One-Shot: Apocalypse

APOCALYPSE
scribblemyname


Fandom: Awake (TV)
Summary: Apocalypse, the lifting of the veil. Michael Britton is not the only one who can understand.
Credits: Awake belongs to NBC and its creators. Please do not offer me any donations because of this fic. It is a derivative, noncommercial work of fanfiction.
Prompt: from lithiumlaughter on Tea-Time at Ficlet o'Clock, "very few people know that the original Greek translation of 'apocalypse' means 'lifting of the veil' or 'revelation'...a disclosure of something hidden."
Author's Notes: Scrapped two excellent starts on this because it refused to resolve, and this writer needs a bit of resolve. So here goes. From the top. Pulled together with the assistance of "I Am Brave," a lovely song from the unofficial Divergent soundtrack, Factionless by Sam Cushion.


Red

"You have a visitor." The words initiate Michael Britton's journey from a prison cell his own friend had put him in down the hallways and into the small room on the other side of the glass from...

"Hannah," he breathed.

She was holding it together. Barely. He knew that inner strength on her face, the one she always denied she had, always felt he had so much of when he didn't.

Continue reading

Posted in Fandom | Tagged | Comments Off on One-Shot: Apocalypse

Choosing Vulnerability

Some days I hate my writing. Today is one of those days and the reason I almost failed to update City of Glass, my current serialized science fiction novel, this morning. I hate the whole story. I want to throw it in a river to go and rot.

Every writer I have ever met has experienced this at one time or another. It's a side effect really of our pursuit of perfection. We need that pursuit. It's what brings you fully-developed wonderful literature instead of half-baked half-written stories that leave you wondering what we were doing when were supposed to be writing. It's important. Without that pursuit, we would be unable to create the works that inspire us and make us want to keep putting pen to paper day after day.

But there's thing called a commitment. I made a promise to not just put pen to paper, so to speak, but also to put paper to bed and send it out into the great wide world twice a week for readers to enjoy—or not. I really can't control that part. Commitment is important too, necessary to us artistic types who want every word we produce to be perfect. Without that commitment, we would never be able to stop writing, editing, revising, etc. and hand over our work to the reader. It would never get to you.

And then, there's resolve. It's that murky bridge in between the two. My resolve is what allows me to do what I need to do, even when I don't want to. I still hate City of Glass as it stands. I still hate the chapter I finally kicked out the door this morning. I still wish I had never, ever made that stubborn commitment to produce a novel that wasn't finished first so I could belabor it into perfection.

But I am resolved to fulfill my commitment. The new installment is up. I have done my duty and must wash my hands of perfection.

There.

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

1.4 The Point of the Lay

This entry is part 9 of 13 in the series City of Glass

It was one of those things people did not talk about. Earth had been around before the Alliance and the Human Alliance Council. It was not only one of the original twelve worlds after Kippler's was discovered, it was the original world, and all the outsourcing for resources could not change the fact that Earth was still populous and only renewable to a point.

Jack did not talk about it much either. Ever since Kailin acquired its priority one status with the Alliance, there were speech requirements concerning what could and could not be said around the students. Undermining HAC was impermissible. Jack usually could not care less, but he tried to show at least a little restraint. Especially around green eyes glimmering with shrewd interest.

Continue reading

Posted in Fiction | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Icons: Education, Smell the Flowers, & Steal My Heart

We don't need no education. Stop and smell the flowers. Go ahead - Steal my heart

Created: August 5, 2012

Feel free to use, pin, and share these icons as you please. Please credit LiveJournal user, scribble_myname, or Liana Mir. 100x100 pixels | dpi. If you like these, please consider donating to help me continue creating work you enjoy!

[paypal-donation]

Posted in Artwork | Tagged | Comments Off on Icons: Education, Smell the Flowers, & Steal My Heart

5 Things Meme: Worldbuilding

This entry is part 3 of 5 in the series 5 Things Meme

Comment to this post saying "FIVE!" and I will pick five things I would like you to talk about. They might make sense or be totally random.

Then post that list, with your commentary, to your journal. Other people can get lists from you, and the meme merrily perpetuates itself, hopefully for the rest of eternity!

From arliddian: Worldbuilding

What do we talk about when we talk about worldbuilding? How about we begin with the fact that I am a worldbuilder at heart, that I empathize with Tolkien's desire to write out stories to express the worldbuilding he had done and further, that the worldbuilding he had done was built around languages. Additionally, I was asked to write this post ages ago, but haven't, primarily because it's too big. I couldn't get my arms around it.

Worldbuilding is writing. No matter what time period you're in, what setting, what people, your story exists within a world, and the story builds that world within your reader's mind.
Continue reading

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on 5 Things Meme: Worldbuilding

Asking for Reader Feedback on the Blog

So I've been blogging for a while now and I'm starting to find a rhythm I like, but I'd still rather make sure my readers and friends like it too.

So I discovered that my poll plugin is broken. (I got your answer to the first question only, Rabia.) :growls: So here goes on simply asking:

  1. What is your favorite kind of post?
  2. Do I post too often, too infrequent, on too many topics, too few topics, or just right?
  3. Is there any kind of post you'd rather not read?
  4. Would you like to see more of any kind of posts? Fiction prompts? Any category or theme?

And last but not least, is there any way you think I could do better?

Posted in Website | Tagged , | 2 Comments

1.3 The Lay of the Land

This entry is part 8 of 13 in the series City of Glass

Jack Kiligree was simply minding his own business, wandering down Kailin University hallways towards the main section of garages and workshops, when he ran into his own version of vocational trouble.

Now, just to keep things straight, Jack was a bit of rough-it-out loner type, former militancy, and impatient with anything that kept a man from cutting to the bottom line. He could even empathize a bit with Dr. Clark Gabrin, muttering as they passed in the hallway. The good doc had probably heard about Scheffer's plan to require vocationals on the Gabrin Habitat Project. Vocationals were not like the other students who came to Kailin with their academic record of excellence and dreams on their mind. Vocationals were the test-ins. They had aptitude, and that was all that was required. Not social skills (unless they claimed aptitude for diplomacy), not a proper understanding of subordination, not any understanding of their place under those who had already passed through the ranks, and apparently, not a single shred of respect for personal space.

Continue reading

Posted in Fiction | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Web Graphic: Done Reading Yet?

Done Reading Yet? Get Back to Work!

Created: July 27, 2012

Feel free to use, pin, and share this web graphic as you please. 800x400 pixels | 96 dpi. If you like it, please consider donating to help me continue creating work you enjoy!

[paypal-donation]

Posted in Artwork | Tagged | Comments Off on Web Graphic: Done Reading Yet?

1.2 An Interlude of Letters

This entry is part 7 of 13 in the series City of Glass

A computer made a soft pinging sound, and a petite (read tiny) girl with dark hair and a smattering of freckles across her pert nose removed said nose from where she had buried it in one of those dry and ancient tomes on the permissible style, forms, and terms of privateering charters and what technological and weaponry limitations were permissable and/or enforcable in pre-Alliance precedent and general Alliance practice. The girl's name was Shelley Huntington, a sufficiently English-world name to mask her Ybreteh breeding and interests. She perked up when she realized the alert was the one she had set to Elysium incident reports.

Tome dropped and thunking off the hardwood floor in her bedroom, small kosher dinner abandoned, Shelley eagerly settled in at her slim, top-of-the-line computer and set to work hacking.
Continue reading

Posted in Fiction | Tagged , | Comments Off on 1.2 An Interlude of Letters