Somewhere around 2 o’clock

imageWhen a mysterious disease starts killing off small animals at an alarming rate, man’s new best friends begin to suspect man’s old one, the dog.

As the resident population of hamsters, gerbils, mice and rabbits resign themselves to a painful and inescapable extinction, an unlikely ally comes to their aid. Hopelessly outnumbered, this small canine takes the domestics on a journey that will test their will to survive to the limit.

A tale of unusual heroes, unlikely allies, unwavering faith and unfurling love. Think the War in Terror in the Animal Kingdom, only the bad guy is a character called Hayden, the location is England and the Army are… well – small.

Below is a link to the first three chapters.
If you would like to read more, send me an email.
(Be sure to include which book you are interested in so I don’t send you something else by mistake.)

Somewhere around 2 o’clock: chapters 1-3

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Three Sisters

imageWorry looks around. Sorry looks back. Faith looks up. Dark clouds hover. A pigeon relieves itself.

Worry looks down, mouth caught between a smirk and a frown: it wasn’t her, but it just as easily could have been, in another time, at another place. Sorry stops, starts reversing, in preparation for a hasty retreat, reaches into a pocket, extracts a hanky, sniffs. Faith sits down, starts praying: “Help me Father, for I have sinned. I accept your punishment gladly. Tell me, how shall I make amends?” The clouds grumble. The pigeon lands. A cow opens its mouth, yawns.

Worry shivers. Sorry weeps. Faith takes a tentative step. The path becomes a wood. The trodden, unkempt. She advances towards what could quite possibly be a very prickly end.

Worry observes her departure and fears for her health. Sorry laments her sacrifice, filled with sudden regret. Faith mutters “good riddance to false and poisonous friends”.

On the path it starts to rain. Worry gets wet. Sorry puts on the handkerchief.

In the forest the sun comes out. A stag appears and Faith follows it. The course may be undetermined, but her conviction remains the same: it will lead to the destination, wherever that is.

 
by Rebecca L. Atherton
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A tale of two halves…

image…all beginning and middle but with no discernible ending

The man didn’t understand why the bird wouldn’t fly, why it refused to even try to.

He had taken it in, having found it lying on a damp patch of pavement directly below the tree out of which it had slipped. He had bound its wing, wrapping it gently so that the bones might set. He had fed it and cleaned it and given it a cage: gilt, shiny and expensive. He even left the door open during the day so that it might wander about, familiarising itself with its surroundings. But its wing remained limp, its spirits low. It ignored the food and water and avoided the cage wherever possible. It simply sat and stared out of the window, its gaze fixed resolutely on the tree that inhabited the lawn at the bottom of his neighbour’s garden.

He had tried talking to it countless times. He had played it music on occasion. He had encouraged it to listen to the radio and to watch television in his absence. And he had given it several books to read on the off chance that it would be able to decipher what was written on the pages they contained. But each separate effort had met with similar failure, and repeated attempts only seemed to upset it further.

Eventually, unable to get to the bottom of what it was all about, he gave up, leaving it to its own devices.

Over time, it lost what little flesh it had previously owned, until finally, little more than a silhouette, it could slip easily between the bars of the cage and the man found that he was no longer able to contain it.

One day, while he was out at work, it vanished entirely, and although he searched for it high and low, in every room, shelf, drawer and tight corner he could think of, he failed to shed any light on the matter of where it might have gone.

Years passed. He waited patiently, but it never materialised.

Research reveals that it took up residence in a nearby garden, partnering up with a white dove to have and to raise a family. This cannot, however, be confirmed. In fact, the only evidence that it existed at all is the strange note that it left, more metaphor than story, more riddle than answer. The note baffled the man but made sense enough to all those who heard it who had also known the bird.

Dear Sir,

I am leaving because I have received far too much and simultaneously been given so very little.

I have had more than I can possibly bear of that for which I have expressed no desire and nowhere near enough of that for which I am surely owed but for which I have never dared openly ask for.

Yours respectfully,
The Bird.

Baffled, the man sought help from his environment, visiting three individuals with skills far outweighing his own.

The first, a priest, told him that he had sinned openly and suggested that he pray for his salvation.

The second, a medium, told him that the bird was still alive but would not reveal its location.

And the third, a hypnotist, told him that he had reaped that which he had sown and to think long and hard before requesting the finer details. “Some things,” he advised, “are better off left alone and this might easily be one of them. Be careful what you wish for, for that which you cannot easily swallow, you might find impossible to digest.”

And so, forewarned, the man gave up trying, escaping the full weight of responsibility for his sins. But his life was less satisfying without the bird and he never stopped wanting for its company. If he could have started over, he would have asked it what he had done, but second chances are largely fictional and he wasn’t the reading or the writing kind, so lacked the ability to find one.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

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Tripping over Objects

image
Tripping over Objects

The waning moon is absent here,
casting me into darkness,
its disappearance a mystery
for which I have no answer.

Like a bird without wings,
I stumble upon the path,
tripping over objects
I had no previous awareness of.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

 
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A Brush for a Tail

image
How startling… I prophesied a storm, “literally”, predicting the inhospitable nature of the weather that arrived without warning or schedule last night. How did I manage that? Is it even possible? It must be, somehow, because I did it unaided.

Maybe it was the headache that plagued me throughout the preceding day? The air was oppressively close. But there were no storm clouds to speak of and the day’s forecast was good.

Whatever the case (and there’s no need to dwell on it; for little can be gained from such aimless conjecture), at a little after midnight, the wind picked up and I felt myself being blown, first gently and then roughly, while lying in my bed. Over the next fifteen minutes it grew progressively stronger, forcing me to hide beneath the sheets. I must then have slept, for the next thing I knew it was 1.30 am and there was heavy rain outside the window and lightening and thunder above my head. Initially in the hills, a good few miles away, it rolled steadily closer and closer, until it was situated directly overhead. It was kind of terrifying. I covered my face, scrunched up my eyes and imagined myself elsewhere: somewhere safe and quiet and calm and peaceful.

I guess I slept again and soundly, for suddenly it was morning and I was aware of today. Happily, it is dry and the sun is out. But for some reason, instead of reducing the humidity in the air, it feels even more oppressive and close, almost claustrophobic, in fact. My headache has disappeared though, and for that I am thankful.

In light of the predicting I managed to achieve yesterday, which was indeed profound, I thought I would try to write again to see where, if anywhere, it leads me. I have decided upon a simple free writing exercise, for, if nothing else, it will stretch my creative muscles in a fun and thoughtful way and, as we all know, all stretching is beneficial. After all: the more we stretch, the more supple we become; and the more supple we become, the more we are then able to achieve, (or so the fitness gurus say).

A Brush for a Tail

The sound of water catches my attention:
loud splashes, indulgent and joyful;
indicative of someone having a good time.

Inspection reveals an intruder,
large and hairy,
with a brush for a tail and dusters for feet.

We stare at one another,
each caught trespassing,
he on my property,

me on his improper behaviour,
and for a few short seconds we remain transfixed,
both trapped inside the moment.

And then,
without apology or warning,
he turns and flees,

out across the field,
up over the wall,
away, into nothing.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

 
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The Blue Beneath

imageThe Blue Beneath

Yesterday’s storm broke the atmosphere,
ripping the sky apart.

I watched – as the clouds fled in terror
and the blue beneath bled.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

 
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Behind the mirror

imageBehind the mirror

The air is hot and heavy and the atmosphere is humid. It makes my garden feel like a desert. Stepping out onto the terrace, I attempt to cool off. The ground is dry and dusty and the concrete burns my feet. In the surrounding meadow, the crickets polish their legs against the grass, a bizarre lullaby spiralling from left to right. Above me, a seagull cries out, it’s throaty despair enveloping the landscape.

Breaking the sheen of the pool, I slide beneath the surface. The water is cool and clear and I feel at home within it. Flapping my arms – first up and down, then in and out – I devour it length and breadth. If it weren’t for the wall, that hard line that hurt my foot last summer, I could go on forever. As it is, I do my best.

Later, wet and exhausted, I fall into bed. The room hums, but even stirred, the air refuses to move. Mosquitos flock to my body and my arms lash out – swish, swish… favouring neglect to these curious ministrations which only make my skin itch. Behind the mirror, the gekkos make out. Already in their hundreds, soon their will be millions. Left unchecked, they will swallow my house.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

 
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Fresh Gaps

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Fresh Gaps

Like everything,
repetition and conviction grow habits

and habits
become part of a bigger picture,

forming,
over time,

pieces of
larger pictures

until they are securely stitched in
and attached

with no danger of fraying
to reveal fresh gaps.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

 
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All bark and no bite

20140613-090152-32512499.jpg
The Hive of my Head

The bee buzzes,
angry and trapped,
unable to escape the hive of my head.

I think evil thoughts.
I wish him ill.
He has been here for longer than I would like.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

 
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Fights and Upset

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Fights and Upset

I wish someone would step in to reassure me
that everything will be alright.

I wish that I was surrounded by love and kindness,
all words spoken of the highest possible quality,
delicately put.

I wish that the unwelcome toys,
now resident in the pram,
would be tidied away,

or else accepted and befriended
so that they would be less likely to create friction,
cause fights and upset.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

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