Wednesday, August 15, 2018

#WEP Challenge: Change of Heart

http://writeeditpublishnow.blogspot.com/2018/08/welcome-to-wep-writeeditpublish-august.html 

 Write…Edit…Publish (WEP) is an online writing community now partnering with the Insecure Writers Support Group (IWSG). We post the third Wednesday of every second month. WEP challenges are open to all. 

I'm supposed to post my feedback preferences, but I'm not sure what to ask for... I'll learn as we go here, so for now I'll just ask for whatever reactions you had to the story.


Change of Heart

“There you go, Ma’am. There was a bit of nastiness, but it’s all clear now.” Jason tipped his hat to the absurdly grateful homeowner and collected his payment, smothering his smile until he was out of sight in his van. Then he allowed a broad grin to escape as he straightened the bills—more than he had asked for, no doubt as a token of her gratitude for cleaning up that “bit of nastiness”—and filed them in his wallet.

“The spirits won’t like you mocking them.”

Jason shook his head. He kept hearing Great-Aunt Mathilda’s voice. How had the old biddy known what he was up to, anyway? He shook his head harder as he continued hearing her warnings. The old lady was crazy. What she said about the spirits proved it. Who but a crazy old lady would believe the ghosts were real?

Your clients do, a part of him argued.

“Well, they’re all crazy, too! Or just plain fools.” Jason realized he was talking aloud to the empty van and started the engine. “Next appointment, Siri?” That was talking to someone who wasn’t there as well, but it wasn’t considered crazy.

“Spirit clearance at 89 Witmore Lane.” The slightly sexy, slightly mechanical voice halted. “You’d better be ready for this one.”

What the hell? That hadn’t been part of his memo. Siri mostly sounded human, but she wasn’t. She couldn’t do that.

Jason shook off another wave of—not guilt, because he’d long since made sure he had no conscience. A frisson of fear? Well, hardly. Jason wasn’t one to be afraid of things that didn’t exist. His only fear was that someone would decide that ghost clearances were illegal, or that one of his clients would realize he was a fraud, because there were no spirits.

He pulled away from the curb and followed Siri’s directions to 89 Witmore Lane.

*
“I am so glad to see you, young man.” The well-aged homeowner greeted Jason effusively. “The spirits have been getting so obstreperous of late, I really didn’t know what to do, until I saw your ad.”

Jason nodded solemnly.

“And you have all that modern, up-to-date equipment,” Mrs. Smith said, gazing admiringly from the device in his hands to his van.

Jason, who knew that behind the curtained windows and gaudy paint the van was an ordinary camper badly in need of some house-cleaning, shifted a little, smiled, and gestured with the complicated device he carried. It was, in fact, a completely inert sculpture he’d picked up at a fund-raiser for the local middle school art department, but it impressed the clients. There were lots of dials and little windows with needles behind them.

“I’ll just get started, then, Ma’am.” He began walking toward the stairs, his eyes on the dials, pointing the ‘sensor’ around him. He was pretty sure that sensor had started life as the spray hose from someone’s kitchen sink, but the artist had turned it into a listening snake. Jason wished he’d been the one with that artistic talent.

He was upstairs when he caught the first movement. Not something seen out of the corner of his eye slipping around a doorway, which had happened several times before and which Jason attributed to an over-active imagination (though he in fact lacked imagination, he was not aware of this shortcoming). The movement he saw was in the main dial of the ghost-o-meter, known to his clients as a “spiritual emanations detector.”

He took a second look, but the dial was inert, as always. Just to be sure, he shook the box a bit. The needle didn’t budge. He turned it over and checked the dials on the other side. No movement.

He turned it back over and resumed his “scan” of the room, and the needle jumped again.

“Dag-nabbit!” He practiced a kind of folksy clean-cut persona for the old ladies. They ate it up. Mrs. Smith wasn’t in the room, but you never knew when the client might be spying on you. Some were so scared they left the house while he “cleared” the ghosts, but others wanted to learn how you did it. Jason always put on a good show. “Dag-nabbit! Am I going to start imagining things now?”

He twiddled with the control knobs for good measure, then continued his sweep, trying to ignore the needle that now jumped with each new movement of the sensor.

By the third bedroom, Jason had forgotten about putting on a show, and was alternately cursing and muttering to himself that there was no such thing as a ghost. If Mrs. Smith heard him, the jig might be up, but he was starting to hear whispers behind him and didn’t care anymore what she thought. He just wanted them to go away.

Actually, he cared enough to want to finish the job and get paid. The greedy part of his mind wondered if he could milk this one for a second visit. The rest of him was fast abandoning his lack of belief in ghosts and just wanted to get out.

He compromised, taking one last sweep around the upstairs hall, then turning to the stairs.

“I do particularly feel them on the stairs, dearie,” Mrs. Smith called from below. “Be sure you do a thorough job there.” She emerged from the kitchen to peer up at him as he made a great show of sweeping each step, peering into the dials and adjusting the knobs.

Jason was on the third step down from the top when he felt the hands in the middle of his back. He had time while he fell to reflect that there wasn’t anyone upstairs.

His neck broke when he hit the landing. The last thing he heard before he died was Mrs. Smith’s voice.

“You were warned not to mock the spirits. They don’t like it. Not one little bit.”

He believed her.

###
©Rebecca M. Douglass, 2018
As always, please ask permission to use any photos or text. Link-backs appreciated!



Monday, August 13, 2018

Middle Grade Monday: The Shadow of the Minotaur

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Title:
The Shadow of the Minotaur (Shadows from the Past #2)
Author: Wendy Leighton-Porter
Publisher: Mauve Square Publishing, 2012. 234 pages.
Source: Purchased from Amazon

Publisher's Blurb:

Ten-year-old twins Joe and Jemima Lancelot continue the search for their missing parents who are trapped somewhere in the past. Together with their friend, Charlie, and their unusual talking cat, Max, they are whisked back in time to ancient Crete and the palace of Knossos, where the fearsome Minotaur resides in its labyrinth, feeding on human flesh. Can they help Prince Theseus of Athens overcome the terrifying monster before it devours them all? And will the children survive the terrible storm which threatens to wreck their ship as they attempt to flee the island?

My Review: 
This is such a great series! The adventure ramps up right from the start, and doesn't quit. It helps that this time, the kids know what's happening, and what to expect (they learned fast from their first adventure!).  There's no time lost in trying to figure out what's happening. It's also nice that Max can communicate. I love his outsized ego and decidedly cat-like personality. Max may be one of the great cats of literature.

The author does an amazing job of balancing the scary aspects of the story--there are real threats to the children--with a level of humor that keeps it "safe" for younger readers (Max is a big help here). Leighton-Porter also makes good use of the myths that are out there for the reading, not changing "history," but filling in some of the, er, shadows around them. In particular, she gives personality to the mythical characters [minor spoilers!], so that we find that Theseus is a bit of a jerk, and Ariadne, to my delight, is shocked out of her infatuation with a little help from Jemima, and her ending may not be quite what the more ancient sources thought. Nice to introduce a little feminism to the early civilizations!

I greatly enjoyed the first book in the series, and I think this one might be even better. I have #3 queued up and look forward to continuing the series--I think there are 8 books, and since this is one of my choices for the GMGR "Finish the Series" challenge, I have a lot of reading to do!

Note: Wendy Leighton-Porter has a story in the BookElves Anthology, as do I. This association may have influenced my decision to start reading the series, but it did not influence my review, and the decision to continue with the series is purely the result of a great reading experience.

My Recommendation:
This is a great series for readers 8-12. A bit of exposure to mythology, in the wrapping of an exciting adventure with a touch of humor. What more could you want?

FTC Disclosure: I purchased The Shadow of the Minotaur, and received nothing from the writer or publisher for my honest review. The opinions expressed are my own and those of no one else. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising." 

Friday, August 10, 2018

Photo Friday: Shepherd Pass

I'm finally ready to start my trip report on our recent backpacking extravaganza, 9 days into the Kaweah Basin in Sequoia National Park.

The trip really began back in 2015, when my husband, Eldest Son, and I backpacked out of Mineral King in Sequoia NP. Midway down that trip report is a picture of the Kaweah Peaks, one jagged and intriguing crest. I'm not sure how we got from "those are impressive peaks" to "I hear there's an amazing basin on the other side of those peaks," but we did, and found a couple of on-line accounts of accessing the (trail-less) basin. Thus was a plan begun, but until this summer we didn't have the two-week time block we needed to acclimatize and tackle what we would want to do as a 9-10 day trip.

Fast-forward to July, 2018. My husband retired, I quit work, and we had the time to train and to do the trip right. I shared some of our acclimatization activities here. Now we had 10 days food, and a plan to enter the Sierra via Shepherd Pass (out of Independence, CA, in the Owens Valley), cross the crest, drop down to the Kern River, and climb back up to the Kaweah Basin from the east. That approach, while long and involving some off-trail route-finding, doesn't involve finding a route across the jagged Kaweah Crest, which was a good thing.

Ten days' food is a lot (I got it to a hair over 1.5 lbs/person/day, so you can do the math). Because of that, our trip actually began 3 days before our start date when we loaded up most of our gear, hauled it 6 1/2 miles into the mountains, and cached it. Thanks to that effort (which was also good training!), when we started at sunrise on July 17 our packs were small. That was nice, because the first day's hike to camp was 8 1/2 miles, with 4400' of climbing (and about 500' of descending as you pass from one creek drainage to another). The final mile or two, after we collected our gear, told us how hard it would have been to have carried everything the whole way--we estimate that for those 2 miles pack weights were 40 lbs or more. Once upon a time, that was normal, but we aren't in our 20s anymore.

Day 1-1 1/2: Trailhead to Shepherd Pass (national park boundary)

We camped at the trailhead, putting ourselves in position to start our hike almost as soon as the sun was up. I'm ready to hit the trail at 6:30 a.m., hoping to beat the (not insignificant) heat.
Nice little pack to start a long trip!
On both our earlier gear-haul and the first day of the trip we took advantage of the final creek crossing (before beginning a 2000'+ climb out of Symes Creek) to fill our hats as well as our water bags with cold water.

The climb was long and grueling, but long views and near alike helped make it feel like an outing rather than a slog.
Blazing star. Apparently one of several wildflowers with that name!
High above the Owens Valley, which was already showing signs of smoke impacts from assorted CA wildfires. Happily, we were never affected by any of the smoke.

Thanks to some extra stops it took us until lunchtime to cross the divide from Symes Creek to Shepherd Creek. Now we can see where we're going, though the pass is out of sight around to the left.
Wait--we have to go up *there*??
The climb took most of the day, what with the extras (including time to pick up, sort, and pack the rest of our gear several hundred feet below "Anvil Camp," one of only 2 or maybe 3 camping places along the 10-mile, 6000' climb to the pass). Always nice after a hike like that to have a hearty dinner. I put in the work at home, and in camp my cooking is purely of the "add water" variety. In this case, also "add salmon." Thanks to Teresa Dicentra Black for her fantastic cookbooks!
The Amazon mailing bag is my "cozy" for keeping meals hot while they rehydrate.
Camp felt like we were perched at the top of the world, but the next morning we kept going up.
Dave, making his way past tree line.
And higher!

Finally seeing the pass. We know we have to cross the top of that snowfield, and we've heard stories.

Apologies to the squeamish for the next photo. I'll leave it small so you don't have to see too much. Last  November an unusually heavy early snowstorm caught deer herds on the wrong side of the Sierra crest (they graze well into the mountains in summer, but winter in the Owens Valley). It dumped a lot of snow and ice, and when the deer tried to cross the pass many fell to their deaths. The evidence remains at the base of the more or less permanent snowfield. Assorted predators and scavengers have reduced the evidence pretty much to bones and hair.
Grim reminder that steep snowfields can have real dangers.
And, of course, we had to cross the snowfield. We'd been hearing from hikers coming down, with opinions ranging from "scary" and "kinda sketchy" to "no problem." We expected to find it somewhere in between, but by the time we got there the snow was soft in the mid-day sun, and though we stepped carefully it felt safe.
We reached the pass in time for lunch, and launched ourselves into the Park. For the record, when we got our wilderness permit, they issued two--one for the National Forest (east of the pass) and one for the National Park (west of the divide), but we were able to get both at the same place (the Bishop Ranger Station).

Lunch was sometimes crackers and peanut butter, with other munchies, and sometimes hearty main-dish salads I'd made and dried at home, then rehydrated in my pack all morning. Those proved to be really tasty and filling, and I'll be doing more of them! Either way, we got mixed nuts for trail snacks, and chocolate to top off our lunch.
Juice and a taste of carrot-raisin salad, and chocolate. Always must have chocolate!
 Watch this space on Fridays for the rest of the trip--the scenery just gets better.
Shepherd Pass, looking west toward our goal--at the base of the dark jagged peaks on the far left, far distance.

©Rebecca M. Douglass, 2018
As always, please ask permission to use any photos or text. Link-backs appreciated!