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  Kenneth Lawson
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June 20th, 2021

6/20/2021

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I returned to Trinity College to correct a wrong from thirty years before. The head of the Alumni Association, Lauren Myers, had signed the invitation to the reunion. Figures. She believed the best revenge was succeeding epically and then rubbing everyone’s face in it. I reread the letter, tempted to throw it into the trash, but I decided to go. It was the perfect time. 

Lauren Myers stood at the reception desk when I signed in. I forced a smile and shook her hand as I pinned my name badge on my sports coat. “I wasn’t sure you’d come, Wayne.” She exclaimed too politely.

“I wouldn’t miss this for all the world.’ I lied. 

I signed in and picked up my small leather carry bag. I hadn’t planned on staying the entire three-day weekend.

 In my room, I pulled out the file tucked into my case. I had spent the past thirty years wondering what to do with them. Although my instinct was to throw it away when I received the invitation, I realized this was my opportunity to do what I had to do.

The invitation said the opening reception would be at six o’clock. I had time to take a nap and lay on the hotel bed. Sleep came quickly, but not sound sleep. The young, beautiful, ambitious version of Lauren that I knew in college appeared in my dreams. The version I’d met a few minutes ago remained quite beautiful. Our last meeting together had haunted my dreams for the past thirty years.

“Lauren, You can’t do that.”

“Who’s going to stop me? You?”   We had snuck into the university president’s office, and she had several grade documents she’d doctored, replacing the grade sheets in their files. 

“Don’t do this. They won’t graduate this year if you change their last semester grades.”

“So, they have to take classes over. They ruined my life. Besides, these three are borderline failing anyway.”

“Come On. They only teased you a little.” I told her.

 “A Little?”  She retorted, “They made me the campus joke—no one would give me the time of day. Professors wouldn’t even help me after class, and no one would date me or talk to me. They made my life hell!! Now I’m making their life hell.”  She went through the files and replaced the folders with hers, keeping the originals. I stood by and watched her helplessly. 

At six o’clock I entered the reception. The three men in question were there because I made certain they came. I took a breath and got the crowd’s attention.

“I am Wayne Carmichael, as you know, but what you don’t know is why Roberts, Lee, and Crandell failed and had to repeat the semester when they were supposed to  graduate.”

“President Long, here are the original grade sheets for these three.” I looked at Lauren, who was white as a ghost. “Lauren Myers made fake grade sheets and slipped them into their files, removing the correct grade sheet. I was there when she planted them. I tried to stop her at the time. I should have stopped her or told them, but I was too scared. Now I can set the record straight.”  

I handed the grade sheets to President Long and walked out of the room. Right is better than wrong.
 
 


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June 13th, 2021

6/13/2021

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Thunder rumbled as we approached the ruins. Standing just down the path, I sighed as I looked around. The spring rains had been generous this year. The sun glaring off the green grass almost blinded me. 

 The distant thunder grew louder, and the ground shook under my feet, wind from behind driving the clouds in our direction. “Looks like another Thunder-banger,” I spoke aloud, not caring if my two companions responded and pushed through the weeds surrounding the old castle. They followed me without speaking, as neither had much to say on the best of days. We reached the outer walls of the ruins just as the cold light rain began to fall. 

We ducked inside a crevice between abutments and caught our breath as the winds shifted, pushing the hard rain deeper into the crannies surrounding the walls. Spotting a low round window nearby, we dashed for just as thunder clapped, shaking the ground under us. As I leaped through the window, lightning flashed over the horizon. We moved farther into the room to escape the winds and rain blowing into the old ruins.

Lew and Dan weren’t originally part of the deal. The original plan had been for me to slip in and out alone and find the artifact. The surrounding kingdoms were at war over control of the regions and valuable resources. 

My king sent me on a covert mission, but when word leaked out about the prophecy,  various factions sent mercenaries to follow me and steal the artifact from me if I had found it. That made bodyguards necessary.

The castle’s location was never precise, and I pulled the old map from my pouch, carefully unfolding the fragile paper to check the landmarks. I had to be in the right place—the castle of King Wilfred. Though now in ruins, it had the unusual spherical towers and odd-shaped outer walls described in the ancient texts. Locating the map in an abandoned library was pure luck, but that luck may have paid off. 

While Lew and Dan watched for mercenaries, I carefully searched the walls of the storm-darkened room, looking for the secret opening. I was nearly back to where I started when I felt the edge of a doorway. Pressing along the seam, a portion of the wall opened, revealing a narrow passageway with stairs leading down into darkness. Telling my guards to keep an eye out, I took Lew’s torch and disappeared into the depths of the castle. 

It took a while, wandering the labyrinth of passageways, but I found the object of my quest. A rumored jewel-encrusted gold bird statue that legend told gave ultimate power to the ruler who possessed it. I reached for my pouch. I had work to do. 

When I returned, Lew and Dan looked wide-eyed at the statue I carried. Lew sputtered. “What is that?”

“This will give our King his power.”

As we slipped out of the castle, I tucked my pouch inside my shirt. It held the real jewels taken from the stature. I replace the real ones with colored glass, and the king would never know. 

I should have answered Lew with the truth. “The stuff that dreams are made of.”

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June 06th, 2021

6/6/2021

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​They were strangers, drawn together on the shore by a force they didn’t understand. Jason Rogers searched the faces of the dozen or so other people with him but knew none of them, and they didn’t recognize each other. A woman standing next to him asked him where they were. He didn’t have a clue. All he knew was that the early morning sun broke on the horizon as they stood in knee-deep waves on a beach. 

A beach that wasn’t acting like any beach he’d ever visited. The sand was rolling under their feet as if it were alive. A man a few feet from him yelped as he stumbled on the moving stand. Panic set in, and the entire group rushed out of the surf only to find the sand, warm even in the weak dawn light, was moving as well.

“Hurry.” A woman waved frantically to them. “There’s a solid ground up here. Looks like a parking lot or something.” 

Jason hurried to join them, noticing the seagrass on the dune looked blue, not green as it should. What the hell, where were they? 

Once on what looked and felt like asphalt but was squishing, the group began talking. Jason was shocked, they were from various places in the United States, and the last thing any of them remembered was going to bed. No one remembered how they got to the beach. 

A man named Arlo from Brooklyn pointed to the sky, “Oh my god, there’s another sun coming up.” 

Jason’s heart began to race. He was supposed to be in class this morning, not here. His parents would be frantic. He searched the area around them, but there was nothing but flat land and strange vegetation. There was nowhere to go for help.

The strangers stood huddled together, frightened, for about twenty minutes, watching the twin suns rise in the sky. Jason was about to look for help when the ground beneath them began to vibrate. They ran in unison back onto the beach as a whining sound of a revved engine blasted their ears.

A large silver object, Jason thought the metal tube looked like a train car, winked into sight. No one moved, transfixed on the tube. When a door slid open, revealing a brightly lit chamber, they moved further away. 

A man with thick white hair and a huge forehead stepped onto the solid ground. “Greetings, my fellow travelers. I trust you have enjoyed the twin sunrise here on the most beautiful beach in the universe. It’s time to embark on the next segment of your adventure. Our next port of call is the planet Lorea where you will have breakfast under the planet’s glittery diamond rings. You will find a wide variety of delights to keep you amused, and this will be your first chance to shop. Please have your credentials ready as you board the transport.” 

Credentials? They looked at each other, stunned. Jason felt something in his jeans pocket and pulled out a crystal disk that flashed ‘admit one.’ Not knowing what else to do, he got on the transport, and the others followed him.

As the beach winked out, stars replaced the view from the transport window. Jason scoffed. This was either one hell of a dream or one hell of an adventure.

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May 30th, 2021

5/30/2021

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​Finnian Payne turned seventeen on the Winter Solstice, and his life changed forever. Through the centuries, the Winter Solstice had become occasions whereby the child officially became an adult in the eyes of the community. 

For centuries in villages of the valley, the tradition was that a child became an adult in their seventeenth Winter Solstice year. His birthday had landed on the exact date of the winter Solstice that year, making his passage even more special. 

The majority of the region’s population was well past working in the fields or doing manual labor, leaving most of the work to the few still able-bodied citizens. The Winter Solstice ceremony brought more of the population old enough to do the adult work.

The ceremony was grand and lasted well into the night. The children of the surrounding villages had gathered together with their families to honor their passing into adulthood. Finnian had attended many ceremonies in the past, but this was different. There seems to be a sense of urgency about the whole thing. 

While never saying anything, the elders seemed eager to end the ceremony quicker than in the past. Many had reached their seventeenth-year milestones, more so than in the past, and the abrupt ceremony was a surprise. 

The following morning, the elders informed the newly “ recognized” adults what the hurry was the day before.

“Finnian, you have proved yourself to be an able leader, dependable, and our best hunter. That is not to say that any of the others are less able or dependable but, there must be a new leader. The council had decided  that you are to lead this group into battle tomorrow morning.”

The small group stood in stunned silence. The elder continued. “There have been no new adults in several years. The elders and the council have been preparing you for this day. We are aging and need young, hearty men to fight.” He paused. “What the village doesn’t know is that we have been under threat of attack for a long time. Tomorrow, you must defend the village and our way of life.” The elder paused to let them think for several minutes.

Finnian spoke up first. “What or who are we fighting?”
Before the elder could answer, the sky darkened, and the light shining through the windows dimmed to as though twilight had fallen. The elders exchanged glances, and the chief elder pointed out the window. “Them.” 

Finnian and the others turned to look out the window. Outside on the edge of town was an army of soldiers on horseback, led by the legendary  General Akitia, a warlord from a distant empire. The young men had not thought to be a threat to this region. Finnian now realized the talk of the village’s resources and their value he had heard over the years was real. 

He turned to his peers, and Finnian realized the years of sword fighting, hunting, and tracking they endured was for a reason. He took a breath and addressed his men. 

“We have an enemy to fight, and we are ready.”

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May 23rd, 2021

5/23/2021

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​The garden was tranquil, but she realized harmony was a momentary matter. Within a few minutes, the reality would return. The sounds of planes and gunfire were deafening, but it was the sounds of drying soldiers that cut to the bone.

 She’d volunteered to be a nurse early in the war. Within a month of beginning to serve,  she had held severed hands and looked deep into a young boy’s guts and not blinked. How much blood had she washed from her hair? Far too much, but nothing ripped her heard up as sounds of the dying soldiers. The garden became her sanctuary where she came after another one died. The sounds of the pond and the smell of fresh flowers, and even the buzz of flies, were peaceful. She could compose herself and remembered there was life beyond the blood, guts, and dying.

Today had been horrible.

Three young men and a female driver of an ambulance were involved in a rollover accident. They managed to save one young boy but lost the others. She cried, the drone of a bee nearby and the plop of a frog in the pond her only companions. 

She sensed someone in the garden and whipped her head around. 

 “You okay?” Her commanding officer stood before her. 

She stood and faced her CO. “No… yes, I’m fine.”

“Linda, I know. You did the best you could.”

Linda straightened her apron and pulled herself together.

 “Thank you, sir. I’ll get back to work now.” She saluted as she walked past him.

 The war in the east against the Japanese had been fierce and devastating. It seemed the only space that either side avoided was the small gardens and resting places dotted through the country. A fire could destroy the land and buildings surrounding the gardens, but the gardens were sacred. It was in these small patches of nature that she kept her soul together. 

She retired from the Army Nursing Corps, a colonel, and taught nursing for the army and other medical schools. Now, fifty years later, each night, she came to sit in her small Japanese garden at her home in California.

Through the large glass door behind her, her service medals and awards in the war hung on the wall. But she took little comfort from the medals, as she tried to forget all the men she couldn’t save.

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May 16th, 2021

5/16/2021

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​The boy waited patiently on the path, knowing they would have to return home eventually. The army had blocked the main road, including the main gate, which was the only other way into the estate. Most of the locals knew about the old service path to the estate but rarely used by anyone. They feared the army would find out about the back gate and path but not locate the tunnel as Lord Stanley was essential to their cause. 

He had a message to deliver to the Lord, but when he arrived, he’d found the gate ajar. He decided to backtrack out of sight and wait.

He leaned on his bike and remembered the day the invading army had come through the town. The soldiers destroyed or damaged the town’s buildings and rounded up anyone who remotely looked as if they could be a threat. Some died at the hands of the soldiers, with the rest held hostage until the region’s elders agreed to surrender the town to them. A few citizens held out, waging a guerilla war from the hills.

Several wealthy landowners were either killed or captured and placed under House arrest, and the army used the estates as headquarters with armed guards patrolling the grounds. The army chose Lord Stanley’s estate as their main headquarters because of its location on the side of a hill facing the ocean. They hadn’t counted on the estate having tunnels from the second great war and the back gates hidden from the main grounds, behind a wall of evergreen trees and brush that made passage difficult. However, a tunnel that from the back gate to the house. For several weeks they had been sneaking out one at a time to get messages and supplies. So far, the soldiers had not caught them, but it was risky. 

Lord Stanley had the tunnels cleared out and made plans that were underway. The risk the soldiers would discover someone missing from the house or caught at the entrance to the tunnel or in the hidden basement area was always present, but they ignored the risk and prepared to fight the enemy.

After a long wait, Lord Stanley showed up and stopped short when he saw him leaning against the bike.

‘Michael? Is everything ok?

“I have a message for you from the resistance. The army suspects you and others are part of the resistance, and tomorrow planes come from over the mountains. They are planning to bomb the estate. Hide in the tunnels by six a.m. The resistance will come for you when the bombing stops.” The boy jumped on his bicycle and rode down the path,  leaving Lord Stanley saying a prayer to himself as he slipped in the gate and down the tunnel.

By six the following morning, Lord Stanley huddled in the tunnel with his family and a few servants as the ground shook and bombs and artillery destroyed his family home. But they were alive, and Lord Stanley and the others would carry on for as long as it took. 

They would defeat their enemy, and freedom would be theirs again.

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May 09th, 2021

5/9/2021

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NOTE: This week the ​limit was upped to 500 words

​My family had lived on this land for a hundred years before my grandparents disappeared without a trace. My parents had come home to find them gone. The pot was still on the stove. Dishes on the table. Grandpas’ newspaper and a shot glass of bourbon on the side table. Grandma’s knitting in the bag beside her chair. clothes piled in the hamper, ready for the washer. They left in mid-living and never seen or heard from again. 

Decades later, I was back at the old homestead looking for answers. Police and family members searched and cleared out the house long ago. All that remained was a rotted decaying shell of a house. The old car still sat in the yard near what had once been a driveway. I tugged on a door handle, and the car door creaked as it open, but as I expected, I found nothing inside.

The rickety front door opened easily, and I stepped inside. Memories of  Christmas and Thanksgiving dinners with tables all over the house and the smell of chicken and turkey and warm bread oozing through the house flooded my thoughts. Images of children playing. I shuddered and was back in the shabby room. Glass from broken windowpanes lay scattered about the floor, boards loose, the house dangerous to walk through. 

Only dust greeted me as I walked into the kitchen. I poked around and opening an upper cabinet, and shiny, beady, little eyes greeted me. A mouse, startled by the sudden light and scurried through a small hole in the corner of the cabinet. 


I almost ignored the hole, but it was too neat for a mouse to gnaw through. There was no electrical box near the cabinet. So why the hole?

I found an old newspaper and wiped away the dust and mouse droppings in the cabinet. Standing On the one remaining chair that looked solid, I reached into the cabinet and felt the hole with my finger. A drill bit had made it. I hooked my finger over the wood and gently pulled. It moved. The panel pulled away, and I found a metal box between the studs. 

 I took the box and headed outside into the sunshine. Resting the box on the hood of the old car, I pried the box open. There were papers inside, their papers, and I began to understand their lives. 

The papers inside revealed a story no one told my family. In the early years of their marriage, my grandparents witnessed a murder. The police kept their involvement out of the papers and provided them with protection until the day word came that the people responsible for the murder had learned their identity. The police placed my grandparents into protective custody without a word to their family, hoping to keep everyone safe. 
I placed the papers back in the box—time to go home and tell the family that their grandparents left to save them all.

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May 02nd, 2021

5/2/2021

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​The prophecy led us to this mysterious world, unaware of what we would find.

 My companion shrugged her shoulders, and a shiver shimmied down my back as we entered deeper into the valley. Ice encased the opening to our way home as though frozen in time. 

The books had spoken about a place such as this. We had followed the old legends and ancient paths but working out the meaning of the symbols had taken decades. Yet here we were.

The lake water gave off heat as we worked our way around the shore. The surface rippled as something moved deep within. The water began to move in violent waves, and the ground vibrated under our feet, nearly knocking us over. A low roar echoed from the depths of the lake. 

Fire erupted from the center of the lake, and flames reached the ice-shrouded cavern ceiling. The fire lapped the icy cavern roof, and we watched transfixed as the ice melted then refroze as quickly as it melted in a continuous cycle. The roar subsided, and the water receded toward the flames. The ground shifted and compelled us to move with it, and we found ourselves near the base of the intense fire. 

It was then we heard a voice emanate from deep within the fire.  The words became louder and clearer, echoing off the snow and ice.

“It is time for new Gods to rule this land. The land has chosen you. You have  shown great courage in the face of the fire.”

We hurried up the lakebed slope as the fire disappeared into the ground, and the lake level returned to normal. We stopped in shock as we reach the bank to find thousands of people kneeling before us. 

We were the new Gods of this strange land.

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April 25th, 2021

4/25/2021

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I was standing on the sidewalk when a flash of light startled me, and now I’m here—but where is here?

There were no doors near me in the hallway, only what appeared to be stairs leading off the corridor. A single small door sat neatly centered on the dead-end wall. The stir of chilly air made me shiver.


The sound of a low hum reached my consciousness. I knew that sound, but I couldn’t place it. My footsteps on the floor echoed in the room as I approached the door.
I’d been on a busy city street seconds before when a light flashed over the roof of the building across the street from me—bright enough to blind me even in the midday sun. I wondered if anyone else saw it because I found myself here, alone.

Approaching the door, I saw no knob on the door, only the hinges on one side. I touched it and felt cold steel. There was a slight vibration in my fingertips, and the familiar hum continued.

I’d never seen the room or door before, but a thought sounded in my head. Only it wasn’t my thought.


“You’re almost home now, James.”

“Home?” I instinctively asked myself. The thoughts bounced into my mind as I pressed my hand to the door. It swung open to reveal another room. A disembodied voice spoke.
“We’ve been looking for you for an eon.”

“What? Looking for me?”
“Yes. Please, you must return home.”

The soft glow of the lights that diffused from the edges of the ceiling was familiar. I had been here before. I jumped as the door closed behind me


She materialized from a corner of the room. She stood slightly taller than me, her hair white and her features familiar. I knew her.


A thought sprang into my mind. “Mother?”

“Yes, son. We lost you quite a while ago. We’ve been searching the galaxy for you. You must never run off like that  again.”



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April 18th, 2021

4/18/2021

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“This ends now.”
His words echoed in my mind as I looked for a place to hide. I was in deep trouble. The deal had gone well until someone accused me of being a cop. Guns came out. I ran like hell—bullets flying around me. I stumbled and dropped my weapon but kept running. The sound of gunfire echoed in the alleyway, and all I could hear was my heavy breathing and my heart racing.
Keeping in the shadows, I managed to find a weapon of sorts—a long steel pipe. The only problem was that I had to get much closer than I wanted to use it. The glare of headlights blinded me as they worked their way down the alley towards me. The large dumpster I was behind wouldn’t hide me for long. They spotted me and closed in. Braced up against a brick wall and a steel trash bin, I prepared to fight for my life.
​
​I was on a sting operation to capture the criminal boss who paid off dirty cops. Backup hadn’t responded when the shooting started, but I wasn’t surprised. I was quite unpopular in the department after I had turned in several officers for being on the take and planned to testify against them next week. So, they set me up to die in the “line of duty.”

Four men confronted me, one with a crowbar, the others with guns point at me. The man whacked the crowbar across his palm. He sneered. “I told you this ends now. You’re mine.”
​

“Actually, you’re mine.” I grinned at the surprised look on his face as the lights flooded the alley and FBI agents appeared from the shadows. I took a step toward him. “Yep, this definitely ends now.”

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    500 Words
      The idea is to write a short story  about 500 max short based on a picture and an opening line.  
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