Hey, Stephanie! I have a little request. If you’re going to keep changing me, reach those artificial nacho cheese-dusted hands onto the Wheel of My Fortune and spin it to figure out who I’d be this thirty-second time (Yes, I counted.) around, could you at least swap out…you know?
Yes, I’m aware, all too much, in fact. You say that you’re a pantser, that you’re a flâneuse who would rather meander the winding alleys of your imagination rather than follow some preset road map. You balk at the idea of anything other than the thorny weeds of a plot point sprouting up in your mind guiding you to concoct “the most heartfelt romance story to ever grace the pages of Paddweb.com”. Perhaps, my plea would but fall on deaf ears…uhm, fingers. However, as I stand here at the foot of the craggy Pennines (my ninth home), my large brown eyes (which have always been the same) exhausted from deciphering my fate hanging in the air, I feel the need to discuss all this with you course in my veins like ink flows onto a sheet of pristine white paper.
Let’s see now. In the past five months, you’ve thrust upon me the costumes of a flower shop owner from sunny Brighton (for which, I sneezed up a storm. You forgot I had allergies.), a street tough New York cop (Guns! Gore! GAH, no!), a trapeze artist from St. Peterburg (Heights, really?! My stomach just flipped remembering that.). Gosh, there were so many masks, but not much time. My favourite would most certainly be my February identity, a jazz singer from the Philippines with long, wavy tresses and a staccato laugh. Alas, I was blissfully lapping up the dulcet voice and jewel-toned wardrobe you had gifted me with when you smacked your lips together and hit that backspace button. I could only silently scream “NO!” before that blinking black line transformed me from beaming Antonella Callea to pink mohawk-sporting Roxie Matthews from your ill-researched idea of LA. No worries, though. As per usual, I just sighed and did your bidding. What’s an entity that only exists in a yellow folder icon on some beat-up, crumb-covered laptop to do?
However, there is one thing about me that you’ve kept intact, a tiny morsel of my parsed together existence that has remained as solid as the stone walls of the first cave drawings where Homo Erectus first told his tales. From the moment you first entered your email to create that writing website account, you have always envisioned me ending up with Ethan ---- blonde, burly Ethan. Ethan who’s…. uhm…. golden-haired and muscular. I get it. If you, Stephanie Marie Thorpe, can not bag very much married Nathan Hayworth (really clever modifying only the first syllable by the way), if your prince charming slipped that glass slipper on another woman, you suppose that you could at least give me --- the baby spawned by your thoughts, the two dimensional chameleon you conceived for the sole purpose of simulating the elation of being Mrs. Hayworth --- the decency of wedding your dream boy. At least, in this world of the Word document, anything is possible.
Well, indeed, when you’re the one tap-tapping away, everything is yes and amen…. except for what I really want. You see, Stephanie, we ---your characters --- have been hiding a secret from you, a “sin,” so to speak, from the alpha and omega of this entire universe’s existence. The moment of truth has arrived. It’s about time you know that yes, I’m in love…with Daniel.
(Yes, I could observe your mouth contort into some twisted pretzel. Stop!)
I can finally admit to you that Daniel --- the last-minute addition to your piece, the supporting role in the film in your brain cinema you only cast because your Paddweb readers insisted on a best friend for good ol’ moi ---- is the star of every fantasy I’ve conjured up in my fictional consciousness. No, no, don’t yell. I do understand that to develop the hazel-eyed, brunet hero of my journey, you’d listed down every single quality that has enshrined Nathan in your pedestal (literally. I’ve seen you scribbling it at the back of a receipt. My Daniel can’t even get the decency of a proper notepad?!) and ascribed the exact opposite of him. If Nathan spends his afternoons with his cheeks covered in mud on a football pitch, Daniel’s face is constantly covered by a hardbound. If Nathan air guitars along as Metallica blasts from his headphones, Daniel hums to Elton John records, true to his name. You even went the other way on a detail as minuscule as his favourite ice cream flavour, vanilla to Nathan’s rocky road. I was meant to take this difference as a glaring neon sign pointing to my leading man. Well, it did; it was just not the Casanova you had envisioned.
Yes, Stephanie, it is by your fingers we live and breathe when your laptop is on, but once you click on “shut down”, you couldn’t and can’t stop us from, well, living and breathing beyond the script you feed us. Neither could you stop me and Daniel from using the same power you wield over us to draw our own arc into each other’s embrace: the power of words.
You couldn’t stop the day I had reached across the table Daniel was sat at the Character Café and beamed at him. As your machine for writing died down, a surge of energy coursed in my verbally constructed veins. It was but a stream of consciousness when I grabbed his muscular hands, stared into those amber orbs, and gave him a smile more glittering than a Pulitzer in a case. Thankfully for me, he pulled me close and shakily retrieved a folded leaf of stationery bearing a love poem. Like with Cupid and Psyche before, no, you can’t prohibit the inking of affections in black in white.
You couldn’t stop Daniel’s sputtered out request to take me to the Idea Theatre for the very first time. The overmorrow after that fateful confession over coffee, he knocked on my door of my flat (Yes, the one you’d described to resemble your own. I think I’d appreciate you cleaning up after yourself, if only my own abode could be immaculate too.) and jittered as his mouth spilt out his desire to fulfil that daydream he’s had ever since you first fashioned him from keyboard strokes: a movie date. Of course, like in those slow-motion scenes in those Nora Ephron flicks, I leapt into his arms and said yes. Stephanie, any cutesy scene you invent has nothing on the way he gently wrapped himself around my waist as we walked to the ticket counter. And oh that kiss as the two main players canoodled on screen --- tinged with the butter popcorn he so kindly bought for us both, so tender! Inside my mind, it’s as if a reel stopped. Like with Boubil and Schönberg’s Chris and Kim, no, you can’t prohibit us from sneaking away to each other’s company, celebrating as if it were the last night of the world.
You can’t stop Daniel and me promenading by the River of Thoughts and laying out blankets of checkered linen and sweet nothings for a picnic. You couldn’t stop us pressed up against each other, my head leaning onto his firm chest, the cadence of his heart the rhythm section to the melody of the words I’m reading him from the tome in my lap. You couldn’t stop every twirl and every giggle as rain pitter-patters on a rooftop and Stevie Wonder’s poetry in notes blares from a radio. Like with Jo and Friedrich Bhaer, no, you can’t prohibit the cloudy, pillow-like peace that comes with two like-minds letting time fall away together.
Oh, and absolutely not, you couldn’t stop Daniel bending down on one knee, an art deco-style diamond seemingly belonging to Daisy Buchanan in a green velvet box before me. As you slammed your computer shut after the umpteenth case of writer’s block yielded but one paragraph, my beloved picked me up and told me we’d be visiting a garden. Little did I know that it secretly was decorated with tulip petals, sting lights making all that greenery look like Wonderland. I couldn’t help being speechless, robbed of the very glib you had bestowed upon me. That’s when my Daniel knelt down, tears flowing from his eyes and spouted out the question I had always longed to be part of our dialogue: Will you marry me? Soundlessly, without anything I could put in quotation marks, I cupped his cheeks and passionately gave him a smooch. As if I were reading the climax of the most gripping of novels, my eyes were glued to my sweetheart slipping the jewel onto my waiting digit. It is so like us to show you no, you can’t prohibit two souls yearning to spend the rest of their lives together --- yes, even if you, the person who conjured us up, brought us to life.
Stephanie, no, you can not stop our love. Really, all I’m asking for you is to change up my partner in your work so we, the figments of your imagination don’t have to pretend, wear yet another set of masks, when your laptop is fired up. It’s really simple now if you think about it. Since you can not make us cease from writing our own story when you’re not around, all you need to do is accept this needed edit to your tale. Call it constructive criticism.
Oh hey, what’s that sound? Is that clicking? Why are you…no….oh no! Don’t send us to the Recycle B….
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87 comments
True Love will win! Even in the unfinished paged of the next Best Seller! But the MC should have known not to criticism too much, no writer likes an editor! Thanks!
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Hi, Marty ! Exactly that. As my protagonist mentions, she will end up marrying Daniel anyway in that non-story world. Hahahaha ! Thanks for reading !
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I absolutely loved this. There are so many allusions, so much detail! And thank you for introducing me to the word "pantser." Maybe it's an Americanism? Or maybe I need the title down before I even type a word! You should win with this one, and all my fingers are crossed.
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Hi, Rebecca ! I'm chuffed you liked it ! I had buckets of fun writing this. Oh, and as for "pantser", perhaps it is an Americanism (Otherwise, it would be a "trouserer" ? Hahahaha !). I do hear that a lot in a writing Discord group I belong to. I am NOT one, though. I have to plot for any story to make sense. Hahahaha ! I do hope I win. If not, though, at least, I had fun. Thank you for reading !
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It was a really good prompt, I think. It seems to have inspired us all !
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Very fun! "I'm in love with Daniel!" How dare she make her own decisions that are at odds with her writers! Who does she think she is??? This was highly engaging and a great interpretation of the plot. Characters, eh?! Cheekly little so-and-sos!
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Hi, Derrick ! Right. How dare our protagonist fall in love with Daniel. But there's Ethan. He's blonde and burly! And...blonde and burly. Hahaha ! I'm happy you liked my take on the prompt. As I mentioned earlier, I wanted a different take on it and thought what if the protagonist is fine with the changes...but wants her love interest to change too. I...try to be kind to my characters, though. Hahahaha ! Thanks for reading !
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Classic Alexis. Wonderfully quirky, funny-romantic, tongue-in-cheek. Not dragged out of the recycle bin, I trust! Love the Elton John/Daniel line.
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Thank you, Carol ! It means so much coming from you ! I liked "Not dragged out of the recycle bin". Hahahaha ! The pour protagonist, though. And yes, I do love "Daniel". One of my favourites from Elton John. Thanks for reading !
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Oh, I loved this so much. As a sometimes-pantser, I feel a little called out and feel the need to apologize to the narrator. And then go back and apologize to my own graveyard of unfinished/unused characters...
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Hi, LC ! Hahahaha ! Sorry for the unnecessary call out. I wanted to experiment with the idea of a romantic lead wanting a different partner. But yes, I like plotting, so at least my characters won't be confused on who they are. Hahahaha ! Thanks for reading !
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I love this story! So funny. I think most writers I know have experienced that moment where their characters veer off the path they’ve laid out. Lol I loved the phrase “ verbally constructed veins.” So creative! Thanks for sharing.
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Hi, Anna ! Precisely that. I like to think, though, that unlike Stephanie, I welcome all the verring away from my plotting. Hahahaha ! I'm happy you found it funny and enjoyable. Thanks for reading !
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Yes, sometimes it feels like the characters just want to go where they will, whether you want them to or not. Sometimes they are insightful, and others times you just have to show them who's the boss. Way to stand up for writers everywhere. It was a fun read, and I didn't even mind the romantic background (romance just isn't my thing). Well done
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Hi, KA ! I'm very happy you liked the story. Precisely that, sometimes, it's worth it to listen to our characters. Thanks for reading !
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This is hilarious! What an imagination!
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Hahahaha ! Glad you found it funny, VJ ! Thanks for reading !
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I feel bad for my characters I've never completed. Some have two or three chapters, but nothing more, some are sketches on lined paper. I made a character recently, Stori, who is strong-willed and opinionated, I feel like she would tell me to go back and finish those poor characters stories. I love the 'Character Café', and the Idea Theatre! I like characters that have their own personality (hence Stori) Great job and keep writing! :)
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Hi, Madeline! I know what you mean. Sometimes, it feels like I've curtailed a life. Like I mentioned, I wanted to play with the idea of a romance protagonist (one of my favourite genres to write) wanting her partner to be different than the one the author picked out. I enjoyed the idea of a world that exists when the computer is off too. Thanks for reading !
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Again--what fun. It is a delicious story. I love the characters--all their incarnations. I often find myself wondering if the people I create like or hate me or are too bland to care.
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Hi, Beverly !!! I'm happy you liked the story. I sure had fun with it. Somehow, when I saw the prompt, a story about a character wanting to change partners came to me. I do wonder what my characters think of me. Hahahaha ! Thanks for reading !
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This was a really entertaining, brisk read! As much as I sympathize with our protagonist, I sympathized with the writer too. How often we can go back and forth writing and re-writing our characters. Funnily enough, they do eventually tend to take on lives and voices of our own, and the best things come out of listening to them!
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Hi, Lonnie ! I suppose because we're all writers here, we can see a bit of ourselves in Stephanie. Funnily enough, though, I always start with a base of what the character will be like and then, add on to that. Not quite rewriting. I suppose it's because I don't want to torture my characters with multiple identities. Hahahaha ! It's true, though. Sometimes, you just have to listen. Thanks for reading !
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Really fun story, Alexis! Wonderful work per usual :)
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Thank you, Sophie. It means a lot.
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Alexis, this is a truly enjoyable read. Excellent work as always, with vivid description.
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Thank you so much, Renate ! I sure had fun writing this. Thanks for reading and commenting !
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Fun
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Thank you, Luca ! Yes, I had fun writing this !
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Recycle bin....hahahah!!! Well, Alexis, this was yet another fun read and I loved all the little details and descriptions that you always seem to write with! It takes a true talent to consistently write quality stories to keep us readers coming back for more! I thought this story worked really well with the prompt and flowed perfectly. As always great job!!!! :)
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Hahahahaha ! I suppose Stephanie doesn't like her protagonists mouthy. Hahahahaha ! Daniel, I always love it when you comment because you have been nothing but so kind in the comments. Like I mentioned to McKade, I really had fun writing this. I wanted to do something cheeky, and I'm happy I achieved that. I love including those details in my stories to make it (and my characters. Of course, I wanted readers to cheer for my protagonist and Daniel) really believable. Thank you so much for thinking I'm talented. As always, thank you for rea...
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You're welcome!! :) You are turning out to be quite the writing machine. Before you know it, people will be calling you Alexis "The Typewriter" Araneta. ;)
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Funnily enough, I never used a typewriter. I do like the image, though. HAHAHAHAHA !
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Another great story, Alexis! I love the idea of our characters existing outside of what we write for them. The concept kind of reminds me of Wreck it Ralph, haha. Great work! And hilarious and very unexpected ending! 😂
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Hi, McKade !! I'm so happy you liked this story. I sure had fun writing it. I suppose because I'm a participant in Writing Battle, and I got assigned "Inanimate Object Romance", the idea of a Toy Story world that exists when humans are away was fresh in my mind, so I came up with this. I had to include that ending to make it funnier. Hahahahaha ! Thank you for reading !
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If only my own characters had a voice as strident as this one - and as erudite You introduced me to so many new words (or words I would never have thought of using in context) that my head was spinning. If I'm honest, there were a lot of words in this piece for me - rather too many, which tended to detract front the originality of the story. Liked the ending though Serves the mouthy madam right.
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Hi, Malcolm. Yes, I've seen and heard a lot about you in the comments of other stories. I'm sorry my wordy style is not your cup of tea. Glad you liked the ending.
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Not all bad I hope! What I omitted to say in my previous comment is that I thought you a wordsmith - probably the biggest compliment any writing peer has ever given me in my writing career to date.
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