we are looking for something, we don't know what. we are in a gallery, filled with portraits of eyes. we do not recognize each other. we just search, looking for something unknown.
"there!" one of us calls, "a clue!" as we flock about the new object. it is a portrait of an eye. we do not know why this is important. but we suddenly find ourselves in our bedroom. we search for a small dragon with eyes much like our portrait.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
candy corn (cane) part 2
di here.
ok, yeah, i'm sorry for not writing since october. i was out of my writing mood. i've been busy. but please can i go on?
ok........introducing
candycorn canes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ok. i know it isn't christmas yet. but it sure feels that way in a number of ways.
1. i have a christmas plaid bathrobe.
2. i got a hooded sleeper with removable footies and an adorable owlet pattern.
3. christmas music is my favorite now.
4. mom has already gotten a christmas present (from me, a box of fancy chocolates).
5. my pet fish, rowenne (aka ro, roby) has a homemade stocking now.
6. mom has returned from a shopping trip with a bag of secret stuff.
7. my room has:
a. paper and cottonball and tulle drifts of snow.
b. fronts of christmas cards mounted on holiday theme paper.
c. foam gingerbread- and snow- creatures.
8. the muppet christmas carol and george balanchine's the nutcracker are playing a lot.
so, naturally, i go for:
i. candy canes
j. peppermints
k. peppermint bark
and other treats of the season.
merry christmas!
ok, yeah, i'm sorry for not writing since october. i was out of my writing mood. i've been busy. but please can i go on?
ok........introducing
candy
ok. i know it isn't christmas yet. but it sure feels that way in a number of ways.
1. i have a christmas plaid bathrobe.
2. i got a hooded sleeper with removable footies and an adorable owlet pattern.
3. christmas music is my favorite now.
4. mom has already gotten a christmas present (from me, a box of fancy chocolates).
5. my pet fish, rowenne (aka ro, roby) has a homemade stocking now.
6. mom has returned from a shopping trip with a bag of secret stuff.
7. my room has:
a. paper and cottonball and tulle drifts of snow.
b. fronts of christmas cards mounted on holiday theme paper.
c. foam gingerbread- and snow- creatures.
8. the muppet christmas carol and george balanchine's the nutcracker are playing a lot.
so, naturally, i go for:
i. candy canes
j. peppermints
k. peppermint bark
and other treats of the season.
merry christmas!
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
candy corn part 1
di here.
or, in actuality, candy corn here.
you see, i am totally obsessed with the candy. i bought a soft pair of slipper-socks with small stuffed candy corns with faces on them. i drew on a shirt a large, cute candy corn. i bought a bag of candy corn to eat. i'm sort of wishing i had bought that candy corn costume at party city. no - ladybugs are still better.
i've gotten back into sewing and already have made a pillow. i think i'll run and ask mom to see if we can zip to jo-ann fabrics for some cloth for a big pillow now.
i draw candy corn. i eat candy corn. i wear candy corn.
i am candy corn.
or, in actuality, candy corn here.
you see, i am totally obsessed with the candy. i bought a soft pair of slipper-socks with small stuffed candy corns with faces on them. i drew on a shirt a large, cute candy corn. i bought a bag of candy corn to eat. i'm sort of wishing i had bought that candy corn costume at party city. no - ladybugs are still better.
i've gotten back into sewing and already have made a pillow. i think i'll run and ask mom to see if we can zip to jo-ann fabrics for some cloth for a big pillow now.
i draw candy corn. i eat candy corn. i wear candy corn.
i am candy corn.
Friday, September 21, 2012
be a bug
dotty here.
i am di's pet ladybug. most buggies don't know this, but i was saved by di. i was in a big bowl of soup but di didn't eat me. i now live in a nice house. di feeds me well and gives me all i want - a bedroom, a bathroom, a dining room, a guestroom, a toyshop, a bookstore. i am happy here, with my mother veronica and my father trevor.
di will be a ladybug fairy for halloween, and i will be her pet.
i love to be a bug.
i am di's pet ladybug. most buggies don't know this, but i was saved by di. i was in a big bowl of soup but di didn't eat me. i now live in a nice house. di feeds me well and gives me all i want - a bedroom, a bathroom, a dining room, a guestroom, a toyshop, a bookstore. i am happy here, with my mother veronica and my father trevor.
di will be a ladybug fairy for halloween, and i will be her pet.
i love to be a bug.
1, 2, 3, bug!
di here.
dotty - the real dotty - is a littlest pet shop ladybug baby. i like to pretend that she can do things, so sometimes you'll see a post by her.
for halloween i'm going to be a ladybug fairy with a pet ladybug - dotty. and ladybugs are my latest obsession. so......
1, 2, 3,
bug!
dotty - the real dotty - is a littlest pet shop ladybug baby. i like to pretend that she can do things, so sometimes you'll see a post by her.
for halloween i'm going to be a ladybug fairy with a pet ladybug - dotty. and ladybugs are my latest obsession. so......
1, 2, 3,
bug!
Sunday, September 16, 2012
dotty the bug
di here.
this new story is about a bug. a ladybug. a cute little bug that likes to fly.
dotty the ladybug had big green eyes and a sweet light red shell. her mommy, veronica, looked just like her except she was magenta instead of light red, and she was bigger. dotty lived happily in the garden under a bush.
dotty was old enough to learn to fly. she was good, but not so good as to escape dangers - like the big glass jar that suddenly dotty got caught in.
she was practicing flying one day when a huge glass jar cupped over her. it was held by a mean-looking boy.
"bug soup," he said. "you won't make much soup by yourself, but with a couple others you'll be fine."
dotty's mommy was too far away to save her. dotty was trapped. the boy carried her around a while, then put her in a pot with other bugs. there was shelly, the snail; charlotte, the spider; wiggle, the other spider, who smuggled apples; dragon, the caterpillar, who smuggled his sunglasses; jacques, the french lovebug,who smuggled a carrot; flutter, the butterfly, who smuggled cheese; and of course dotty.
in the pot,they wondered what to do. the water was hot and uncomfortable, the food quickly inedible, the oxygen slowly dwindling even in the air: there was a lid on the pot.
suddenly the lid came off. a giant ladle came in the pot and scooped up dotty's new friends one by one. dotty was alone in the pot. the ladle soon came down and scooped her up, too.
dotty squirmed unhappily in the bowl she was in. sure that she would be eaten, she thought of her mommy searching for her fruitlessly.
dotty felt the spoon lifting her up. she imagined the huge mouth and slimy throat. what she got, however, was a soft hand gently picking her up and slipping her into a pocket.
dotty heard her unexpected savior get up and leave. after a smooth ride, she saw the hand reach inside and grasp her. the soft hand rinsed the soup off her with warm water - not the freezing rain water at home, nor the boiling water in the pot - warm water, pleasantly warm. the soft hand set her on a small table while it neatly set up a doll's bed covered with soft thick white bedding.
dotty got snuggled up in the bed. the hand left and flicked off the light.
after many days, while the hand and its match made a couch, two dressers, two bedside tables, one kitchen table, and a second bed that was slightly larger, dotty wanted her mommy. she told the hands so, and they soon set her mommy down and presented dotty with the second bed for her mother.
well, they lived like this for a while. then the hands presented themselves and their owner as diana. diana was to be a ladybug for halloween. dotty was coming on a leash.
dotty loved trick-or-treating. she got lots of people loving diana and herself. she even got her own candy bit!
dotty was happy.
this new story is about a bug. a ladybug. a cute little bug that likes to fly.
dotty the ladybug had big green eyes and a sweet light red shell. her mommy, veronica, looked just like her except she was magenta instead of light red, and she was bigger. dotty lived happily in the garden under a bush.
dotty was old enough to learn to fly. she was good, but not so good as to escape dangers - like the big glass jar that suddenly dotty got caught in.
she was practicing flying one day when a huge glass jar cupped over her. it was held by a mean-looking boy.
"bug soup," he said. "you won't make much soup by yourself, but with a couple others you'll be fine."
dotty's mommy was too far away to save her. dotty was trapped. the boy carried her around a while, then put her in a pot with other bugs. there was shelly, the snail; charlotte, the spider; wiggle, the other spider, who smuggled apples; dragon, the caterpillar, who smuggled his sunglasses; jacques, the french lovebug,who smuggled a carrot; flutter, the butterfly, who smuggled cheese; and of course dotty.
in the pot,they wondered what to do. the water was hot and uncomfortable, the food quickly inedible, the oxygen slowly dwindling even in the air: there was a lid on the pot.
suddenly the lid came off. a giant ladle came in the pot and scooped up dotty's new friends one by one. dotty was alone in the pot. the ladle soon came down and scooped her up, too.
dotty squirmed unhappily in the bowl she was in. sure that she would be eaten, she thought of her mommy searching for her fruitlessly.
dotty felt the spoon lifting her up. she imagined the huge mouth and slimy throat. what she got, however, was a soft hand gently picking her up and slipping her into a pocket.
dotty heard her unexpected savior get up and leave. after a smooth ride, she saw the hand reach inside and grasp her. the soft hand rinsed the soup off her with warm water - not the freezing rain water at home, nor the boiling water in the pot - warm water, pleasantly warm. the soft hand set her on a small table while it neatly set up a doll's bed covered with soft thick white bedding.
dotty got snuggled up in the bed. the hand left and flicked off the light.
after many days, while the hand and its match made a couch, two dressers, two bedside tables, one kitchen table, and a second bed that was slightly larger, dotty wanted her mommy. she told the hands so, and they soon set her mommy down and presented dotty with the second bed for her mother.
well, they lived like this for a while. then the hands presented themselves and their owner as diana. diana was to be a ladybug for halloween. dotty was coming on a leash.
dotty loved trick-or-treating. she got lots of people loving diana and herself. she even got her own candy bit!
dotty was happy.
Labels:
bug
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
excerpt: introduction
di here.
you know how i told you how i had this new idea for a book in the last post? well, this is it. and i'll keep writing it because you will want to read more. you are my encouragement to keep writing.
this book is called i dare you.
here goes.
introduction: a rumor
in the tiny village, there was a rumor.
the rumor was about a child of unknown gender, about eleven, who had broken their toe. this was because the child had fallen.
off a hundred-foot cliff.
onto rocks.
they had broken just their toe.
who was this child?
you know how i told you how i had this new idea for a book in the last post? well, this is it. and i'll keep writing it because you will want to read more. you are my encouragement to keep writing.
this book is called i dare you.
here goes.
introduction: a rumor
in the tiny village, there was a rumor.
the rumor was about a child of unknown gender, about eleven, who had broken their toe. this was because the child had fallen.
off a hundred-foot cliff.
onto rocks.
they had broken just their toe.
who was this child?
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
excerpt: chapter 5
di here.
i am posting the fifth and last chapter. don't be sad, though, because i have an idea for a great story. possibly i can put up excerpts of the adventures of sir ribbit, another of my books. or maybe something from future, yet another of my books.
and if you have read any of these other clock of fate excerpts, you know what i'm going to say.
keep up the comments.
i am posting the fifth and last chapter. don't be sad, though, because i have an idea for a great story. possibly i can put up excerpts of the adventures of sir ribbit, another of my books. or maybe something from future, yet another of my books.
and if you have read any of these other clock of fate excerpts, you know what i'm going to say.
keep up the comments.
Chapter 5
A
nervous-looking Elliot rushed to Abigail’s room, wondering why Carol was
looking so happy, and fearing what he must do. What he was not expecting, however, was a
blue-clad Abigail, curled snugly in her pillows, who was perfectly alert but
looked slightly nervous and ill.
He
stood in the doorway, unsure what to do, when Abigail made a soft, fearful
noise, as though she had noticed a bloody axe, and spoke in an anxious whisper.
“What
should I do now?”
“I
believe I am to take you to the feast,” replied Elliot.
“I’m
hungry.”
“Good. Carol, your caretaker, is waiting.”
Anxious
to meet this fabled Carol, but still not able to put weight on her feet,
Abigail met a dilemma. After a few
tries, she could stand, and Elliot then supported her to walk. She shuffled out the door and found her blue
shoes helped her walk. She got to the kitchen
and nearly collapsed again.
Carol
was not the kind of old farmwife who sold magic herbs in the market square,
like Abigail supposed. She was a slim
woman of sixteen, wearing robes of lapis lazuli like Elliot's tunic. She also, like everyone else, was staring at
Abigail.
Abigail
blushed.
Emma
bustled around, testing a few stews, tasting some cereal, nibbling kernels of
cheese. One of her kitchen babies sat
dreamily tasting way too much stew, and Emma jerked him out of the pot. Carol guided Abigail to her seat. Elliot, strangely enough, glanced toward Carol
and quickly began to set the table.
The
place settings were mismatched. The
kitchen babies got a mix of ceramic; Elliot got a china clock-shaped plate with
clock-theme silverware and cup; Carol, Abigail noticed, was the neatest. She had fine china decorated with clocks, and
golden silverware. Her napkin Elliot
painstakingly folded into her teacup. Abigail’s
herself was a clear glass bowl on a small glass plate. A glass teacup stood nearby. Sheldon’s setting was translucent colorful
glass.
They
feasted heartily. Abigail ate more
cornflakes, bacon, raspberries, and orange juice.
After
the feast, Carol helped Sheldon and Abigail pack. They said goodbye, and Elliot
accompanied them to a hidden, magical door that would lead them into their own
home of five children (including Sheldon and Abigail) that was truly home. All was well.
THE END
Labels:
clock of fate,
excerpt
excerpt: chapter 4
di here.
here is the second chapter i have posted today. it is number 4. i will post number five soon.
as i always say, keep up the great comments!
here is the second chapter i have posted today. it is number 4. i will post number five soon.
as i always say, keep up the great comments!
Chapter 4
Sheldon
did not get used to life. He sent
letters home, but got no response. The
best food he could wish for seemed tasteless. He could not get bored, but there were times
when he could not work. Emma gave him
anything from her sweet stock, but the sugar rush was skipped and went straight
to the dumps. He could not visit Abigail
anymore. She was too delicate to have
anyone but Carol in the same room.
Every
day Abigail grew worse. Elliot, the
young man who had brought news to the workshop, had taught Sheldon how to make
clocks. Now he spent his time tinkering
with pieces Elliot brought to him, making small figures that walked, danced,
and played games.
He
was in his room, playing chess with the most intricate figure, a clockwork toy
named Sidney, when he heard a knock on the door. It was Emma.
“Um,
Sheldon,” she said, “I bring bad news. Carol
cannot fix the clock. She cannot remove
the clock, because that would kill the patient. If she cannot remove the clock, she cannot fix
it. I’m so sorry.”
Sheldon
did not respond. It could not have
happened. Abigail could not be gone. But
he knew if Carol could not, no one could. She was the best clockmaker.
Sheldon
suddenly heard a voice in his head. It
said, is Carol truly the best clockmaker?
Has she made any figures like mine,
better than mine?
“Emma,
has Carol made any figures of clockwork?” said Sheldon.
Emma
shook her head. “No. Not any as good as
yours.”
A
bubble of hope rose inside him. Abigail
would be saved.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
next evening, he sat working on the most intricate clock he had ever built. He told no one of his plan, worried he would
be put off.
He
worked by candlelight. He had spent the
morning napping, for it was vital he stay awake. He had spent the afternoon praying, to keep Abigail
alive. And now he worked.
By
midnight, he had slipped out. He tiptoed
down the passageway, clutching the clock in his hand. He arrived outside Abigail’s door. A peek through a crack in the door confirmed
she was alone.
He
crept in. Abigail was on her side, her
hands under her cheek. She looked
deathly pale.
Sheldon
went to check her pulse, but remembered she had no heart. Her clock was the heartbeat.
He
gently, carefully, softly turned her on her back. The broken clock glinted in the moonlight.
He
pulled out the silent clock he had made. He wound it.
The
merrily ticking sound filled the room. It sounded cruel, cruel to the lifeless form
in the bed. He listened to the sound,
and then bent over Abigail. He grasped
the clock in her breast, and tugged.
He
wasn’t sure what he had been expecting – blood? But a skin-covered hollow, a pothole, was in
the smooth skin. A single golden
metallic cord rose from the center, right where the winding gear was. He connected the two and placed the new clock
where the old one had been in the hollow.
The
clock ticked happily. Sheldon felt a
slight breeze touch his hand. He
realized Abigail was breathing!
He
ran and fetched a chair from his room. He
set the chair near the bed and watched Abigail until morning.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
That
morning, Emma raced to Carol’s rooms. “The
boy –fixed the girl’s clock! – She’s alive! – The boy – he did it – it was him
I say –”
Carol
jolted awake. She had had a lovely
dream. Abigail awoke and there was a
feast in rejoice. She told Emma so, and
Emma shook her head.
“Nah,”
she said, “that’s true! I was yelling it
to you a minute ago, that boy he’s got clockwork power I do tell you! He made
her a new clock!” Emma ran out of breath. She continued: “I snuck past her door
just now, and he was gently shaking her, and she seemed to be stirring! I need to make breakfast!”
Sheldon,
who had sensed Emma’s delighted gaze, hurried to his room. Abigail, left in the room herself, stirred. She opened her violet eyes, blinked, and found
herself in a lovely room with clockwork on the wall. A small, pudgy girl came in presently.
“I’m
glad you’re awake, Abigail,” she said. “I
am Emma. You have been out for weeks. I
fed you myself;” added Emma, looking proud, “but Carol and Sheldon fixed your
clock.”
The
blurry memory of Sheldon catching her as she fell unconscious slowly came back.
She felt slightly ill and cold then, so
Emma helped her into bed and produced a bowl of cornflakes and a glass of apple
juice. When she was finished, Emma
helped her into a blue puffy-sleeved and –skirted knee-length dress with white
pants and socks and blue shoes. She looked lovely.
Then
Emma headed to the feast her kitchen babies were preparing, while Carol sent
Elliot to bring Abigail to the kitchen.
excerpt: chapter 3
di here.
so much for putting up 3 chapters yesterday. perhaps i can do that today.
this is chapter number 3. later i can post up numbers 4 and 5, the last chapters.
as usual, i ask you to continue writing great comments!
so much for putting up 3 chapters yesterday. perhaps i can do that today.
this is chapter number 3. later i can post up numbers 4 and 5, the last chapters.
as usual, i ask you to continue writing great comments!
Chapter 3
Sheldon’s suspicions were correct: there was another door
leading outside. He carried Abigail out
and suddenly saw a signpost that hadn’t been there before.
To Carol the Clock-Maker
All Magical and Unusual Clocks
Abigail’s clock is certainly unusual, if
not magical, thought Sheldon. I hope
it’s not too far. He set off to
Carol’s clock-shop, wondering how far and long he needed to walk.
He
set Abigail down, deciding to check her supposedly broken clock. He looked, and there was the strange
timepiece. It no longer made a ticking sound, however faint, and the single
hand was perfectly still, pointing at the twelve. He could only suppose that meant ‘mortal
peril.’
Suddenly
a young woman, perhaps sixteen, raced down the path.
“I’m
assuming she’s another of those girls with the clocks, banged it up or
something – oh my goodness!”
She
hurriedly bent over Abigail and checked the clock. A grim look spread over her face.
“I
do hope I can cure her,” she said. “Often,
with a scratch, I just repair the scratched section. But the very gears have broken, and if the
clock breaks down, so does the child. These clocks are the persons’ heart and
brain. Emma! I need your help!” The woman called down the
twisting road.
A
small, chubby figure appeared running towards them.
“Yes,
Mistress Carol! I’ve got the kit!” cried the little girl. She looked younger
than the twins, perhaps three. Emma
handed over a large drawstring bag, which clanked loudly.
“Good,
Emma. Take the boy back. I’ll get the girl.”
Emma
hurried away with Sheldon and Carol was left with Abigail. She reached into her bag and drew out a clock.
“Oh,
help. Help me save the girl. Oh Holder of the Clock of Fate, I pray to you
to save your daughter. I pray to save
the girl.” Carol lifted Abigail up and carried her down the path, to a dark
wooden mansion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sheldon
was sitting in a large room filled with overstuffed couches and tables. They all faced a central fireplace, and over
the fire, set into the wall, was a huge clock. Its face was twenty feet in diameter at least,
perhaps longer, and there was a single hand that was twice as long as Sheldon
was tall. No, not one hand, one thick
one and – strangely enough – a hundred other, thinner hands, most moving gently
from one number to another, all ticking in unison.
A
small figure was bent over the fire. At
first thought Sheldon assumed she was tending it, but then realized she was
praying hard.
“Oh
Holder of the Clock of Fate, let her live, let her live, let her live, let her
live, let her live.” The chant was repeated. “Oh Holder of the Clock of Fate,
let her live, let her live, let her live, let her live, let her live.”
Sheldon
knelt on his chair and imitated. “Oh
Holder of the Clock of Fate, let her live, let her live, let her live, let her
live, let her live.” He realized he was
praying for Abigail, and redoubled the force of his chant. “Oh Holder of the Clock of Fate, let her live,
let her live, let her li -”
Just
then, the doors burst open. “Come,
Sheldon!”
Carol
beckoned. She led him through a series
of twisting passages. Doors lined the
walls.
“We
are practically empty,” she said. “It’s
lucky: she’s the only patient here, and we can use everyone. But it’s unlucky as well, because it will
still take a month.”
Thank goodness, the wedding is in six weeks, thought Sheldon. But
he was still troubled.
“What
is the cost of the repair?” he asked.
“There
is no cost to save my sister,” she said, and pulled down her dress so he saw
the glint of an identical clock. “She’s
my half-sister to be exact.”
Carol
stopped at a wooden door in the marble walls. She pushed it open.
Baby-blue
wallpaper lined the walls. A huge window
and window seat were on the opposite wall. On the left was a white shelf with a
collection of wooden clocks. On the
right was a canopy bed with white curtains, drawn back, and Abigail lay on it.
The
white covers were drawn to her chin, and she wore a long-sleeved blue-and-white
striped nightgown. It was V-necked, so
her clock was exposed. Abigail looked
simply and peacefully asleep.
Oh Holder of the Clock of Fate, let her live, let her live,
let her live, let her live, let her live, thought
Sheldon.
Carol
continued on down the passage. She
stopped at another door.
“This
is your room,” she said. Sheldon looked
around.
On
the walls, which were painted dark green, hung an assortment of clocks. An emerald-curtained four-poster stood in the
corner. Bookshelves, a table, and a
wardrobe filled most of the room, and a window let light dance in.
“I’ll
be back,” she said. “Make yourself at
home.”
Sheldon
sighed. He had no idea what was going
on.
“I’ll
be back to give you the tour.”
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
A
few hours later, Carol gave Sheldon the tour. It was pretty simple. There was the kitchen, a giant stone room filled
with cooking ware. A bunch of young
girls and boys, Emma included, were scrubbing dishes and stewing meat and
carrots. There was the room Sheldon had
seen before, with the clock. That was
the timekeeping room. There was another
room, too.
“This
is the workshop,” said Carol.
There was an innumerable amount of clockwork,
scattered here and there, piled up, on the floor, all taken apart. A few entire
clocks were stacked in a pile.
Suddenly,
a young man burst through the doorway. He
wore a blue tunic, the precise shade of lapis lazuli as Carol’s dress. He looked tired.
“Carol,”
he panted, “she’s worse. We’ve
transferred Megan from cleaning to nurse duty, and Leah is helping. Emma
offered to make a bowl of soup – bean, I think. You need to get there fast.”
Carol
swept out of the room with a grim look on her face, and the man following, and
Sheldon thought of what the family would think if Abigail was dead.
Monday, September 3, 2012
excerpt: chapter 2
di here.
i'm sorry i haven't gotten any time to blog over the weekend, so today i'll try to put up 3 chapters.
i hope you have read my earlier posts. if you haven't i recommend reading those first.
and please, as always, keep writing those great comments!
thanks & enjoy.
i'm sorry i haven't gotten any time to blog over the weekend, so today i'll try to put up 3 chapters.
i hope you have read my earlier posts. if you haven't i recommend reading those first.
and please, as always, keep writing those great comments!
thanks & enjoy.
Chapter 2
The family set off that morning. Emily was yelling, the twins were shoving each
other, and Abigail was sulking because she had ended up taking all the blame
for the spilled food.
Sheldon himself was feeling cooped up. The stuffy carriage was bumping madly, and the
noise was unbearable.
Finally, they arrived at a small, mercifully quiet shack with
an enormous garden. Emily and the twins
stayed outside, enjoying the fresh air. Sheldon,
Abigail, and their parents went in.
Every clock of every sort was piled on tables, hung on walls,
stacked on shelves, and dangling on the ceiling. An excited looking old man trotted in.
“Hello, sir, miss,” he said, “and hello young ones!”
They all nodded hello, then Sheldon and Abigail pulled coins
from their pockets, and found two clocks to buy.
Sheldon’s
was a square, light-colored wood one, with no glass in the front. Abigail’s was round, with polished dark wood
and a thin sheet of glass in the front. They
both were strung on fine gold chains. Then,
when they were paid for, Abigail made a discovery.
“Hey – I found a door!”
They nudged it open. A
dark passageway twisted a way down.
Shutting the door behind them, and keeping one hand on the
wall, they followed the pitch-black tunnel. Suddenly the tunnel widened into a brightly
illuminated room, filled with clockwork. The clockwork was ticking rhythmically and in
unison.
Abigail suddenly stopped in her tracks.
She looked weak. She
was slowly starting to collapse. Sheldon caught her as she tumbled to the
floor. She was shaking badly.
“Abigail -”
“Sheldon,” she whispered, “fix my clock. My clock -”
And those were the last words Abigail said as she fell
unconscious.
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