26 comments

Fiction Fantasy

Story’s Mission


Finally, the library was one of the few places that offered any comfort in the old drafty Woodleigh Manor. The roaring fire was the main, though inadequate source of illumination in the cavernous book lined room. The light from the candelabra at Sir Percy’s elbow allowed for reading but did not reach beyond the well-worn leather club chair.


Sir Percy turned the page of his book, pushed his half specs back in place and reached for the brandy snifter. Suddenly he paused in the lifting of the glass, his body at full alert. His breath caught in his throat; ears pricked trying to decipher what sound he thought he had heard. Had he heard a door close or was it a tree branch rustling and tapping against the window? Was someone out there? Had his barricades been breached?


For the umpteenth time he reached down toward the floor and touched only empty air. Again, he mourned the loss of his faithful companion. Old Snow, his black lab would have alerted him if anything had been amiss. Sir Percy cursed the old house, this mausoleum of his long-dead and estranged family. Even after all these years, he could not distinguish one creak from another.


The library door creaked. “ … erm, sir. Excuse me …”


Feeling jaded, a bit discouraged writing yet another Sir Percy mystery, Author welcomed the interruption. Looking up from the computer screen, he turned toward the door.


“Well, hello there. Who are you?”


“I-I’m one of your stories, sir.”


“Yes, I can see that. But which one, pay tell? Come a little closer, let me have a better look at you.”


The pages rustled as they crept across the floor, trying not to get tangled in the fringes of the antique oriental rug.


“I’m URSA, sir.” The story's panting showed both its fatigue and relief when all its pages had reached Author’s chair.


“Ursa?” Arthur mumbled, pensively, leaning down to gather the pages.


“Yes sir.” URSA answered with a shaky voice while Author tamped the pages on his knee, bringing them back in line.


“Ah yes. I think I remember.” A wistful smile softened the creases in his brow. “You are the grandchild of Wall-e and EVA, are you not? Their son, Wall-S somehow mated with Roomba-S, the space edition, and you, Universal Recycling Solutions Appliance, were the result.” Author chuckled. Thinking back with fondness to his childhood imagination. “If I remember correctly, you stowed away on Earth Viability Explorer III, did you not? And met your grandparents and all sorts of new things, like blades of grass and operational Mac computers, am I right?”


“Yes sir!” URSA was thrilled that Author remembered. “I had a lovely adventure, sir. I meant to thank you. but …” the story shrugged, creasing a few of its top corners in the process.


“But you ended up stuffed in a box. Yes.” Author sighed, trying to flatten the pages. “I was only twelve or so, when I wrote you. Didn’t think I had done a good enough job. I was too self-conscious to show my work to anybody. And then I got busy with school and girls.” Author shrugged. “That’s on me, I should have come back and given you another chance, shouldn’t I? But what brings you down here, at this late date?”


“We-Well….” URSA nervously twisted a few of its bottom corners together.


“Spit it out, little one.” Author admonished while smoothing those corners flat again.


“W-Well, the place where you store us …?”


“The attic.” Author nodded.


“Yes, sir. It’s kind of damp. Remember the Haunted House?”


“The haunted house?” Author frowned. “Let me think, for a minute. Oh, you mean the Unicorn and the Ugly?” He huffed a dry laugh of self-mockery. “The reverse from the Beauty and the Beast.” He nodded.


“Yes, sir Well, most of it is a wet blur. I was on the bottom and have stayed dry, so far. But that one is all brown with big ink blob ...” The story’s voice trailed off.


“Oh, dear.” Author shook his head. “I was quite proud of my reverse fairy tales. Thought making the beast pretty and the woman ugly would be most ingenious.”


“Yes, sir. It was. I- I quite like the unicorn, and the woman is kind, once you get to know her.” The pages rustled eager to continue with its message. “But Bert Big Toe also has many brown spots and blue blobs already. And the Prince and his toadettes. Well, the toadettes don’t seem to mind the water, but …” The pages slumped and folded in on themselves. “They are my friends, sir.” The story whispered a sigh.


“I see.” Author nodded. “Yes, I quite see.”


Author, deep in thought, trying to remember all the stories he had scribbled in his youth, slowly stroked over the old pages of ring binder filler paper. He read a misspelled word here, flattened out a dogear there. URSA purred with pleasure at his touch while he toyed with a small rip near a perforation.


“Well then,” banking his reminiscing, Author came back to the present with a start. “We better go take a look.” Rolling URSA up and stuffing the pages in his jacket pocket, Author left the library and climbed the stairs to the attic.


“Oh, dear!” He sighed with dismay when he saw what was left of the old cardboard box.


“Now then, let’s see. Oh, my! Poor Unicorn … And Bert, old fellow. Tsk-tsk. I wonder if I can salvage you guys. Hah, Ursa, you forgot to remind me of Laddy and Young Brown. My shaggy dog story.”


“Well, yes, sir … The thing is.” URSA’s voice was a bit muffled inside his pocket. “They like to lick the paper, sir. They are sloppy, you know.” The story shuddered its pages.


“They do? Yes, I bet they do. Big sloppy dogs will do that. And you, Ursa, are all about clean, aren’t you?” Author chuckled softly. “Oh look. The unfinished adventures of ‘Alec Up A Tree’.” He shook his head with mirth at the audacity to try to reverse Alice in Wonderland. He even had briefly toyed with an upside-down version of Oz.


Author reached in his other jacket pocket and retrieved his phone.

"Mac, old boy. How are you? ... Good, good thank you. Listen, who was the roofer you hired last summer? ... Do you recommend him? ... Yes, it looks like I do, yes. ... Oh, would you? Please do text his number, will you ... Yes, it's a bit of mess up here ... No, some of my old stuff ... Oh? And what can I help you with? ... Do I know? ... Yes ... Yes, I think I do know a children's author ... Yes, let's. Next Friday, some G&T's? Smashing. See you then."


With a smile Author stowed his mobile in his pocket and looked down at the old box.


“Let’s bring you lot downstairs and see what’s what.”


A sigh of relief from a moist prince, a wiggle from a fungal Big Toe, croaks of pleasure from a couple of toadettes, a wag from a tattered tail or two and a weak, watery rainbow sputtered from the old cardboard box when he picked it off the floor.


Before leaving the attic Author looked around and saw a few dusty ring binders on a shelf nearby. A sketch or two of pirates, mermaids and aliens were peeking around the edges of the binders. A parrot’s feather and a squawk escaped when he tucked those binders under his arm.


“You know, lads,” Author whispered with excitement as he carried his childhood fancies down the stairs. “I think it’s time to put Sir Percy’s murder mysteries aside for a while. What do you say, shall we work together and find your happy endings at last? Besides, I’m long overdue for my second childhood.”

August 30, 2024 16:11

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26 comments

Daniel R. Hayes
17:41 Sep 15, 2024

Loved this one! Glad to see that you are still banging out these stories!! You have a wide range and always do a great job!!! :)

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Trudy Jas
17:50 Sep 15, 2024

Thanks, Daniel. Just started your fairy tale. p.s. you might like my version of the orient express as well. (shameless begging? sure)

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Breanna Aguiar
23:48 Sep 11, 2024

Wow. I loved this! It reminds me of the movie The Pagemaster with Macaulay Culkin. Made me smile, very cool story.

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Trudy Jas
00:06 Sep 12, 2024

Thank you, Breanna. I'm not familiar with the movie, but I'll take all the praise I can get. :-)

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16:46 Sep 11, 2024

Aww this one is lovely. I'm sure we all have forgotten stories like these wasting away somewhere. They are all our creations. Glad to see these ones might get dusted off :)

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Trudy Jas
18:25 Sep 11, 2024

:-) I actually have the URSA story written, but it's just too silly for public. Thanks, Derrick.

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07:32 Sep 12, 2024

Ooh interesting!! Silly is good! Maybe they will do a children's story prompt some day. I have written some middle grade stuff too which might surprise you considering how dark the stories I post here are lol

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Daniel Rogers
02:01 Sep 11, 2024

I've thought of revisiting my earlier stories using the skills I've gained since then to write them better. But now, I think I'll just wait for my second childhood. Cute story.

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Trudy Jas
03:21 Sep 11, 2024

Thanks, Daniel. I hope we don't have to wait too long. LOL

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Kristy Schnabel
18:49 Sep 10, 2024

This is so clever, Trudy. Your story is a delightful read. I especially liked the Story when its paged slumped, shuddered, or shrugged. So very creative. (I see you have several short-lists--I'd say, "You're due!"

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Trudy Jas
18:57 Sep 10, 2024

Thank you so much, Kristy. I had a fun with this one. I'm glad you liked it too.

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Myranda Marie
02:55 Sep 10, 2024

Adorbs !!!

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Trudy Jas
03:10 Sep 10, 2024

Thanks. :-)

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10:54 Sep 09, 2024

Imaginative and nostalgic. A lovely story Trudi. With a happy ending. There's something very clever about writing children's stories. especially new takes on old classics. And new takes on old classics appeal to adults as well. So glad the author plans to revisit her/his original stories.

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Trudy Jas
12:22 Sep 09, 2024

Thank you, Kaitlyn. I had fun trying to come up is new way to tell old stories. Didn't get any further than the titles, though/ :-)

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KA James
16:17 Sep 07, 2024

Hi Trudy, Nice mix of the Author's nostalgia (and assuming that much of that might also be yours) and larger culture references. Makes you want to reminisce and go into your own attic to see what might be there to talk to you. Love your other abandoned stories too. 'The Unicorn and the Ugly'. Great title

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Trudy Jas
16:30 Sep 07, 2024

Thanks. :-) Was kinds partial to the prince and the toadettes, myself. But the watery rainbow has a special place too.

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Darvico Ulmeli
14:47 Sep 07, 2024

Sounds a lot like me. Only my stories and novels sleep on memory of my laptop. Love it.

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Trudy Jas
16:02 Sep 07, 2024

Thank you, Darvico. Mine do too, now. :-)

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Malcolm Twigg
11:36 Sep 07, 2024

Interesting approach, Trudy, but I was quite into the Sir Percy saga - I found the writing very evocative. Not quite so much into the rest, thiughm but can't fault the imagination

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Trudy Jas
11:53 Sep 07, 2024

Thanks, Malcom. :-) Sorry I left you hanging with Sir Percy. Who knows, he might come back.

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Beverly Goldberg
04:00 Sep 07, 2024

Oh my, finding one's youth in need of attention. I love this story. How much we tuck away and don't look back on. This is a lovely story, and how the promise of renewal lies underneath it all.

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Mary Bendickson
19:26 Aug 31, 2024

Creative recreation throughout the ages, er, pages.

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Trudy Jas
21:02 Aug 31, 2024

:-) Thank you, Mary.

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Alexis Araneta
02:15 Aug 31, 2024

Brilliant, Trudy ! I love how this is both a wonderful standalone story but also an ode to pop culture with the Wall-E, Alice in Wonderland, etc. references. Lovely work !

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Trudy Jas
03:46 Aug 31, 2024

:-) Thanks Alexis. I had written the URSA story, but one (at least I ) cannot improve on Wall-e. So, it morphed into this soggy reunion. I'm glad it worked.

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