Day 5 #100DaysOfThoseDays

Today is World Spay Day https://gloriawriteshere.wordpress.com/ (February 28th)

“Maisy, go down to the market and get me a bunch of bananas. Make sure they are not the green ones. I want to make banana bread to bring to Granny’s tomorrow.”

“Will you make one for us too?”

“You know I always make two! Now, get…I’d like to get started.”

Maisy slipped out the front door and was shocked at the scene in front of her brownstone apartment. There were people lined up as far as she could see to the left and the right. The rows of people were at least five if not six or seven deep. She could get lost just outside her house. How was she going to get through all those people and not spill something down her pants leg? Looking at the front stoop two doors down, Maisy finally had the opportunity to see what all the hype was about. Leaning slightly forward, so as to not fall over the rusting wrought iron handrails, she saw what everyone was looking at.

By now Maisy had forgotten all about the banana bread and was now fixated on…

The group that had congregated at the intersection. There were about 10 people and they were all dressed in Mexican clothing. The funny thing was they were just standing there. I couldn’t hear any music and I certainly didn’t see anyone dancing. I wondered if there was supposed to be some sort of parade or something with all these people lined up and down the street. I decided my best bet would be to go down the step and see if there was anyone who looked friendly enough to chat with.

As I made my way down the steps people near my building turned and looked at me. Their glares felt like I was disturbing something but as I had noticed when I walked out, there was no music, no festivities, or at least none that I could see yet. A man in a jeans coat turned to his side a bit to let me walk by but since he turned and his back was away from me I took that as not an invitation to chat! The peoople lined up didn’t seem to mind stepping out of my way but nobody made eye contact and noone greeted me in any way that seemed friendly. I was about halfway through the rows of people.

I continued making my way when a small, old woman looked up at me as I tried to pass.
“Here, dear, you can stand by me,” she said.
I took this as an opportunity to find out what exactly was going on.

“Good morning,” I said cheerfully. “I didn’t know there was anything special happening today! I only live a few buildings down and I was so surprised to see all these people lined up.”

“Well, I’m surprised you haven’t heard the news. There is a giant truck coming from the Mexican border. No one is certain what is on the truck but people have some ideas. I think it’s going to be bags and bags of Tortilla Chips. I heard they make them from fresh corn in Mexico.”

“Maybe,” I said, trying not to roll my eyes. A truck of tortilla chips? Where on earth did she get that idea? And why was everyone dressed up?

Maisy’s mind was spinning in circles! Mexican fiesta? Mexican food? There wasn’t anything here to hint at what was coming in this supposed truck! Maybe I’d better get down to get those bananas before it gets any busier, she thought.

“I’ll be right back,” Maisy said to the old woman.

“No problem, dear, I will save you a spot for when the truck gets here.” The old woman beamed with excitement and anticipation.

Maisy began moving through the crowd again, excusing herself as she bumped into people who seemed so oblivious to her that they didn’t even step aside to let her by. As she neared the opening she could hear someone talking in just above a whisper, coming from the center of the small group in the intersection. She nudged her way past the last line of bystanders and saw what was at least the beginning of the event. There, in the middle of the street were four men and four women, all dressed in beautiful, bright costumes, and they stood around a chair, almost like a throne that had been placed right in the middle of the street. Sitting in the chair was an old man.

At the base of the chair, surrounding the old man’s feet were at least a dozen small children. They sat mesmerized by the old man. He held a book and was quietly reading to the small children. The words he spoke were Spanish, so she couldn’t understand, but she assumed it was a children’s story by the way the children sat so quietly, listening to the man. Then just as soon as she had seen all the little children the old man put a bookmark on the page he had been reading and closed the book. Maisy could hear groans from the children, they obviously wanted him to continue.

Then, as if out of nowhere a huge tractor-trailer came slowly down the road on the right of the crowd, and the people began to move out of the way of the giant vehicle.

The truck began to slow down, thankfully aware of the small children who were scattered around. No one at the fiesta seemed to know what the truck was for but if the outside was any indication it was for the food vendors. Painted on the box of the truck were so many different foods, all of which could probably be purchased once the food tents were erected. The children began noticing the food pictures and excitedly pulled on their parents hands, pointing out their favorites.

Maisy stood watching the giant truck maneuver its way through and around the crowd. Her stomach began grumbling when she saw that there would be a tent selling all of the most popular nuts. Maisy loved pistachios and unlike the bananas that Granny wanted, Maisy loved that they were green. Licking her lips, Maisy made her way past all the parents and their noisy little charges, trying to get to the market for those bananas! Granny would not be happy if she came home without them.

Now, as Maisy moved farther away from the crowd of people she saw that she was almost to the market that Granny said had the nice, ripe bananas she needed. The shop owner, an old Korean man, was such a sweetheart and Granny said it was so important to give him, and the other little shops, all of our business so the big box stores couldn’t push them out. Maisy loved that this was all happeneing right where she had grown up.

Walking past an alleyway between two of the small buildings Maisy heard a faint noise. She didn’t need a flashlight to see that there was a small glass bowl and the smallest kitten lapping the liquid up out of it. The kitten looked tiny and Maisy wondered to herself if it was a stray or feral cat or if someone just let it out of their house. Granny didn’t allow Maisy to have any pets and she had heard that they cost a lot of money anyhow. There were vet bills and bedding, food and toys, and now it was even a rule or someething that everyone should have their pet spayed or neutered to cut down on all the animals wandering around with no home. Maisy hoped this little one had a home, maybe she would ask the nice man in the shop.

Maisy walked closer to the shop and thought for a moment, wondering what it was she was supposed to be bringing home to Granny! Between the crowds and the children, the old man reading, and now this tiny kitten, Maisy was overwhelmed with all the hustle and bustle!

Day 4 #100DaysOfThoseDays

Today is National Pistachio Day https://gloriawriteshere.wordpress.com/ (February 26th)

“Maisy, go down to the market and get me a bunch of bananas. Make sure they are not the green ones. I want to make banana bread to bring to Granny’s tomorrow.”

“Will you make one for us too?”

“You know I always make two! Now, get…I’d like to get started.”

Maisy slipped out the front door and was shocked at the scene in front of her brownstone apartment. There were people lined up as far as she could see to the left and the right. The rows of people were at least five if not six or seven deep. She could get lost just outside her house. How was she going to get through all those people and not spill something down her pants leg? Looking at the front stoop two doors down, Maisy finally had the opportunity to see what all the hype was about. Leaning slightly forward, so as to not fall over the rusting wrought iron handrails, she saw what everyone was looking at.

By now Maisy had forgotten all about the banana bread and was now fixated on…

The group that had congregated at the intersection. There were about 10 people and they were all dressed in Mexican clothing. The funny thing was they were just standing there. I couldn’t hear any music and I certainly didn’t see anyone dancing. I wondered if there was supposed to be some sort of parade or something with all these people lined up and down the street. I decided my best bet would be to go down the step and see if there was anyone who looked friendly enough to chat with.

As I made my way down the steps people near my building turned and looked at me. Their glares felt like I was disturbing something but as I had noticed when I walked out, there was no music, no festivities, or at least none that I could see yet. A man in a jeans coat turned to his side a bit to let me walk by but since he turned and his back was away from me I took that as not an invitation to chat! The peoople lined up didn’t seem to mind stepping out of my way but nobody made eye contact and noone greeted me in any way that seemed friendly. I was about halfway through the rows of people.

I continued making my way when a small, old woman looked up at me as I tried to pass.
“Here, dear, you can stand by me,” she said.
I took this as an opportunity to find out what exactly was going on.

“Good morning,” I said cheerfully. “I didn’t know there was anything special happening today! I only live a few buildings down and I was so surprised to see all these people lined up.”

“Well, I’m surprised you haven’t heard the news. There is a giant truck coming from the Mexican border. No one is certain what is on the truck but people have some ideas. I think it’s going to be bags and bags of Tortilla Chips. I heard they make them from fresh corn in Mexico.”

“Maybe,” I said, trying not to roll my eyes. A truck of tortilla chips? Where on earth did she get that idea? And why was everyone dressed up?

Maisy’s mind was spinning in circles! Mexican fiesta? Mexican food? There wasn’t anything here to hint at what was coming in this supposed truck! Maybe I’d better get down to get those bananas before it gets any busier, she thought.

“I’ll be right back,” Maisy said to the old woman.

“No problem, dear, I will save you a spot for when the truck gets here.” The old woman beamed with excitement and anticipation.

Maisy began moving through the crowd again, excusing herself as she bumped into people who seemed so oblivious to her that they didn’t even step aside to let her by. As she neared the opening she could hear someone talking in just above a whisper, coming from the center of the small group in the intersection. She nudged her way past the last line of bystanders and saw what was at least the beginning of the event. There, in the middle of the street were four men and four women, all dressed in beautiful, bright costumes, and they stood around a chair, almost like a throne that had been placed right in the middle of the street. Sitting in the chair was an old man.

At the base of the chair, surrounding the old man’s feet were at least a dozen small children. They sat mesmerized by the old man. He held a book and was quietly reading to the small children. The words he spoke were Spanish, so she couldn’t understand, but she assumed it was a children’s story by the way the children sat so quietly, listening to the man. Then just as soon as she had seen all the little children the old man put a bookmark on the page he had been reading and closed the book. Maisy could hear groans from the children, they obviously wanted him to continue.

Then, as if out of nowhere a huge tractor-trailer came slowly down the road on the right of the crowd, and the people began to move out of the way of the giant vehicle.

The truck began to slow down, thankfully aware of the small children who were scattered around. No one at the fiesta seemed to know what the truck was for but if the outside was any indication it was for the food vendors. Painted on the box of the truck were so many different foods, all of which could probably be purchased once the food tents were erected. The children began noticing the food pictures and excitedly pulled on their parents hands, pointing out their favorites.

Maisy stood watching the giant truck maneuver its way through and around the crowd. Her stomach began grumbling when she saw that there would be a tent selling all of the most popular nuts. Maisy loved pistachios and unlike the bananas that Granny wanted, Maisy loved that they were green. Licking her lips, Maisy made her way past all the parents and their noisy little charges, trying to get to the market for those bananas! Granny would not be happy if she came home without them.

Simply 6 Minutes-2/28/23 Perfect Plans

This may have been the step before the oops!

Sillyfrog's Blog

We’re asked to use the photo below as inspiration for a story and we have only six minutes to write it.

They had made it!
Two young urban professionals who were a ‘perfect’ match.
They’d met in the workplace, of course. Were on their own ‘perfect’ trajectories for advancement too.
They had an apartment that suited them both only minutes from work AND had planned their lives together right down to having car rental agreements that alternately expired for a well-planned system to avoid even the smallest financial conflicts.

The wedding was the crescendo! “Perfect” couldn’t even have described it. The sun shone, the guests had been generous, and the photo shoot outstandingly artful.

A week later, a home pregnancy test was positive.
Nine months later, their marriage was ‘on the rocks’ and their ‘planned lives’ in shambles.
Having discussed everything, how had they overlooked the possibility of unplanned…

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Catch Me If You Can!

Dirty Dancing or someone’s wedding?

pensitivity101

Christine is our host for the Simply 6 Minutes challenge and this is our photo this week:

This is an illusion of a bride and groom with the bride sitting up on the groom’s shoulders.
This was to be their party piece.
They got the idea from Dirty Dancing and they had practised often to get it just right so that everything was perfect for the photographer.
He was confident he would catch her.
She was equally as confident he would and when the moment came, she threw herself into the air and landed with an inelegant thump on his chest.
He staggered but managed to keep his balance, the pair of them laughing as their trial runs had forgotten to include one minor detail…….. her dress.
It gave a whole new meaning to the words ‘In Training’.

103 words.

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Simply Six Minutes

Such a sweet, uplifting story!

The Bag Lady

Wanting the perfect wedding was always a dream. College degree, good job, my own apartment, finding the love of my life and then the ultimate “big wedding”. It never occurred to me that this might only be a dream, but since the age of six when I was the flower girl in my sister’s wedding, I dreamed it. Logistics never a thought in my head because I was a goal oriented person and so far at twenty-three, everything was right on schedule. I was just settling in to the perfect job and the chance at a promotion when he walked into my office. You know that time you are busy shuffling paperwork and you feel something in the air that causes you to look up? Well I did, and there he was…every goal so carefully planned, left my mind. Later as we decided to spend our lives together, the wedding…

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New Book: Shadowed Seats (Young Adult/ Mystery/ Thriller/ Novella)

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Welcome to the tour for YA Suspense novella, Shadowed Seats by Marguerite Ashton! Read on for more!

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Shadowed Seats

Genre: Young Adult/ Mystery/ Thriller/ Novella

Length: 63 Pages

Oliana knows that every family has a secret, but she never expected hers to come from the grave.

High school senior Oliana Mercer dreams of attending the prestigious Reyersen Drama Academy and pursuing her acting career. But when tragedy strikes, Oliana discovers secrets hidden from her by her adopted parents, dimming the lights on her perfect world. As the sins of the past surface, Oliana finds herself caught up in a tug-of-war between two families while the love for her boyfriend is tested. Determined to find some form of happiness in life, Oliana becomes student director in the high school’s senior play. When her best friend, Devin Worthy, dies during dress rehearsal, Oliana is re-cast as the lead. Everyone thinks the death was a suicide, except Oliana, whose search for clues may be enough motive for the killer to murder again.

Free for Kindle Unlimited!

About the Author

author

When Marguerite Ashton was in her twenties, she took up acting but realized she preferred to work behind the camera, writing crime fiction. A few years later, she married an IT Geek and settled down with her role as wife, mom, and writer!

Her blog, Criminal Lines: Settled Writer Past 40 is her outlet while building dollhouses and plotting out her next book.

Marguerite lives in Wisconsin and enjoys RVing.

Marguerite Ashton

Twitter: @msashton_writer @RRBookTours1 #RRBookTours

IG: @rrbooktours #rrbooktours #shadowedseats #yabookstagram #yathriller 

Book Tour Organized By:

R&R Button

R&R Book Tours

WordPress Question of the Day

Describe the most ambitious DIY project you’ve ever taken on.

Last fall I had an offer from a publisher to publish a children’s picture book I wrote. The problem was that they wanted to have it illustrated for the submission. A friend of mine is an artist and has illustrated books before. We talked and decided that she would draw my illustration and I would build her three daughters each their own miniature.
The reason this was the most ambitious projects is because I was starting from scratch and wanted them all to be different yet match their interests and likes. I think they came out great but…
the publishers offered me a hybrid contract which means I would pay up front and then get money after it was published. Been there, done that…

Anyhow, these are the three miniatures I made

Simply 6 Minutes – Welcome to the Challenge: 02/28/2023

Welcome to the 6-minute challenge!

Today’s prompt is:

Whose legs are they?

This is an illusion of a bride and groom with the bride sitting up on the groom’s shoulders.

*****For any participants that do NOT like restrictions, please feel free to participate in any way you would like. It is great to read the contributions!****

  1. Set up a timer or sit near a clock so you can keep track of the six minutes you will be writing.
  2. You can either use one of the prompts (photo or written) or you can free-write.
  3. Get ready and write for 6 minutes, that is it! Can you write a complete story? Can you think of a new Sonnet? Can you write 400 words? 400? 500? There are no restrictions on what kind of writing you do, but you should try to be actively writing for six minutes.
  4. After you are done writing, include your word count and then post back to this page #Simply6Minutes or include your link in the comments section. Pingbacks are enabled.
  5. *Feel free to leave your work completely unedited. I believe it is good to see, especially for new writers, that even very seasoned writers don’t write a perfect first draft.*
  6. Have fun, challenge yourself if you’d like, read and respond to others’ posts.

Thank you for participating!

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