 courses. I met Sylvie in his course last semester, and we became inseparable. Scheduling conflicts meant we couldn’t take Comp 2 together this term. She had Kennedy’s class now, and I was scheduled for his next session. I hoped they didn’t cancel it since it would cause havoc with my calendar.

“Check out his replacement.”

I swiped to the photo and gasped. Sylvie had surreptitiously snapped a pic as the new guy walked between the desks. Framed from the crotch to his forehead, he filled the image. Long golden curls covered broad shoulders and his bushy blond walrus mustache accentuated his full red lips. I noticed I was breathing harder as I stared at his piercing blue eyes. It was obvious he had known Sylvie was taking his picture as he looked right at me. I reluctantly scrolled to read the next message.

“Can you say NORSE FREAKING GOD????”

“No shit, Sylvie,” I said out loud.

“Crappy name. Ingmar Bergman.”

Another photo. This one featured his ass as did the four following ones which marked his progress as he walked to the front of the classroom.

“He’s Swedish.”

I hit play on the video. He spoke. His accent was a bizarre and idiosyncratic interpretation of English. I loved it and my heart pounded in my ears when I played it again.

“Oh yeah. Call him DR. Bergman,” her next text said.

“The DR. can examine me anytime.” Sylvie followed her comment with a line of heart emojis.

She sent a dozen photos of him standing in front of the classroom.

“Comp is my new favorite subject,” she texted.

I laughed at the last image. Sylvie had and captured him unknowingly photo-bombing her selfie. This one she tagged with “Don’t be late. HOTTEST Prof this semester.”

I typed my reply and hit send.

“I’m on my way. Do NOT disturb me. We’ll talk after.”

I slipped my phone into my pocket and headed to class. Sylvie was right, I didn’t want to miss a single minute with the good doctor.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Blogging from A to Z Challenge — Letter H

AtoZ2019H

Today’s Positive Adjective:
Heuristic: involving or serving as an aid to learning, discovery, or problem-solving by experimental and especially trial-and-error methods

Jane loved studying her favorite primates in their natural habitat. The monkeys were leery of Jane at first, but after a while, they ignored her. As she became more familiar with the troop, she recognized individuals. Breaking a research taboo, she named her new subjects.

Harry was the dominant male, king of his domain he put any potential challenger in their proper place. The top female Jane called Hermione. Hermione was smart, and she carried a small twig with her wherever she went. She used the stick to correct the juveniles and sometimes even Harry.

Little Ginny lived at the bottom rung of the monkey hierarchy.  The best and sweetest fruits grew high in the trees and social status determined where the clan members could forage. They relegated Ginny to the forest floor, where she scavenged, hoping her family would drop unwanted tidbits. Ginny’s plight touched Jane’s heart, but the ruled bared Jane from intervening.  Jane’s observations led her to believe Ginny was perhaps smarter than the others.

Jane study focused on how they gained new skills. She created an experiment designed to illuminate how they learned and passed the latest technique to the rest of the troop. Jane devised a crate filled with the monkey’s favorite food. They could see it and smell it, but releasing the fruit required learning how to work the dispenser. First in line, Harry jumped on it, trying to crush it, he hit it with a rock before attempting to pry the box apart. When he gave up, it was Hermione’s turn. She waved her wand at the carton, then she tried poking her stick in the hole to wiggle the plastic door open. Failing she conceded and allowed the others to try.

Jane wondered if the puzzle was too difficult as one by one each monkey failed. Finally, Ginny got her shot. Slow and methodical used every heuristic device at her disposal. While she explored, no one bothered her. Ginny spent more time with the box than any of her family members had. She was determined to get her reward.

Ginny worked at the dispenser until a sprinkling of goodies spilled into her palm. She glanced around to see if anyone had noticed, but they had returned to the treetops. With a fistful of food, Ginny waited, making sure the coast was clear before she stuffed every morsel in her mouth. Her hand covered her lips as she chewed.

Ginny watched her family before she manipulated the dispenser again for her second serving. Ginny operated in stealth mode, and Jane knew she would not share her hard-won knowledge with anyone else.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

 

Blogging from A to Z Challenge — Letter G

AtoZ2019G

Today’s Positive Adjective:
Germane: being at once relevant and appropriate: FITTING

Barb accepted the position expecting a week of work. It seemed easy enough. Assist Professor Heinzman. They said she would help him catalog organize, analyze his research data. Then compile the information to prepare for writing his conference paper.

She arrived at Professor Heinzman’s office and knocked at the door. No response. She checked her phone. She was a few minutes early, so she dropped her bag on the floor and reclined on the wall, figuring she would answer her email. Lost in her work she didn’t notice the thin man walking approaching her.

“You Barb?” he barked as he leaned toward her. Watery blue eyes blinked at her through chunky trifocal glasses.

“Yeah. Are you Professor Heinzman?” she countered. She plastered herself against the wall, sidestepping, to escape his invasion of her personal space.

He didn’t notice as he turned, fumbling to find the correct key on his keyring.

“Good, I hate when people are tardy,” he said as he unlocked the door.

Retrieving her bag, she slung it over her shoulder and glanced at her phone. She almost laughed. Twenty minutes late. Horror replaced her cynicism as the door opened and she looked inside.

From her experience, college professors commanded a generous-sized office, about twelve feet square, plenty of area for a desk or two and a few chairs for meetings. But she had seen nothing like this. Barb wondered how they would fit. Bookshelves lined the room, covering the window, Barb knew it must have. Books, binders, folders, and reams of paper filled each shelf. He had jammed them into any available space. Thick layers covered every chair, table, and counter and overflowed onto the floor.

Professor Heinzman picked his course along a small path and navigated to a spot behind one desk. When he sat, his head disappeared.

“This way dear, you can sit next to me.”

Barb proceeded gingerly afraid a wrong step might cause a landslide. Papers covered the seat he showed her.

“Just move those anywhere,” he said shaking his hand in the general direction of the chair.

Barb scooped the loose papers into her arms. After considering her limited options, she tucked them underneath the chair and sat.

“Where’s the data I need to compile?” she asked, her bag balanced on her lap.

“You’re looking at it,” he said waving his hands.

“Ah, which stack?”

“Why, all of it. It has taken me years of study and refinement to reach this point. I’m on the verge of the Nobel,” his voice rose, and he hopped up and down on his seat.

“Where are your computer files?”

“Computer files?” he scoffed. “I don’t trust those things. Touch the wrong key and everything disappears.” His fingers wiggled as he spoke. Stretching his arms wide he blinked and snapped his fingers. “Poof. Gone.” he finished.

This time Barb laughed when she wanted to cry.

“Okay. Well, can we start with the most germane parts?”

“Oh sure,” he said and flitted around the room pulling a binder form here, a folder there and depositing them onto her lap. The stack grew until she feared she wouldn’t be able to stand.

“Professor,” she called, “Professor.”

Startled he froze and a loose page fluttered to the floor.

“How about I start with this? When I’m done, I’ll come for more.”

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Blogging from A to Z Challenge — Letter F

AtoZ2019F

Today’s Positive Adjective:
Flamboyant: marked by or given to strikingly elaborate or colorful display or behavior

Paco was a quiet, unassuming man. Curly black hair cascaded over his eyes, hiding his soul from the scrutiny of others. Walking into the bar, friendly patrons greeted him and shook his hand. He was polite, murmuring hello, or nodding his acknowledgment. The throng pressed on him, impeding his progress. He lifted his guitar case vertically in front of his chest, clutching it in in both hands he used it as a shield as he zigzagged through the crowd.

He reached the safety of the stage, his little corner of the world. With his instrument tuned, he signaled he was ready, and the dancer took her place. She stood alone, poised, unmoving while the house lights dimmed.

Their fans grew silent. This was why they waited. Anticipation thick in the air, Paco’s fingers strummed the strings. Softly, the melody flowed, and the performer tapped her toe.  The Canté swelled, the bailaora’s movements developed, gaining in intensity.

Paco’s music was flamboyant, emotional, moving. It pushed the bailaora, driving her expressions. She conveyed intense emotions with each swirl, every foot stomp, and arm gesture. Paco played, lost in his reverie. The performance mesmerized the audience. They pulsed, swaying with the beat, transfixed by the story’s passion.

Too soon the Canté ended. A momentary silence descended.  Ecstatic applause thundered through the room, and Paco smiled.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Rat Race – 3 Line Tales

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

photo by Ahmed Odeh via Unsplash

Life runs at a frantic pace, constant demands keep us busy, busy, busy.

Perpetual motion, no time to think, only act, react, rinse and repeat.

Exhausted, all reserves spent, time expires as we collapse, with no goals met.

______________________

Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Blue Days – Stock Photo Challenge

Title: Blue Days
Source:  Stock Photo Challenge
Word count: 100 words

Hesiod played melancholy songs.

The crowd favorite featured a young musician in love. Professing his love, he swore he would do anything to please her. He begged for her hand, and she agreed. Children soon completed their life.

The wife worried. A performer couldn’t support a growing family. Honoring his vows he took a job suitable for a responsible father. The work broke his spirit and left a pale imitation of the man he once was.

Years passed, and she didn’t recognize him. He was no longer the carefree soul she married.

Separated, lost, the old musician played melancholy songs.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer