giovedì 6 novembre 2025

Celestina

Welcome to The Spot Writers. The prompt for this month is to write a story involving a mirror. This week’s contribution comes from the pen of Phil Yeats.

In April 2024, Phil published The Body on Karli’s Beach, the third book in his Barrettsport Mysteries, a series of soft-boiled mysteries set in a fictional South Shore, Nova Scotia town. For information about these books and The Road to Environmental Armageddon, his trilogy about the hazards of ignoring human-induced climate change, visit his website: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com/. He published his latest book, a novella titled Starting Over Again: A Post-Apocalyptic Fantasy, earlier in 2025.

 

 

Celestina

by Phil Yeats

 

Lord Elric stared into the still waters of the lake by which they camped. He saw not his battle-scarred reflection but that of Lexicas, the wizard.

“I salute your mission to slay the traitor Saurus and rescue the fair Celestina and her two handmaids, but beware, trouble awaits inside your castle. Hob has overrun the defenders you left behind,” Lexicas said before his image disappeared. It was replaced by Elric’s.

Celestina crept forward and took Elric’s hand. “Your furrowed brows and the fire in your eyes suggest something’s amiss, but you have a plan.”

“Yes, we must make haste to the castle. We leave immediately.”

That evening, they camped again two hours’ march from Lord Elric’s castle. He was staring into the diminishing evening light when Celestina approached from beside their campfire. “I wish I could have warned you. My stepbrother Hob is not trustworthy. He’s hated me for as long as I can remember. Hob and my father paid Saurus to kidnap me, knowing you’d come to my rescue.”

Lord Elric snorted. “And how were you to warn me?” He placed his arm around her slender shoulders. “But all is not lost. Their treachery is now revealed. Hob’s a worm. By tomorrow night, we’ll have him baited and hooked to trap the real villain. Lord Ranulf. He has no supporters at the king’s court. Ranulf will be exposed as a compatriot of the traitor Saurus. The king will banish him and Hob from the kingdom. They’ll both rot in France.”

“And what will become of his fiefdom?”

A smile softened the harsh lines of scars on Elric’s face. “Surely you know your mother was the king’s cousin, taken and married by Ranulf. Then, when you were but two years old, your mother died under mysterious circumstances. In those days, Ranulf had powerful allies at court, and the king was weaker than he is now. Now the king is strong, and Ranulf’s allies have abandoned him. His fiefdom will be the king’s gift to you when you marry a suitable husband.”

“Like you, my good Lord Elric, we’ll join our two fiefdoms together to make a truly powerful Lordly domain.”

“Yes, my love, that is the plan, but we must play our cards carefully.”

Lord Elric’s advance party departed three hours before dawn. Their plan. Gain access to the castle through the escape tunnel built for escaping priests during the religious crises from decades earlier. With luck, they could take Hob’s pack of vermin, unfamiliar with the castle’s secrets, by surprise. Then, when their main force arrived outside the gates at dawn, they could lower the drawbridge and mop up any vermin lurking in the shadows.

Lexicas met them outside the root cellar that hid the entry to the priests’ secret access and led them single file through the narrow, low passage. They reached a thick door, and Lexicas inserted a key in the lock before turning to Elric. “You should wait here, sire, while I check that the passage is clear. I’ll signal you if all’s clear.”

A high-pitched whistle signalled the all-clear, and Elric, with his archers and swordsmen right behind him, surged into the passage. “The dungeon?” he asked Lexicas. “Does it contain my loyal defenders, or did Hob’s vermin kill them all?”

“Killed some, but most are in the cells. I dosed the wine Hob’s guards consumed last evening with sleeping potion. They should offer no resistance.”

“And Hob and his henchmen?”

“In your quarters and the adjacent guest rooms, also sleeping off the wine.”

Elric deployed three of his strongest swordsmen to subdue the dungeon guards and free the prisoner, deployed the archers to pick off the defenders on the ramparts when dawn broke, and led their remaining swordsmen to his quarters.

Outside Elric’s door, they encountered two sleepy guards who offered little resistance, and inside they found Hob asleep. Elric raised his sword, preparing for a downward two-handed blow. Lexicas stepped in front of him.

“Wait, my lord. Killing him in his sleep would be murder. He’s more valuable alive as a hostage. Put him in a cell and clear out the rest of his compatriots.”

Elric nodded and stomped from the room, leaving Lexicas to deal with the captives. He’d hated Hob and Ilbert, his father, since they used guile, and some false promises, when the king found himself with a losing hand after an insurrection in France.

Outside, Elric exhorted his archers to attack the defenders on the ramparts as soon as the early morning light was adequate. They’d have the initial advantage, being inside when the defenders expected an attack from the outside. Lexicas dispatched his swordsmen, and those liberated from the cells, to attack the castle’s defenders in their barracks. Elric led the attack on the gatehouse, the prize they must win. With luck, the battle would be over before Celestina and his remaining fighters arrived outside the gates.

Elric with four swordsmen and six loyal serfs armed with battle clubs and daggers, for the noise from the attacks on the defenders on the ramparts to draw the defenders in the gatehouse from their lair. When the battle for the ramparts began, they surprised the first four defenders and cut them down without trouble. Several others retreated into the guardhouse, but couldn’t bar the door before Elric’s men were upon them. They were seriously outnumbered and laid down their weapons without a fight, leaving Elric in control of the gatehouse.

The sun was high in the sky when Elric and his trusty warriors flushed the last of Hob’s invaders from their holes. Some died fighting, others surrendered and joined their compatriots in the crowded cells.

Elric retired to his rooms relieved in the understanding he’d survived his first challenge since his father died. He’d left too few fighters to defend the castle, but they’d been able to take the invaders by surprise and win the day.

He could now doff his fighting clothes and don more ceremonial attire in preparation for a feast to honour his loyal knights and welcome the fair Celestina to his castle. He gazed into the looking glass, ran his finger down the most prominent of his battle scars and wondered if she could ever truly love anyone so ugly.

 

The Spot Writers:

Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie: https://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com/

Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/

 


giovedì 30 ottobre 2025

Too Many Mirrors

 Welcome to The Spot Writers. The prompt for this month is to write a story involving a mirror. This week it’s Cathy MacKenzie’s turn—just in time for Halloween Eve!!!—and she’s on a roll with another story about the Grimes family.

Check out her latest book, 300 pages of crass, crazy, crude, funny, sarcastic, and weird stories about the Grimes’ Christmases, called (what else?): THE GRIMES’ CRAZY CHRISTMASES. Available on Amazon or (cheaper) through the author. https://www.amazon.ca/dp/1990589448

Cathy’s writings have been published in over 200 print and online publications. Check out her website www.writingwicket.wordpress.com for further information on her works.

 

***

Too Many Mirrors

by Cathy MacKenzie

Elise stood in front of the full-length mirror. She adjusted her extra-large long-sleeved T-shirt, knowing the long sleeves covered her arms for a reason. She sighed, disbelieving she could’ve aged so fast in such a short time. Had she never noticed Passing Time? Jimmy was only sixteen; she hadn’t even hit forty yet. How much worse would her body get? And what about Jimmy? Was he ashamed of his dowdy mother?

What to do? She’d dieted and dieted. She only moderately exercised; she tried to make time to walk around the neighbourhood for the supposed-requisite thirty minutes a day but wasn’t always successful. But didn’t her daily traipsing after Bob and Jimmy count for something?
Glancing at herself again, she shook her head. “Old age is a bitch,” she mumbled. But if it weren’t for old age, where would she be? “In my coffin,” she muttered, answering her question. “In my coffin. Hopefully, one of those fancy burnished ones at Sunshine Gardens and not a cheapie that Bob would select.”
She smoothed down her T-shirt one more time before giving up in defeat. The baggy sweatpants didn’t help matters. She sighed again. She was what she was. Thankfully, neither Bob nor Jimmy had ever made fun of her looks. Then again, she rarely—if ever—received compliments, so that revealed something, didn’t it?

 

***

 

Jimmy stood in front of the mirror that hung on the wall over his dresser. It was a long and low piece of woman’s furniture, with horizontal drawers, so unlike the tall, skinny chest of drawers his father had. But, in times like this, when he needed a clear view of himself, the female-type dresser with the large mirror provided that.

He liked what he saw in the mirror. Halloween was tomorrow: October thirty-first, as everyone knew. Even he knew that! Tonight was his dress run, and he was “dressed to kill,” meaning he had a great costume—not that he’d be stabbing or shooting someone. He didn’t possess a knife or gun to do that deed, though he supposed he could scoff a knife, one of his mother’s largest and sharpest from the kitchen drawer, or he could steal the pill container from his mother’s mirrored medicine cabinet and boff someone that way—
But, no, he wasn’t in the mood for killing. Too young for that. Though the macabre would fit in quite nicely, especially on Halloween night. Nope, he just wanted to parade around the neighbourhood, gathering as many sweets as the king-size pillowcase he’d pilfered from the linen closet would hold. Most kids carried regular-sized pillowcases. Not him. The bigger, the better.
He examined himself again. The costume at $49.98 had almost wiped out his Christmas and birthday savings for five years, not that he’d saved every dollar he received. Due to his height, he’d had to purchase the adult size, which was ten dollars more than the kid’s suit, but it was worth it. How many people walked around as a lobster?
He’d have to be careful with the claws, though. He’d be mighty pissed if they pricked the plastic and burst the lobster. And if that happened, he wouldn’t be able to return it. (He’d learned that trick from his mother, who always returned artificial Christmas trees the next shopping day after Christmas—IF the family was lucky to have a tree, that is.)

 

***

 

Bob stood in the bathroom, examining himself in the mirror. “Mighty fine,” he mumbled, smoothing down a few wayward hairs. “Sexy or what?”

Hmm, he thought. Halloween tomorrow. Should he dress up, scare the neighbourhood kids? Or should he just plan on scaring Jimmy?
He snickered. No, the better idea would be to frighten Elise. Scare her shitless. He scratched his head. What the heck did any of that mean: scare shitless?
The previous day, Elise nattered about needing to go to the ER, but he’d talked her out of it. “It’s just gas, Elise.”
“But I have these huge pains. And my belly is so bloated and hard.”
“Here,” he’d said, “take one of these,” handing her a box of laxatives that just happened to be within grasp.
Yep, that one pill had pretty well done her in. Doubt he could scare her shitless today or tomorrow!
He glanced in the mirror again. Yep, good to go!

 

***

The Spot Writers:
Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/
Catherine A. MacKenzie: https://writingwicket.wordpress.com
Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com
Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/

 

 

 

 

 

giovedì 23 ottobre 2025

Reflection

 Welcome to the Spot Writers. The prompt for this month is: write a story involving a mirror

Today's tale comes to us from Val Muller, author of the Corgi Capers mystery series.

***

Reflection

by Val Mulller


The guitar twang echoes in the house, shaking the picture frames. I shake my head to the lyrics. Something about heartbreak and loneliness or a pickup truck or boots. That's all they're ever about.

"It's not true," Evan would say if he weren't up in his room, blasting country music. It's all he's loved from the first time he heard it playing at Steak House of Texas one vacation. Of course, we live nowhere near Texas, and country music's not so big here. I detest it. So of course, he loves it.

The chords grow louder, then quieter. He must have stepped out of his room, then closed the door again. But of course he didn't cut the music.

I think back to me in high school. All goth, all metal. Everyone I know wanted to be either a guitarist or a drummer. But country? We would rather have been dead than to have listened to--

"Dad."

I startle, turn and stand. Evan is there, waiting for me to notice him. It's not like I don't live with the kid. I see him everyday. But I swear he grew a foot since the last time he went up to his room.

"Dad?"

He stands wearing one of my old flannels, but it is buttoned and tucked, not the grunge style I used to wear.

"Dad?"

I shake myself to attention. "Evan."

He looks sheepish. It is money. I know the look. I lived the look as a teenager.

"I was wondering..."

"How much?" I sigh. 

"It's for a movie. Me and--"

I fight back a smile. "Are you taking Jess?"

Before he answers, time freezes. I look at him like I am looking at myself in a mirror. I was him, decades ago. My flannel hung defiantly from my sleeves, buttons uncuffed. Ripped jeans and Doc Martens where his fit jeans and cowboy boots stand. And where I stand? It was my father, always in a button-down, half the time wearing a tie, always ready to pull out a wallet from the pants the wallet had worn thin. 

In Evan's embarrassed smirk, I see my own pride in having a date, my shame in asking Dad for money, my embarrassment at letting him into my love life.

"Yeah, Jess is coming," he says, looking up while bowing his head. I know he hopes I don't ask any more.

"Be careful," I hear my dad say as I hand my son the bills.  I know they say every generation is bad, but I know we were truly worse than Evan and his pals. They are more naive, but they are good at heart.

He reaches for the money, and in the mirror image I see my own hand snatching the money from my dad, glad I have made it past the Inquisition of two questions.

Evan goes upstairs. The music grows loud briefly as he opens his door, then quiets again. I sit back on the couch. I am reading the news on my phone, but I cross my right leg over my left, the way my father did when he read the paper. I look at my reflection in the glass cover of the fireplace.

"Thanks, dad," I whisper. 


****

The Spot Writers–Our Members:

Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie: https://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com

Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/

 


giovedì 16 ottobre 2025

Mr. Autumn makes a bet

 Welcome to The Spot Writers. The prompt for this month is “fall or autumn.”

This week’s contribution comes from Chiara De Giorgi. Chiara is an Italian author and currently lives in Berlin, Germany. She writes fiction, with a focus on children’s literature and science fiction.

 

Mr. Autumn makes a bet

by Chiara De Giorgi

 

Mr. Autumn was walking along the canal, watching the clouds and the trees and the houses reflected in the water. He was ruminating, had been ruminating for a week. He had made a bet with the Weather Master; time was running out and he still didn’t know what to do to win it. 

The Weather Master had recently come up with one of his ideas: he had invented a thing called Seasons

He had assigned one to Miss Winter, who filled it with white and frost: elegant snowflakes, shimmering icicles, bare branches covered with soft snow. She looked so happy in her furry coat! And her hands were enveloped in thick gloves, and on her head she wore a bright woolen hat. 

Mr. Spring was put in charge of another Season. He splashed the meadows with green and filled them with brightly colored flowers, dressed the bare branches of the trees with lovely buds and tender leaves. He unleashed birds in the sky and butterflies in the fields.

A third Season was managed by Miss Summer. She gave juicy fruits to the trees, added the buzzing of a million bees to the chirping of birds, made the sun bright and warm, and the sky clear and deep blue. Squirrels filled their little mouths with nuts and ran up and down the trees.

As the Weather Master boasted about this last invention of his, Mr. Autumn expressed his objection: it was a harsh transition between the Season Miss Summer had created and the one by Miss Winter. To go from bright and warm to white and frost. From juicy fruits and green leaves on the trees to bare branches covered in snow. From fluffy red tails disappearing behind a tree trunk to icicles hanging from the branches.

The Weather Master had smiled and said: “Then, be in charge of a fourth Season! Can you create a good one in a week? Let’s make a bet!”

Mr. Autumn had been taken by surprise, but he couldn’t pull back, could he?

And now, the week was almost over and he hadn’t been able to produce this fourth Season. 

But finally, while a gust of wind pushed a leaf, sending it twirling and floating to rest on the he water in the canal… he suddenly had an idea.

He painted the leaves yellow, red, and rust brown; then he made the wind swirl them around, creating a multicolored carousel, dancing in the air. He dropped chestnuts in the grass, lit fires in the fireplaces, and scented the air with grapes and figs. The air grew colder, the sun hazier. The birds left their nests, and the ants hid in their holes. The fourth Season was ready. 

When he saw the trees so ablaze with colours, the Weather Master clapped his hands, and called everyone for a round of celebrations. Miss Summer brought honey, Miss Winter brought biscuits shaped like snowflakes, Mr. Spring brought flowers for the table, and Mr. Autumn some roasted chestunuts. 

“Marvellous, marvellous!” the Weather Master exclaimed. “Shall we do another bet?” he added excitedly.

Promptly, a squirrel popped its head out of Mr. Autumn’s pocket and tossed an acorn at the Weather Master.

“Excellent aim,” he mumbled, rubbing his head. “I suppose this means no more bets…”

And thanks to the squirrel’s infallible aim, there is no fifth season. 

 

The Spot Writers:

Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie: https://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com/

Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/

 

 

 

 

domenica 12 ottobre 2025

Autumn or Fall

Welcome to the Spot Writers. This month’s prompt is “autumn or fall.” This week’s contribution comes from the pen of Phil Yeats. 

In April 2024, Phil published The Body on Karli’s Beach, the third book in his Barrettsport Mysteries, a series of soft-boiled mysteries set in a fictional South Shore, Nova Scotia town. For information about these books and The Road to Environmental Armageddon, his trilogy about the hazards of ignoring human-induced climate change, visit his website: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com/. He published his latest book, a novella titled Starting Over Again: A Post-Apocalyptic Fantasy, earlier in 2025.

 

***

Autumn or Fall

by Phil Yeats

 

Jeremy and I sat at a table in the residence cafeteria, lost in a discussion of the P vs. NP problem. We’d arrived at eight for breakfast and were still at the table pouring over masses of scribbled notes at ten. Percival Adams the third marched in and came straight to our table. He’d piled his breakfast tray high with all the unhealthy food the cafeteria staff offered on Sunday mornings.

“Crikey,” he said. “Why aren’t you two outside enjoying the fall colours? I don’t suppose you noticed, but we had a frost last night and poof, the leaves are now reds, oranges, and yellows.”

“Fall? Did you say fall? Shouldn’t it have been autumn?” Jeremy said. He was always quick to satirize our fellow student from the Boston states and his obsession with everything English.

It was a sunny but cool October morning. I’d noticed and enjoyed seeing the coloured leaves through the cafeteria windows and didn’t want to listen to Jeremy and Percy’s extended bickering. “Fall or autumn—either is acceptable here, in Britain, and in the US. Autumn is more formal and fall more informal.”

Jeremy wouldn’t back down. “That’s secondary. The English, who tend to be more formal, say Autumn. Americans, more informal, say fall. It’s only here in Canada that the two are interchangeable.”

“Bollocks,” Percy replied, switching from the upper class crikey to more working-class Brit talk. “I’m just trying to fit into the culture up here north of the border, where you insist on using British rather than American English.”

Now they were really into it, a totally meaningless argument about the trivialities of language, when Jeremy and I were getting our heads around the P vs. NP problem.

“Is that so?” Jeremy replied. “What do you think we’d call chemical element number 13, the one with the symbol Al?”

“Aluminium, just like in the UK,” Percy replied.

“Hah, you’re dead wrong. It’s always aluminum up here north of the border, just like in the US.”

“But you spell colour and other words like it with our not or like it should be.”

“As it should be for words with French roots. But, we spell realize with a zed, like in the US.”

“Not so. I’ve seen it spelt with an ess up here.”

“Okay, our Canadian dictionaries accept both spellings for some words, but trust me, almost everyone pronounces it like it has a zed. And what about some other words, like skeptic? It’s always with a kay, never a cee, like in England?”

Percy stood up, taking his now empty tray. Somehow, he’d wolfed down his enormous breakfast during the confrontation. He stared down at Jeremy. “What’s your point, you stupid little math geek?”

“You’re an American. Talk and spell like an American, or try to incorporate some Canadian usage. We’d appreciate that. But your English schtick is nothing but a pain in the ass.”

“Shouldn’t that be arse?” Percy said with a sneer.

“No, dammit, it shouldn’t,” Jeremy yelled at his departing back. 

I leaned back, swallowing coffee that had gotten cold, while Jeremy cooled down. Percy, who could be a pain in the ass, or should that be arse, had the last word. He usually did.

 

***

The Spot Writers:

Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie: https://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com/

Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/

 

Catch Me If I Fall

 Welcome to The Spot Writers. The prompt for this month is “fall or autumn.”

This week it’s Cathy MacKenzie’s turn. Her writings have been published in over 200 print and online publications. Her latest book is MOSES AND ME, “tails” of a dog and a senior—a seventy-year-old (Cathy)—who’s disliked dogs her entire life but suddenly had to have one. Available from her or on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1990589383

Check out www.writingwicket.wordpress.com for further information on Cathy’s works.

***

**The author wrote a series of “creepy crazy” Christmas books for four consecutive years (2012-2015). She has been busy reformatting them into one book (hopefully in time for Christmas 2025), so the wacky Grimes family has been on her mind. This month, she wrote another for this prompt.**

***


Catch Me If I Fall

by Cathy MacKenzie

 

“Bob, I was at SuperSave today, and I overheard a guy talking.”

“Yeah?”

“Yes. He was saying how hot it is and how we need rain so badly.”

“We do, Elise. People’s wells are drying up. Good thing we’re in the city. Gonna be on the city to keep us water-logged. Glad we don’t have no well that’ll run dry.”

“And it’s so hot, Bob, for this time of year. Jeepers, today is October 2. And it’s sixteen—one of the coldest days we’ve had for months, but still lovely. The rest of the week will be around twenty, twenty-two. That’s unheard of for October. It’s almost Halloween. And Halloween is always dark, cold, and dreary.”

“It’s almost a month before Halloween, Elise. Why do you exaggerate so much?”

“I don’t know. It’s October today. Halloween is October. So, to me, they’re close.”

“Yeah, okay.”

“But it is hot, you must admit.”

“Gotta be global warming, Elise. Or is it global warning?”

“I think they’re about the same, Bob. Just like today and Halloween being close.”

Bob grunted. “So, whatcha gonna be this year, Elise?”

“What am I going to be?”

“Yeah, for Halloween. What you gonna be?”

“Why, Bob, I’ll just be myself. No dress-up for me.”

Elise was taken aback when her husband emitted one of his great guffaws. As if he’d told a funny. No, she guessed it was her who’d told the funny, though what was funny about it was beyond her. She was an adult. Adults didn’t dress up for Halloween—at least, she didn’t. Ergo, she’d be “herself.” 

Jimmy, on the other hand, what would he be? Their son was now sixteen. Did sixteen-year-olds still trick or treat? She figured Jimmy probably would. He revelled in that sort of stuff.

Hmm, she thought. Jimmy. Where in the heck was he?

“Have you seen Jimmy today, Bob?”

“Can’t say I have, Elise. Why?”

“No special reason. But we should know where our son is, shouldn’t we?”

“He’s seventeen, Elise. I think he’s old enough to take care of himself. And if he isn’t, then too bad.”

“Bob, he’s only sixteen. A year makes a difference, you know.”

Bob dropped the remote. “Really, Elise? I thought he was seventeen.” 

Elise scratched her head. “No, I believe he’s sixteen.”

“Well, you’re the mother. You’d think a mother would know how old her son is.”

Elise felt herself blushing at her husband’s smirk. As if she wasn’t smart enough to remember an age. Or was he funning again? “Pretty sure he’s sixteen, Bob. So do you know where he is?”

Bob glanced at her before picking up the remote. “I do not. That’s a mother’s job.”

“Yes, I suppose…”

“I’m sure he’ll turn up, Elise.”

Elise cocked her head. What was that? The front door? Jimmy?

And then he appeared. “Mom, Dad, here I am.”

“Nice to see you, Jimmy.”

“Yeah,” Bob chimed in. “Nice to see you, son.”

“Dad, you didn’t even look at me. How can it be nice to see me when your eyes are on the TV.”

“Oh, I have eyes in the back of my head, didn’t you know?”

“I did not know, Dad. And you still haven’t looked at me.” Jimmy glanced at his mother, who was glaring at his father, who was engrossed in the television, still not caring to look at his only child. Jimmy shrugged. “Never mind. I’m going to my room.”

“What are you going to do there, Jimmy?”

Jimmy sighed. “Nothing bad, Mommy. Just teen stuff, okay? I’m still a teenager, you know.”

“Jimmy,” Elise asked, “are you sixteen or seventeen? Your father and I were wondering.”

Elise couldn’t help but see her son’s eyes bug out.

Jimmy stood taller and said, “I’m seventeen! Both of you: I’m seventeen.”

“See, Elise, told you so.”

“Going to my room now.” Jimmy saluted. “See ya later.”

***

Jimmy couldn’t believe it. His parents actually believed him when he said he was seventeen? Crap, he was only sixteen. What were they—well, his father—trying to do? Kick him out of the house a year earlier? Both of them kept harping that the door was gonna hit him in the butt when he was eighteen. He’d asked once if that door-butting would be on his actual birthday or if they’d give him a few days leeway. He never received an answer. Figured neither of them knew what they would do.

Cripes, why did he end up with such shitty, strange parents? He plopped to the bed.

It was October. Fall. Fall denoted back-to-school vibes, which he hated. But fall brought Halloween, which he loved. 

But his dratted parents…

 

I wish you’d catch me when I fall—wish you weren’t the one who caused me to fall—

You’re supposed to be the one to stand me up,

To stand by my side,

To take a stance with me,

But…

Life’s up and down,

Rise and fall,

Fall and rise,

Topple and die…

 

“Or turn eighteen and have the door slammed on me,” he mumbled. “And then fall.”

 

(To be continued…)

 

 

***

The Spot Writers:

Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie: https://writingwicket.wordpress.com

Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com

Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/

 

 

 

giovedì 25 settembre 2025

Nothing Gold

Welcome to the Spot Writers. The prompt for this month is autumn. 

Today's tale comes to us from Val Muller, author of the Corgi Capers mystery series.

 

Nothing Gold

by Val Muller

 

Mrs. Paxton stepped down the hall. As she neared the classroom, Miss Summers looked up. Mrs. Paxton's shoes were such a giveaway. She never took to wearing sneakers, not even after the pandemic, like all the other teachers.

Mrs. Paxton didn't want to intrude, even though she wanted to, so she kept moving down the hall, listening to the clip-clop of her own heeled shoes in the vintage hallway. She chuckled, knowing the etymology of the word "sneaker" did indeed originate from its ability to sneak around. Not all words in the English language were so cut and dry. She went down a mental rabbit hole, remembering the old practice of literally cutting and drying herbs and other plants.

See?, she reminded herself. She would have plenty of things to think about during her retirement. There was nothing to worry about.

She neared the end of the hallway and eyed the poster on the wall. Homecoming. This would be her last one. It was a year of lasts, and since she had given up the yearbook, she had more time to consider each milestone. It bothered her, giving up the publication, but it was only fair, letting Miss Summers take over this year, while Mrs. Paxton was still here to mentor her if need be.

She turned back around and headed toward Miss Summers' classroom. Funny, she remembered when the rules for possessive apostrophes were different. She always thought of the people who updated all the style guides as this secret council, meeting in robes and performing chants and other rituals before making decisions about the sanctity of the language. Maybe she could do that in retirement--find out who changes the language rules and join them. Leave her mark on the academic world that way.

Miss Summers and the yearbook kids were reading a poem, "Nothing Gold Can Stay." A classic one, but perhaps a little cliche to include on the back cover. But it was fine. Leave well enough alone.

Mrs. Paxton recited the famous poem to herself as she retreated to her classroom. She ran her fingers through her white hair. Leaf succumbs to leaf, she told herself. Miss Summers was the new greenery as she herself prepared to blow away in the wind.

She'd had her moments. Her golden years were behind her. She sat at her desk, vowing to clean out another file folder before her next class. But the golden rays of sun shone in through the day's heavy clouds. She looked out the window at the school's front lawn. In the golden rays, a PE class was doing aerobics in such unison, it seemed an otherworldly dance. And the lighting was just--

"Perfect!" Mrs. Paxton shouted, running down the hall. Her shoes slipped, so she took them off, hustling to Miss Summers' room. "Grab the cameras," she said. "A photo opp! Front lawn!"

The kids who'd had her last year knew that excited tone and hurried to get the cameras. Miss Summers looked startled, not yet having changed gears from the poem.

"A photo opp," Mrs. Paxton repeated to the startled teacher. "Gold. You've got to be gold while you can," she said, deciding to stop counting her lasts after all, knowing none would stay in the end, but that the golden hour could stretch toward eternity with the right outlook.

 

 

The Spot Writers–Our Members:

Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/

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Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/