Coffee Break Read – Office Politics

Ty’s link had reached him, dinging insistently on his screens as soon as the resupply hopper had dropped from FTL into the planetoid’s traffic stream. He got back to her right away.
What are you playing at, Grim? I already gave you a three-day extension and you take that and ask me for two more. I know you have to live up to your maverick rep, but you are not helping us to build any trust doing the lone bounty hunter thing.”
He tried to sound penitent.
“I just need two more days Ty – then I’ll be in and have something to make up for it. I promise.”
“That’s what you said last time. What is this, Grim? Seeing how far you can push me? I don’t take kindly to being pushed. You keep it up and I’ll push back. And I can push harder than you, maybe so hard you’ll find yourself off the case and back on basic duties for the next five years.”
“I’m not trying to push you,” Grim heard the slight edge of hostility in his own voice. Then he boxed it all off and swung himself into Ty’s corner for a moment – putting himself behind her eyes, feeling the intense pressure from Jecks, the weight of knowledge – greater than his own – about the possible consequences of failure in this investigation, and the frustration and concern that the man she was supposed to be working with was apparently running amok and not telling her anything even before they had hit the ground running. He took a breath to regain his own composure. Ty was not the enemy, she was his best and greatest ally. He spoke again, his tone much more conciliatory:
“I am working on something I got from a personal contact – I can’t take this down any official road, if you want it logged and signed up, it can’t happen at all. Right now, I‘m on leave and I’m my own master – trust me for two more days, please Ty, and I’ll be able to bring you something really worthwhile. Call me in now, and I can’t get that for you.”
He was guessing that part of the reason he had been chosen for this case was this very tendency of his to blaze off-trail and get things done. That and the fact he had a proven record which showed he really could bring down the big beasts of the criminal jungle when he was allowed to do so.
He could see Ty considering his appeal. She had to be a risk taker too – no one was going to assign a stolid jobsworth to this kind of investigation. But, she would also be grappling with the concern that she needed to assert her authority over him and it was very possible letting him get away with this might be one step beyond her comfort zone on that particular score. Grim hoped she’d realise he wasn’t seeing this as any kind of power struggle. He had no wish to challenge Ty’s authority – just a burning desire to get done what he needed to get done.
“At least tell me where you’re going to be for those two days,” she said, after a moment. Grim felt a tight satisfaction, knowing he had got his two days. Hopefully, that would be enough.
“A place in the middle of nowhere called Hell’s Breath,” he told her.

From Iconoclast: Mistrust and Treason a Fortune’s Fools book by E.M. Swift-Hook

Jane Jago’s Daily Drabble – Two Hundred and Sixty-Nine

Ever have the feeling you were being watched? Ellie couldn’t concentrate on being kissed because she felt eyes boring into her. She wriggled in Herman’s embrace.

“Get off me. I don’t feel like it.”

“Whassamatter babe?”

“There’s somebody watching us.”

He obviously thought she was being silly, but he knew he wasn’t getting anywhere with her in this mood, so he grabbed her hand and walked her back to the waiting car.

Atsutsa looked at his mother. “What humans were doing Etsi ?”

His mother showed her teeth in a rueful grin.

“When Etsi and Gadoda did that. Atsusa came after.”

©️jj 2019

Author feature: The Interspecies Poker Tournament, Case 27 of The Roshaven Files by Claire Buss

The Interspecies Poker Tournament, Case 27 of The Roshaven Files, by Claire Buss is a humorous fantasy novella following the adventures of Ned Spinks and Jenni, a prequel to The Rose Thief. If you loved Terry Pratchett's Discworld, you'll love Roshaven.

Ned Spinks, Chief Thief-Catcher, has a new case. A murderous moustache-wearing cult is killing off members of Roshaven’s fae community. At least that’s what he’s been led to believe by his not-so-trusty sidekick, Jenni the sprite. She has information she’s not sharing but plans to get her boss into the Interspecies Poker Tournament so he can catch the bad guy and save the day. If only Ned knew how to play!

‘As I was trying to tell you fifty million times, he’s killed Kevin! I don’t know why that is so difficult for you to comprehend but there it is – dead as a dodo – and all we’re getting is persecution for being loud! Kevin is dead. Where is the compassion? The sympathy? The cake?’ The chief was so indignant that his jowls quivered.
‘Cake? I can ring for some cake if you like, if it would help.’ Lady Shillot hovered helpfully.
‘If you wouldn’t mind, Ma’am,’ replied Ned. Then he did a double take. ‘Do you speak Brownese?’
‘Oh no. That’s not one of my languages, I’m afraid. Daddy didn’t think we should learn anything  irregular.’
‘So ‘ow did you know ‘e wanted cake?’ asked Jenni.
‘They always want cake, those things. Poor Cookie is in a dreadful state, always having to bake. She never gets to do much savoury.’
The door to the drawing room opened and the butler appeared. Ned could tell he was the butler because he looked very disapprovingly at everything, including Lady Shillot.
‘Ah, Jenkins. Could you bring us some tea and cake? There’s a good chap.’
‘As you wish, Ma’am.’ The butler retreated silently. Ned wondered if they’d actually get any refreshments and if they did, how long it would take before they arrived.
‘What are you going to do about it then?’ A small voice demanded.
Ned tried to get back to the murder in hand. ‘Tell me exactly what happened.’
‘We’ve had a new arrival. It’s not unusual. Brownies come and brownies go. It’s all part of cake-up. With there being so many bakers in the city, it’s our duty to keep them on their toes and continue to check residencies for any new tasty slices. Why, only the other day Aggie improved on her cinnamon twist. She needs brownie approval to declare that, you know?’
Ned nodded in agreement. His waistline was all too aware how great Aggie’s cinnamon twists were.
‘So we had this new brownie – name of Arnold – and he wasn’t that taken by the fruit cake we had. I thought to myself then, he was unusual. Fruit cake is the centre of the universe, you know?’ The chief waited for Ned to nod in agreement. He didn’t.
‘He asked a lot of questions, did Arnold. Why this and why that. He spent time with everyone and was always looking closely at everything as if he was trying to take a picture with his mind or something.’
‘How does that relate to the murder of Kevin?’ asked Ned.
‘Well, can you see Arnold here?’ retorted the chief.
Ned shrugged helplessly.
‘He’s not. He disappeared shortly after we found the body inside the salad bowl! The salad bowl!’
The other brownies had been listening intently and at the mention of the salad bowl, they became very agitated.
‘Brownies don’t like salad, Boss – say it’s devil food.’
‘I’m quite partial to a seasonal leaf,’ piped up Lady Shillot

A Bite of... Claire Buss
Q1: How much of you is in your hero/villain?

My hero’s are Ned Spinks, a cynical thief-catcher in need of good boots and a penchant for cake, and Jenni the sprite, an extremely powerful fae who pongs strongly and has a strong Cockney-ish accent. It’s true that I always seem to need new shoes and I do like cake…

Q2: What time of day do you write best?

I write best when I get five minutes to get stuck in. I struggle with the adage of write every day because I can never guarantee being able to sit down and write at the same time each day. I tried getting up at 5am to write. That lasted less than the five seconds it took for me to turn off my alarm. I often end up staying up late just in an effort to try and shoehorn everything in, not necessarily writing. Plus if the muse is not with me, I can’t write anything at all.

Q3: Are you ticklish? If so where?

I have ticklish feet but be warned, you take your life into your own hands if you try to tickle them. I have a wicked roundhouse attack that’s completely involuntary. Plus I’m a master at getting my own back when you least expect it. Best to avoid antagonising me (cracks knuckles) (would crack knuckles if could crack knuckles).

Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet based in the UK. She wanted to be Lois Lane when she grew up but work experience at her local paper was eye-opening. Instead, Claire went on to work in a variety of admin roles for over a decade but never felt quite at home. An avid reader, baker and Pinterest addict Claire won second place in the Barking and Dagenham Pen to Print writing competition in 2015 with her debut novel, The Gaia Effect, setting her writing career in motion. She continues to write passionately and is hopelessly addicted to cake.

You can find her on Facebook, Twitter and her own Website, follow her on her blog and join her Facebook Group.

 

 

 

Jane Jago’s Daily Drabble – Two Hundred and Sixty-Eight

It started out as a serious experiment, there was very little doubt of that. The funding came from a concerned group of multi-billionaires with an interest in hydroponics.

All was going well until somebody decided they could afford a couple of interns to do the boring work.

They appointed a girl with impressive ‘assets’, and a skinny geek with yellow dreadlocks.

The duo was left to manage the hot greenhouses.

Authority smiled, until the day the board met to be presented with the results of two decades of work and three billion euros.

The world’s first self-slicing banana.

©️jj 2019

Best of The Thinking Quill – 2

Dear People Who Read This,

This is Jacintha Farquhar and I’m the unfortunate mother of Moons – that’s the twonk who usually writes this blog thing for you and always signs himself Moonbeam Farquhar Metheringham IV. He wrote a truly dreadful book once called “Fatswhistle and Buchtooth’ and peed himself with excitement (and I am not being metaphorical) when it rose to one million on the Amazon ‘in store’ sales listing. He’d just bought a copy I think.

Anyway, Moons isn’t writing his thing this week because he’s in bed with man flu. Which, now I come to think of it, is probably the manliest thing the miserable little squit has ever laidclaim to in his life. Be that as it may, I even offered to lend him my tablet so he didn’t have to go into that pokey stinking coal-hole he normally writes in and could do so in bed. But he turned me down saying his creative muse was mocking him or some such delirious crap. Honestly, there are days I wonder if they made a mistake at the hospital and I’ve had to bring up some other poor cow’s freak of an offspring. More likely it was that terrible school his sperm-donor insisted he went to. It was all cold showers, canings and stiff upper lips – and stiff other parts too, from what I could tell.

Sec. Bear with. Need a refill.

That’s better. Now, where was I? Oh yes, I’m supposed to be doing something about how to write. Moons gave me his notes, but I used them as a coaster and the ink’s gone smudgy with the advocaat. So, you lot will just have to put up with my thoughts instead. I mean, you read his shite week after week so you can’t be very discriminating. Fact is most of you won’t even notice it’s not Moons.

How To Write A Book – The Write Way

So you really want to know how to write a book?

S’easy. Pick up your frikking metaphorical pen and write the sucker. I remember that some poncey author or another was once asked how he wrote and the big festering gobshite replied ‘one word at a time’. Ha bloody ha ha! Who’s a clever asshole then?

But there is a grain of truth in. You can read enormous amounts of pretentious shite about courting muses, and engaging with your characters, and story arcs, and much other meaningless birdcrap. But as far as I can see that is about as likely to result in a bestseller as any of the puerile stratagems employed by my sad excuse for a son.

Basically, find a rattling good story and tell it. Sprinkle it with the most perverse sex you can imagine. Add a goodly dollop of blood and gore. And don’t forget the happy ever after.

Job done.

Consider this. The horrendous old bat Moons moons over (in a literary way) managed to churn out over 700 of her sickly tales in between interfering in the lives of anybody who would listen to her. By my reckoning, that means anybody should be able to knock out two or three a week. You will be wealthy by Christmas.

Or maybe not.  

Who knows? Who cares?

Coffee time now so you’re on your own. If you get really unlucky, Moons will be back next week.

Go on, piss off then. I’ve said all I’m going to say.

Jacintha Farquahar, unfortunate mother of Moonbeam Farquhar Metheringham IV

You can find more of IVy’s and Jacintha’s profound thoughts in How To Start Writing A Book courtesy of E.M. Swift-Hook and Jane Jago.

Jane Jago’s Daily Drabble – Two Hundred and Sixty-Seven

When the traveller had his pleasure, he indicated that the girl might leave.

“There is money on the chest by the door. Take a coin for your trouble.”

He watched her, curious to see what value she placed on her favours.

She took the smallest coin.

“Wait,” he said, “I would know why you value yourself so low.”

She actually smiled. “I won’t be keepin’ your coin. Innkeeper will have it from me as soon as I get downstairs. I don’t see why you should pay ‘un twice.”

It is unwise to cheat a dragon, as the innkeeper soon discovered.

©jj 2019

Lying Hands

Lying hands, untruthful fingers
Truth may die
Dissembling lingers
Smiling eyes, with hate beneath
Chew through lives
With sharpened teeth
Lying kisses, cold caresses
Love denied
The heart distresses
Lying hands that grip and hold
Steal the warmth
And leave the cold

© jane jago 

Weekend Wind Down – Dangerous Hobby

Leisure vehicle users were dying. They were going to sleep in their shiny ‘vans and just not waking up. Various theories were advanced for this phenomenon, including foul play by person or persons unknown, but nobody could actually put their finger on a cause. After some months of speculation. a government-sponsored study was set up. It discovered that people did indeed die in leisure vehicles far more frequently than was statistically explainable – even given the average age of the people concerned.

The findings were, of course, summarily dismissed by leisure vehicle builders as being merely an attempt to frighten customers, and the biggest players in the market banded together in defence of their profitable product.

For a while the buying public was convinced, but a proliferation of news stories about unexplained deaths began to seriously erode consumer confidence and the industry looked as if it would be reporting a drop in profits for the first time in living memory.

This was intolerable, so an emergency meeting of the big boys was convened to look into what could be done to repair the situation.

After a bit of fencing, the industry giants were forced to admit that some sort of a gesture was needed, and it was decided that the players would go away and have a think, reconvening in twenty-eight days with suggestions.

The second meeting was a noisy affair with not a few theories flying around the huge boardroom table. Some advocated an advertising campaign featuring holograms and huge city-centre billboards. Another faction was convinced by special edition models with gorgeous graphics and over-the-top specifications. Both options were considered seriously before being dismissed as being insufficiently impressive.

There was, however, one suggestion that nobody was prepared to entertain for a moment. It was proposed by a group of research and development operatives, who humbly suggested trying to discover whether leisure vehicles might indeed possess some underlying fault that could be responsible for the deaths. The scientist sent to present this unpalatable notion was lucky to escape the convocation with his skin intact, and it was made abundantly clear that such politically unpalatable ideas were not to be entertained.

The unfortunate scientist called his friends to report drawing a blank, and, although nobody was much surprised, there was more than a little disappointment among his peers. A small inner group determined to carry on researching the deaths, while resolving to keep what they were doing under wraps.

Meanwhile the wrangling among the bosses went on for days, with nothing of any substance being decided. In the end another four-week recess was called, and the delegates went away to bully their underlings for some better plans.

While the bullying and chivvying was going on, a very young research assistant beavering away in a design facility in the USA made a disturbing discovery. There was one factor that was common to every ‘van in which unexplained deaths had occurred. Each was fitted with a relatively new and spectacularly efficient battery system, part of which was a wireless control box enabling users to manage all the vehicle functions from their mobile phones. He postulated that there had to be a connection between the system and the fatalities, but the connotations of that were so sinister that nobody was willing to talk about it. The young geek was told to go and find some concrete evidence, and to keep his mouth shut until he did.

While this was going on, the big bosses met for the third time to thrash out an appropriate response to the growing unease. To say the meeting was tetchy is to massively understate the case. The arguments raged back and forth, and men in suits all but came to blows up and down the polished wood of the conference table.

In the end, the Managing Director of the biggest player of all stood up and spoke.
“What we should do,” he said portentously, “is host a worldwide series of long weekend rallies. Rallies with free food, free beer and free entertainment. By this means we will gain much public approval and prove to the doubters that leisure vehicles are absolutely safe.”
He paused for effect.
“We should each host at least one rally. More if we can. We offer free tickets to customers. We invite the world’s press to stay in ‘vans at the rallies. And we ourselves act as hosts of the events, also staying in ‘vans. Does anybody have a better idea?”

Of course nobody did and once the wave of arguments and counter-proposals died down, the job of making arrangements was handed to an army of administrators and gofers.

A paper-thin Latvian gentleman smiled thinly, and made a series of cryptic phone calls once he was in his chauffeur-driven Bentley. The upshot of these calls was a dramatic drop in the trade price of a certain battery system and a corresponding rise in production at a manufacturing plant in northern Germany.

The Latvian met an even thinner man in a private room at a very famous fish restaurant in Barcelona and, over course after course of seafood, into which neither man made much inroads, he reported the upshot of the industry meetings. His host laughed, a short humourless sound, and rubbed his hands together.
“It appears,” he remarked in a colourless and precise voice, “that I may have my vengeance at an earlier date than I could have expected. How did you arrange that?”
“We encouraged a young lady of dubious virtue to drop a suggestion in the ear of a certain gentleman. And he swallowed it.”
“Very good. You have my thanks. The second instalment of your fee will be in your bank tomorrow.”

When the Latvian had bowed himself out of the room the other man picked up his phone and dialled a number. When it was answered he had a quiet-voiced conversation with somebody on the other end. Had there been anyone in the room, they might have noticed the whitening of his knuckles as he held the phone and the single tear that coursed down the side of his rather beaky nose, but he was alone so those rare signs of emotion went unseen. He ended the call and sat for a while regarding his own hands with a grim set to his mouth. Then he spoke coldly and with absolute precision.
“Your little cartel declared war on me and mine all those years ago. Now you are about to pay your debts.”

Then he rose from his seat and left the room, walking very quietly.

High summer in the northern hemisphere saw hundreds of venues prepared to receive visitors. Enormous marquees had been erected, catering companies were roasting pigs and sheep, beers and wines were ready to serve, sound checks had been carried out by expensive musicians, and ‘vans began arriving to be pitched in serried ranks by an armies of smiling marshals in smart uniforms.

At close to the end of the working day on the Friday groups of influential journalists were bused into the each of the various venues. The biggest North American rally was taking place in a huge grassy valley in Utah, and the bus paused on the lip of that valley to permit its passengers a view of the immensity of the undertaking.

A young female news anchor shuddered.
“Look at them,” she pointed at row upon row of all but identical ‘vans pitched with mathematical precision as far as the eye could see. “Will you just look. How does anybody tell them apart? They are fucking clones. Can you imagine being lost among rows and rows of those things?”
A tall Texan grinned.
“Yup. They are mostly indistinguishable. However. According to the press pack, that I seem to be the only one to have read, each ‘van has a homing device accessed via an app on your mobi.”
The girl shuddered again.
“I like that even less. It’s too much like being led along by the nose. And how does anybody know all those things aren’t talking to each other? Talking and plotting. It’s creepy. I’m not staying. Nobody could pay me enough to stay. I’ll walk out if need be.”
The bus driver gave her a thumbs up.
“Just stay on the bus then. I’m dropping off, and heading home. I don’t like this vibe any more than you do.”

The young woman stubbornly stayed on the bus, even in the face of telephone threats from her bosses and increasingly desperate entreaties from representatives of the industry. Something about the setup had her rattled and she wasn’t entirely comfortable until she was on an aeroplane heading home.

Friday evening saw each carefully orchestrated rally swinging into action, and the charm offensive for the world’s media turned up to megawatt intensity. Nobody mentioned the young American anchor, or two Italians, one Frenchwoman, and a Japanese, none of whom could be persuaded to spend any time at all enjoying the hospitality.

As the rally attendees partied, a serious-minded young researcher logged in at a secret facility in Cincinnati. He was convinced there was something wrong with the battery system that now powered more than ninety per cent of leisure vehicles. But he couldn’t for the life of him see what. He should have been at home for his brother’s birthday party, but something inside his head insisted he needed to be in his laboratory. His family excused him and he sat regarding the two examples of the system set up in glass boxes on the laboratory bench.

Something was going to happen, he was sure, he just wasn’t sure he wanted to know what.

Midnight found the last of the music petering out and even the hardiest of ralliers returning to their accommodation. The tall Texan looked at the phone in his hand as it pulled him gently towards his allotted ‘van. He found himself feeling hugely uneasy, and cursed the nervous anchorwoman under his breath. He shrugged his muscular shoulders, unlocked the door of his palatial home on wheels and pulled his soft bag out of the cupboard. Slipping the bag onto his back he rolled up the duvet from the king-sized bed and stuck it under his arm before making his silent way out of the ranks of silver-sided monsters and up the escarpment to a level meadow where he could roll himself in the duvet and sleep under the stars.

Two hours later, in Cincinnati, the researcher was awoken by a message notification, something was talking to his two battery systems. Some elementary instinct for self preservation had him carefully closing the airtight doors on the glass cases before checking his gauges. Nothing. Then he heard the distinctive sound of breaking glass. In each of the systems set up for study a tiny blown-glass vial, which the schematic of the devices said was something to do with self-levelling, had exploded and its contents dripped through a grating into the largest of the batteries. The gauges went wild. It was nerve gas. Powerful nerve gas. The researcher grabbed for his phone, all the while fearing himself to be too late. Two hours later he gave up on trying to contact anybody at any of the rallies. He put his head down on his bench and let the bitter tears fall.

Some hours later in Utah, the Texan awoke with the sun in his eyes, and stretched before sitting up with a rueful grin. It must, he thought, be very early still as there wasn’t a sound in the valley below him. He looked at his watch, then stiffened. That couldn’t be right. It couldn’t be after nine. If it was, the valley would be abuzz with activity. Breakfast was scheduled to start at eight, and by nine there should have been volleyball, tennis, soccer, watercolour painting, and all manner of activities going into on below him. Something was wrong. Badly wrong. He dragged his phone out of his trouser pocket and called for help.

While he waited for the police to arrive he watched the valley, alert for any sign of movement. Of course there was none.

Just shy of fifteen hundred people fell asleep in that valley. None of them ever awoke.

It was the same story all over the world.

Nobody ever moved any of the ‘vans from the venue in Utah and for all we know they are still talking to each other as they quietly rot away where they stand…

© jane jago 2017

Jane Jago’s Daily Drabble – Two Hundred and Sixty-Six

The big, orange cat appeared, mouth first, grinning, and Allie couldn’t help thinking she knew who he was.

Before she could speak he hissed.

“One is not,” he said firmly, “from Cheshire”.

Allie swallowed nervously then summoned a grin of her own.

“And my name isn’t Alice.” 

“Very well, then, we understand each other. Were you following the white rabbit perchance!”

“No. I most certainly was not. I fell asleep in the sun. And the next thing I knew there was a big ginger tomcat…”

“Sadly, one is not quite a tomcat.”

Allie sighed.

“Even the cat is a disappointment.”

©jj 2019

Toppling The Truth

So here I stand and raise my flag
To mark my point of view
I hold it high above the crowd
So they can see it too

I shout my truth in voice so loud
With little care for tact
The voice that speaks the loudest wins
Opinion made fact.

I see you mouthing thoughtful words
But care not for your whys
I subscribe to the YouTube truth
And know the media lies.

And when the experts say I’m wrong
We all know experts fail
They don’t mean what they’re on about
They’re paid to tell a tale.

And scientists are in the pay
Of those in the deep state
Who only want to crush the truth
And silence all debate.

So don’t tell me of climate change,
I know it’s just weather.
Claim lives saved by vaccination?
Don’t you pull my tether!

I might not know where China is
But I’ve had education
You can’t fool me anymore
With your United Nations.

It used to be a real pain
To get what I think heard
Then someone made the internet
So I can spread the word.

And now there are a million flags
All waving in the sun
And to all it’s plain to see
My day has just begun!

E.M. Swift-Hook

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