Happy Memorial Day

Valkyrie 6 A Memorial Day Flight by Donnadome Nitzo -d66mlzi

Valkyrie 6 A Memorial Day Flight by Donnadome Nitzo -d66mlzi via www.deviantart.com

 

Happy Memorial Day

Here is to the memory of all of our military veterans, past and present. Whether they served one day or many years, lived or died, they pledge their lives to protect ours. I salute you all.

I finished my 10th May Story a Day yesterday.  Yay! I’ve reached my goal. I’ll probably write at least one if not more this week.

On the gardening front, I put in four more tomato plants, both full size and cherry, and two hot pepper plants.  I’m going to buy basil and sweet pepper plants. Walmart didn’t have either when I picked up the tomatoes so I’ll have to go elsewhere to get them.

Memorial Day weekend was buzzing here in central Arizona. Pine had their annual craft fair and there was one in Payson as well. There was a memorial service in Green Valley park to honor Veterans. There was a mini-triathalon on Saturday. Campers were in town all weekend, buying supplies, eating at the fast food places and generally spending money on their way to the forests of Rim Country.  Hubby and I pretty much stayed home. It’s actually nice not to go somewhere else.

Thanks for stopping by my blog today.

Please sign up for my newsletter where you’ll get first dibs on any promotions, book announcements, and other information. Want to know how to get a free copy of each new book? Go to the button on the right side of the blog or go to my Newsletter tab to sign up. Or sign up here. Use Control, Click to access the link.

I have an in depth interview on my Smashwords Author page. You can read it here.  Don’t see information about me you’d like to know? Leave me your question in my comments and I’ll try to answer it.

Hard Choices: A Gulliver Station Story, released May17th! I’m pretty excited about it. You can buy at: Apple, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kobo, or Smashwords today!

Published!

Piano Poster by Elthenstorm via www.DeviantArt.com

Piano Poster by Elthenstorm via www.DeviantArt.com

I’ve been working like crazy on my books this month. Today, I got my 3rd Gulliver Station book, Hard Choices, up on Amazon (ASIN: B00KEVWYHW) and Smashwords (https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/439286).  Distribution to other distributors will take a week to two weeks to accomplish.  I’ve decided to give my readers a deal. Sign up for my newsletter and I’ll reward you with a free copy of Book 2, The Challenge. Sign up here. Use Control, Click to access the link. You all are getting this offer before even my newsletter people. Hurry, offer ends Sunday the 25th!

This month I’m continuing the writing habit with my writing site’s May Story a Day. I’ve written seven stories so far in addition to working on my 2YN novel, well on my way to 10 stories this month. In addition, I’ve challenged myself to write at least 1K of words per day in new writing five days per week. I’m doing well with both challenges.

My blog has been undergoing a makeover. My friend Brianna Jill Soloski, has given the site a face-lift and fixed my Books page. See it on www.conniesrandomthoughts.wordpress.com. If you like what she did, she’s ready to hire at: (http://girlseeksplace.wordpress.com/hireme/). Blogs, Etsy pages, whatever you need in editing and a whole lot of other things.

The weather has been fine and we’re now up into the 80’s. I don’t expect any more frosts. I put in seed for Serano peppers, Rutger’s tomato, summer green and yellow squash, a bird house gourd, butternut squash, peas, green bush beans, green pole beans and yellow beans. Potatoes, herbs and swiss chard are already growing on their own. I’m going to buy more tomato, basil and pepper plants. I’m lazy and didn’t get seed started in time. I put my bay leaf tree and lemon tree out in the yard. So far they’re fine.

The town has been a hive of activity again this weekend. For the fine arts people, a classical piano recital by a 13 year-old girl was held on Saturday night. I didn’t go but friends I walked with on Sunday morning said the young lady was quite accomplished. She even threw in some Gershwin, just to keep it interesting. On the other end of the scale, the Spring Rodeo was in town on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. People both local and from far away traveled into town to see the riding, bronc bustin, and ropin’. Saturday is a big yard sale day. My hubby and I picked up a nearly new oak dining room table and six matching chairs for an amazing price. The yard sale people even delivered it. Yay! There’s something for everyone in my little town.

Thanks for stopping by my blog today. Please sign up for my newsletter where you’ll get first dibs on any promotions, book announcements, and other information. Want to know how to get a free copy of each new book? Go to the button on the right side of the blog or go to my Newsletter tab to sign up. Or sign up here. Use Control, Click to access the link.

I have an in depth interview on my Smashwords Author page. You can read it here.  Don’t see information about me you’d like to know? Leave me your question in my comments and I’ll try to answer it.

Hard Choices: A Gulliver Station Story, released May17th! I’m pretty excited about it. You can buy at: Apple, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kobo, or Smashwords today!

Flash Fiction Friday: Saving A Life

Prison Bars by Choney25 via www.deviantart.com

Prison Bars by Choney25 via www.deviantart.com

A little late but still on Friday. Enjoy.

Saving A Life

Emil and Teresa Gerhardt huddled with several hundred other humans in the camp the Aliens had put them in. Their children, fourteen- year-old Mikail and ten-year-old Ruth sat between them.

“Mom, what are they going to do with us?” Mikail whispered.

Teresa didn’t know. Their colony, founded three generations ago, was emptied yesterday by the aliens, the Krtit, who had let them settle here. The aliens, pink shaded, six legged hippopotamus looking creatures with eyes like crabs and circular mouths like sea anenomes with razor sharp looking teeth herded them through the Alien city they called Rylab, and into this fenced area yesterday. “I don’t know, son.” She looked at her husband.

He shrugged. “If we knew why they rounded us up, we might make a guess.” He was worried. The Mayor was at the gate, talking to one of the aliens. Hopefully trying to get them all released.

A bell sounded and they stood up. The Krtit had prepared food and the humans lined up to get it. It wasn’t much, two dried bars each and a bottle of water. One bar was savory and hard to chew. The other was sweet and soft. Both of them made the people thirsty. The line at the tap to get water was always long.

#

Bice was at home in his pool. The Krtit were ocean creatures in their distant past. They were land creatures now, but still, a pool was an essential part of any Krtit home. He manipulated the controls of the communication device on the wall with the first pair of legs which had twenty fingers on each. He watched the news of the human round up as he floated in the pool. “It’s not right,” he told his spouse when she joined him. “We told them they could live here.”

“You know what happened. The government changed and the groups that didn’t want them here began to control the government. There’s been increasing anti-human sentiment for the last few years.”

“They want to exterminate them. It’s not right. Why don’t we just have them get on their ships and move away?”

She shrugged, a motion that caused her entire body to wave in the salty water. “What can we do, Bice? We’re just one couple.”

“Something has to be done. Look, they have young in the camp too.” He pointed at the screen.

She nodded. “I agree, but what?”

The next day he called the government office that was responsible for the round up. “I’d like to pay for some of the humans to leave Ytic. Can you arrange that?”

The official was stunned to silence. When he recovered he said, “I don’t know. It’s not been offered as an option. I’ll contact you when I know more.”

A few hours later Bice was called back.

“It seems that if a toll is paid, you can choose your humans and send them away.”

Bice worked out the details and closed the connection.

He began calling friends. This was going to take a lot of credit.

#

A week later, Emil, Teresa and their children were called to the gate along with four other families. Emil was nervous. Other families had been called to the gate in the last three days. The Krtit didn’t say what was going on and the other families had not returned. Rumors flew around the camp; humans were being killed, the families were being released, no one really knew.

Outside the gate they were loaded into a transport and Emil could see they were heading to the spaceport. “Maybe they’re releasing us,” he said.

Teresa’s face was grim. Two of the other wives were weeping. “I hope so.”

At the spaceport they were lined up beside the transport and handed plastic cards. An officious looking Krtit told them, “These are your identicards. They contain your personal history and one thousand credits each.” The Krtit, pointed at a space liner on the tarmac. “You have each received permission to leave Ytic. You are never to return.”

“But I had more than a thousand credits in the bank! I have a business, property” cried out one man.

The Krtit stared at him. “You may now board the ship.”

“But what about…,” another man began to say.

The Krtit cut him off. “Enough. You can leave. You’re passage has been paid.”

Emil put his hand on his wife’s back and urged her toward the ship. “Let’s go before they change their minds.” They grabbed their children’s hands and headed for the ship, the other families followed.

#

Three weeks later the Krtit government declared war on the Human race. The remaining families were slaughtered.

Bice stared at the communication screen from his pool, his wife beside him, the video of the slaughter on the screen. “You tried,” she told him.

“We saved some at least.” He turned the screen off. “What a waste.”

The End

817 Words

Find more of the Forward Motion Flash Friday Group here: http://www.fmwriters.com/flash.html

Cover Reveal for Hard Choices

Hard Choices  Cover art by Connie Cockrell

Hard Choices
Cover art by Connie Cockrell

 

Check it out! What do you think? The book itself will be out the end of May. I still have editing to do on it. Overall, it’s a very short novel and a four related short stories. It’s set in the Gulliver Station timeline between The Challenge (released end of March 2014) and Revolution, which is slated for release end of July 2014.  I’m still contemplating the arrangement of the short stories.  Here’s a blurb about the book:

A short novel with four short stories, Hard Choices looks at life on Gulliver Station in the time after The Challenge. Weather in the Biosphere is a tale about two cousins, who make an ill-timed mistake. Methane Breathers considers communications difficulties between two different species. Growing up is full of hard choices as Cassandra Madison in The Conversion discovers. Barrie has lost his job and must play the game for his family to survive as you’ll read in Dedication Day. The title story, a short novel, takes a look at life on Gulliver Station from an outsider’s point of view.  Between ships, Jolene Harris enjoys leave by herself when things go horribly wrong. Will she live to reach her new ship, The Adirondack?

April’s Camp National Novel Writing Month, https://campnanowrimo.org/sign_in  is in its third week. I’m plugging away on my novel, still unnamed. As of yesterday, I’m at 32,000 words, well on my way to my goal for 50K words. There’s still a lot of writing to be done but it looks as though I’ll meet the challenge!

My rhubarb has made it through the dry winter here in central Arizona. I think it needs at least another year before I cut any stalks.

The root canal took five shots of novocaine and two hours but the dentist was quite pleased with the results. I still have some jaw ache from the procedure but it’s slowly going away. It’s nice to take a drink of room temperature water and not wince from the pain.

My project to collect my mom’s history by using To Our Children’s Children: Preserving Family Histories for Generations to Come by Bob Greene and D.G. Fulford is ongoing. Not every phone call to my mom has time or opportunity to ask questions but it is moving along. My brothers and sister are going to like this.

Thanks for stopping by my blog today.

Go ahead and sign up for my newsletter where you’ll get first dibs on any promotions, book announcements, and other information. Go to the button on the right side of the blog or go to my Newsletter tab to sign up. Or sign up here.  Use Control, Click to access the link.

I have an in depth interview on my Smashwords Author page. You can read it here.  Don’t see information about me you’d like to know? Leave me your question in my comments and I’ll try to answer it.

The Challenge: A Gulliver Station Story released March 23rd! I’m pretty excited about it. You can buy at: Apple, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kobo, or Smashwords today!

Flash Fiction Friday: The Drink

My writing prompt came from Chuck Wendig. It’s a challenge to create a story with a drink designed by the author. I decided a story located in my Gulliver Station series was appropriate. If you like it, check out A New Start, now available on most ebook retailer sites.

The Drink

Paula Vance held up the heavily embroidered scarf with intricate metallic blue and silver swirls and stars. “Look at this, Rob! I’ve never seen anything like it.”

He stepped to his wife. “Beautiful.”

The stall keeper sensed a sale to the tourists. “I know the artist. She does fantastic work but as you can imagine, it takes a long time to hand embroider. I don’t get many like that.”

“We’re on our 10th anniversary trip,” Paula shared with the stall keeper. “We heard about the Gulliver Station BioDome and since it was on the way to Pica, we decided to stop here. I’m glad we did.” She tried on the scarf and looked at herself in the mirror standing on the counter. “I have to have it.”

Rob laughed. “Why not? It’s our anniversary after all.” He handed the stall keeper his ID.

“Shall I wrap it for you, Miss?”

Paula took a couple of steps backward to get a different perspective in the mirror. “No, I think…”

She shrieked as she was struck by a speeding methane breather transport pod. Paula slid over the bubble protecting the alien and rolled off of the back onto the floor.

“Paula!” Rob shouted.

The pod stopped. The stall keeper called Station Security. Passersby gathered around the fallen woman and the transport. In a few minutes, Station Security Officer, Helene Guzman, arrived on the scene.

“Are you alright, Ma’am?” Officer Guzman took a swift glance at the transport. There was no smell of methane so the bubble wasn’t cracked. The exterior speaker hissed and sputtered. She read the display.

“Fright. Female. Broken!”

Guzman sighed. She hated dealing with the V’Heeme. It was hard to figure out what their messages meant. Was it scared and broken or was it asking about the woman?

Rob helped his wife to her feet. “I think she’s fine.” He dusted off her dress.

“Stay right there, the medics are coming.” Guzman turned to the transport’s speaker. “May I ask your name, Honored V’Heeme?”

The screen printed, “Zmugn.”

“Honored Zmugn, are you injured?” She tapped her pocket pad with the V’Heeme’s name and the number of the transport pod. The message went straight to Security.

“No. Human?”

“I will inquire, Honored Zmugn.” She turned to the couple. “May I ask your names?”

Paula straightened the scarf, then her hair. “I’m Paula Vance, this is my husband Ron. We were just buying this scarf when the pod hit me.” She straightened her dress. “I never expected to see a Methane breather.” They peered into the bubble.

“So you didn’t see the pod travelling along the market aisle?”

Paula glanced around her, the crowd, smaller now that there was no apparent injury, hung onto every word. “Well, I stepped back a bit, to see the scarf in the mirror.”

“That’s true, Officer,” the stall keeper called out. “She was just admirin’ the scarf.”

Guzman nodded. This was an accident but with the V’Heeme involved it could turn ugly. “I can do a couple of things here. I can take both of you and the V’Heeme to the office where everyone can file complaints.

“Or, I can call it no harm, no foul, since no one is injured and you can go about your business.”

“Oh, no,” Ron said in a hurry. “We were just about to go to dinner.”

Guzman nodded. “Let me ask the V’Heeme.”

“Honored Zmugn, do you wish to go about your business or come to Station Security to file a complaint?”

The speaker hissed and crackled and the screen finally printed, “No. Business now.”

“Thank you for your courtesy, Honored Zmugn.” Guzman tapped the answer into her pad. She turned to the couple.

“Your lucky day, the V’Heeme is eager to get on about his business, too.”

They watched the pod speed away. “It goes kind of fast, doesn’t it?” Rob said as he watched it take the corner.

Guzman held out her pad. “Could you sign at the bottom of the screen, please? To confirm you are not filing a complaint.”

Paula reached out and pressed her thumb to the screen.  When the medics arrived, Officer Guzman stayed so she could complete her report. It only took a moment for them to do a scan and pronounce Paula fit. She thumb-printed her release on their pad.

“Have a good evening.” Guzman tucked her pad into her pocket.

“Wait,” Rob said. “Can you recommend a good place to eat? Some place you would go to have dinner?”

Guzman stopped. “Are you looking for fancy or for good local food?”

“We can get fancy food on the ship. Local food,” Rob said.

“Go to the Eastenders on this Level. Best Irish stew on the station.”

They thanked her and wound their way through the market to the maglev. It took them to the other end of the market. The Eastender’s was in full swing but they found seats at the bar. The stew and fresh bread was delivered promptly and they ate with gusto. “We should have an anniversary drink,” Paula said.

“Good idea,” Rob said. “Jake,” he called to the bartender. “Do you have a signature drink for the Eastenders?”

Jake, a long time bartender on the station, scratched his head. “No. None on Gulliver Station, as far as I know.”

“Good.” Rob rubbed his hands together. “Is there a particular favorite drink?”

Jake grinned. “That would be whisky. It’s made right here.”

The two men put their heads together. In a few minutes, the three of them had a squat glass filled with ice cubes and a light chocolate colored drink. “Cheers,” Rob toasted. They each tasted.

“What’s in it?” Paula asked.

“One and a half shots of whisky, half a shot of chocolate liquor, half a shot of Irish cream whisky, and a shot of coffee. We’ve decided to call it The Gulliver.”

“It tastes like dessert!” She sipped again. “Thank you, Jake.” She raised her glass. “To Gulliver Station.”

“To Gulliver Station,” they toasted.

The End

1000 Words

Find more of the Forward Motion Flash Friday Group here:http://www.fmwriters.com/flash.html

 

Friday Flash Fiction: FTL Dilemma

How about a SciFi story for today?

FTL Dilemma

Aubrey sank to the floor of the engine room. He’d just put the last body in the maw of the main recycler. He leaned his head against the bulkhead and closed his eyes. Two hundred and three bodies. He ran a hand through his curly black, close cropped hair and groaned. Every muscle hurt. He struggled to his feet. It was time to check on the kids.

Patyn Polanski was the oldest of the three remaining children. At thirteen, she helped him get water and food to the other two but she was newly recovered herself. When he entered the cabin, she was asleep. The ten year old Hal Corliss was asleep too; arm thrown over his black-haired head and so was eight year old Bree Webber. Her long blonde hair a tangle spread across her pillow. The kids knew each other, but he didn’t really know them. Twenty-two years old, he didn’t hang with the kids anymore.

He left the cabin and went to the galley. He needed some broth and time to rest. Two days ago Aubrey managed to find the dehydrated stock, added it and water to a pot, and left it in the galley. Patyn could just get some, heat it and give it to the others. He scooped a mugful and heated it in the microwave then slipped into a chair to drink it. He jumped at her voice.

“Is it done?” Patyn leaned against the edge of the galley door. She had dark circles under her eyes. Her shoulder length, dark brown hair was nearly as tangled as Bree’s.

Aubrey motioned her to a chair. “Yeah. Just finished. Want some broth?”

She nodded as she slid into the chair opposite him. He levered himself up and got her a mugful and sat it on the table.

“Have you told the kids?” he asked.

She shook her head as she held her face in the steam from the cup. “They barely wake up. I gave them some broth and they went right back to sleep.” She looked up at him, concern on her face. “Can you fly the ship?”

“I think so.” He drained his mug and put it back down. “I’ve had my turn at the controls like everyone else.” He sighed. “That’s next; to go to the bridge and get us to the nearest station. I need to sleep first.”

“I’ll be with the kids till you get up.”

#

Aubrey sat in the Captain’s chair where very system on the bridge could be accessed. He pulled up the operations manual and reviewed the checklist for starting the engines. Patyn wandered in.

“Is it alright that I’m on the bridge?” she asked from just inside the doorway.

He turned to look at her. “Why not. All the rules are out the lock now anyway.” He went back to the manual.

She came in and sat in the Communications chair.

“Do you have any training on the bridge yet?” he asked her.

“No. I just started Ship Systems training, in the galley.”

“Too bad.” He took a deep breath. “I’m going to start this baby up.” He punched a number of buttons on the board in front of him. He checked the manual to be sure he had the sequence right. “Here’s the last button.” Aubrey punched it and waited.

Patyn looked around. “Should we feel the engines working?”

Aubrey rubbed his face with both hands. “Yeah, something’s wrong.”

She paled, eyes wide.

“It’ll be alright. The Chief Engineer probably did something. I’ll call up the Engineering manual and look for it.”

She swallowed and nodded. “I’ll check on the kids.”

An hour later, Aubrey stumbled into the galley. He made a sandwich and dropped into the nearest chair to eat it. Patyn was watching from a nearby table, a sandwich in front of her too.

“What’s wrong?” she asked.

He chewed and swallowed. “I can’t find the problem. I was too hungry to think.” He took another bite. “How are the kids?”

“Awake. I put a vid on for them.”

He nodded and finished his sandwich. “Can you leave them for a few minutes?”

“Yeah. I’ll check on them then I’ll be ready.” She wiped the table in front of her with the napkin and shoved it into the kitchen recycler.

Aubrey got a glass of water and drank it down. She was back in four minutes. “They’re fine. I told them I had to help you.”

He turned his gaunt face to her. “You told them about the rest of the family?”

Patyn rubbed an eye. “Yeah, they said they knew.”

He wondered how they knew but the kids always seemed to know what was going on with the ship. He sighed. “Let’s go to Engineering.”

At the Chief Engineer’s console, Aubrey brought up the manual. “I was hoping the Chief would have left a note or something. Check his log, can ya?”

She slid into the second console chair and tapped out commands. “I see an Engineer Log,” she told him. “I can’t open it.”

Aubrey switched screens. “Let me try from here.” He tapped a few keys. “I see it but it won’t open.” He slumped back into the chair. “It’s password protected.”

“I was hoping it would open from that console,” she said.

They sat, shoulders drooping, staring at the screens. “How did you get into the Captain’s files?” she asked after a minute.

“The manual had an emergency code, you know,” he snorted, “in case of catastrophic emergency.”

“Will the same code work on the Engineer’s files?” she asked.

He brightened. “Let’s see.” He tapped the code into the log in. He whooped. “It’s open!”

Patyn grinned.

He punched several keys on the console. They felt the reassuring vibration of the huge engines starting up. “I didn’t realize I was missing that sound,” he said as he watched the monitor show engine performance steady into the green. “Tell the kids we’re going to be alright.”

997 Words

Find more of the Forward Motion Flash Friday Group here: http://www.fmwriters.com/flash.html

Flash Fiction Friday: The Cruise

Here was my prompt: The story starts when your protagonist goes on a cruise. Another character is a courier who can see the future.

Please enjoy my conception of The Cruise

Courier First Class Mark DeWolfe moved to the far right of the space liner’s 1st Class passenger corridor. Kait Gilman, Earth’s Cultural Attache to the Magellan cluster aliens, the Codon, was a procession of two, dictating a message to her assistant at full volume. May Todar scurried behind her, tapping her electronic pad and saying “Yes, Ma’am,” every few feet.

Mark asked about Miss Todar the first day out from Earth. Seated at Attache Gilman’s dinner table she caught his eye. Her hair was like burnished copper and she was obviously interested in everything going on around her. “Forget it,” his table companions ribbed him. “The Attache isn’t going to let that young woman out of her sight.”

The following week he found it true. The Attache kept May Todar hopping every second of the day and night. He nodded as she passed but it was May who acknowledged his presence. He gave her a wink.

He caught a brief grin just before his head exploded with pain. He grabbed the wall and held the side of his head. Sinking to one knee, the vision burst. Spacecraft exploded in space, human colony worlds destroyed, Earth under attack, and Kait Gilman at a table, dismayed as Codon left the room. As soon as it began, it was over. Mark shook with the emotional impact of the vision.

He stood, headache receding. Not every Courier First Class received visions, but those that did were highly qualified to act on their own. He wiped his forehead with the back of his hand. He decided to see the Captain.

“Captain Takai, thank you for seeing me.” Mark stood in front of the Captain’s desk in a cramped space filled with books on navigation, Space Maritime law and Psychology.

“No problem, Courier. What can I do for you?”

“I need an appointment with the Attache, sir.”

The Captain drummed his fingers on his desk. “An unusual request, may I ask why?”

Mark knew that Liner Captains were briefed on Governmental Couriers. “I’ve had a vision, sir. I need to discuss it with Attache Gilman.”

He rubbed his chin. “I suppose this is time sensitive?”

“I believe so, Captain.”

“I’ll send a message. She’s in with the Codon ambassador now.”

Mark swallowed; a sick feeling in the pit of his stomach. Was it already too late? “Soonest, Captain.”

Captain Takai stared. “I’ll break in, Courier.”

Mark nodded and left the office.

He hurried to the meeting room. Everyone on board knew the Codon and the Attache were meeting in 1st Class. Security stopped him at the open end of the meeting room corridor. There were gilt-edged chairs located against the wall, facing the corridor. He sat. Shortly, the Codon Ambassador, Praranab, and two of her assistants lumbered out of the meeting room. The Security guards stepped aside and bowed as the aliens passed by.

Mark heard the guard’s pad chime. They scanned the screen and motioned to him. He hustled down the corridor and entered the room. May Todar stood in the left corner of the opposite wall as she watched her boss raging back and forth across the room at the end of the table. “Can you believe the Captain interrupted our meeting? This had better be important.”

She whirled around as Mark entered the room. “I suppose you’re the reason my meeting was ended?”

“I’m Courier First Class Mark deWolfe. Yes Ma’am, I’m the reason.”

She glared. “Well, spit it out. We were in the middle of discussions on Human/Codon access to educational systems. Delicate, Courier deWolfe. Very delicate.”

He bowed, “My apologies Attache.” He glanced at May. “My information is highly sensitive.”

Mark saw May’s eyes widen.

Kait Gilman huffed, “My assistant has the same clearances I do, Mr. deWolfe.” She jerked the hem of her brocade tunic down.

“No offense meant.” He bowed to May. “I had a vision, Attache. Of war between the humans and the Codon.” He paused to let the information sink in.

Kait sank into the chair next to her. “A war? Are you sure?”

“As I can be, Attache. May I ask exactly what you were discussing with the Ambassador?”

The Attache waved at May, who stepped up to the table. “The specific discussion was concerning juveniles secondary schooling. We were having trouble understanding their reluctance to tell us a specific age their children would be able to attend school.”

“Have you had trouble like this before?”

Kait shook her head. “We know they live longer than we do. They’ve never shared how much longer.”

May spoke. “Madame Attache, I’ve been thinking, as you were involved with the discussions, that the Codon may have a transitional period. Like a pupa before it becomes a butterfly.”

Kait’s eyebrows rose. “Why do you think that?”

“In all of our discussions, Ma’am, they refer to their youth as The Unformed. At first I thought it was a figure of speech or a translation error. But over the last hour of conversation it occurred to me their youth might actually be a different form than the adults.” She looked between her boss and Mark. “From that perspective, the Ambassador’s reaction to our suggestion of co-located or joint schools makes sense. Their children are too vulnerable and unable to interact with human children.”

Kait sighed. “Now it makes sense. They may see that stage of their lives as a weakness. We’re too new to them for them to feel comfortable talking about it.”

She slapped the table softly. “We’ll drop that part of the discussion, at least for the foreseeable future.” Kait stood up and walked to the courier, hand extended.

“Thank you. I appreciate your information.”

He shook her hand. “My pleasure, Attache Gilman.”  He looked past her to May. “Would you mind if I invite Miss Todar to dinner this evening?”

She patted his hand, a twinkle in her eye. “I think that’s a wonderful idea. Don’t you, May?” She looked over her shoulder.

May blushed.

The End

996 Words

Find more of the Forward Motion Flash Friday Group here: http://www.fmwriters.com/flash.html

Flash Fiction Friday: Captain Blackfur

I did this as a writing exercise back in June. In reality, it’s not a complete story, more like a first chapter or even a vignette. But I thought you’d enjoy it. Let me know how you like it. I may turn it into a short story or even a novel if you all think it’s worth it.

Captain Blackfur

Captain Zaphod Blackfur extended a claw and pushed the recessed button on his command console to bring the ship to impulse power. He had only one item in his cargo bay, a four cubic foot box. He was curious about that box, after all, he was still carrying cat DNA, but not enough to go back there and look inside. That wouldn’t be worth his skin.

The control tower radioed. “Proceed at one quarter impulse power, Captain.”

He confirmed and brought the ship speed down. The sky city states were particular about traffic around them. That was understandable; it would be messy if one were hit. The mountain that was his destination appeared on his forward screen. He reduced speed again. Damn them for hiding the landing bay doors. As if it wasn’t hard enough to fly and land a ship.

A door in the side of the mountain opened and a tractor beam pulled him into the cavern. He didn’t like it but if he tried to fly in himself, they’d turn the on force field protecting the hidden city and his ship would splatter against it, falling to the forested mountainside in smoking pieces.

On the dock he was met by the owner of the box, a human male, six feet tall, hands tucked into the wide sleeves of his master scientist robes. His blue eyes drilled into Zaphod.

“Thank you for making this speed run, Captain.”

“My pleasure, Master Whin.” Zaphod knew better than to try and shake hands. Whin’s  intense stare made him wary. The man paid a lot of money for this run from Centauri, maybe he’s anxious. He handed the scientist his pad, “If you’ll just sign here, I’ll get your box for you.”

The scientist hesitated and Zaphod began to bristle. It was known that many humans were prejudiced against the mutant animals. But it was their own fault, spewing toxins and genetically modified material all over the planet. What did they expect would happen? Whin slowly removed his hand from his sleeve and took the pad. He pressed his thumb to the screen.

Zaphod made an effort to control the bristle down his back while taking the pad. “I’ll bring it right out.” He had loaded it on a maglift just inside the hatch, out of sight. He hovered the box through the access way and down the ramp. He was handing Whin the handle when the man’s chest exploded in a spray of red. Zaphod dived for cover as several creatures came running in his direction.

They were a mix of cats, dogs and a bear, all sentient like him. The bear pulled him out from behind some shipping crates. One of the dog persons seemed to be in charge.

“What were you doing? Do you know who you were giving this too?” The snarl on the dog’s face was primeval.

Zaphod shrugged. “I was delivering a box to Master Whin. Who are you?”

“Cody Rex, I’m with the Sentient Beings Coalition. Do you have any idea what is in this box?”

“You’re terrorists, making it harder on the rest of us.” Zaphod hissed, “And I don’t care what’s in the box. I was paid to pick it up and deliver it here. End of story.”

Cody nodded at the two cat persons. They nodded back and hustled the box away. The bear and the other dog picked up the body and disappeared around the bend of the dock. He turned back to Zaphod. “The box contains a virus that will alter the DNA of created beings. Turn us back into the dumb animals we once were.”

Zaphod felt his back arch in a primal reflex. He fought it. “That’s ridiculous. It’s against the law to discriminate against created beings.” He thought back to Whin’s reaction.  “Anyway,” he asked, “how do you know what is in the crate. It could be furniture.”

Cody sniffed. “We have spies, comrades in places of power.” He held his head up, sniffing again. “I have to go. Think about joining us, Zaphod Blackfur. We could use a ship’s captain.” He turned and ran down the dock, disappearing through a door.

Zaphod hustled up his ship’s ramp, closing the access way up tight. Security would be around any minute.  He ran to the bridge, thinking about Cody’s invitation and the sky city states. Each one was as human only as they could legally make them. Sure, he delivered to them, but his reception was always cool. He never stayed long. On the bridge the comm light was blinking. Sinking into his chair, he punched the button. “Captain Blackfur here, Control.”

“Captain Blackfur, sensors picked up what sounded like an explosion on the dock outside your ship.”

“I heard no explosion, Control.”

“Security will be there in three minutes.”

“Thank you, Control.” He clicked off. Great, they’ll check the DNA and know it’s Master Whin. He turned on the dock monitors. The security team was just arriving. A sergeant pointed one man to the blood on the deck. Others were directed to search the perimeter. He began to speak into a comm unit. Zaphod counted, three, two, one, and pointed at the signal light on the comm board. It popped on as he pointed.

“Captain Blackfur here.”

“Captain, patching Sergeant Urich through to you.”

Zaphod watched his monitor, a moment later, he had the sergeant.

“Captain Blackfur, this is Sergeant Urich. Did you see what happened out here?”

“Sorry, no, Sergeant Urich. Is something wrong?”

“There’s blood all over the dock, Captain.”

Zaphod watched the security officer stare at the ship. This one’s no dummy, Zaphod thought. He’s going to pull the video from the dock security cameras and see the whole thing.  “Sorry, Sergeant, I completed my business with my shipper and came back into the ship.”

He saw the Sergeant grimace. “Thank you for your time, Captain.”

Zaphod cut the connection. He’ll order that footage right away. I need to get out of here.

The End

999 Words

Find more of the Forward Motion Flash Friday Group here:http://www.fmwriters.com/flash.html

It’s A New Week

Busy, Busy, Busy!

I know, everyone is busy. I’m a volunteer for my Project Management Chapter and for my local county fair (www.NorthernGilaCountyFair.com). It’s hard to get a hold of people to get things done, we all have so much on our plates already. Sigh. I just found out the fair book, just released, has several errors. It’s annoyed the advertisers and confuses the people who want to enter the fair. It makes it all so much harder.

My peach tree produced a bumper crop of peaches. I planted it 3 years ago. Last year I had 3 peaches. This year, the branches all bent over to the ground under the weight of the fruit. The peaches became ripe last Monday. They begin to go bad immediately so I’ve been freezing, canning and cooking with peaches since then. I picked the last of the fruit Saturday. I gave peaches away, ate peaches and at this point have had all the peaches I want. However, I have a good supply in the freezer and on the pantry shelves to last me the rest of the year. As soon as I recover from the glut.

The same holds true for the green beans. Their saving grace is that they don’t come all at once. However, I pick every other day and have just about all I need in the freezer and we eat green beans every third day or so. I’m giving them away now too. The brother-in-law got some (and peaches!) yesterday.

The ripening cherry tomatoes are now also running ahead of our ability to consume them. The brother-in-law got some of those too. We keep them on the counter in a bowl and since I grow Sungold cherries, they’re treated like candy or grapes. Just pop one in your mouth every time you pass the bowl. I picked the 1st of the Early Girl tomatoes yesterday. Hubby cut it up as soon as I washed it off and put it on a sandwich. Yum.

I haven’t forgotten my writing. I finished my Mugging The Muse class and learned a lot as well as picking up 6 new story ideas. I have picked up my Gulliver Station series and started revising the 1st draft I wrote, back in November. I needed to make some technical decisions about the book and over the weekend finally came to a conclusion. It involves math on my part, (it’s a SciFi series), so that will take some time for me. The math wheels in my brain are fairly rusted. But now that I’ve made that decision, things can move forward pretty quickly. I’m hoping to have the series start coming out as Indie publishing in late January with an every other month release schedule for each book. There are four books planned. Things depend on my revisions. I’ll keep you posted.

So, stay productive you busy people!

July’s NaNo Challenge Progress

I’m eight days into July and 13,000 words into my July Camp National Novel Writers Month, called July Camp NaNo http://campnanowrimo.org for short. I’m also checking out another community, called July Novel Writing Month http://julnowrimo.com/. I have writing friends working in each site and some, like me, recording our progress on both sites. Each site is a community, (see my post on July 18th on Community!) dedicated to helping the writer get through a challenge to write 50,000 words in the month.
So far, I’ve been writing about 2,000 words per day on my 2nd book in the series I used to call TriPoint Station and have since changed to Gulliver Station. CJ Cherryh wouldn’t have been threatened at all by my use of her name for a space station but why cause her any embarrassment. There are four books in this series. I wrote the 4th book first, in November 2012. I know, but I hadn’t planned for it to be a 4th book, I was hoping it would be a 1st book in a completely different series. After I wrote it, I realized I didn’t have series material for my protagonist. But I was captivated by the space station world I had just developed. Go figure.
Anyway, I wrote book 1 in April, Gulliver Station: A New Start (all titles subject to change.) And now book 2, Gulliver Station: The Challenge. Book 3 will be drafted in November: Gulliver Station: Revolution. The 4th book is called Stories from Gulliver station. It contains a novelette and some short stories. None of the drafted books have been revised yet. I’m still hemming and hawing over exactly how I want them to come out, as well as still struggling to learn my craft enough to revise them properly. I hope to start publishing in January 2014. We’ll see how that turns out.
Speaking of publishing, I have my newest book, Recall, up on a promotion on Smashwords.com. For a limited time, it will be free to download. Go to http://www.smashwords.com/books/search?query=Connie+Cockrell and use coupon code SW100. Go today. This promotion won’t last long.