For novices: a Drabble is a story told in exactly 100 words. It's a good exercise in word economy... or silliness, depending on the author *cough* (y'all are probably clear where I fall)
Image courtesy of Mike Hudson (a friend of mine from high school): shot taken on the Palouse--area around Moscow, Idaho
March's bleakness makes surreal the cranberry sun's promise of pleasure and beauty. It seems unreachable across the vast, empty sky. A faraway dream, never to be attained.
Only the work of spring – rains, investment, toil – allow that promise to reach fruition. In the chill it can all feel pointless, too hard to ever achieve.
But if we look about, reach out, touch what is near at hand, there is beauty in the bleakness. And the grasses left from last year remind us that the vivid ball keeps her promises, if only we hold up our own end of the bargain.
“Lemon and Lime”
Sarah Graham (Courtesty of Castle Gallery, Cardiff)
Chupa Chup. What a good word. Makes you pucker just to say it, sour, then sweet shooting flavors through your mouth. If only the English were so blunt. Lollipop. What is that anyway? We could call it a suck suck, too. I'd like a suck suck please, and wrap it in bright paper. Happy presentation. I suppose maybe something is lost in translation, but it seems to me, presented elsewhere, this company could not possibly keep up with demand. "Suck suck, fifty pence!"
I suppose that is a cynical view. Or not. Suck suck for fifty pence... definite mass appeal...
“Chocolate Spread” Sarah Jane Szikora
"Martha, are you coming?"
"Oh, Frank, just let me enjoy how you look a little longer."
"But Martha, I'm getting cold. Did you open the freezer?"
"I might have. I had a little something special in there. Would you like me to show you?"
"It's not the frozen Hot Wheels again?"
"No, love. It's better."
"But I'm cold already."
"So do you want me to enjoy it alone?"
"No. I just want you to warm me up."
"But Frank, we can't waste it. Here, just hold on a second."
"Ahhhh! That was freezing!"
"Here darling, let me warm you up."
Ode to a Murder
(I took this pic across from my house)
I hear the faint hum and then see the leaf-bare trees against the strawberry sky. The hum becomes a buzz and I recognize it, though it would be indistinct to an untrained ear. As I turn the corner, houses momentarily block the trees from view but the sound grows more distinct. Individual cries. Caw. Caw. A stray pair of birds veer as far as the street I am walking on and I am confirmed, but by now I have passed the houses and can see the branches well enough to recognize the congregation. A cacophony of noise welcomes me home.
So there.