(This uses a triangular sequence to determine the number of words per line, and per paragraph https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangular_number. A couple of the longer lines seem to wrap as well - not clear how to resolve that with this editor.)
Mouse!
In
my house.
I
know not
whence it came.
Eyes
beady eyes
glare at me
and whiskers chuff away.
“Shoo!”
I shout
and heavily stomp.
“Get you gone now,
beast, and forever hie away.”
“No,”
it squeaks;
its nose twitches,
“It cannot be done,
I’m so sorry to say.”
And I’m perplexed and ever vexed.
“What?”
I wonder.
“How dare you?
What insolence is this?”
Such a cheeky little mouse
defying me in my own house,
I simply cannot stomach this at all.
“Cheese,
please sir,
I beg you,”
says the fluffy runt.
“I am poor and famished,
and you have so much bounty.
Just a little nibble, tittle, and jot,
a slice of yellow heaven, a pungent triangle.”
Cheese,
of course
it’s always cheese.
I feel pity swell.
I cut a cheddar chunk,
an orange sliver, crumbly and sharp,
and hand it to the starving rodent.
“There there, of course, a triangle is fair.
And now you’ve had your fill my friend, adieu.”
“Thanks,”
it says,
and then: “But.”
But? Is there more?
“What of my wife, sir?
She’s dwindling fast, the poor lass,
and dearly needs a bite as well.”
A hungry wife? Well that’s certainly no good.
I grab my knife and measure the cheddar anew.
“Camembert, sir, if you please. Her tastes are quite refined.”
Again
I slice,
and give away.
“Is that all then?”
The mouse pockets the cheese
and squeaks, “I’ve two children also.”
I sigh and raise my knife again.
“Gouda for my girl Eileen, her favourite kind,
and brie, my boy Maurice – he can’t do without.”
I cut again and once more, my cupboard running bare,
my plans for French soup abandoned, and my toast left unadorned.
“More,”
he squeaks.
“I’ve cousins some,
arriving from all over,
and aunts and uncles too.
A mouse-ish wedding we will have
so cut and cut more triangles, sir,
of edam, feta, parmesan, and gruyere and blue,
and for the kids, a queso sauce, and cream–”
I scream! My shaking hand cramps from the endless cutting.
“How many more?” I fretfully ask. “How many kin have you?”
“Oh more, sir, a great deal so, from countries far and wide.”
Squeaks
and chitters
fill the air,
a thousand tiny feet.
Around me are a legion,
a million mice carpet my home
and drape the walls with beady eyes
and swishing cobra tails. They sniff and whisker
and debate which cheeses are best, and argue ceaselessly.
Then I hear my guest, “Keep cutting sir! More cheese!
We need halloumi by the load and much Havarti and Swiss.
Cottage by the bucket, and Muenster by the barrel. And above all
we need the cheese – that glorious, sumptuous, blissful cheese – that everyone calls cake.”
Sweat
drips into
my sorry eyes,
I hack my knife
so hard the counter splits.
The mice, they cheer and jeer
and hurry me along. Each new cheese
I cut into a slice and then again
diagonally; two perfect triangles filling the mice with glee.
“More!” they shout, their squeak a roar, a deafening tide
of joy. “More, sir, don’t lag behind! We hunger ever so!”
They pass me a new, bigger knife, and tip my fridge over,
and produce a better cutting board – big, industrial and made of stainless steel
– and shout “Our appetite keeps growing! Just cut and cut again, another cheesy triangle!”
Another
cheesy triangle!?
What to do?
My arm goes numb
and my back aches so.
I cannot keep this pace up,
but my guests do goad me on.
I fear what happens when I run out
the last of all my cheese. Will that sate
the little beasts? Or will their hunger just keep growing?
Each time I blink there’s even more mice by the dozen.
They walk on stilts and fill the air, hanging from tiny ropes,
a million million eyes on me. They bet each time another triangle’s cut
to see who gets the prize; and those who don’t just roar their ire:
“Cut faster, man, and harder! More triangles for us today! You’ve done okay so far.”
“Mouse!”
I cry.
“How much more?”
“More and ever more,”
he says, and they cheer.
“I’ve given you an inch already–”
“–and we’ll have a mile. You see,
we like your home and we’d simply hate
if we had to chew the walls. You agree?”
I don’t want them in my walls, yes, I concur
that cheese is the better of the two. “And,” he says,
“a small known fact: that mice, though small, are fond of meat.”
Of meat? I wonder what they mean. What next? A slice of ham?
Or chicken drumstick, turkey leg, bacon rasher, sausage, steak or big tin of spam?
My fridge is nearly empty as it is, and held little more than my cheese.
I may have a can or two of sardines in the basement, or tuna and beans.
Silence,
I note
all around me.
Not a single squeak,
peep, chirp, snuffle, or twitch.
All ten billion eyes on me.
“Meat,” says the mouse, “my good sir.”
And all their mouths drip with fresh saliva.
“No hard feelings, sir, but we’ll have our fill.
Keep the triangles of cheese coming, and cut them well,
or we’ll gnaw the cutter who’s surpassed his purpose. It’s recycling.”
My throat’s gone dry, I swallow hard, and get back to slicing.
I feel their eyes crawl on my skin and hear their slobber drip.
How did I get into this mess? How did the day turn so awry?
The sun was nice this morning and I never feared that today I would die.
I ponder all the plans left unfulfilled, as I cut another triangle and toss it to
the mass of mice. Another dozen slices of smooth mozzarella, another score or two of crumbly asiago –
Out.
Of cheese.
I swallow hard.
The tense mice shift,
my fridge a barren void.
“Thank you, sir,” says the mouse.
“You’ve done quite well, but that’s all.
We’d love more cheese, but now we’ll feast–”
“Wait!” I cry, interrupting the beast. “A moment please.”
“Well?” he arches an irritated eyebrow. “What is it then?
Hurry now, for our stomachs rumble so, and our young hunger.”
Think fast! I think I’ve done my good deed for the day
and don’t relish ending up a mousy meal. But what can I do?
There’s a billion billion of them, stacked so tight they run floor to ceiling.
If only I had more cheese for just another triangle or two. But that’s it!
“Mouse!” I say. “There is more cheese!” He frowns and scans the fridge, empty and lifeless.
“Not here, but at the store! I’ll grab my wallet and drive down, and return with more!”
The mice agree, and I flee across the sea. And the house, I put up for sale, as-is.
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Very impressed at the triangle viewpoint, yet such a story within. How ,much cheese research did you have to do? or did you know all the names and styles already? lol
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Many cheeses I did already know, but I still had to dig some up online :) And I learned there's way more of them out there than I've ever heard of.
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
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This was a great piece of work. It really feels like a Grimm fairytale.
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Thanks, Lance! I was definitely going more Grimm than Disney :) I'm glad you enjoyed it!
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So much fun turning into a horror-comedy, like Gremlins or something. Only these guys can talk! And the triangle cheese with triangle formation was inspired. :)
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Thanks, Molly! Yeah, had to work triangles into the story somehow :) I'm glad you enjoyed it!
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This has the charm and wit of a bedtime story and a horror undertone with the imagery. As someone who's a huge fan of the triangle sequence, this was excellently done, with the increasing number of mice per triangle and the resemblance of a block of cheese. An amazing use of the prompt!
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Thanks, Madeline :)
It took me a while to find the right sequence. Most of them grew too fast, and I figured that while pi was doable (and opened up all sorts of pie puns) many people would probably pick it. Then I hit the triangle sequence - and now only did it expand manageably, it also led to an interesting "physical" shape for the story.
I'm glad you enjoyed it :)
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I attempted to write in the Fibonacci sequence, my personal favourite - but that was a mistake! It was going great until the last paragraph needing to contain 1,597 words. I did not want to bend mathematical order for the sake of correct writing structure and visa versa! It is so much harder than it looks, I applaud you. I would love to see another prompt like this honestly.
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Yeah, it's definitely a unique prompt :) Actually, this week has generated a crazy number of entries.
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congratulations on the win!! :)
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Thank you :D
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Lovely :)
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Thanks, Sue! I'm glad you enjoyed it :)
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This story was fantastic, Michał!! I'm just so, so impressed by your ability to use a triangular sequence and tell a good story! I loved the way you built the tension and then the story took an unexpected twist when the mice wanted meat... I also like the way mice just multiplied (in our barn, we would go from 'oh look, I think that was a mouse,' to 'the place is riddled with them,' in what felt like three and a half seconds haha). Great story, I thoroughly enjoyed it, thank you for sharing. =)
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Thanks, Beth :) Yes, the growing mice fit the growing paragraphs - that was a nice coincidence. Though, I didn't mean to malign any rodents :)
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
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Woohoo!! Congratulations, Michał!! What a well deserved win! :-)
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Thank you :)
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Yours is my first story for this prompt. Needless to say the story is a delight visually when you click on it: triangles reminding me of concrete poetry. Now this could be just me, but there was quite a pungent whiff of Communism about this. All those proletarian little mice demanding their fair share of cake and redistribution of the common goods. The allusions to the French Revolution seem purposeful as of course many still associate France with both cheese and liberty ( even if only historically). Of course the uprising of the runty masses is no joke for our bourgeois narrator who's forced to flee. Big applause: form and thought perfectly sliced and presented. More triangles please!
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Heh, that's a great take on it :) Hoarding of wealth is a problem, but redistributing it via violence is also problematic. What's the answer here? I guess if we look history - well, actually, it doesn't look like we've figured anything out. Resources are a perpetual human issue, in one form or another.
The initial seed for this story was quite silly, just a confrontation with a confrontational mouse (and a lot could be said for "my house" - what if the mouse lived there first?) I'm glad it turned into something with a bit more depth :) Thanks for reading, Rebecca!
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Congratulations! Please pass on any tips you pick up in your form masterclass. And I hope you're celebrating with a triangle of cheese🤣
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Hehe, celebrating with *all* the cheese :) Thanks Rebecca!
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How you did this-kept the sequence going and told an engaging tale-I'll never know. This prompt was immediately discard when I saw it as being 'beyond difficult' so thanks for proving it can be done, and done well.
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Thanks, Wally! Frankly I'm happy I managed to cobble together a story too, as the focus was on form. But I had this vague mouse idea, and as I added more and more bones, it was a little easier to hang the meat on them.
I appreciate the feedback :)
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Fascinating story, Michal. Reads almost like a poem, or some poem-story hybrid; I'm in love with the way this week's prompts have pushed everyone to break boundaries for the sake of artistic exploration and experimentation, and you've done so quite well. Very interesting what you've done here. I see it as a brilliantly absurdist take on power dynamics, consumerist greed, and obligatory generosity that becomes forced. Thought-provoking stuff.
Great job, and thanks so much for sharing!
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Thanks, Nathaniel! Yes, very interesting prompts this week :)
The structure did lend itself to something more poetic, but the constantly rising word/syllable count made it hard to actually realize. So I suppose hybrid is right.
I appreciate the feedback!
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WOOHOOOO!!! Congratulations on the win!
Couldn't have imagined a better recipient; very very well deserved.
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Thanks :D
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A wonderful and unique story. I am astounded by your creativity. It was a pleasure to read
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Thank you, K. C! I'm glad you enjoyed it :)
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Yes, it wasn't a horrible math thing, I'm so relieved! This was brilliant. A lovely rhyming story, great rhythm, fairly innocent until - this was my "Oh no!" moment:
“a small known fact: that mice, though small, are fond of meat.”
I fully expected the poor guy to devoured! Glad you went with a smart escape.
Also, loved what a great cheese collection there was to choose from and how the starving mice needed specific cheeses... choosing beggars.
This was so fun and also a great use of the prompt! Best of luck!
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Heh, that was the "oh no" moment while writing it too, where the ending kind of revealed itself to me :) The physical form of the story was initially a bigger priority, as it was tricky to get right.
Thanks for reading and leaving your thoughts, Riel :)
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I had the same “oh no” moment and it was gratifying because you did such a great job building the tension that I was just waiting for it to take a dark turn and you delivered on that. I love the power shift that happens in this story, how manipulative the mice were, and how everything spiraled out of control. I’m jealous of the MC’s quantity and assortment of cheese! The way you utilized the triangular sequence technique to craft an engaging story is very impressive!
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Michal!
What delightful, technically awe-inspiring, and philosophically thought-provoking prose poetry you have given here!
And sorry about being late for the cheese party you have dished it out so early in the week. Kudos to you!
This can be a kid's bedtime story or this can be a cautionary tale for an adult or it could be just an existentialist's musing- How much giving is too much? is it out of kindness or compulsion? Can one hold on to his cheese in front of growing aggression? did he somehow feed that aggression?
Interesting questions, with no easy answers. And a very good fit for the prompt.
Thanks for sharing!
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"or it could be just an existentialist's musing" :D
It's only after I finished it that it occurred to me, it's kind of a kids' story where the message is "sharing is bad." While that might be appealing to staunch libertarians, it wasn't exactly my aim - but that's a good question. "How much giving is too much?" And I think you're onto something with the kindness/compulsion. Is it intent that matters then, or circumstance? Seems like there's lots to explore here with more stories.
Thanks for reading, Suma!
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Woo hoo! Congratulations!! Well deserved 👏👏👏
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Thanks Suma! What a lovely surprise today :)
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Please tell me you've read those "If You Give a Mouse a Cookie" books. This is so good, exactly what I'd expect to find in that series - so much so that I can picture everything drawn out and put on paper right now. Brought me right back to my childhood, so thank you for the trip down memory lane. The lesson is just as important here: give a person (or, in this case, a mouse) an inch and they will most definitely take a mile. Yikes.
Props for choosing this prompt too. Thought it was a tie between this one and the story-within-a-story-within-a-story for hardest challenges of the week (though, funny enough, you've succeeded at writing one of those before too, with your Middle School shortlister). What I like most here is the use of white space. It fits with the parameters of the prompt, sure, but the way that it reads is almost like poetry. Like, you see one or two words in a single line and your brain automatically forces you to read more slowly, more carefully. There's a nice rhythm to the prose. Which is why I'm glad this is NOT in a published book, because the story would lose that bit of nuance. (Plus, I can't imagine how hard it must've been to get the number of words in each line just right.)
Quite a fun story, indeed. I actually finished and went back to the top to see if you'd tagged this as "Horror," because it started off so innocuously, and then you have this man whose life is being threatened by mice. This story is a journey.
On a completely unrelated side note, having been sick the past few weeks, I've got to go back and see your stories that I've missed in the meantime, but I wanted to congratulate you on reaching your goal of submitting 52 stories in 52 weeks. That's some serious dedication. Very commendable. Hope you continue writing even more on here. And I'm curious: I know we all probably have our favorite Michał Przywara stories, but I wonder what your personal favorite(s) are from your canon. I'm sure you have some. Anyway, thanks for sharing this.
P.S. My favorite line was: "The mouse pockets the cheese." (What a great verb, such a fun, weird, wacky thing to conjure an image of.)
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Sorry to hear you've been ill! Glad to have you back though :)
Yeah, 52 in a row. That was the original goal, and it's nice to hit it. But honestly, it kind of floated by without much fanfare and mostly I'm looking forward to the next prompt :) Keeping with it has done wonders for handling procrastination and writers' block, so I figure I'll keep going.
"If You Give a Mouse a Cookie" - Alas, no! I grew up with a different set of children's books, and I sometimes feel like I'm missing a lot of references. But I got a nephew hitting reading age, so I suppose I've an excuse to pick it up :)
This was a fun prompt, and yeah, I tend to agree - this structure lent itself to something more poetic. Only, the ever increasing word/syllable count kind of broke any regular rhyming or rhythm, heh.
"how hard it must've been to get the number of words in each line just right" Yeah, easy initially, and quickly becoming boring and confusing. I ended up writing a Python script to validate the story, as easy and boring is perfect for a computer, and excellent for human error.
As for favourite story, that's surprisingly hard to answer. There's definitely a bit of fire-and-forget as soon as the prompts drop each Friday, and scrolling through the list, there's some I actually have forgotten. I like 10 Days because it's my win. I like Four Pillars, even though it was initially dropped, and only posthumously approved for the contest. I like Blood of the Wolf and Syriah Falls, because they pull from ideas that have been sitting for a long time. Incarnation, I got excellent feedback from the community on, transforming a bland ending into something much better. If it's down to just one, let's say When Lady Luck Gives You the Finger, as it hit the tone I was going for.
Thanks for asking!
I appreciate your feedback, as always, Zack.
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How fitting is it that the story that ended your year-long writing goal was the same one that got you your second win? Not something you see every day, now is it? Well done, friend! Congratulations on the win, and wishing you many more in your future!
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Thanks Zack! Yes, what a lovely and unexpected way to cap a year :)
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This was absolutely wonderful, Michal. Not only did you stay true to the triangular sequence, you took it a step further and made each line correspond to the sequence's values. And, just to show off, you wrote a really engaging tale. This is marvelous work, my friend.
And now I'm scared of talking mice! LOL
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Thanks, Delbert :) That's probably a healthy fear :)
It was definitely an interesting challenge, but I think non-standard layouts (or poetry, or things that aren't typical short stories) are usually discouraged, so I figure let's take a shot with something different.
I was worried the story would suffer for the sake of the form, so it's good to hear it still turned out all right. Thanks for leaving your thoughts!
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I can't help but compare this to Lewis Carroll and the grimmest of Grimm's tales, except "Mouse!" has the added merit of having been composed according to a mathematical scheme. One word surmises it: Brilliant! (With the exclamation sign). Thanks for this intricately thoughtful share.
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Thanks, Mike! Mostly, I'm glad I was able to fit a story to the form, as the first few drafts didn't really go anywhere. Had a lot of *ideas* for this prompt, but of course, an idea is not a finished story.
The comparison to the darker fairy tales is welcome :) I've also had Roald Dahl's works on the mind, as I've read the latest printings will have some of their content changed. I suppose that's a bit like the movie adaptations, which typically had happier endings than the books - but there's definitely room for darker stories in the world.
I appreciate the feedback!
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I loved this story, how you used a triangular sequence was very smart! This was a rollercoaster of a story, at the beginning, it was funny, then it became more like a horror story when the mice threatened to eat him. The ending was well thought out as well, it's an amazing story!
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Hey Michal,
Well, this was DELIGHTFUL. I love that image of mice eating cheese since we, us humans, created it. We could preserve cheese so we kept it on hand in vast stores. So that’s what they had access to because of us. Maybe if we had found some other food source, they would have become accustomed to that. And that idea of the triangle was charming, too. Thanks for reaching us about it first. :)
I really enjoyed the way your story included all of the mice family members, too. It made me think of that old adage about cockroaches-you see one and a thousand more are hidden. Nice work! This was fun.
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Thanks Amanda! Yeah, cockroaches are a good comparison. And I can't blame mice for liking cheese - it's so good :)
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