During the last school holidays, my daughter came up with a fun challenge for you – fiveย words to fit into a ten-word story. Well, she clearly doesn’t have enough homework this half-term as she’s come up with some more words for my latest challenge. These words are:
- Fedora
- Patagonia
- Pink
- Melancholy
- pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (apparently the longest word in the dictionary and it means a lung disease caused by inhalation of very fine silica or quartz dust!)
So you can choose another five for your story. I look forward to seeing the results – I’m not expecting many takers!
For my writing challenge last week, I gave you an ending to your story:
She shook her head and smiled. The day hadnโt started well, but it had certainly ended with a bang.
Here’s what you came up with:
Keith Channing took a real event and added to it:
Reluctantly, Jacqui dragged herself out of bed. She hadnโt slept at all well. She had gone to bed the previous evening with a rotten summer cold developing and threatening to overwhelm her; even the brandy and hot milk, her go-to remedy on these occasions, hadnโt helped at all. To cap it all, just before four in the morning, her faithful companion for more than nine years, her little Jack Russell, had decided that whatever he had eaten in the garden during the evening would serve him better all over Jacquiโs bedclothes than inside his stomach.
As if that wasnโt enough, today was the day she had decided to invite some of her friends around for a crafting session.
Just before ten, her little dog erupted into a frenzy of yapping, signifying that someone had had the temerity to come to her door. It was Juliette, the first of her friends to arrive. The other three turned up at intervals over the following half-hour or so.
These were good friends, kind, giving, supportive friends, the sort of friends she could rely on to rally round whenever there was any kind of emergency, and who could rely on her to do the same. After some minutes of oohing and aahing and โyou should have called us to cancel, if youโre not feeling well; we would have understoodโ-ing, the group settled down to a few hours of making cards, costume jewellery and all manner of trinkets, each bringing her own special set of skills to the table.
Jacqui was seldom happier than when surrounded by her small clan of friends, and had every expectation that this tight-knit group would go on for ever. They all did. Until, that is, Betty dropped the bombshell that she and her husband were planning to leave the area and return to their roots.
That news was met with stunned silence. All eyes were fixed on Betty, and they werenโt kindly eyes.
โIsnโt anyone going to say anything?โ Betty finally asked.
โWhat is there to say?โ Jacqui demanded, โYou come in here, in the middle of a really nice dayโs crafting, and calmly announce that youโre leaving.โ
โAnd you donโt even say why,โ Juliette added, โand donโt give us that garbage about returning to your roots, โcos we donโt buy it. Whatโs really going on, eh, Betty? What?โ
โItโs true,โ Betty said, leaning back in her chair and rubbing the back of her neck, โwe want to be closer to our families, so we can see them more often and watch the little ones grow up.โ
Isabelle turned toward her and pointed an accusing finger. โWho was there when you had that trouble last year, eh? Them or us?โ she asked, โWhere were they when you really needed them? Nowhere to be seen. Thatโs when you know who your real friends are; but if youโre prepared to turn your back on all that, on everything we have meant to each other, everything we have done for each other, suffering and rejoicing together, then up yours. I want nothing more to do with you.โ
โSteady, Issy,โ Jacqui said, โperhaps she has a point. I miss my family, too; we all do.โ
โBut we donโt all abandon ship on a sentimental whim like that,โ Issy hissed, โwe stick together. Thatโs what friends do. But if youโre going to take her side, then count me out. Anyone else feel the same?โ
Silence. No-one moved.
โOkay, if thatโs how you feel,โ Issy said; and with that, she picked up her work and stormed out of the door. Betty started to cry, hiding her face behind her hands with embarrassment. Jacqui, Juliette and Annette comforted her as best they could, but it was clear that no more crafting would happen that day.
Suddenly, Bettyโs face cleared. She looked up, beaming.
โThat worked,โ she said.
โWhat dโyou mean?โ Jacqui asked.
โIโve seen how Issy has been trying to take over the group for a while, now. Iโm not going anywhere, but I had to do something to stop her. Good riddance, I say.โ
โMaybe youโre right, Betty,โ Juliette said, โI hadnโt noticed, but now you mention it, Issy is rather controlling, and she does always steer us to doing what she wants, instead of what we had planned. Iโm sure weโve all had enough of her โIssy fitsโ.โ
The three others nodded in agreement.
Jacqui shook her head and smiled. The day hadnโt started well, but it had certainly ended with a bang.
I love Geoff Le Pard‘s interpretation of the theme:
Shopping with mother was a chore, but then anything with mother in the same sentence was a chore. A sentence. Ellie sniggered. Yes, a life sentence.
She should love the old bag, she thought as she rummaged through the past the sell by date yoghurts distractedly. But she had yet to be beatified so that was beyond a mere mortal such as herself.
Take the journey here. โIโll be gone soon then youโll be sorry.โ
โDonโt say that, mum. You knowโฆโ
โYou just donโt care. Well, donโt think Iโm leaving you anything. The dogโs home, theyโll get it all.โ
โI donโt wantโฆโ
โAnd that person wonโt get it either, sod him.โ
She meant Keith. Now there was a saint, to put up with his mother in law. His patience made it worse, really. If only heโd get angry with her.
She picked up peach yoghurts, two days out of date and moved to the stale bread bin. If mother had so much money, why did she insist on living on left overs and scraps? Ellie plucked a dented ready-sliced tin and put it in her basket.
And then there was Mr Ahmedโs boys. Lovely lads, so polite. Theyโd seen her struggling to get mum into her chair and offered to help. โGet their greasy hands off me, the darkies.โ Ellie had really wanted to strangle her after that. Thatโs why sheโd left her outside, moaning about the smell as she stared at the boys. โDonโt think you can get away with that, my girl.โ Her whinging on repeat had followed Ellie into the store but at least in here it was quiet.
That was when Ellie was thrown backwards ten feet, ending in the frozen peas. Smoke and debris surrounded her as she was rendered deaf by a humungous explosion.
Four hours later, Ellie sat on a chair in the hospital, her head bandaged. Several people had sought her out to comfort her. At first she hadnโt understood but gradually it became clear. Her mother, left alone, had wheeled her chair over to where the two Ahmed boys were waiting. Someone had said she had a go at them. Another said she had picked up their bag, after an argument. What was not in doubt was the fact that Ellieโs mother, in seeking to pull something out of the boysโ bag had detonated a huge bomb, destroying some of the shopping centre as well as herself and the two boys. Ellie wanted to feel guilty but all she felt was relief that the only people who had died were the two brothers, apparently suicide bombers and her mother. Funny how things work out.
She shook her head and smiled. The day hadnโt started well, but it had certainly ended with a bang.
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