Herald Town News—12:00 Briefing

Submitted into Contest #76 in response to: Write a story told exclusively through dialogue.... view prompt

23 comments

Speculative Drama Fiction

           “Hello there, sir. Would you mind telling me what you are doing at this here Quick-Market?”

           “Buying groceries, sir. My wife wants to make a tomato soup and she ran out of bread. She wanted me to get her a loaf. Sourdough, I think, for a toastie-“

           “Good to know, sir. And would you mind giving your name?”

           “James Watson, sir, and my wife’s is Anna-“

           “I don’t actually care about her name right now. I’m here to interview you.”

           “You’re from a news station?”

           “Yes, hence why I’m standing in front of a camera and am holding a microphone.”

           “Oh. I just thought you were one of those hippies.”

           “Mr. Watson, sir, hippies went out of style five decades ago.”

           “Well I’m sorry. There’s too many of these newfangled trends; I just want my tomato-“

           “Anyway, Mr. Watson, sir, if you’re fine with beginning…”

           “Yes, we can start.”

           Camera ON.

           “Hello and welcome to the Herald Town News; my name is Philip Bell, and I am here introducing eyewitness Mr. James Watson. Mr. Watson, sir, why are you here at the QuickShop?”

           “To buy a loaf of bread—I thought you didn’t care about my wife-“

           Camera OFF.

           “Mr. Watson, sir, please just answer the question.”

           Camera ON.

           “Well, my wife wants to make a pot of soup and toasties but she’s all out of bread, so I came here to get a loaf of sourdough.”

           “And tell me, did you notice anything suspicious while you were shopping.”

           “Yes, yes, I think I heard a girl screaming.”

           “Do you know who this girl is?”

           “No, no, I don’t, but I think-”

           Camera OFF.

           “She’s a toddler. A toddler was screaming.”

           “But I’m pretty sure I saw a cashier screaming. It sounded like a cashier.”

           “Cashiers don’t have a particular sound, and even if they do, I want you to say it was a toddler.”

           Camera ON.

           “A toddler was screaming. She’s about two-and-a-half feet tall, I think, so maybe four years old? She could just be small for her age-“

           “Thank you, Mr. Watson, sir. And do you happen to know why she was screaming?”

           “If you mean the cashier then yes, I think it was something with her boss.”

           Camera OFF.

           “What is it I told you about the cashier?”

           “To not talk about her, I know, but she’s all I remember seeing. There was no toddler.”

           “There was, I’m telling you. A toddler was screaming because her mother refused to buy a cookie. Say that, okay?”

           Camera ON.

           “This little girl wanted a cookie—chocolate-chip, if I recall correctly, or maybe oatmeal—and her mother said no, or else she would spoil her dinner. But the poor girl had her heart set on that cookie and started to cry.”

           “Would your children behave this way?”

           “I don’t have children.”

           “Mr. Watson, sir, do you know any children?”

           “Yes, I do. My wife is a teacher-“

           “And would these children behave like that young girl?”

           “Would they work in a grocery store? No; as my wife says, they’re all brilliant and can aspire to much more-“

           Camera OFF.

           “Mr. Watson, sir, repeat to me what I told you about the cashier.”

           “Ignore her. She doesn’t exist.”

           “Precisely. Now, would you mind continuing?”

           “Okay.”

           Camera ON.

           “As I said, Mr. Watson, sir, would your wife’s students behave this way?”

           “I do think so. Every now and then, children get cranky: it’s what they do.”

           “Would you have behaved this way?”

           “I don’t think so, because I know I wouldn’t have gotten any dinner at all.”

           “And here enlies the problem, Herald Town. Children these days do not receive the proper punishments, resulting in improper behavior. Mr. James Watson over here did not have a behavioral problem in his youth due to his parents’ firm discipline.”

           “It wasn’t my parent’s—it was my aunt.”

           Camera OFF.

           “Who was it that withheld your dinner, Mr. Watson, sir?”

           “My aunt. My parents both got polio, back when it was bad. Before the vaccine.”

           “So your aunt raised you, I take it?”

           “Yes. My aunt, and sometimes my uncle, but he was at work. Trying to treat polio, actually, so I knew that the more of his time I took, the less help my parents would receive. That was flawed logic, though, because my parents didn’t-“

           “Mr. Watson, sir, I’d love to hear your personal history, but not right now. We have a news story to cover. Don’t you think more parents should treat their children like your aunt did to you?”

           “No, not really. I was terrified for a few years that we were poor, and when I went to college, I purely stuffed myself, and then I had to go on a weight-loss plan, and now I’m still stressed when my wife runs out of food. That’s why I’m here, buying bread-“

           “Wonderful. Well, unfortunately for you, that does not fit with the thread of the story at all, so you’re going to need to say that what your aunt did to you was good after all. Understand?”

           “Yes, yes, I think I do.”

           Camera ON.

           “Mr. Watson, sir, didn’t your aunt’s disciplinary tactics shape you into who you are today?”

           “They certainly did. Now I am a completely well-adjusted adult with absolutely no lingering anxiety. In fact, I’d go so far as to call myself exceptionally honest and moral-“

           Camera OFF.

           “You’re laying it on too thick, Mr. Watson.”

           Camera ON.

           “Thanks to my aunt, I never threw a tantrum as a child. Not once. Not like that little girl.”

           “So I would be correct in my connection that parents these days are too lenient?”

           “If you mean the parents of that cashier’s boss, then yes, parents are too lenient. What kind of a boss would make his employee scream?”

           Camera OFF.

           “Mr. Watson, sir, how well did you do in school?”

           “Excuse me?”

           “You are obviously lacking in basic comprehension. What part of-“

           “I know, I know, don’t talk about the cashier! But I heard her scream and I saw her boss right there with her, and I think it would callous of me to not be suspicious as to why he was making her scream-“

           “I literally could not care less.”

           Camera ON.

           “Well, um…well, I guess parents are a bit too lenient with their kids.”

           “Way too lenient.”

           “Yes…way too lenient. They need to be better parents.”

           “’Better parents’ is right. How, Mr. Watson, sir, do you think parents can improve?”

           “Well…they can improve by disciplining their kids, and to discipline their kids without being lenient…I’d say they out to be stricter. Parents need to be firm, have confidence, and resist being knocked over by anybody else.”

January 10, 2021 21:36

You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.

23 comments

I really enjoyed this story Anita!😝 😉 It was such an amazing story written by dialogue! Great job Meggy! :)

Reply

Meggy House
17:31 Jan 14, 2021

Thank you so much! Anita thanks you as well :)

Reply

Your welcome Meggy, and I am glad Anita thanks as well! :)

Reply

Meggy House
20:50 Jan 14, 2021

:)

Reply

Meggy House
20:52 Jan 14, 2021

Oh wow, fancy happy face! :D

Reply

Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Regina Perry
16:03 Jan 22, 2021

You've done it again, Meggy! This story is witty and clever. I love the duality of the storyline- the way Mr Watson is forced to say what the news reporter wants but also won't stop saying the truth. When he says "Parents need to be firm, have confidence, and resist being knocked over by anybody else" at the end it's especially brilliant, because he's being pushed around by somebody else and resents it, but he's still going along with it— only, if you pay attention to the individual words he's saying, that's okay, because he's not a parent.

Reply

Show 0 replies
Zahra Daya
03:40 Jan 22, 2021

I'm laughing while writing this - I absolutely loved this story, and I'm not just saying that. This has got to be one of my favorite stories on this site. The sheer seriousness but underlying sarcasm was right up my street. This was the best way to use the prompt, in my opinion - very, very good job!!

Reply

Meggy House
13:40 Jan 22, 2021

Thank you so much! I am so happy you enjoyed it and I greatly appreciate your reading!

Reply

Zahra Daya
01:01 Jan 24, 2021

Of course!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Natalie Dafoe
15:10 Jan 19, 2021

Hello! This is the first story of yours that I have read, and I think it is just spectacular. The way Watson reacted to the reporter's pushing the story on him was very believable, and same with the reporter, the dialogue felt natural and not forced at all. And the way the reporter was asking questions then cutting of his answers because he was impatient / it didnt fit the story was *chefs kiss*. Also the way the story is spelled out through the dialogue without info-dumping, you've got skill. The character's interactions were very satisfyin...

Reply

Meggy House
18:40 Jan 19, 2021

Thank you so much! This is such a wonderful comment and I greatly appreciate it!

Reply

Natalie Dafoe
23:15 Jan 19, 2021

Of course! You deserve it :)

Reply

Meggy House
02:20 Jan 20, 2021

:)

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Nancy Drayce
15:33 Jan 11, 2021

Hm, really interesting story! I loved the way you constructed it! I am just kind of confused about the plot and what really happened. Still, very intriguing story! <3

Reply

Meggy House
02:12 Jan 13, 2021

Thank you for your lovely comment! As for what has happened: a news reporter heard that something happened at a grocery store and interviewed a shopper: James Watson. James recounted that a boss had made his employee scream, and speculated it was assault, but the news reporter didn't think that would fit with the thread of the story he had made up, and twisted it so that it became a false recount about a toddler throwing a fit. It's meant to be a bit confusing, but I'll go back in and make it clearer!

Reply

Nancy Drayce
08:25 Jan 13, 2021

Oh okay! Now it is clearer! I mean, at first I was confused to why he would twist James's words, but I think I know what you meant, since a lot of things in the world can be twisted and falsely represented. Hm, interesting... 🤔 all in all a very interesting story and I really loved the construction of their dialog! 😊💜

Reply

Meggy House
12:58 Jan 13, 2021

Thank you so much!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Reedsy | Default — Editors with Marker | 2024-05

Bring your publishing dreams to life

The world's best editors, designers, and marketers are on Reedsy. Come meet them.