Today is the final bout in the 3rd Round of the WRiTE
CLUB playoffs. There have been three
bouts...on Mon - Wed - Fri...with our fighters randomly re-matched using their
submissions from round two. Once again,
we will have outright winners for each bout and one wildcard (the loser with
the most votes), so every vote counts! How are those winners chosen? By you.
Anyone can vote by simply leaving the name of the writer who resonates
with you the most in the comments below.
After you do that, please spread the word so we can maximize the
exposure for our contestants.
The winners will be posted in the afternoon on Sunday, September
14th.
The winning writers who move into the quarter-finals (Monday,
September 15th) will have the opportunity to "tweak" or edit their
current submission based on the input voters have left for them. Those "tweaked" submissions will also
be used to battle in the semi-finals, where only two will become finalist. No wildcard in the semi-finals. The two
fighters who make it to the finals will be asked to submit 500 word writing
samples for a 3rd time, and those new samples will be forwarded to our
celebrity judges. Of course I'll post them here on my blog for you to comment
on, but it will be our judges who make the final selection. If by chance our
judges vote end in a tie, the votes left in the comments will be used as the
deciding factor.
In this corner welcome back to the ring.....petrichor
Invisible strands of music drew Marina to the small pond in her backyard where koi fish turned puckered notes into a melody only she heard. Her best friend Rain was there already. On her stomach and stretched across a flat boulder, Rain trailed her finger along the top of the water.
“Rain, look what my dad made for me.”
“Nice.”
“You’re not even looking!”
Rain twisted her body around and glanced back. Marina pointed to her sandals. Iridescent and purple, the sandals shimmered like a butterfly’s wings.
“They’re good,” Rain said without enthusiasm.
Marina grimaced. Really, she knew better than to ask for Rain’s approval. Rain’s fashion sense began and ended with running shoes.
Marina sat down on the boulder next to Rain, slipped off her sandals, and placed them next to her, where she alone would admire them. Then she plunged her feet in the cool water and let the koi fish kiss her toes.
“Pru’s granddaughter moved in,” Rain said. “Name’s Angela.”
The back of Marina’s left shoulder felt suddenly hot. She shifted on the rock, searching for shade, but there was none. The heat spread up the nape of her neck. Her dragon was restless. She dipped her hand into the cool fish pond and splashed water on herself. Steam rose off her skin.
“You want to knock on the door and say hello?” Rain asked.
No, Marina wanted to say. She didn’t feel like explaining her dragon tattoo to the new kid in town. Instead, she asked, “Do you?”
“Be nice to have another friend,” Rain said, piercing Marina’s heart.
“What if she’s a weirdo?” Marina asked.
Rain turned her head and raised an eyebrow at Marina. She scanned Marina’s floating hair, shot over to her shimmering sandals, slid down to the koi fish gathered at her feet, then raised her gaze to settle on Marina’s left arm where the dragon’s tail now swished. “Okay,” Rain said, drawing out the second syllable.
Marina tugged down her sleeve. “I’m not weird,” she said. “Lots of people have tattoos.”
Rain said, “Yeah, but they’re not twelve.”
The dragon writhed. Marina bit her lip and swallowed a scream. Never before had the dragon been so active. Usually it rose at dawn, circled once, and resettled back on her skin. But now it slipped past her shoulder and sent inked plumes of smoke down her arm that billowed then collapsed in eddies around her elbow.
“What if we can’t trust her with, you know…magic?”
Rain barked out a laugh. “Angela’s a shaman. Girl walks between worlds. Communicates with spirits. Speaks to the dead. I don’t think anything about us is going to scare her.”
Marina wasn’t sure any of this was something to brag about. “What does she do, raise the dead, have a conversation, then knock them over the head with a shovel and push them back in their graves?”
Rain snorted. “That would be hilarious.” “No,” Marina said, “that would be evil.”
************************************************************************
And in the other corner, also anxious to return to the ring,
let me re-introduce.... Swick
"This
is no place for a little girl." The ‘coyote’ has inky hair and eyes to
match and a smile that belongs on a wolf. The sort of smuggler whose fees are
more than money.
I
raise my bow. "Good thing I’m no little girl."
"Estadounidense." He spits my
nationality like a curse word.
"Mexican-American. And I mean you no more
harm than you mean me."
"Then
lower your weapon."
He
clutches something in his pocket, not a gun—they’re risky this close to the
border. Something he won't be able to use before my arrow pierces his heart.
Blood rushes in my ears and I fight to keep my hands steady. This is the sort
of thing Juanito trained me for. Now that it’s real, I feel unprepared without
my partner.
I
lift my chin. "Leave this clearing and I'll let you live."
His
wolfish smile widens.
Arms
wraps around me from behind, my bow trapped at my side. Too busy twisting and
writhing; I don’t see the first man coming at me until his boot collides with
my torso. Sharp pain rides up my ribcage and my vision flickers in and out like
bad reception. He kicks me in the stomach before his partner releases me.
A
fallen branch buries itself in my palm as I stumble to the dirt, unable to
catch my breath. I crawl away and turn on my back, a groan escaping my lips as
I yank the wood from my palm.
"Go
back to the playground, little girl." The first man spits in my hair.
His
partner laughs and, together, they leave the clearing.
I
crawl toward my bow, but lifting it sends stabs of pain through my whole torso.
"Robyn?"
"¡Juanito!
¡Aquí!" Black
spots filter my vision as I try to sit up.
"What
the hell happened?" His hard expression breaks at the sight of me lying in
the dirt. He kneels beside me. "Were they armed?"
"Depends
on whether you consider boots weapons. Shit, this hurts."
Juan
and one of the women help me to my feet. He does some quick first-aid on my
hand, his jaw twitching more than ever. The woman tries to hand me her bottle
of water, but after weeks in the desert she needs it more than me.
"Can
you walk?" Juan asks.
"I
think so. But I can't raise my bow."
He
pulls his spare gun from his ankle holster and holds it out. I shake my head.
"Robyn--"
"No,
Juan."
He
sighs but stows his pistol, handing me a switchblade instead. I unsheathe the
blade and carry it in my fist. My grip distracts me from the pain shooting
through me with every step.
Juan
shakes his head. "I'm taking you to the range. No arguments, or you will
not come with me again."
I
don't argue because we need to get the hell outta here. I'll take it up with
Marian.
But
I won’t use the sort of weapon that killed my father.
************************************************************************
Remember the WRiTE
CLUB motto, it’s not about the last man/woman standing, it’s about who
knocks the audience out!
Petrichor
ReplyDeleteWow -- Very, VERY tough round for me today. Probably the hardest vote I've had to make yet. I've gone back and forth several times and finally had to go back and consider their previous entries in order to be able to choose between the two win-worthy writers.
ReplyDeleteSwick's work is excellent, but I like the range that petrichor has shown in this competition, so I'm going with petrichor.
Hmmm. This one is really hard. I have to go with Petrichor mostly because the voice of the piece popped a bit more for me. Both are terrific
ReplyDeletepetrichor
ReplyDeleteTwo great entries, both with vivid descriptions and excellent voice. However, Swick has something very few entries have had: an effective action sequence.
ReplyDeleteToday, it's Swick for me.
petrichor.
ReplyDeletePetrichor for me.
ReplyDeleteI love the interaction in Petrichor. The visual elements were wonderful. My vote is Petrichor.
ReplyDeleteThe interaction and visuals were great in the first one and very natural - Petrichor.
ReplyDeletePetrichor
ReplyDeleteThis isn't getting any easier.... Petrichor for me!
ReplyDeleteThese are two of my favorites. In petrichor's, I wanted the hints of magic to come sooner, and I love that detail about the tattoo. In Swick, I feel obligated to point out that switchblades don't usually have sheaths (the blade is concealed in the handle and flicks out with the touch of a button), but I love the worldbuilding.
ReplyDeleteMy vote goes to Swick.
This just gets tougher and tougher... but it's Swick for me.
ReplyDeleteLoved them both (this competition is really heating up!). I have to go with petrichor today.
ReplyDeleteSwick!
ReplyDeleteSwick!
ReplyDeleteLove both entries but gotta go with Swick!
ReplyDeleteGoing with Swick, I like the intensity of the scene.
ReplyDeleteI'm gonna go with Swick.
ReplyDeleteI'm going with Swick too.
ReplyDeleteSwick. Crazy good world building.
ReplyDeleteSwick for me!
ReplyDeletePetrichor. But these get harder and harder.
ReplyDelete(Sorry to be so absent from the voting, DL. RL has kicked my behind lately. ;-) )
PETRICHOR!
ReplyDeletePetrichor
ReplyDeleteIt's Swick for me.
ReplyDeleteOoh, difficult...going for Petrichor!
ReplyDeleteSwick!
ReplyDeletePetrichor
ReplyDeleteSwick.
ReplyDeleteSwick!
ReplyDeleteWith a line like "The sort of smuggler whose fees are more than MONEY" I kept going back to SWICK but, in the end, the imagery, the wonderful word choice & the voice had me selecting PETRICHER, although I think both were great.
ReplyDeletePetrichor
Swick.
ReplyDeleteIt's a tough call.....but my vote would be Swick!
ReplyDeleteSwick wins it for me. I felt like the plot really moved, though I would like to have seen a little more emotional punch in a few places.
ReplyDeleteI like the voice in the Petricher--but I felt like the pacing was slowed because of the amount of flowery description. In the end, I found myself too tempted to skim.
Swick
ReplyDeleteSwivel for sure. Love the pacing and voice. :)
ReplyDeleteSwick, that is. Damned autocorrect.
DeleteSwick... Makes me want to keep reading.
ReplyDeletePetrichor. This was another really tough one, as again the style in these entries is quite different, so I also referred back to the contestants' original entries to help me reach a decision. (And to make it even harder, these are the two contestants that I guessed would be most likely to end up as the finalists at the very end!)
ReplyDeleteSwick.
ReplyDeletePetrichor, but this one was very difficult.
ReplyDeleteLove the action in Swick's offering and it was done so very well, but I think the way Petrichor reveals essential details in such a subtle way is really masterful and SO hard to do. Throw in some magic and an animated tattoo along with some middle-school angst-y type stuff ... well, I sure wanted to see how this story was going to roll out.