Friday
- humour/comedy
- a sandwich
- dizzy, exotic, lumpy, tiny, twisted
My themes are dance, romance and military life, so they were the topics that came to mind.
- something dancing? rom com date picnic
- milspouse find rotten sandwich while unpacking
As an Australian military family, we have extra support when we move house. The movers pack all our belongings for us, which is really helpful. But I've also heard plenty of horror stories. Things get broken (they dropped our fridge one year - their insurance meant we got a new fridge, so that worked out ok). Or things get packed that weren't supposed to. I've heard lots of stories about the contents of the rubbish bin being packed. Gross. A friend of mine lost her cat during a packing day. Luckily, it turned up in the shipping container - alive but very hungry. The rotten food idea caught my attention. Ten minutes until I'd planned to start dinner. I'd just jot down a few ideas.
- goal - make new house into home - unpack stuff to make sandwich
- motivation - milspouse - moving again, know will settle better when feel familiar - hungr
- conflict -
My mind started whirring. I didn't bother writing anything down for conflict. I knew the problems she would face. The chaos of unpacking day. I'd lived it. I'd just jot down a few more ideas...
Set up the story in the first 100 words. Establish the character's goal. She's hungry and wants to make a sandwich.
Introduce conflicts and make things worse over the next 300 words.
Give her what she wants, then twist things and take it away in the last 100 words.
The kids ate dinner late but I had the first draft.
Saturday
When I'd entered Furious Fiction before, I usually plotted on Friday, wrote on Saturday then edited on Sunday. That way, the story had a chance to breathe. I'd already written 543 words. I had heaps of time to polish it. It was ok if I slept in until midday. I'd worked all week as a teacher's aide - both in paid employment at school and unpaid at home. I deserved a rest day. And some more Netflix (Kim's Convenience is hilarious).
Sunday
I had until midnight to edit and submit. That was hours away. Life happened. Completely forgot about Furious Fiction and went to bed.
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Untitled
Darwin was the last option on my list of
placesplace I wanted to live, but what I
wanted and what the military needed didn’t often align.rarely
aligned. Like them sending my husband away for three weeksout
bush the day before the movers arrived with all our stuff.
I’d spent all morning
yelling directions and ticking box numbers
off a list. I was dizzy with hunger. A fresh loaf of sliced bread and new jar
of peanut butter sat on the table, calling my name. Nothing exotic, a simple
sandwich would do. I just had to find a plate and a knife.
I ripped the tape off the first kitchen-labelled box and
peered inside. Lumpy butcher’s paper. I unwrapped the items one by one.
A plastic container.
Another plastic container.
A plastic lid.
Did they really need to wrap those things? Having someone
else pack all your stuff had its pros but also had its cons.
I shoved the items in my newly designated plastics cupboard,
too hungry to take the time to arrange them neatly. I had ages to sort the
house out before hubby came back. It wouldn’t really feel like home until he
was here, anyway.
Next kitchen box. More butcher’s paper, this time twisted
around a wooden spoon, a metal soup ladle and the tiny plastic corn cob forks. Utensils. Surely there would be a knife in
this one.
Nope. Not unless you counted my carving knife. But that
was too big to fit in the jar.
I opened the last box in the pile. Socks and undies. Why
on earth was thisthat in
the kitchen? I checked the label. Master bedroom. Idiots.
My stomach growled. I paced through the house, scouring the
labels on the boxes. I found two more kitchen boxes in the lounge room. Of
course. Eeny meeny miny mo. I grabbed the box
on the left and lifted it. Too light to be the crockery. But did you really
need a plate to make a sandwich?Whatever.
I ripped the top open and unwrapped the first parcel. Forks! This felt like a
winner.
I dragged the box into the kitchen and shoved the forks
into the cutlery drawer. Tearing the paper of the next parcel, I squealed with
joy.
Wielding a butter knife, I slapped a couple oftwo
slices of bread straight onto the tablekitchen bench. I wrenched the lid off the jar, slathered a thick layer of peanut butter onto
one slice then plonked the other on top. My mouth watered as I raised the
sandwich to my lips. I took a huge bite, the gluggy lump sticking to the roof
of my mouth as I ambled back into the kitchen to drop dropped
the dirty knife into the sink. The open box sat by my feet. I figured
I might as well put the rest of the cutlery awaykeep
unpacking while I ate. The knives clinked
as I dropped them into place.
I held my sandwich withbetween
my teeth and used two hands to life the next parcel onto the bench. It felt too
squishy to be spoons. I peeled the paper open. My gag reflex activated. My teeth
jammed togetherjaw clenched. My sandwich fell into
the rotting remains of the contents of my Victorian garbage bin.
I no longer felt hungry.