Over
the past two weeks twenty writers have stepped into the WRiTE CLUB ring and ten emerged victorious. But before we call upon
the next twenty writers to do battle, first we must whittle our winners down to
five. This is called the elimination round because it’s the first time winners
face off against one another. Our ten winners will again be shuffled and --
like the first bouts -- randomly matched to compete against one another with
their same submission. A writer who emerges victorious from this round will
earn a spot in the play-offs and will be asked to submit a new 500 sample to
use in the next round. Let me remind you that our competitors are not only
scuffling for notoriety…recognition…a $75 Amazon gift card…but also free
admission to the 2016 DFW WritersConference, who helps sponsor this contest.
This
week I’ll be holding daily bouts (M-F) between the Anonymous 500 word
writing samples, submitted under a pen name by the winners of our first 10 rounds. The writing can be any genre, any style (even
poetry) with the word count being the only restriction. Today is Elimination Bout #4. Read each sample carefully and then leave a
vote in the comment section for the one that resonates with you the most. If you didn’t have a chance before, please leave
with a brief critique of both submissions as well.
As
it was with the early bouts, voting for each will remain open for one week. The
winner of each will be posted at the WRiTECLUB scoreboard.
Are
you ready?
Here
are today's randomly selected WRiTER's.
Standing
in this corner, please welcome back to the ring……..CJ Rage
Said she’d come for me, kill the liars, kill the liars dead.
I’m handcuffed to the shadow’s
rage that’s tattooed on my bed.
Eyes of soot, soul is gone, dying
to be free,
She’s calling out, screaming out, “no one buries me!”
Heavy feet, heavy feet, heavy
feet, I sink.
To the bed, to the grass, and to the
cold concrete.
She wakes me from my nightmare holding shovels stained in red,
“I said that I would come for you
and kill the liars dead.”
Between the sheets, the liars’
suite, “don’t say a goddamned word,”
Not the first but now the last,
my pleas she overheard.
The day she came to rescue me, the sky was black and grey,
She promised if the liars won she’d
never go away.
The smoke it is arising from the
lower level’s flames,
She set the house on fire after digging all their graves.
A rope is laced around my neck, her words etched in my ear,
“He’ll never touch you, never
touch you, never touch you, dear.”
The liars tried to shut me up,
tried to break me down,
She wouldn’t let them, couldn’t let them, make another sound.
Said she’d come for me, kill the liars, kill the liars dead.
She’s calling out, screaming out, “for all the truths unsaid.”
Her fingers tap along my back; they paint my shirt in red,
She promised me the liars gone, they burned up in my bed.
“They’ll never touch you, never touch
you, never touch you, there.
I severed off their hands and
tongues, then said a little prayer.”
She leaves a note pinned to my chest, the truth for all to see,
It was not her who set the blaze, she
tells them it was me.
“For everything the liars did,
the life I did not choose,
Eyes are soot, soul is gone,
there’s nothing left to lose.”
I’m on the ledge , on the ledge, the house in charcoal smoke,
She tells me this will wrong the right, and right his every stroke.
The rope it falls, we’re dying now, dying to be free,
We’re calling out, screaming out, “no one buries me!”
My body hangs, waits for them, waits for them to see,
The note, the red that’s on our hands, the blood that covers me.
I killed the liars, killed the liars, killed the liars dead,
She isn’t real, isn’t real, a figment in my head.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
And
in the other corner, let me
re-introduce to you……….Möbius
There
was only water, and then, a small raft.
Essa
hadn’t
realized that the Edge of the World would be so calm. Like the pause of
heartbeat and lung at the end of an exhalation, there was that same kind of
dead-air, of waiting, of uncertainty whether another breath could be drawn.
Far
different from journey along the rocky coastline, the capricious currents, and
the storms that shook and spun until her bearings were more tangled than a
rogue fishing line dredged-up from the reef.
The
water was still other than the ripple from her paddle and the bow of what had
once been a boat, before the waves, before the dark, before the wind that
scooped her like a gull scoops an oyster and dashes it to splinters.
This
was an uneasy quiet.
For
only gods and monsters lived at the end of the world, and Essa had come to beg
and barter. To sacrifice, if necessary, if that was the price asked. Out here,
or in the Wilds, there was no guarantee who would answer first: one who could
be persuaded to help, or one who would devour with the swift ruthlessness of a
winter gale.
She
lay the paddle down and drew a whale-bone knife from her pack. The trick was
where to cut, where it would bleed deep enough to summon, yet where it could
easily be bound. Hands were definitely out. It would be impossible to make the
long trek back.
If
there
was a long trek back.
Choosing
where to cut, that was a small, manageable decision. Thinking about what would
happen after...
Essa
lurched back, the paddle knocked wide with a splash. It was the reflection of
her own eyes that had spooked her. Too wide, too scared, too young-looking for
a warrior, for the one chosen and blessed by her village.
Blood
thrummed in her ears, pulled and pushed by the gravitational force of her fear.
She shut her eyes and drew a breath.
This
too was small. This too was manageable.
It
was important to master what was in her reach, because so much was not. Not the
ocean, not the sky, not the run of fish spawning in the rivers, and certainly
not the gods and monsters at the end of the world.
Retrieving
the paddle, yes, that was within her means. The seal-intestine towline was
strong, supple, and still tied tightly to her ankle. Essa pulled it in, hand
over hand, the paddle slicing a low wake until she fished it to safety.
She
crept forward and stared past her reflection, past the surface, past what she
could see and control, into the far-off deep. Each challenge, each step had
been building to this moment. She was strong. She was brave. She was loved. Her
blood would call a god, not a monster.
It
had to.
And
above her temple, along the hairline, she cut, and she bled.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enjoying
two talented writers at work is only part of the price of admission, now it’s
up to you to decide who moves forward.
In the comments below leave your vote for the winner. Which one tickled your fancy? After you vote please tell all of your
friends to stop by and make a selection as well. Yes, it’s subjective, but so is the entire
publishing world. It’s as much about the
readers as it is about the writers.
This
is WRiTE CLUB – the contest where the audience gets clobbered!
Möbius for me.
ReplyDeleteCJ - I commented last time :-)
ReplyDeleteMobius - I like the imagery in this scene, very vivid. I think it can be brought up one more notch through some editing and tightening. When you take a metaphor or simile too far, it takes away its impact. You don't need to spell it out for the reader completely. Leave some room, some holes for the reader to plug in and the subtlety will reward you.
I still love CJ's entry, and today my vote goes there!
ReplyDeleteI vote for möbius the writing is beautiful. Probably my favorite piece so far.
ReplyDeleteI vote for CJ Rage.
ReplyDeleteMobius wrote a good story. I like the imagination behind it.
CJ Rage's poem was a favorite of mine from the beginning.
I''m voting for CJ Rage.
ReplyDeleteI actually did vote for both of these last time.
However, the cruelty/awesomefactor of this contest is who you are paired against. I don't think mobius could stand up for a minute against CJ Rage. It is just such a compact, dark, tight poem that makes you reflect your own demons. It hooks me by the first line. Mobius would make a great longer novel. But CJ Rage can stand all on its own. Great job to the both of you!
CJ Rage all the way! I fell in love with this the first time, and plan to keep on loving it 'till the bitter end.
ReplyDeleteMöbius - really like the storytelling.
ReplyDeleteVote for Mobius.
ReplyDeleteReally couldn't get into CJ's poem.
Cj rage
ReplyDeleteI still love CJ Rage, so have to go with that.
ReplyDeleteMy vote goes to Mobius
ReplyDeleteMöbius - I really like the mood they've established and all the sensory details that plug me into their work.
ReplyDeleteI vote for Mobius.
ReplyDeleteCJ Rage for me!
ReplyDeleteCJ Rage. I just.. love that piece.
ReplyDeleteMobius for me!
ReplyDeleteMobius!
ReplyDeleteMobius, but I like them both.
ReplyDeleteMy vote goes to Möbius this round.
ReplyDeleteMobius
ReplyDeleteCj rage gets my vote.
ReplyDeleteI voted for both of these in the first round and hate that they're paired against each other now.
ReplyDeleteCJ Rage is such a dark, beautiful piece. I love the poetry and tension of Mobius.
I'm voting for Mobius because I want to read more.
Möbius gets my vote!
ReplyDeleteMöbius for me. Love the setting and imagery! I had a hard time with the italicized words in CJ Rage's.
ReplyDeleteMobius for me!
ReplyDeleteMobius again, one of my favorites of the contest so far. Something I wish I'd written.
ReplyDeleteMobius
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry but CJ's poem just doesn't strike me. Mobius pulls me in completely and has to get my vote.
ReplyDeleteCJ
ReplyDeleteMobius
ReplyDeleteMobius
ReplyDeleteMöbius. I love the world and the feeling of vulnerability there.
ReplyDeleteI vote for Mobius.
ReplyDeleteMobius. Can't wait to see a Great Old One.
ReplyDelete