Writing a book in 365 days – 112

Day 112

Writing exercise

The Smithsons had always lived in a house at the middle of the cul-de-sac on the nice side of the neighbourhood, where they never quite made the grade.

That’s not to say they didn’t belong there, and they might well have fitted in if it had not been for the rather gregarious behaviour of Mrs Smithson.

Or so my mother said, many times in hushed tones, when stealing a glance out the front window, and Mrs Smithson would be standing in the front yard in attire that, as my mother so bluntly described it, a decent woman would not wear inside the house, let alone out.

My father, being the polite man he was, would also glance out the window, but I always thought his look was one of appreciation. I know my older brother had the same look, but with a different set of feelings. I was too young, at the time, to understand such things.

Where had they come from?

Why had the realtor sold them the house, especially when he knew that only a certain type of person would be welcomed into the neighbourhood, or was it for some other reason?

Years later, when my home for many years was finally handed down to the last family member, me, I got to discover the truth.

The Smithsons had a daughter, well, that’s another story, but a girl about my age turned up one morning outside the front of their house, in a rather strange manner.

Or given how the neighbourhood perceived the Smithsons, perhaps it was in character for them.

A rather posh car stopped out front, and my mother, not to miss anything that happened there, happened to be peering through the blinds.

“Come and look at this,” she said, excited, to my father, who was about to leave for work.

“Jenny, don’t you have better things to do?”

Like take us to school, of course, but for the gossip session later…

He didn’t join her but continued on his way out. I went over instead.

Just in time to see a man get out of the driver’s side and come around to open the door for a lady who was dressed differently from us. The man had a hat and a suit on.

Then a girl got out of the car, about eight or nine, with a small suitcase. The woman who I assumed was her mother grabbed her hand and literally dragged her to the front door of the Smithsons’ residence, then started pounding on the door.

When there was no answer, but I did see movement of one of the curtains indicating someone from within was watching, she yelled out, “Daniel, you’d better get out there and collect your little brat, because I’m leaving her here. You hear me, Daniel? You’ll be hearing from my lawyers.”

She waited a minute, said something to the girl that made her start crying, then stomped back to the car. The man opened the door for her, she got in, and then they left.

Only then did the front door open, and the girl and the suitcase dragged her in and slammed the door.

And from that point, there were nothing but heated arguments that often spilled out into the cul-de-sac, until one morning, it all ended. Mrs Smithson left with her own suitcase.

I used to play by myself because most of the children in the cul-de-sac were much older, in a field behind the Smithsons’ house, and gained access to it by a narrow walkway between the Smithson house and their neighbour.

Sometimes Smithson was waiting for anyone who dared to use that walkway, or his two eldest boys, who were bullies. It became a game in itself to get past them, and one I succeeded in doing more often than not.

Once, I ran into ‘the little brat’, named Eloise. That much I knew from the shouting matches. She was hiding down in the makeshift hut I’d built out of builders’ waste, a summer holiday project.

“Who are you?” she asked.

“The owner of this hut.”

“It doesn’t belong to anyone.”

“It’s not yours.”

“I’m here.”

“So am I. Who are you?”

“Eloise. What’s your name?”

“Jack.”

“You live over the road. Does your mother always peer out from behind the curtains? My mother says she should mind her own business.”

“That’s what my dad says. What do your parents argue about all the time?”

“Me.”

“Why?”

“I’m supposed to be the result of my Daddy’s sordid affair with my mother. Now my mother no longer wants me, and neither does Daddy.”

“You could come and live with us,” I said without thinking and without knowing the ways of the world. To me, it seemed an easy thing to do.

“That would be nice, but I’m being sent to a relative in New York. That will be better than staying here where I’m not wanted. I’d better go before they send those two horrible boys to find me.”

When I came home from school about a week after Mrs Smithson left, my mother told me that ‘obnoxious little brat over the road’ had been taken away. I didn’t bother telling her just how wrong she was about Eloise.

By a quirk of fate and a very bad year, I found myself the new owner of the house I grew up in.

How it happened was another of those stories that fitted into that category, ‘you wouldn’t believe if I told you’.

I was surprised when the lawyer called me, and even more surprised to learn of both my parents and brothers’ passing.  We had a falling out, some years before, over something quite trivial, but pride and stupidity on both sides created and perpetuated a stand-off that was never bridged.

The pity of it was that I did not feel the loss as keenly as I should have, and for a month or so, I dithered about returning.  In the end, I decided the happy memories outweighed the despair, and I decided to move back home.

Now, standing in the lounge, I stole a glance towards the window that my mother had spent so much time at, stickybeaking at the neighbours.  For a moment, I was tempted.

But, the moving boxes weren’t going to move themselves, the movers running out of time, and had dumped the last twenty in the foyer.

Until there was a knock on the door.

Was this the neighbourhood welcoming committee?  There had been one when we first moved in. I went over and opened the door.

“Hello, Jack”

A woman about my age but very familiar stood on the front porch, looking back towards the Smithsons’ house.

“I know you, don’t I?”

“Yes, you do.”

“Then give me a minute… Oh, yes.  Eloise?”

She smiled.  “Very good.  I see you have just moved in.  I’m loath to say I was watching through the front window.”

“A regular pastime in this neighbourhood.  God, the number of hours my mother wasted.  I apologise for her behaviour.”

“It doesn’t matter.  Never did, for me anyway.  I wasn’t there long enough for it to matter.  Are you staying or passing through?”

“Staying.”

“Your family?”

“Passed.  A car accident a while back.”

“Oh, I’m sorry for your loss.”

“Thank you.  When did you return?”

“About a week ago.  A quirk of fate, really.  Last relative standing.  Parents divorced and passed, both to cancer, and those two beastly boys died in Afghanistan.  I guess being the result of an affair sometimes has its advantages.  So, here I am, and so are you.  I never forgot that moment of kindness.  I thought, if it were you, I would invite you over for dinner.  Unless you have other plans.”

I looked around at the mess.  “It can wait.  What time?”

“Now.”

©  Charles Heath  2025

Writing a book in 365 days – 111

Day 111

Good grammar!

This is the sort that doesn’t leave the beta readers saying Good Grief! over and over.

But…

There is writing the way people sometimes speak, which is hard, good grammar, and the way it should be written. Especially in historical fiction, I find that the lower classes in the 1700s and 1800s were literate enough to speak properly, after a fashion, when employed as servants and lesser staff, but the question would be as to what education level they reached.

Of course, it is a matter of deciding whether these characters will speak as they would have at the time, or in a manner the reader can understand.

Other than that, good writing is literate and understandable, with no overuse of adjectives that the common reader will not understand, and there should not be obscure similies and sayings, an order I sometimes forget to tell myself.

Perhaps it is an idea to keep several grammar references on the desk just in case you start having fights with the grammar checker, which I do from time to time. It doesn’t recognise the speech that I use, which is basically common knowledge, but not built into the grammar checker.

Grammar checkers are like artificial intelligence; it is only as good as the person who programs it and gives it its grammar examples.

When running it across a 500-page document, and its eccentricities start flaring, it gets a little annoying, particularly when you can’t turn it off. Still, it picked up quite a few errors that
I didn’t, and I guess that left me a little miffed.

Searching for locations: Port Macquarie – Day 1 – Part 1

In keeping with the new travel plan, we are picking places in Australia, where we can exchange our timeshare week.

Some people consider timeshares as a waste of time and money, and the process of getting one is very painful, which it can be. 

Certainly, in some of the places we have gone, they tried hard to sell you another which can be a downside to staying, but the fact we get to stay in a three-bedroom fully kitted apartment of bungalow for $200 for the week far outweighs the small inconveniences.

Previously, we stayed at Coffs Harbour, but this time, we decided to stay at Port Macquarie.

Our bungalow, as they are called, is on the edge of the lagoon, which has an island and has been stocked with fish, though I doubt we would be allowed to go fishing in it.

For the more adventurous, there are canoes.  I think I would prefer the BBQ, and watch the planes taking off and landing at the airport just on the other side of the tree line on the other side of the lagoon.

At least they are only smaller planes like the De Havilland Dash 8.

And, knowing the airport was only minutes away, we dropped in for a quick photo op and got the following

Writing a book in 365 days – 111

Day 111

Good grammar!

This is the sort that doesn’t leave the beta readers saying Good Grief! over and over.

But…

There is writing the way people sometimes speak, which is hard, good grammar, and the way it should be written. Especially in historical fiction, I find that the lower classes in the 1700s and 1800s were literate enough to speak properly, after a fashion, when employed as servants and lesser staff, but the question would be as to what education level they reached.

Of course, it is a matter of deciding whether these characters will speak as they would have at the time, or in a manner the reader can understand.

Other than that, good writing is literate and understandable, with no overuse of adjectives that the common reader will not understand, and there should not be obscure similies and sayings, an order I sometimes forget to tell myself.

Perhaps it is an idea to keep several grammar references on the desk just in case you start having fights with the grammar checker, which I do from time to time. It doesn’t recognise the speech that I use, which is basically common knowledge, but not built into the grammar checker.

Grammar checkers are like artificial intelligence; it is only as good as the person who programs it and gives it its grammar examples.

When running it across a 500-page document, and its eccentricities start flaring, it gets a little annoying, particularly when you can’t turn it off. Still, it picked up quite a few errors that
I didn’t, and I guess that left me a little miffed.

Writing a book in 365 days – 109/110

Days 109 and 110

Writing exercise – a conversation in a restaurant, what they ordered last time, what they’re eating this time, what they like or dislike about the place, and how long since their last visit.

Just as I was walking out of the front entrance of my apartment block, I received a message.

The ring tone that went with it was a special one, attached to my mother, and it had been the first since I last left home two years ago.

And it was about the same person, a girl I went to school with, who I came to New York with after we graduated and where she only stayed for two weeks, I had stayed for two years.

He mail was short and succinct.  Nina was back for the day.  There was no reason why, and it was as cryptic as any of her messages.  I shrugged.  In a city as big as this, there was no way I’d see her, and for that reason, I simply shrugged and went to work, thinking no more of it.

I had bigger issues, the fact it was going to be a promotion or resignation.  I’d paid my dues, and it was time.

Of course, things rarely play out in reality the way they do in your mind.  All the way in, I went over all the scenarios, all the reasons, all the evidence meticulously collected to show Eaterson, the man who held my future in his hands.

He had even said, as recently as the week before, that I was due for a promotion for all the hard work and excellent results.  I had high hopes.

Instead, I walked out of his office, unemployed.  There had been much discussion during the previous week, with various candidates being put forward, and in the end, a rival won the day.  My turn was not far away, but I decided it was now or never.

There was not much resistance when I proffered my resignation, which meant his platitudes were rather hollow, so I handed him the document and told him I could go in two weeks or right now.

It was immediate, and was escorted to the door.

Things happen for a reason.  It just doesn’t appear to be the case at the time, but often becomes apparent later on.

Outside the door, looking back, I shrugged.  If anything, it had been a stepping stone to be chalked up to experience.  Right then, I had no idea how it would help me later on, but there would be time for rumination later.

I’d timed my meeting so that if it did or didn’t go south, I would be able to celebrate or commiserate at my favourite restaurant not far from the office.

For the first time in years, I was not in a hurry and could amble along the sidewall like a tourist rather than a harried employee. 

Outside, going to open the door, my hand reached the same time as another and when I stepped back, seeing it was a lady and manners took over. When she turned to thank me, I saw it was Nina.

She also stepped back and smiled.  “Kevin.”

“Nina!”

I opened the door, and she went through, and I followed her.  We stepped up to the front desk together. 

“Are you here to meet someone?”

“As it happens, yes.  You.  If you remember, we used to come here once a week, on a Thursday, which is today.  I had hoped you would still come here, and you do.”

The girl came back to the desk after taking another couple to a table.

“Are you together?” She asked.

I looked at Nina.

“If you are not here to see someone else?” Nina said.

“I’m not.”

“Then,” the girl said, “You are together.  Follow me.”

We weaved between the tables to the back near the bar and sat, almost the same table we had sat the last time we had eaten there, the day Nina left to go home.

Drink order taken, she left us with menus.  I think we both knew what we were having.

“Remember that last lunch, nearly two years ago, you said that I should try the lobster.  It was very expensive, but you said it would be a perfect way to cap off what had been a wonderful two weeks.  Lobster and champagne.”

“You never said.”

“I loved it, but it was expensive.”

“Then we shall have it again. It will be my treat.”

“I can pay my share.”

There was an element of the same defensiveness she always had if she thought her integrity was being impugned.  It was, if anything, the only fault she had.  On my part, after time to think about it, I could see why she didn’t like the idea of my paying for her.  I’d always believe it was my responsibility if I asked her out and forgot that we lived in a different world from the one my parents expected me to live in.

“And so you shall.  I’m sorry.  I keep forgetting.”

The drinks arrived as we ordered.  “I hope the service has improved.  They used to take forever.”

That was two years ago, even a year ago, but the management had changed, and everything changed.  It had become more professional and more orientated towards business people who were under a time limit.  I told her that since then, the service has been spectacular.

A few sips of the champagne and a few moments to see she had not changed, except in hair colour and length.  I had missed her, and my feelings towards her had not changed.  And I knew she had not found and married another guy since returning home.  Mother took an interest in matters like that.

“How is your job?  Did you reach the divisional manager?”

She knew my master plan and where I would be by now.  It was the job I had just missed put on.

“No.”

“Still at Benders?”

“No.”

“Oh.  What happened?”

“They didn’t give me the promotion.”

“OK.  Where are you now?”

“Here with you.”

“I mean…  Oh.  Do I assume that you resigned?”

“I did.”

“Can you afford not to have a job?”

“No.  That’s why I’m coming home.  I have a few things to clear up, and then I’m on the plane.  Silly question, but why are you here?”

“I wanted to see you, see how you were going.”

“And…”

“Does there have to be an and?”  Furrowed brow, the prelude to a frown.

“No.  I’m just curious.  It’s just that you were always the one who never did anything without a reason.”

“Well, I’ve changed.  I came here to see you.  I took the chance that you would still eat at the same restaurant.  I had not expected you would not have a job.  I came to ask you if there was any chance you might be coming home soon.”

“Then you did have a reason.”

She sighed.  “Just answer the question.”

When I took a few seconds to consider the possible reasons, and knowing her as well as I did, I came to an interesting conclusion, one that caused a sudden ache in my heart.

Back when we graduated and went to the prom together, at some point we promised each other that we would tell the other if we were going to marry someone else.  It had been a given back then that we would marry the other when we achieved success.  I hadn’t, and not hearing from her believed she hadn’t either.

Perhaps I was wrong.

“Tomorrow, but probably in a day or two.  I have to finalise a few details before I can leave.  I’m sure my parents will be glad to see me.  Why?”

“Because I really don’t want to marry Giles.”

“Westerby?”

“My mother thinks I’m about to become an old maid left on the shelf and working her way through Oldbury County’s eligible bachelors.  Giles is the latest and he’s keen.”

“Because no one else will take him.”

“Perhaps, but he can provide a girl a life of luxury to which she could become accustomed.”

“Is that what you want?”

“Of there’s nothing else in the offing.  According to my mother, my childbearing days are rapidly diminishing.”

“You’re barely into your mid-20s.”

“You know, mother’s.  You also have one, and she longs to hold a grandchild, yours preferably, and more likely than one from your brothers.”  She shrugged.  “We could go home and pretend we’re engaged.  It’d solve the Giles problem, and we could string the engagement out for a few months and then let it fizzle.”

“Or we could just get married.  I mean, we always said we would.  If no one else wanted us or had first right of refusal.”

“Would you still want to.  I mean, we were silly kids back then, all starry-eyed and full of impossible plans.”

“I meant it.  Didn’t you?”

“I did, but I never thought you’d remember.  I thought you were just saying what I wanted to hear.”

“I loved you more than anything.  It broke my heart when you went home.”

“I had to.  I missed home too much.  You were the only one, and as you can see, I waited.  And then I’m here giving you first right of refusal.”

“That sounds pretty awful, doesn’t it?”

“I can’t think of a better way of putting it.  You are my first and, to be truthful, only preference.  But, if you have had a change of heart…”

“I have not.  Let’s have lunch, I think I can see it coming now, and afterwards, we’ll go to Tiffany’s.  If we’re going to do this, let’s do it in style.” I took both her hands in mine.  “Oh, and just to be formal, will you marry me?”

“Fine.  I had hoped it might be more traditional, but yes.”

I kissed her hand.  “Excellent.  We will make a stop after going to Tiffany’s.  There’s a special spot in Central Park where I’m told you can propose.  We’ll get a horse and carriage and flowers.”

“And photographs.”  She smiled.

“And photographs.”

“You knew I was coming, didn’t you?”

“No.  But my horoscope this morning was too coincidental to not come true.  An old friend will come back into your life, causing you to make a life-changing decision.”

Glasses refilled, toast made, lunch arriving at the table, everything had turned out as I expected it would.

©  Charles Heath  2025

Writing a book in 365 days – 109/110

Days 109 and 110

Writing exercise – a conversation in a restaurant, what they ordered last time, what they’re eating this time, what they like or dislike about the place, and how long since their last visit.

Just as I was walking out of the front entrance of my apartment block, I received a message.

The ring tone that went with it was a special one, attached to my mother, and it had been the first since I last left home two years ago.

And it was about the same person, a girl I went to school with, who I came to New York with after we graduated and where she only stayed for two weeks, I had stayed for two years.

He mail was short and succinct.  Nina was back for the day.  There was no reason why, and it was as cryptic as any of her messages.  I shrugged.  In a city as big as this, there was no way I’d see her, and for that reason, I simply shrugged and went to work, thinking no more of it.

I had bigger issues, the fact it was going to be a promotion or resignation.  I’d paid my dues, and it was time.

Of course, things rarely play out in reality the way they do in your mind.  All the way in, I went over all the scenarios, all the reasons, all the evidence meticulously collected to show Eaterson, the man who held my future in his hands.

He had even said, as recently as the week before, that I was due for a promotion for all the hard work and excellent results.  I had high hopes.

Instead, I walked out of his office, unemployed.  There had been much discussion during the previous week, with various candidates being put forward, and in the end, a rival won the day.  My turn was not far away, but I decided it was now or never.

There was not much resistance when I proffered my resignation, which meant his platitudes were rather hollow, so I handed him the document and told him I could go in two weeks or right now.

It was immediate, and was escorted to the door.

Things happen for a reason.  It just doesn’t appear to be the case at the time, but often becomes apparent later on.

Outside the door, looking back, I shrugged.  If anything, it had been a stepping stone to be chalked up to experience.  Right then, I had no idea how it would help me later on, but there would be time for rumination later.

I’d timed my meeting so that if it did or didn’t go south, I would be able to celebrate or commiserate at my favourite restaurant not far from the office.

For the first time in years, I was not in a hurry and could amble along the sidewall like a tourist rather than a harried employee. 

Outside, going to open the door, my hand reached the same time as another and when I stepped back, seeing it was a lady and manners took over. When she turned to thank me, I saw it was Nina.

She also stepped back and smiled.  “Kevin.”

“Nina!”

I opened the door, and she went through, and I followed her.  We stepped up to the front desk together. 

“Are you here to meet someone?”

“As it happens, yes.  You.  If you remember, we used to come here once a week, on a Thursday, which is today.  I had hoped you would still come here, and you do.”

The girl came back to the desk after taking another couple to a table.

“Are you together?” She asked.

I looked at Nina.

“If you are not here to see someone else?” Nina said.

“I’m not.”

“Then,” the girl said, “You are together.  Follow me.”

We weaved between the tables to the back near the bar and sat, almost the same table we had sat the last time we had eaten there, the day Nina left to go home.

Drink order taken, she left us with menus.  I think we both knew what we were having.

“Remember that last lunch, nearly two years ago, you said that I should try the lobster.  It was very expensive, but you said it would be a perfect way to cap off what had been a wonderful two weeks.  Lobster and champagne.”

“You never said.”

“I loved it, but it was expensive.”

“Then we shall have it again. It will be my treat.”

“I can pay my share.”

There was an element of the same defensiveness she always had if she thought her integrity was being impugned.  It was, if anything, the only fault she had.  On my part, after time to think about it, I could see why she didn’t like the idea of my paying for her.  I’d always believe it was my responsibility if I asked her out and forgot that we lived in a different world from the one my parents expected me to live in.

“And so you shall.  I’m sorry.  I keep forgetting.”

The drinks arrived as we ordered.  “I hope the service has improved.  They used to take forever.”

That was two years ago, even a year ago, but the management had changed, and everything changed.  It had become more professional and more orientated towards business people who were under a time limit.  I told her that since then, the service has been spectacular.

A few sips of the champagne and a few moments to see she had not changed, except in hair colour and length.  I had missed her, and my feelings towards her had not changed.  And I knew she had not found and married another guy since returning home.  Mother took an interest in matters like that.

“How is your job?  Did you reach the divisional manager?”

She knew my master plan and where I would be by now.  It was the job I had just missed put on.

“No.”

“Still at Benders?”

“No.”

“Oh.  What happened?”

“They didn’t give me the promotion.”

“OK.  Where are you now?”

“Here with you.”

“I mean…  Oh.  Do I assume that you resigned?”

“I did.”

“Can you afford not to have a job?”

“No.  That’s why I’m coming home.  I have a few things to clear up, and then I’m on the plane.  Silly question, but why are you here?”

“I wanted to see you, see how you were going.”

“And…”

“Does there have to be an and?”  Furrowed brow, the prelude to a frown.

“No.  I’m just curious.  It’s just that you were always the one who never did anything without a reason.”

“Well, I’ve changed.  I came here to see you.  I took the chance that you would still eat at the same restaurant.  I had not expected you would not have a job.  I came to ask you if there was any chance you might be coming home soon.”

“Then you did have a reason.”

She sighed.  “Just answer the question.”

When I took a few seconds to consider the possible reasons, and knowing her as well as I did, I came to an interesting conclusion, one that caused a sudden ache in my heart.

Back when we graduated and went to the prom together, at some point we promised each other that we would tell the other if we were going to marry someone else.  It had been a given back then that we would marry the other when we achieved success.  I hadn’t, and not hearing from her believed she hadn’t either.

Perhaps I was wrong.

“Tomorrow, but probably in a day or two.  I have to finalise a few details before I can leave.  I’m sure my parents will be glad to see me.  Why?”

“Because I really don’t want to marry Giles.”

“Westerby?”

“My mother thinks I’m about to become an old maid left on the shelf and working her way through Oldbury County’s eligible bachelors.  Giles is the latest and he’s keen.”

“Because no one else will take him.”

“Perhaps, but he can provide a girl a life of luxury to which she could become accustomed.”

“Is that what you want?”

“Of there’s nothing else in the offing.  According to my mother, my childbearing days are rapidly diminishing.”

“You’re barely into your mid-20s.”

“You know, mother’s.  You also have one, and she longs to hold a grandchild, yours preferably, and more likely than one from your brothers.”  She shrugged.  “We could go home and pretend we’re engaged.  It’d solve the Giles problem, and we could string the engagement out for a few months and then let it fizzle.”

“Or we could just get married.  I mean, we always said we would.  If no one else wanted us or had first right of refusal.”

“Would you still want to.  I mean, we were silly kids back then, all starry-eyed and full of impossible plans.”

“I meant it.  Didn’t you?”

“I did, but I never thought you’d remember.  I thought you were just saying what I wanted to hear.”

“I loved you more than anything.  It broke my heart when you went home.”

“I had to.  I missed home too much.  You were the only one, and as you can see, I waited.  And then I’m here giving you first right of refusal.”

“That sounds pretty awful, doesn’t it?”

“I can’t think of a better way of putting it.  You are my first and, to be truthful, only preference.  But, if you have had a change of heart…”

“I have not.  Let’s have lunch, I think I can see it coming now, and afterwards, we’ll go to Tiffany’s.  If we’re going to do this, let’s do it in style.” I took both her hands in mine.  “Oh, and just to be formal, will you marry me?”

“Fine.  I had hoped it might be more traditional, but yes.”

I kissed her hand.  “Excellent.  We will make a stop after going to Tiffany’s.  There’s a special spot in Central Park where I’m told you can propose.  We’ll get a horse and carriage and flowers.”

“And photographs.”  She smiled.

“And photographs.”

“You knew I was coming, didn’t you?”

“No.  But my horoscope this morning was too coincidental to not come true.  An old friend will come back into your life, causing you to make a life-changing decision.”

Glasses refilled, toast made, lunch arriving at the table, everything had turned out as I expected it would.

©  Charles Heath  2025

Writing a book in 365 days – My Story 14

More about my story

So, like every ancient city, there was a concerted effort to build over caverns, dungeons, and make secret passageways for reasons only known to those who created and used them.

The city we’re in for the story has a large underground area, which the government allows visitors to explore, but with a guide.  A great deal of the catacombs are closed off, the excuse being that they have not been explored or they are not safe.

Of course the more sinister and reasonable explanation is that the government believes the catacombs hide the whereabouts of the resistance.  How else are they so cunningly able to avoid being detected and be able to turn up in places that take far longer for the police, secret or otherwise, to get there.

And, of course, it is a place where our spy must go to satisfy his own curiosity.

Having run into and been summoned by the local police chief, a circumspect man who does not work for or agree with the methods of the secret police but is wise enough not to interfere, our man needs him to get permission to explore.

Of course, the police chief has his suspicions, and our man has an idea that somewhere down there, the head of the resistance is hiding.  Or captured by the military and/or the secret police.  His relationship with the police chief is going to be an ongoing dance.

As for the girl in white, he has now discovered that she is the daughter of his target to watch over.  It briefly causes a little concern, but now he knows he will not be making a big mistake.  But there’s something else, while she might think she has the run of the city, out man doesn’t agree, and he’s going to have to extend the protective arm over her too.

Good thing he has help.

Writing a book in 365 days – My Story 14

More about my story

So, like every ancient city, there was a concerted effort to build over caverns, dungeons, and make secret passageways for reasons only known to those who created and used them.

The city we’re in for the story has a large underground area, which the government allows visitors to explore, but with a guide.  A great deal of the catacombs are closed off, the excuse being that they have not been explored or they are not safe.

Of course the more sinister and reasonable explanation is that the government believes the catacombs hide the whereabouts of the resistance.  How else are they so cunningly able to avoid being detected and be able to turn up in places that take far longer for the police, secret or otherwise, to get there.

And, of course, it is a place where our spy must go to satisfy his own curiosity.

Having run into and been summoned by the local police chief, a circumspect man who does not work for or agree with the methods of the secret police but is wise enough not to interfere, our man needs him to get permission to explore.

Of course, the police chief has his suspicions, and our man has an idea that somewhere down there, the head of the resistance is hiding.  Or captured by the military and/or the secret police.  His relationship with the police chief is going to be an ongoing dance.

As for the girl in white, he has now discovered that she is the daughter of his target to watch over.  It briefly causes a little concern, but now he knows he will not be making a big mistake.  But there’s something else, while she might think she has the run of the city, out man doesn’t agree, and he’s going to have to extend the protective arm over her too.

Good thing he has help.

Writing a book in 365 days – 108

Day 108

So, the keynote here is that as writers, we should not repeat ourselves.

Repeat what?

I think what the bottom line is here is that we shouldn’t write basically the same thing over and over. I noticed that movies tend to take the view that if the first is successful, they just switch a few things around, substitute the bad guy, and it’s business as usual.

This was prevalent with a couple of John Wayne westerns, Rio Bravo and El Dorado. It was much the same with Superman 1, 2 and 3, and the Spiderman movies.

The thing is, I’m almost guilty as charged with several of my books. The problem is to get out of your comfort zone and write something completely different.

I have a YA fantasy story across three volumes about an unlikely princess saving the realm.

I am in the process of writing a Sci-Fi novel simply because I wanted to go into outer space. The only way I’ll ever get there is inside my imagination, and that being the case, it’s a riot.

I keep trying to write a romance novel, it has always fascinated me how the writers of Mills and Boon stories manage to fit them into 187 pages. I try, but brevity doesn’t;t seem to be my thing. At any rate, I get so far, and then it veers off into espionage.

I’m guessing I’m going to have to try harder not to veer off the path.

Writing a book in 365 days – 108

Day 108

So, the keynote here is that as writers, we should not repeat ourselves.

Repeat what?

I think what the bottom line is here is that we shouldn’t write basically the same thing over and over. I noticed that movies tend to take the view that if the first is successful, they just switch a few things around, substitute the bad guy, and it’s business as usual.

This was prevalent with a couple of John Wayne westerns, Rio Bravo and El Dorado. It was much the same with Superman 1, 2 and 3, and the Spiderman movies.

The thing is, I’m almost guilty as charged with several of my books. The problem is to get out of your comfort zone and write something completely different.

I have a YA fantasy story across three volumes about an unlikely princess saving the realm.

I am in the process of writing a Sci-Fi novel simply because I wanted to go into outer space. The only way I’ll ever get there is inside my imagination, and that being the case, it’s a riot.

I keep trying to write a romance novel, it has always fascinated me how the writers of Mills and Boon stories manage to fit them into 187 pages. I try, but brevity doesn’t;t seem to be my thing. At any rate, I get so far, and then it veers off into espionage.

I’m guessing I’m going to have to try harder not to veer off the path.