Every so often on this blog, I intend to post a short (as in tiny) story I've written. Usually it will be the kind of story prompted by .... a prompt.
What happens with a writing prompt is you are given some kind of instruction and then a time limit. You write like mad for that time limit and what ends up on the page ends up on the page.
I have done several of these prompts with my fellow writers in our writing group and they are fun and challenging at the same time. They also spark all kinds of creativity. Sometimes there is time for a short edit - like correcting spelling or grammar - and sometimes there isn't.
Following is my first offering:
The prompt: Choose a person who interests you.
Write about following that person home.
(15 minutes, plus
10 for edit)
P.L. TRAVERS (Helen Lyndon Goff) - Author
That day in London
I saw her leaving a café. I recognized
her from the newspaper pictures – her attendance at the premiere of Mary Poppins, in Hollywood, California. I hadn’t yet seen the film but her books … well
anyone who could come up with such surprising and fantastical adventures, let
alone a character so enchanting … I was
in awe of that kind of brain.
I quickly paid for
my toast and tea and followed her down the street – at a safe distance, mind
you. I’d heard about her crisp and
haughty manner with people. I didn’t
want an interview or even an autograph.
I guess I just wanted to see how she moved, where she went, who she saw.
Try to figure out in these short moments where those clever and original stories came
from – how they came to be.
Her heels clicked
decisively on the sidewalk. Her back was erect. The skirt of her pink tweed suit barely swished with the slight swaying
of her hips. There was something so regal in her bearing – almost the way I’d
pictured Mary Poppins herself and yet, the way she held her handbag with both
hands clasped in front of her made it seem like she wouldn’t let anyone “in”.
She did stop
briefly, to talk to a dog – a little Yorkshire terrier. She never loosened her grip on the handbag
held in front of her, but bent primly at the waist, her attention entirely
focused on the terrier and completely ignoring the person at the other end of
the leash.
“Hello little
pup. I hope you are enjoying your
stroll. Good day to you.”
Straightening up,
she nodded curtly at the dog’s owner and carried on down the walk, her heels
clicking.
In the middle of a
long row of attached cream houses, she turned and marched up the five
iron-railed steps to a peacock blue door.
She removed a key from her bag, snapped it shut, and put the key in the
lock. As she opened the door she turned
towards me. Her brilliant blue eyes caught mine – and I knew I had literally
been caught. She had known all along
that I was following her.
I opened my mouth
to say something but all my stunned self could produce was a tiny squeak.
She responded with
a raised eyebrow and stepped into the house.
“Hello House,” she
said, just before the door clicked shut.
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