Worth

Frost fiction, short stories, poems, non fiction, fiction.

The woman flicked the notes carefully through her fingers, tapping the stack of cash against her desk and peering up over her horn-rimmed glasses.

“Not police?”

The man shook his head.  There was a note of threat to the question and he turned away, fixing his gaze through the doorway, his heart racing.

Silken bronze skin swept beneath long curls of onyx hair.  Asian eyes were lidded and docile.  The woman he desired tugged her skirt over a blackened bruise.

“You like?” the Madame slipped the money into a draw, her finger stroking a pistol.

“Yes.  Very much,…”

Note from the Author:  “This story is based on an event I witnessed personally many years ago, while in Soho for an audition. I didn’t catch much of the conversation – just a man and a woman trying to tempt him into a doorway. The words “Not Police” are forever etched in my mind. It made me so sad.”

Another in our series of 100-word short stories by Tim Austin. Whatever genre you love, there’s a story you’ll enjoy over at onewordonestory.org.

Come back on Tuesday for another. See you then!

Torn

Frost fiction, short stories, poems, non fiction, fiction.

Eddie’s mouth was hanging open.  He wasn’t entirely sure what had happened.

Around him people were staring, forks held comically close to mouths, awkward coughs and murmurs circling the room like sharks.  Behind him a door slammed closed.

“Can I get you a towel, sir?”

The Maître D remained professionally aloof but Eddie could see sympathy in his eyes.

“I,…. think I’ll have the bill, please.”

Eddie picked up the two halves of paper, her telephone number shredded.  They’d been talking about their blind date.  She’d asked what he enjoyed.

Somehow “Chilling to Netflix” was the wrong answer.

 

Another in our new series of 100-word short stories by Tim Austin at onewordonestory.org. Whatever genre you love, there’s a story you’ll enjoy.

Come back on Friday for another. See you then!

Mr Perfect. A Short Story From Rachael Stewart

Ellie hiccupped her way past enemy territory, doing her best to ignore the display of static human perfection goading her through the glass to her right. Men and women, with their perfect faces, flawlessly sculpted hairdos and blindingly-white smiles, all captured mid-fitness move and plastered across the building of the exclusive new health club she had just managed to escape from.

It was all perfect, perfect, perfect. The quintessential front for a joint that had been just as nose-rubbingly slick on the inside. And a complete and utter contrast to the relaxing setup she had created many moons before just next door.

She had wanted to hate it all; from the latest state-of-the-art equipment to the serene colour scheme, right down to the fluffy white towels being offered up to members. But even her hyper-critical eye had to see the appeal…damn it.

A growl erupted in her throat, her head beginning to spin as a few too many prosecco’s mingled with the latest wave of rage and her feet faltered beneath her, teetering as they were on the silly stiletto’s she’d been coaxed into wearing that evening: Go to the launch party, her well-meaning friend and employee, Jas, had urged, thrusting the shoes into her resistant palms, make him realise what he’s destroying, your dream to provide training spaces for real people, you’ll win him over for sure.

She laughed out loud now at the silliness of it all. Why she’d even thought to go along with it she had no idea. When all was said and done, she’d no desire to be face-to-face with the man behind the soulless club, so to attend his celebratory launch night was utter madness.

She stumbled as her heel caught in the cobbled paving stones and flung her hand out to steady herself, her palm pressing up against the glass wall. The cold surface bit into the heat of her hand and with it came a ridiculous sense of shame that she would use the said building for support. 

She snapped it back, her eyes being rewarded with an unhindered view of a male chest, bare and taut, biceps poised as the man folded his arms. She let her eyes travel upwards, taking in the vast expanse of chiselled masculinity, each muscle toned and ready for action. A strong neck leading to a jaw carved from granite that barely softened to house the aforementioned perfect grin, then a strong nose and eyes that were sure to send women weak at the knees, their colour indiscernible in the black and white photograph. 

They would probably be blue, she mused, the colour of the Greek ocean and the perfect match to the foppish hair curling around his overly big head. 

One big, pig-headed head!

She sniggered at her own critique, finding great delight in berating the defenceless life size photograph of the man that fronted the successful nutritionist sport centres taking over the country. Pushing out small gyms like her own, brainwashing the market with unrealistic ideals that she had worked hard to discount. Oh, how she itched to wipe that smarmy grin right off his face. 

The actual owner hadn’t even had the decency to attend his club’s launch night, sending his lackeys to do it for him. To think, she’d only attended in the hope that she could give him a piece of her mind. She had necked the first two glasses of bubbles just to keep up her nerve. But it soon became apparent the guy had better things to be doing. Probably taking over another city, seducing its people with his sickeningly perfect portrayals and empty promises of the perfection they could achieve.

“Well more fool them.” She swayed backwards as she tried to glare down her opposition. “If I can’t do it to you in person, then your company mascot will have to do.”

A smile forming, she scanned the deserted street; save for the odd passing car and distant reveller, the only sound of life came from inside the club. There was no one to stop her from acting out the little plan hatching in her brain. 

“Let’s see how good Mr Perfect looks with a spot of colour.” 

She smiled into her handbag as she fished inside to retrieve the bright red lipstick, another hiccup erupting. Maybe the third glass of fizz hadn’t been such a great idea. Not when she rarely drunk alcohol…

Slowly she twisted the base of the lipstick, staring down at it and feeling a teeny pang of guilt. It was Jas’s after all, just another thing she had coaxed her into sporting that evening. It’s the perfect match for this, she had said as she threw the dress at her. And to be fair, it was the only thing of Jas’s that had covered enough of her curves and still been a decent enough length. It was still far too short for Ellie’s liking though. 

And as for the lipstick, she could always buy her another… 

She looked up at the eyes gazing back at her and reached out. Using more pressure than it probably required, she began her vengeful ministrations on the impotent portrait. And then she started laughing, her strokes turning light and gleeful. Boy was this liberating and so—unlike her. 

Maybe she should have done something similar months back, before, she’d morphed into the workaholic singleton that desperately needed to find herself a life, to use Jas’s words.

Well, if only she could see me now…

“Red never was my colour.”

Ellie’s hand froze midway through her final addition to the masterpiece—a teeny, weeny asset in the nether regions—and her brain scrambled to fit together the identity of the person stood directly behind her. It couldn’t, it wasn’t… Slowly she turned, her cheeks reaching a matching shade to the lippy.

“Oops.” She gave a tiny shrug, her smile one of sheepish splendour.

“Have a thing for defacing public property, do we?”

She swallowed, he was even better looking in 3D and the tiny flutter taking place in her belly had far less to do with being caught than it should. No, it felt like it ran a whole lot deeper and connected with the apex of her thighs. 

“I wasn’t beating up on you per se.” She cocked her head to the side, the incriminating lipstick pointing to the sign overhead and the surname of the man that owned the club, and the mammoth company. “It’s the man behind the brand, not the pretty-stuff he uses to flaunt it.”

“The pretty-stuff?” His eyes were actually dancing. He didn’t look angry, he looked amused. 

And wouldn’t you? You just called him the pretty-stuff! Are you off your head?

She wet her lips and stood tall, beating back her internal telling-off. “I’m not cleaning it off.”

“I didn’t ask you to.”

“No.” He hadn’t. But the way he crossed his arms, just like in the picture, suggested he was waiting for something. And the way he scanned her, his eyes penetrating her layers of clothing and stripping her bare. He looked like he could eat her alive, like he wanted her, or wanted to punish her…

She squinted up at him, her voice tentative, “Are you going to call the police?”

He laughed, the sound taking the flutter inside and turning it into a full-on typhoon. “No, I’m not going to call the police, Ellie.”

She froze mid-breath and shook her head. “How do you know who I am?”

“I make it my business to know as much as possible about my neighbours, particularly when their business impacts on mine.”

“Neighbours?” Her spine tingled with growing understanding. But he couldn’t be the company mascot and the man. He couldn’t. 

“You’re, him?” she asked, the lipstick edging towards the name in lights once again, this time far more hesitantly. “You’re Jude Harrington, of Harrington Leisure, the Harrington leisure.”

He nodded, still no trace of anger, only amusement, only…fire. “For my sins.”

She swallowed again. Jesus, he was not what she expected, never mind beating up his company for flaunting ideals, she’d been so full of prejudice when she’d assumed the real man behind the company would be anything but this perfect specimen of a man. 

Ah, hell.

“I’ve been told you were waiting for me.”

“Uh-huh.”

“Would you like to talk now? Or would you like to finish your art first?” He looked passed her to the wall. “Personally, I’d prefer you finished because I definitely need a couple more inches down there.”

The heat seared her cheeks now. What did one do in this situation, leg it and pretend it never happened, pray he didn’t report her and that they never crossed paths again?

“Before you run, Ellie, I am here to talk with you, I think the least you can do is agree to dinner with me?”

“Dinner?” It came out like a squeak and she clamped her jaw shut. He couldn’t be serious. “Now?”

“Yes.” He bowed his head a little. “Despite the fangs you’ve just given me, I don’t bite…unless you want me to.”

Oh God. Oh God. Oh God. 

Never had she been more aroused or more flight-struck than in that moment.

“Please, Ellie, I think we have more in common than you think. What do you have to lose?”

It was a simple question with a colossal answer. 

You owe it to your dream to talk to him.

You owe it to the long-neglected part of you to pursue the spark so readily blazing in his eye.

“I’ll just finish up…” She turned away, twisting the lipstick once more and giving him a perfect view of her behind as she bent forward. “…then we can get right to it.”

 

This wonderful romantic was written by Rachael Stewart, who writes feminist, uplifting romance for the UKs #1 romance publisher, Mills & Boon.

As a child Rachael Stewart wrote stories, but she pushed her hobby aside for the big city career, getting a First Class Degree in Business and a job as a Business Analyst. When she had children and settled down in Leeds, she was finally gifted the time to put into her writing. Rachael had two romances published by an independent publisher, before signing with Mills & Boon last year.

Her upcoming novel, Mr One-Night Stand (publsihed 21st February)follows Managing Director, Jennifer Haynes. When she sees a gorgeous stranger across a London bar, she sets out to seduce him. But when he turns out to be Marcus Wright, her new business partner, suddenly she’s mixing business with pleasure.

Written by women, for women, Mills & Boon’s DARE books are sexy romances, featuring strong women who know exactly what they want.

Available from Amazon.co.uk.

 

Short Story Author embarks on “World’s Most Insane” Writing Marathon


In March author Tim Austin began a “Brilliantly Insane” project: to write a brand new 100 word short story every single day for 365 days.  It has since been viewed thousands of times by readers from across the globe – from Sri Lanka to Canada, India and Australia.

With just under 300 more days to go, we talk to Tim about the project, celebrity contributors and what writing fiction means to him.

What is One Word, One Story?

It’s a project where members of the public suggest single words and I use those words as titles for flash fiction short stories.  I read each word, an image forms in my mind and I take that image as inspiration for what I write.  I never, ever know what’s going to come next!  And I’m writing a new story every day for a year over at onewordonestory.org.

It sounds crazy.  What made you do it?

A friend of mine suggested the notion of word association as a way of exploring my imagination and practicing my writing.  I started doing that as a hobby.  At first it was single paragraphs but I enjoyed it so much that I turned it into entire short stories.  Taking it public and doing it every day for a year seemed like a fun next step.

You have a strange idea of fun,….

Haha!  I enjoy taking things too far and I like a challenge.  I think this counts for both.

Why just a hundred words?

I wanted to create something that people could read on the go.  People have little time if they’re on a lunch break or travelling to work and I wanted to write something bite-sized that they could enjoy.  Maybe read two or three in a go.  The other reason was the challenge of condensing a whole narrative into so few words – it really makes every word count.  It’s very pure and I like that very much.

Where did the idea of approaching other authors and celebrities come in?

Yeech, I hate the word “celebrities”!  It sounds so contrived and pat.  I want everyone to be able to suggest words and titles but I thought it’d be fun to approach a few writers and actors I admire.  I’ve been honoured that many of them have been kind enough to donate words.

Such as?

Danny John-Jules (“Cat” in the Sci-Fi classic “Red Dwarf”) suggested “SmegForBrains”.  I’ve also had suggestions from screen writers and authors including Mike Wells, Jonathan Maberry, Eddie Robson (Doctor Who) and Robert Shearman (also Doctor Who – writer of the acclaimed Season One story “Dalek”).  I’m keeping quiet about future contributors.  But I’m always asking.  And I’m always looking for new words – anyone can suggest their own.  Hint.

Did you expect it to become this popular?

To be honest, I thought it’d get a couple of hits a day.  I started the site as a hobby, after all.  But within two weeks I was getting hundreds of visitors a day and thousands of hits a month.  It’s been wonderful to connect with people and hear that they’ve enjoyed each story.  That’s been the greatest pleasure.

You can read, contribute to and support Tim’s One Word, One Story project over at onewordonestory.org now.

 

 

Askerswell Short Story Workshop by Wendy Breckon

photo 1ASK

One of the most pleasant ways to spend an afternoon, is to share ideas with other writers and learn one or two writing tips.  On Saturday 17th January, the car ambled through the country lanes to Askerswell near Bridport, for a short story workshop.  Accompanied by a rather large notebook and a trusty pen, I bumped into other like minded people as we walked up the path.  The flyer for the Dorset Writers’ Network said, ‘let your imagination fly’, and that is exactly what we did.  In the warmth of the cosy surroundings of Grey Cottage, our excellent tutor, Frances Colville guided us towards creating the perfect short story.

Askerswell Short Story Workshop by Wendy Breckon

The twelve writers gathered around the table, listened, scribbled down ideas, exchanged helpful notes and read their work.  There is something magical about listening to other peoples’ writing.  All so different.  Quite fascinating. Wonderful.

Frances is a very accomplished writer.  She gave us a clear understanding into the composition of a good short story.  I found her tips very helpful and thought provoking.  One of the constructive ideas she presented to us, is to hot seat your chosen character. This technique is valuable for gaining further appreciation of characterisation; such as understanding his or her personality; age; relationships with others or individual motives. Either, ask yourself the questions about the person you have created, or ask someone else to ‘hot seat’ you.  Both are effective tools to consider when writing a short story.This was very helpful, for gaining an extra insight into the creation of our own characters.

Askerswell Short Story Workshop by Wendy BreckonOur tutor made a number of further practical suggestions; the important use of dialogue in short stories; the inclusion of dramatic tension and how to achieve it, and the necessity for vigorous editing.  Reading your story out loud is very important for getting the sense of rhythm and pace.

A worthwhile exercise to do at home, (which I immediately applied to my own writing), with great success,  is to explore a written piece and the application of descriptive words.  Are they the best ones to choose?  Are you using cliché and words that are too obvious?  Frances suggested, that as writers we underline each one, and think of them on an individual basis.

photo 4ASK

Four o’clock.  It was the end of the session.  Chairs were placed under the table. Notebooks and pens disappeared into bags.  Coffee cups pushed to one side.  Everyone left chatting, heads buzzing.

Frances Colville gave us lots to think about in her invaluable and absorbing session.  I could have stayed for another two hours.

photo 5ASK

So now, it’s time to think of an idea!  If you want to take part in the competition, create a story with a maximum of 500 words.  This should be set in Dorset, have a strong sense of place and have equally strong characters.  The winners will be chosen for the e-book anthology and the closing date is the 31st March.

So, let those thoughts slide on to the page  and your imagination fly. Without any further hesitation get writing.

 

 

Short Story Workshops Across Dorset by Margaret Graham

writing

One of Frost’s favourites, author Kate Kelly, who wrote of her experiences at the Edinburgh Festival is featuring as a tutor at one of the free Workshops taking place across Dorset over the next two months.

Short Story Workshops Across Dorset  by Margaret Graham

In an effort to reach aspiring writers living in rural communities a series of free-entry creative writing workshops for adults has been devised and take place at twelve venues across Dorset between 12 January to 14th February.

Amongst the tutors is another familiar name. Frances Colville who arranged the Bridport Slam, won by one of Frost’s most fun writers, Wendy Bracken, is teaching. Frances herself has featured in Frost in A Day in the Life. In addition, there is Tracy Baines who I taught, and who is a successful short story writer, so lots for the aspiring writer to enjoy.

Perhaps they would like to enter the Words for the Wounded writing prizes? www.wordsforthewounded.co.uk

writing, writing workshops, short, workshops, writing, Dorset, Margaret Graham

The short story workshops will kick-start DWN’s first e-book anthology. For anyone and everyone who enjoys writing or would like to learn to write short fiction check out the communities listed here: Winfrith Newburgh, Sturminster Marshall, Cerne Abbas, Askerswell, Durweston Horton & Chalbury, Martinstown, Stalbridge, Verwood, Crossways, Upwey, Bourton

To book a place, email sue@dorsetwritersnetwork.co.uk

Taking part gives you free entry to Dorset Writers Network e-book competition. Competition launch event is on Saturday 24th January – 2.30pm – at Dorchester Library.

Come along to hear Natasha Solomons reading from her work and celebrate the launch of Dorset Writers Network’s e-book competition.  Advance booking essential, telephone Dorchester Library on 01305 224440.

 

 

Enter the Jeffrey Archer Short Story Challenge!

Are you in the process of writing a novel? If so, the Jeffrey Archer Short Story Challenge sponsored by Kobo and Curtis Brown Creative is the contest for you! One lucky winner will be awarded the grand prize of free enrolment in an upcoming Curtis Brown online novel writing course.

How to Submit

Authors should submit a 100-word short. The short can consist of any genre of fiction, as long as it stays within the 100-word limit.

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Submission deadline: 15th February 2013.

What Happens Next

The Kobo Writing Life Team will select 20 semi-finalists whose submissions will be collected in a free anthology available on the Kobo site! (Author names and photos will be included here as well, so get ready for your close-up!)

Contest judge and bestselling author Jeffrey Archer will evaluate the 20 semi-finalist submissions and choose three finalists. The finalists will be announced by Jeffrey Archer himself at the Kobo booth at London Book Fair on 15th April 2013.

The three finalists will be requested to submit a 3,000-word excerpt of their novel-in-progress to be judged by Curtis Brown Creative and will receive written feedback.

The lucky grand prize winner will be awarded free enrolment in an upcoming Curtis Brown online novel writing course! The winner will be announced on April 29th, 2013.

Tutors and guest speakers of past Curtis Brown creative writing courses include Jojo Moyes, Tracy Chevalier, Tony Parsons, Harriet Evans and Anna Davis. Find out more about Curtis Brown Creative here.

Full Terms and Conditions

The Contest is open only to legal residents of the forty eight (48) contiguous United States, District of Columbia, the United Kingdom and Canada (excluding Quebec) who have reached the age of majority in their respective jurisdiction at the time of entry (each entrant, an “Entrant”). Void in Guam, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and where prohibited by law. The Prize consists of free enrolment in one (1) Curtis Brown writing course. The voucher is valid until December 31, 2013.