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Morgan Delaney

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Writing Prompts

Peck

August 29, 2019 by Morgan Delaney

Photo by Eliška Motisová on Unsplash

Hi!

Another piece of twenty minute fiction. This one inspired by a tweet from Mark Stay (@markstay) about “watering the chickens.” I added five random words and here we are.

As usual I corrected typos and punctuation and deleted anything bad or unnecessary otherwise it is as I originally wrote it. Enjoy!


We could never stop Grandad watering the chickens.
He started one summer. It was warm. Seemed like a good idea at the time. The chickens were at the bottom of the garden. Granny didn’t like them. She said they smelled like Grandad’s trousers when he had them on too long. So the herb garden grew to encompass tomatoes, salads, strawberries and rhubarb in beds, the herbs in hanging boxes creating a verdant backdrop when you looked out the kitchen window.


Whenever Grandad was missing we’d find him hidden behind the foliage; the hiss and platsch of water from the blue hosepipe a giveaway. He’d be standing close to the tall cage he kept the chickens in, leaning in to make sure that each got its fair share. There were three. Two auburn-coloured, one white with brown spots along her wings.


“Grandad! Granny wants you to light the fire.”

He’d give us one of his trite responses and shamble in. He’d do what was required but before you’d know it he’d be gone. Granny would purse her purple lips.
There was always some pretext: the rubbish needed to be taken out; the car should be filled up in case she wanted to use it; the jar was stiff and she wanted him to open it. We’d find him spraying water over the chickens. Leaning in, like he was listening.

Sometimes we hid in the garden, the chickens gackering. If we got too close there’d be a hush. The kind when you walk into a room and people stop talking about you. Grandad leaning in.
It did them good, too. They kept growing. First they were up to my knee. Then up to my waist. Too big for the enclosure. Granny was thankful when there was a drought one year: there was a ban on the hosepipe.

Grandad looked uncomfortable. We’d find him leaning against the backdoor to catch what the chickens might be saying.
“You talk more to the birds than you do to me!” said Granny. We offered to have her stay with us. The chickens were so big they were scary. Their orange eyes stared at us in the garden. We’d pluck herbs – Granny refused to enter the garden at all – as the chickens conferred. We’d race inside and lock the door.

One night she woke and found him watering the chickens. He leaned in, at eye level with the three ladies, one hand pushed through the chicken wire fence.

Needless to say she moved in with us after that.

Grandad insisted we call in advance before visiting. The floors were always damp when we arrived. The chickens watched us from the good couch in the sitting room.


The random words were:

verdant
trite
needless
thankful
offer

I really dislike the line “So the herb garden grew to encompass tomatoes, salads, strawberries and rhubarb in beds, the herbs in hanging boxes creating a verdant backdrop when you looked out the kitchen window. “

It needs to stop after “…hanging boxes.” but then I would lose my “verdant” prompt.

On the other hand I think “We’d find him spraying water over the chickens. Leaning in, like he was listening.” works very well.

The original was “We’d always find him spraying water over the chickens, leaning in to them, almost like he was listening.” I got rid of fill-words but making two lines out of it is the real special sauce: both lines have more room to resonate.

Filed Under: Flash fiction, Horror, Uncategorized, Writing Prompts Tagged With: Flash fiction, Horror

When in Rome

August 8, 2019 by Morgan Delaney

Photo by Ran Berkovich on Unsplash

Here’s another piece of 20 minute fiction. As usual the only changes are typo correction, punctuation changes and deletions.

Enjoy!


Laughter drifted up from the street. Men’s voices, a woman’s; a small group. The same group every night. Outside his hotel window. He breathed out. “Keep calm,” he told himself, heart thumping.


The stupid bray again. Loud. Ignorant. The curly-headed one. He talked and talked, and then laughed. His friends joined in, fattening the sound. Every night drinking and laughing.


He went to his window, pushed the thin pane open. Stared at them with dislike. Caught another buffet of the irritating noise. Felt the taste of coffee rise. He shouldn’t drink so much this late.


The young woman sat opposite the Horse. The one with the terrible, awful laugh. She looked up, caught him. He ducked back inside the room.


The hotel was expensive, the room small. With the view of rooftops, made famous by generations of cheap postcards. But if he couldn’t sleep, he couldn’t finish his report.


Again! That maddening laugh.
Was there anything he could do?


One thing perhaps. If he dared. He pulled his shirt on, it clung to his belly. Despite the evening air it was hot.

He went to the table.
They must have seen him coming, turned. He cleared his throat.


“Excuse me, please. Signori, signora,” he said. “Could I join you?”
“Please!” The Horse jumped up, cleared his seat. Indicated he should sit.
“We wondered when you would,” said Horse.
“I was working. A report…,” said Bill. Signora smiled at him. “…it can wait,” he said.


This one is based on a random first line prompt. I also wanted every line to have the same amount of words (7).

So this gives you a glimpse “behind the scenes.”

Most sentences are shorter as I deleted boring or irrelevant fluff, tightening the language. Even the original prompt got cut from 7 to 6 words. It originally ended with the word “…below,” which is neither interesting to end on, nor necessary as the words “up from” make it redundant.

A few sentences are longer. In a couple of cases I cut adjacent sentences to bits. It then made sense to get rid of a little bit more and make one sentence out of the remains. Insert “It’s alive! it’s alive!” film quote here.

The original prompt was “Laughter drifted up from the street below.”

Filed Under: Flash fiction, Realism, Writing Prompts Tagged With: Flash fiction, Realism

Fly away

August 1, 2019 by Morgan Delaney

Photo by Sachith Hettigodage from Pexels

Hi, here’s another piece of 20 minute writing prompt fiction. Unchanged except for typos, punctuation and deletions. The prompts are below the piece. I also decided in advance that it had to start and finish with the same line

Before I let you get to it: I finished draft 2 of my work in progress yesterday! Woo!


The door slammed. Cups, plates and cutlery jumped on the kitchen table. One plate toppled over, smashed. She was gone. For now. Jack released a sigh of air, pent up throughout the argument. Quietly in case she came back.
He washed the cups. Threw their breakfast into the bin, scraping the thick muesli into the bin bag. It spattered. She’d be back.

There was a scratch of claws over the sink. Archie on his perch. Jack opened the cage and Archie flew around the kitchen, two circuits then back to his cage where he sat in the open door.

Jack packed a suitcase and returned to the kitchen, Archie tilting his head, weighing up what it meant.
Very brainy bird.

Every time they argued she’d storm off, slamming the doors, causing the furniture to skip. He pushed the table into the corner of the room and tied a piece of rope to the hook which held the light. An ugly thing. It had caught his eye when they’d moved in. Sturdy. Tied the rope tight. Got one of the battered chairs, the white paint chipped off. Balanced two of its legs on her bloody suitcase with all its bloody letters and clothes and knick-knacks.

He climbed up, checked the noose, checked the balance of the chair. That’d do it. One good drop and Jack would be off to meet his maker. Ask him what he’d been thinking. He looped it over his neck. Archie came and perched on his shoulder.

There was a scritching at the front door. That’d be her now. The door slammed.


The prompts were:

brainy
bird
tight
creator
arch
drop

Filed Under: Flash fiction, Horror, Writing Prompts Tagged With: Flash fiction, Horror

A step back

July 11, 2019 by Morgan Delaney

Photo by Julian Hochgesang on Unsplash

Hi,

here’s another piece of 20-minute fiction. Unedited apart from typos, punctuation and deletions. The writing prompts follow after the piece, enjoy!


She dropped the glossy magazine on the table. Her breath tasted of coffee as she sighed. It was over.
She’d tried everything to get back on the cover. Then just to get into the pages of the gossip magazine.

Nothing.

Her life was over. No one wanted to know. She wasn’t famous any more. Just a person. Cherry cried, pressing her phone to take a photo, then let it drop. It didn’t matter. She had followers but they weren’t watching her any more. If she killed herself they might glance at the photo. No more likes though.

She let the sobs judder up from her belly, shaking her, alone without anyone watching. No >HUGS< or >Luv U< to make it better.


He’d told her he’d finish her off if she left him. And he had.


She couldn’t resist checking his feed, knowing that it was another hit for his traffic. Bastard.


He looked happy. Wearing BanderaS. They’d worked on that deal together. Now he was getting the goodies, lying around in BanderaS ShortS and TeeS. Pouting at the poolside with BanderaS ShadeS. At least she didn’t have to deal with the ridiculous capitalisation. Hopefully he got arthritis from enforced use of the shift key.

He looked vulgar but pretty, like all famous people.
Like she used to. Cherry Kosimo.

Or Sarah, really. Just Sarah. She washed her face, her eyes puffy.

She still had to eat. No one looked at her on her way to the shop. Not like they should. She felt like an imposter, being herself. Her mind kept looking for ‘grammable moments but… there weren’t any. Just real life. Boring old nobody-cares reality. The air smelled of hot concrete, warm on her face. A bee buzzed around her, padding fuzzily against her fingers when she waved it away. The bakery was open. She bought a coffee, the cup warm in her hands, ate a bagel.
Cherry K, what are you doing? Carbs?!? LOL
But she was Sarah. She could do what she wanted.

A woman, lined cheeks, fawn-coloured hat and jacket was pushing at the shop door. It was too heavy and Sarah pushed it for her, holding it.
The old lady turned to Sarah. “You’re an angel, pet.”
I am, thought Sarah. I’m an angel in real life.
She lifted her sunglasses, rested them on her head. From behind their screen the supermarket, staff and customers sharpened into focus. Boring old real life. But real.


The prompts were:

famous
effect
sigh
vulgar
cherry


Dear Famous People,

I apologise. I needed to use the word “vulgar” and that’s just what came out. Sorry!

Regards,

Morgan


Filed Under: Flash fiction, Realism, Writing Prompts Tagged With: Flash fiction, Realism

For better, for worse, for whom?

July 5, 2019 by Morgan Delaney

Photo by Debby Hudson on Unsplash

Here’s a piece of writing prompt fiction. This is a 10-minute “deadman’s switch” letter prompt. This is from one of Tim Clare’s weekly writing prompts, which you can sign up for here – you can never have too many writing prompts.


Dear James,

it’s about time we talked. Please forgive the nature of our “discussion” but some things I could never have said to your face. I hate questions. Always have, as you know.


I was sick for a long time. You know that too. I apologise for wasting your time with things you know. I’m working my way to the core of the matter.
When I started losing my hair. That’s when it started. I was sick and losing my hair, feeling terrible. Shortly after you started coming home late, working at weekends. Sleeping at the office so as “not to wake you.”
I was sick, James, not stupid. I knew what was happening.


When you lost your job I didn’t go looking for someone who could spend money, get me the things I wanted. So it hurt. When I got sick you went and found someone healthy. And then she died and you came back for a while.
You never realised I was getting better. I wasn’t physically sick, just sick at the sight of you, at the feel of your skin, your hangdog look when you accompanied me to the doctor.


Well. I’m fine now, James. And I’m so sorry you feel bad. Hurts, doesn’t it? And the gnawing worry of the last day.
I look forward to when your pain is over. That life insurance policy should make up for a lot.
There’s no point worrying about it, God has a plan. That’s what you used to tell me.

So lie there and close your eyes. Once I’ve finished reading this to you I’m going to burn it. No don’t get up,


Goodbye.

Filed Under: Crime, Flash fiction, Writing Prompts Tagged With: Crime, Flash fiction

King of the Hill

June 27, 2019 by Morgan Delaney

Photo by Stefan Stefancik from Pexels

20 minute writing prompt fiction.

As well as the usual deletions and typo and punctuation corrections I had to re-type one of the sentences. I had deleted an entire final clause as unnecessary and slowing the pace then realised that it included one of the prompts. I tried to put it back from memory as best I could.

The prompts are below the piece. Can you work out which clause was deleted and had to be re-inserted again? What would YOU have done?


He kept the needle pointing to 60. Time to get out. His lights were off, only the faintest grey light near the horizon. There was the sound of a shotgun behind him. A howl. He’d been missed.
The village was one street, barely large enough for the lorries that thundered through it. He prayed he wouldn’t meet one coming the opposite way. There was a slope, every time he went around a bend the air felt fresher. The motor was straining. Jeff’s hatchback was the only vehicle he could get at such short notice. Another hum. More vehicles. He navigated the hairpin bend – called the Scissors locally – and looked back. No lights. They wouldn’t need them, they knew the area. Probably knew where he was going too. Would there be someone there already? Villagers with pitchforks now had mobile phones too. He had no choice but to move. While he could.
Another twist and he couldn’t see anything, the hill had risen up to blot out the sky. Almost there.
His heart thumping fast, his breath shallow. His body urged him to hurry but he needed to ditch the car. It would buy time later. There. He’d left a white painted signpost opposite it. He pulled in, branches snicked and whipped at the car, scrabbled at the metal,scraped along the windows. The car bounced into the gully and he grabbed the signpost, threw it under the car so no one else could use it.

The whine of the other engines was getting closer. He kept his arms in front as he looked for a way around the trees. If he could get past them into the field he’d have a clear run almost up to the cairn. Just had to make sure he didn’t take a tumble on the rough damp ground or get his eyes poked out by one of these branches.
He found the dry stone wall, flopped over and ran to the next, the slope the only indication of direction.
He heard the cars go past. The road got worse and they’d slow down more and more. He could still outpace them. If they caught him it was over.
He paused, the moon was returning. He could see the ground better but it made him more visible. No matter, they were coming anyway. Would they kill him or just blow a hole in his leg? Nobody was innocent in this game but things had gotten out of hand. He ran, expecting to feel the blow of a bullet. He cracked a twig underfoot and almost fell.
Just meters away and he could taste victory. There was the old Celtic cross where it was buried.
Extreme geocaching, best sport in the world.


The prompts are:

move
twist
innocent
use
tumble

Filed Under: Crime, Flash fiction, Writing Prompts Tagged With: Crime, Flash fiction

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