Beginning of a short story (graphic)
- aparsons
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Beginning of a short story (graphic)
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I woke up to screaming, and the nest full of paws and screams. I smelt something different, something that wasn't my brothers, mother or the nest. I twisted around, hurting, and I saw a huge nose poking into the nest. It was wet and almost as big as my head. The nose moved aside and revealed a huge mouth full of teeth, tongue and drool. The mouth moved forward and I turned to run away, and something clamped onto my tail. I began to yowl, and scratch frantically through the nest to get away, and something ripped. I was able to get away, but my balance was off and I fell forward onto my face. I couldn't stop meowing and looking for my mother.
I heard more crying from around me, and I saw my brother scrunched up at the very back of our nest, hissing and crying. Something was wrong...I couldn't tell. The nose was still at the front of our nest, and I could hear it chewing something. I smelt blood all around me. I kept crying, I couldn't sit down, it hurt my tail. I saw my mother crouched over my sister, her fur was standing up, her tail was puffed up. The mouth that invaded our nest snaked out a tongue and licked at the lips. I could hear a low growling from the mouth, it was a deeper sound than my mother's hissing. I felt my fur prickling along my back and my tail, oh but the pain from my tail! I kept wailing, I couldn't help it. The nose started inching closer to us, and I could hear scrabbling from above and around us, the nose was trying to dig into our nest.
Mother hissed and spat at the nose. The warning went unnoticed, and mother swiped at the nose. She sliced across the nose, and it retreated. I heard whining coming from outside, but a second later it came back and kept snapping at us. The teeth seemed even bigger, and every time the mouth forced itself closer to mother. She kept hissing and swiping frantically, but the nose was too determined. I saw that my sister was not moving much, there was blood on her head. I heard brother behind me crying and meowing, I leaned a little closer to him. I felt him trembling, and realized I was shaking too. Mother was in front of us standing over our sister, but she was being forced back by the nose. The nose by now was slashed in many places, but the tongue and droll kept coming. Mother was forced back a little more, and the mouth clamped down on sister. I saw the teeth sink into sister's neck and her limp head disappeared into the maw.
Mother's screaming took on a shriller pitch and she lunged forward; latching onto the nose. It did not seem to matter, the nose and mouth, along with sister retreated from the nest. Mother followed, and I could hear her hissing and screaming outside. I walked carefully to the entrance of our nest. Outside I saw the familiar sight of trees, dirt and piles of other hiding places. Past the trees was the straight black expanse of ground that mother never let us explore. Past the black ground were the huge squares that mother called “buildings”. Mother said “humans” lived in them. But right in front of me was mother, I saw she was clinging to the nose.
The nose, from farther up, was attached to a huge beast. It had four legs, like mother and us, a tail, but it was much bigger than it. The ears were all wrong, and the fur was all one color, not striped like us. I could hear growling coming from the body, I saw ribs through the solid fur. Mother was scratching its face and it pawed at her trying to shake her off. It refused to drop my sister, letting her body flop around as it shook its head trying to dislodge my mother. I felt my brother creep up beside me, he was still shaking and he was whimpering deep in his throat. He leaned against me and watched too as the beast shook his head back and forth.
The beast finally shook his way over to a tree and slammed mother into the trunk. She slipped off its head, and fell to the ground. The beast stood looking at her, sister's body still stuffed in his mouth. I could see blood dripping off her stomach and tail. The beast started towards mother, but hesitated. It finally turned and loped away. I saw it shake its head furiously a few times, and finally went out of sight through the trees. I tried to sit down, but my tail still hurt, it hurt so much I began to cry again. Brother began to wail as well, we both tried to lie down watching mother, waiting for her to come fix the hurt. We did not wait long. Mother rolled off her back and stood slowly, her head hanging. Brother and I began to cry louder, hoping she would hear us. Mother shook her head slowly and turned to look at us. We huddled together, crouched and trying to keep off our tails. Mother slowly walked towards us, she was quiet and slow. When she reached the hole to our nest, she began to nudge at our heads. We cried louder, but began to inch backwards. We kept hitting our tails against bits of our nest and we cried even louder and stopped. Mother sighed, and kept nudging us backwards.
― Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
- moderntimes
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One small typo or omission, sentence "The nose, from farther up, was attached to a huge beast. It had four legs, like mother and us, a tail, but it was much bigger than it." the closing is wrong, should be "bigger than ours"?
I don't know how the story will turn out -- maybe the little girl kitty will be adopted by the mysterious humans? If so, it's going to be first rate, and something you should finish, absolutely, and then consider submitting to a pet magazine. Yes it's a bit graphic but not over the top and if the ending is a happy one, very very publishable. Honest.
Go with it!
- aparsons
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- moderntimes
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My magazine articles have sold the most -- tops was a national sale for $1000. That sure was celebration money, a couple of evenings ot with my girlfriend and so on. But most were, mmm, $100 or $200.
As far as a collection of short stories, nope, I really haven't written that many total, maybe 6-8 max, so a collection isn't in the mix. All my sales were individual to small magazines.
- aparsons
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- aparsons
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Let's say that I'm starting chapter 14. Now I have a general plot outline for my novel:
Mitch (my private eye) sees murder scene, appalled. Has anger issues and regrets. Helps his employee with a bully ex boyfriend. Talks to the murder witness. Talks to his pal Tony for info. Meets girlfriend for dinner. (etc)
So let's say that ch 14 is where Mitch is meeting a former gang member for help. I put them in a restaurant or maybe a bar, then what does the gang guy tell Mitch? I dunno -- I'm stuck on the plot sequence -- is it a clue or a false lead? Is the gang guy being straight or lying? and so on... tick tick tick...
Here's how I fix being stuck. I quit trying to write ch 14 and instead, I go back a ways, say, to ch 9 and re-read from there forward. I find a typo, fix a sentence so it's more clear, adjust some dialogue so it's easier to understand, and as I proceed thru the earlier chapters, I regain energy and pick up on previous plot threads. By the time I get to ch 14 again I can charge forward because I am on a mission.
So my recommendation is that you take a brief break, but not too long, and go back over earlier passages or chapters, to regain the balance and drive of the narrative.
Works for me.
- aparsons
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- aparsons
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- KBrown
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Keep going!
- DATo
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aparsons - I agree with KBrown, it is a good start and there are many directions this story can take. Keep writing!
― Steven Wright
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