Sunday 28 April 2013

day three: laundry & kisses

The prompt: domestic life, cleaning things, folding laundry, watching movies. – Johanna


“Evania’s down.”

“’Kay,” I say. “Aiden’s almost done with his bottle.”

Damian falls onto the couch next to me with a huge sigh. “I never knew kids would be so exhausting.”

I shoot him a look. “You obviously didn’t work in your church’s nursery for three years.” I wince. “Some days it was painful.”

“No. I did not.” He smiles. “And thankfully my Celtic Thunder life was kind enough not to involve kids on the bus.”

“Thank goodness.” I roll my eyes. “Can you imagine?”

“A tour bus, a homicidal maniac, and kids! Sounds great!” Damian says, sticking two thumbs up. His tone is dripping with immense sarcasm.

“Not,” I add. I pull the bottle out of Aiden’s mouth; it’s drained dry. “Okay. He’s done.”

“Want me to lay him down?”

“I can do it.” I stand up. “And then we have a pile of laundry to do.”

“Oh, joy.”

I walk past Damian and away from the couch. He pinches my waist and I squeal. “I hate you,” I say.

“The feeling’s mutual.”

I lay Aiden down, then go out into the living room and drag over the laundry basket.

“Kiss me,” Damian says.

“No,” I say.

“Please?”

“We have underwear to fold.”

“That’s so romantic.”

“I know.” I pick up a pair of socks, but I can’t help it—I kiss him anyway.

Saturday 27 April 2013

day three :: making mac-n-cheese

the prompt: this one didn't have an official prompt, but it was fluffy and in my novel, so what the llama.
When I wake up, Max is gone. The house is dark and there’s a noise of banging pots and pans in the kitchen. Charlie, I think. I sit up and rub my eyes groggily. As I walk to the kitchen, I run my fingers through my hair, removing the little tangles. I blink uncertainly in the brightness of the kitchen. “Charlie?”

A dark head pops up from under the island counter. “Oh hey, Liv.”

Not Charlie, Max. “I thought you were gone.”

He raises an eyebrow. “Trying to get rid of the person who was your pillow for the better part of four hours? Nah, I just got hungry.”

He’s a teenage boy and he’s hungry. What’s new? “Whatcha making? And I wasn’t trying to get rid of you.”

He pulls out a large saucepan. “Mac-n-cheese. For some reason artificially colored cheese sounded really good to me. Nothing like eating florescent orange food.” He glances over at me. “And you so were.” He smiles his lopsided smile, half of his face curving upwards. He’s teasing me.

“You can’t just call it ‘mac-n-cheese,’ Max,” I deadpan. “It’s macaroni and cheese. It sounds better that way.”

He fills the pan with water and quirks an eyebrow at me. “Is that so? Well then, Miss Anderson, I guess I’ll be eating this mac-n-cheese  on my own.” He stresses his pronunciation of the words to prove a point.

“Fine,” I say. “I’m not hungry anyway.” Of course, my traitor stomach lets out a deafening gurgle at that precise moment.

“Really?” asks Max, mouth twisting in such a way that I know he’s trying not to laugh. “Because that sounded like a hungry belly.” He hops up onto the counter and pats next to him. I laugh and join him, hands folded against my stomach in an attempt to keep it from growling again.

“You do know how to make mac-n-cheese, right?” I ask. “Because I lied. I really am hungry.”

He holds my hand. “I’m sorry,” he says, feigning shock. “Did you just call it mac-n-cheese?”

I look guilty at my slip up. “Okay, maybe I do call it mac-n-cheese instead of macaroni and cheese.”

day two: the guitar


the prompt: learning guitar. thanks, Johanna!

There’s a knock at my door right when I’m in the middle of the fifth episode of How I Met Your Mother. I yank my earbuds out of my ears, pause Netflix, sit up, and go to the door, hoping that whoever’s there doesn’t mind my white shirt and sweatpants.

I run a hand through my hair and pull open the door.

It’s Chris.

“Oh.” I shift, feeling awkward. “Hi.”

“Hey, can I come in?”

“Sure.” I step aside and he shuffles through the doorway, dragging a bulky guitar case behind him. “What can I … do for you?” That’s the right course of action, right? To ask him why he came? Mom is so much better at this.

He smiles, a smile that immediately makes me feel a little more comfortable. “Just got done with band practice, and I was driving by here anyway. Thought I’d come say hi and make the most of it.”

“Oh. Okay.” I smooth my hands down my shirt. “Well, as you can see I wasn’t really expecting visitors…”

“Don’t worry about it.” He sets his guitar case down, kneels, and starts unlatching it. “Mind if I…?”

“Uh.” I purse my lips. “No. Sure. Go right ahead.” I run a hand through my hair. Again. I’m feeling frazzled.

 “Can I… get you anything to drink?”

“What do you got?”

I rack my brain, trying to think of what we’ve got stocked in the fridge. “Uh… my mom made lemonade this morning?” It comes out like a question.

He looks at me over his shoulder. Still smiling, his grin lighting up the whole room. Ugh. “That’d be great. Thanks.”

“O…kay.” I turn on my heel and head into the kitchen, then pull out a glass and pour some lemonade. What is this? I’m playing mom’s role as hostess. This has never happened. And I hate it.

Darn, you, Chris, for coming in and interrupting my quality bonding time with Netflix.

I exit the kitchen again, the cold glass of lemonade already sweating in my hand. “Here.”

“Thanks.” He takes it; our fingers brush. He gestures to my couch. “Mind if I sit?”

At least he’s asking. “Sure.”

He falls into the blue sofa and props his guitar on his knee. He puts his fingers across the strings and plucks a few notes in quick succession. Nobody should be able to play like that.

I am torn between returning to Barney and Robin and sitting and listening to music. I decide to sit. I don’t have a guitar—and a guy—in my house every day. This is momentous. I should pay attention.

I walk into the family room and sit on the one-seater chair that looks like a box more than anything. “So, how was band practice?” Good. That’s something that you should ask. Four for you, Evyn.

“It was great.” He drags his finger across the strings and they make a “hum” sound. “Have you met any of them?”

“Just Mum,” I say.

“Ah. And he didn’t send you running for the hills?”

“Not yet.”

He purses his lips. “I’m impressed.”

“Yeah, well, I’m guessing he’s the most eccentric out of all of you?” I’m half hoping for him to say yes.
He laughs out loud. “No.”

I shoot him a questioning glance.

“Trust me. We’re all eccentric.” He shrugs, then nods to Dad’s guitar, sitting lonely on its stand in the corner.

“You play?”

“No. It’s my dad’s.”

“Does he play?”

“Not anymore.”

He arches his eyebrows at this, but doesn’t press further. “But you don’t play?”

“No.”

“Sad.” He fake-pouts. “I always love playing with other guitar players. Especially girls.”

“Excuse me?”

“I like girls. They’ve called me a heartbreaker before.”

“I think you should leave then,” I say, only half-joking.

“Relax. It’s my day off. No broken hearts today.”

“Phew,” I say, dragging my hand across my forehead far too dramatically, an exaggerated act of sarcasm. Everything in me is resisting this. I just want him to leave.

I’m really not very social, am I?  Maybe I do need to go into the outside world more often.

“So. If you don’t play guitar now, would you be interested in learning?”

I frown. “No.”

“Really?”

This catches me off-guard. “Uh… no. I really don’t want to play guitar if that’s what you’re asking.”

“Is there a reason?”

I could deck him. “No.” The lie slips out before I can think about it. “I mean… yes. I mean, no.”

Thankfully he doesn’t seem to notice my blundering because he’s arranging his fingers in an elaborate chord.
I hate myself for it, but I have to ask. “What chord is that?”

He looks up in surprise. “I thought you didn’t want to know.”

“Just tell me.”

“Fmaj7.”

“Oh.” Somehow, knowing that makes me feel closer to the past, to the days of music that aren’t here anymore. The memories float through my head and I find myself standing, walking over to the guitar stand, and brushing my fingers across my metal neck. In the background, Chris strums a wistful set of chords. It’s as if my life is a movie and he is the soundtrack. And if my life was a movie, this would be the corny redemption scene where the heroine finally figures out her whole entire life.

Pfft. Please. Life never works that way.

But I wish it did.

I brush my fingers across the strings and push all thoughts out of my head. I wish he still played.

I wrap my fingers around the neck, debating whether to pull the guitar from its roots.

“Bring it over,” Chris says behind me.

My shoulders fall in defeat, but I bring it over because I do want this. I have always wanted this. It feels right somehow, making up for past mistakes and broken hearts and shattered dreams by doing the one thing my dad refuses to do. I sit down on the loveseat instead of the chair and set the bulky instrument down on my thigh. It feels far too big for me.

I look down at the neck, marveling at how different a guitar looks when it’s on your lap.  I rest my fingers against the strings, gently, like I’m afraid to push too hard. I’ve always been afraid to push too hard, and not just with guitar strings.

All of a sudden Chris sets his guitar down and kneels next to me. His head is bent as he touches my fingers. I tense up.

He looks up at me. “Relax. Like I said, I don’t bite.”

I still feel like my whole body’s on edge, but I try to let my hand relax.

He presses his lips together. “Put your finger here…” He moves my middle finger to the second string, pressing down gently to make it stick. His touch makes my head spin. I’ve never had a guy touch my hands.
“And… here.” He moves my ring finger to the third string. He looks up at me then sits back on his haunches. “That’s E minor.”

I nod. He bends backwards and pulls a guitar pick out of the black, fuzzy interior of his guitar case. He hands it to me. It’s flimsy, plastic, and dark blue. My dad used heavier picks than this, but somehow the lighter one feels… right.

“Okay,” I say, feeling like I’m walking on ice.

“Now strum.” He smiles, and his eyes light up, and for a second, without consulting me, my heart melts.
I press my two fingers against the guitar pick and then hesitantly, gently pull it across the strings. The sound that floods the air is immediately familiar to me. It makes my stomach drop. All those nights when I was a little girl, this chord filled the air the most. It’s sad. Melodromatic. Thoughtful. And, for some reason, even though it was sad, I loved it, in a strange, sad way. Hearing it fill this room once again makes me feel like I’m drowning.

 Chris seems oblivious, thank God. “What do you think?”

“It’s… great.” I swallow hard, trying to get the lump in my throat to go down. “Hey, is there a…nother chord?”

He raises his eyebrows. “Fast learner. I’m impressed.” He tips his head in thought for a moment, then nods. “Okay, yeah. Here’s the second one I learned. It’s pretty easy, and goes well with E minor.”

I never want to play the E minor chord again, but okay, I respond silently in my head.

He grabs my fingers again and this time I’m a bit more ready for it, but it still makes me feel queasy. He moves my two fingers down a string, then positions my pinky on the fourth. “There. That’s A.”

I squeeze the guitar pick, almost afraid of what this chord will sound like and what memories it will bring. Before I can take the time to dread it, I scrape my pick downward against the strings, harsh and fast. The sound that I hear, though, is pleasantly surprising. I don’t feel like I’m about to lose my lunch. This chord sounds more uplifting, a little bit easier to stomach. And it’s by far not as familiar. I play it again. It reminds me of spring.

A smile spreads across my face without me forcing it. “Ah. I like that one.”

He smiles. “Me too.”

Wednesday 24 April 2013

day two: domestic life.

the prompt: domestic life, cleaning things, folding laundry, watching movies.
 I watch as Liv jerks a pair of jeans out of the basket and aggressively folds it before basically throwing it onto the ground. “Whoa there,” I say. “What’s the laundry ever done to you?”

She turns up the volume on the television and pulls out more clothes to fold. “I’m so freaking tired of never ending chores.”

I take a pile of clothes from the basket and sit on the opposite side of the sofa. She’s watching What Not to Wear again, despite having a billion of them taped already. “Can you explain this show again? I still don’t get the point.” I pair socks and then fold two of Liv’s favorite t-shirts.

“Stacey and Clinton take someone who has horrible taste in fashion and then teach them how to dress properly,” she says, not taking her eyes off the TV. She knocks over a pile of folded laundry and swears. “I just want to be done with this.”

“We still have the dishes and vacuuming to do when we’re done with this,” I say cheerfully.

Liv ignores me and folds another pair of jeans. She stares straight ahead at the television and acts as though I haven’t spoken. “What the heck is she wearing,” she mutters under her breath. “It looks like Tinkerbell barfed glitter and sprinkles on her.”

I glance at the TV. “What do you mean? I think she looks fine.”

She glares at me. “You have got to be kidding, Max. That woman does not know how to dress herself if she’s twenty-seven and still going around looking like a two year old who wants to be a princess.”

I shrug and fold the last pair of socks. “I figure it’s her choice if she wants to look ridiculous.”

“You look like an oversized pixie,” says Stacey on the TV.

Liv throws me a triumphant look that says ‘I told you so.’ I smile brittlely and chuck a pair of socks at her. It bounces off her forehead and then lands on the floor. She turns to face me slowly. “Benson,” she says. “You. Are. Going. Down.” She picks up a whole pile of laundry and throws it at me.

Her favorite ‘I heart NYC’ sweatshirt slaps me in the face and I let out a rather unmanly, erm, squeak. “Liv!” Something heavy lands on my stomach and my breath is stolen from me. “Oof!” She starts tickling me. “No, no, not the tickling,” I say between laughs. “L-iv!”

I squirm off the couch in an attempt to get away and curl into a ball. She pauses and I take a deep breath. “Do you surrender?” she asks.

“Yes!” I say. “Yes, just let me up, woman.”

She moves and I sit up. The credits are playing at the end of the episode and the living room is destroyed. “Well,” Liv says. “I guess we still have to fold the laundry.”

Tuesday 23 April 2013

day one: kittens & rainbows

day one
the prompt: Kittens, rainbows, kittens riding rainbows while two of your characters ride away in the sunset. thanks, Isabel!

“What the heck,” Damian says.

I just sit there with my hand on the mouse, my jaw open.

“What is this,” I say.

“I think whoever made this was high.”

“I am going to have this in my head for the next two years,” I say, covering my mouth with my hand.

Across the screen, a digitalized cat on a rainbow floats across the screen, and the high-pitched music that’s coming out of its mouth makes my ears sting.

“Nyan Cat,” Damian whispers.

Keith, who has been watching with his mouth open for the past few moments, has the expression of a five-year-old who’s just gotten ice cream. “This. Is. Brilliance.”

“Click on the ten minute version! No, no, no, the 24-hour version!” Damian urges.

Keith’s eyes widen, again like a kid with ice cream. “There’s a 24 hour version?”

“Yeah. Click on it!” Damian says again.

“No,” I say.

“Yes. Do it. Please.”

That’s when he brings out the puppy dog eyes. Ugh.

“Pleeeease?”

“Lord help me,” I mutter as I click on it.

Day One :: Graduation.


The Prompt: your characters at their child's graduation.

--------------------------------------------------------

They’re wearing long robes in the school colors. My little Mels is at the end of the line. Her normally messy hair is immaculate and she’s beaming across the assembly room at Ace and I. She’s holding hands with the boy next to her and he’s whispering in her ear. I frown. My little girl isn’t supposed to be interested in boys yet. No dating until she’s twenty-five at least.

Ace and I are in the fourth row, just close enough to see everything unravel. Aislin had wanted the front row, but we showed up a little too late and ‘had to settle for the fourth.’ They had begun to call the names and hand out diplomas awhile ago and now it’s almost my Mels’ turn. She smiles at me as they call her name and she walks across the stage. She stumbles a bit with her short heels, but catches herself before she face plants on the stage.

I hear Aislin sniff from beside me and look down. She’s wiping her eyes and flashing Mels a weak thumbs up. I take her hand and squeeze it, leaning over to whisper, “You know, she’s only graduating kindergarten.”

She wipes at her eyes a little more and smiles, “I know, Alex. But she’s growing up so fast.”

an introduction of sorts.

It all started when Mary asked for writing prompts. Fluffy writing prompts. I, and several other tea-spitters, gave her some. They ranged from mildly cute to zomg-the-adorbs-i-need-to-write-this-right-now.

Next came my confession. A confession that changed everything (and in a round about way started this blog). Bailey doesn't write much fluff. I can hear your gasps of horror through the computer screen. And I think that's your jaw sitting there on the floor. I know, I know. I'm a horrible human being. I don't really write fluff.

But then - then, Mary did something that would result in this blog. She both ordered and dared me to write a fluffy bit for every single one of the prompts that she had been given. There were roughly 100 of them, I counted.

My name is Bailey Noel, and I'm writing one fluff everyday for the next 100 days.