As per usual I begin with an apology - and this the most earnest of those so far: so very sorry for the abruptness and the length (!) of my silence.
I am in fact, still alive, still working, and most significantly, preparing for fatherhood.
I do suffer from chronic, low level depression which most often presents itself as a strong desire to be left alone and excessive computer gaming :\ ... yet the main reason for the sudden stop was more particularly two things:
1/ fear, as I approach the moment/scene in ECONOMOUS that motivated me to start his story in the first place; &
2/ realising that I had no idea who Miss Swift actually is (since *-SPOILERS AHEAD!-* I want to make her a main character) and not being able to proceed without her being better realised.
Well, happy day \o/, thanks to my writers' group of Michael Hawke, Ben Morton & Rikki Lambert, I have a much clearer sense of her now (and quite different she is from how I have penned her so far) so proceeding can begin again.
That said, I am currently in the thick of illustrating a growing list of picture books which have most of my creative professional attention, and what of that is left for writing I am thinking of applying to the other fruit of the WRITERS' GROUP: the continuing story of Europe, the Branden Rose, taking up where FACTOTUM left off. Excitingly (for me, at least) I have a beginning, middle and sense of the end (or a final catalysing moment to work towards), so it now simply awaits for me to take the start I have already and turn it into a finished tale.
I would like to thank you all for your persistence and Tom Wamstad for his expressed concern (which prompted me to speak up at last). I am still here, a little overwhelmed, but getting there.
For my next post I shall seek to respond to the comments from the last long ago post, so stay tuned...)
Monday, June 02, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
Economous Musgrove Chapter 9 Part 3
Wow, almost did not make it :O
I blame my preoccupation with a picture book I am working on that is due in little over one weeks time - I Don't Want to Eat My Dinner it is called, a sample for you below.
On posting this, I am painfully aware of missing details, of things not quite fleshed out, but such is the state of first drafts, so read on knowing that if this gets to a more polished stage it will be fuller, fitter, finer.
Economous
musgrove
© D.M.Cornish
PLEASE DO NOT PUBLISH OR REPRODUCE WITHOUT MY PERMISSION
Chapter 9 PART 3
The Sulk & Through
* * * * *
The tenth day of
his travels and Economous was on the road again. Elated, he whistled softly to
himself as he sat in the now moving lentum cabin, Miss Swift once again opposite
and once again ignoring him. Two new somebodies sat beside each of them – some
large lady in a thick shawl and coddling a covered basket, and a gentleman in
sleek blue soutaine – either whom Economous took little time to observe: just
to be moving on again was all his interest. The smudgy threat of the Ichormeer
glimpsed once more from the hilltop road out of Poonemünd was enough to arrest
his attention and he stared at it until the road dropped once more to the
unending flatness of the Sulk plain and the dread mire was lost to sight.
“And what calls
you out to Undermeers, my good friend,” the well-dressed gentleman said
suddenly, addressing Economous directly in an accent somewhere between Gott and
Bosch, with a strange Tutin ring to it too.
Though
surrounded by people after so long in the strange near-solitude of this journey
– this great crossing – Economous almost did not answer the forward fellow. “I
have services to render to a great lady of the region,” he said, telling more
than he cared to in his haste to make amends for his slowness to answer.
The
well-dressed gentleman looked at him and nodded slowly. “Well for you, sir,
well for you.”
“What of thee,
dear girl?” the shawl-draped lady enquired with beady fascination of Miss Swift.
“What brings thee hither to such out-away places?”
Tip of her fan
touching her chin then fluttering with abrupt modulation, her falseman’s eyes
hid again in the shade of a tricorn brim, the young woman also took a moment to
respond.
“My answer is
much the same, madam,” she said bluntly and turned her gaze to the view without
to bring any further enquiry to an end, casting Economous a brief and subtly
perplexed glance as she did.
“A great lady
too, is it?” the be-shawled traveller pressed.
Miss Swift’s
fan shut and tipped to the left, before snapping open and fluttering angrily – was the only word Economous
could give the motion – again. “Indeed, madam” she said with careful
politeness. “And I do not wish to say more on it.”
To this the
portly woman smiled a peculiar, almost indulgent smile and inquired no more.
Economous did
not know what to make of it all, but he was certain the two newcomers passed
knowing looks.
* * * * *
The lack of
proper way-posts, coach-hosts or any such thing to change teams forced the
lenterman to halt often to rest his horses along this stretch named the Lang
Plat. Though these were only the briefest pauses possible to serve the contrary
demands of both speed and equine wind, it was not until very late in the day
that they achieved the intersection of the Lang Plat and the Conduit Limus –
the Ichor Road it was commonly called, its southern arm running audaciously – and largely unused – through the threats and horrors of the Ichormeer. A long earthen dyke ran upon the western flank of the Ichor Road, reaching north and south as far as could
be seen. Economous had some recollection of receiving instruction at the athy
of a battle being fought here during the early days of the Sulk’s full
founding, though between whom and over what he could not now bring to mind.
For the meeting
of two reputedly major highroads, the crossing was strangely empty of settlement
and traffic – no imperial bastion to watch and tax, nor even an eeker’s cottage to make advantage of the
congruence. Leaning out and
looking ahead – quite painful to achieve – the young fabulist beheld in the
westering light the battlements of some fashion of fortress showing clear above
the rises some miles further ahead.
With scarce a
pause in caution of contrary traffic, the lentum crossed the Ichor Road and
pressed on.
Yawning and
stretching in his seat to clear the travel-drowse, Economous heard the
lenterman shout the six horse team to greater exertions despite their weariness
and to the young fabulist there seemed a note of fear in the harshness of the
bluff man’s cries. Though the
sensation was surely just the weariness of the road, but he almost dared to
admit to himself that there was something unfriendly in the air without,
something – dare he admit – threwdish
about the entire darkling vista. Now that he was ken of it, the threwdishness
pressed upon his wind and he found himself nodding in hearty accord with the
driver’s hoarse infrequent barks. Surly they were about to be beset by some
slobbering horror!
Why does the lenterman not drive us faster? he
fretted, peering through the lattice at the darkening hurrying world without. Is he dumb to our danger?
Over a final
rise and the bastion loomed, jutting from the acute slope cut into a hillside
and running long and narrow along the flank of the road. Spangled by myriad
windows, its west-facing battlements lit deep orange in the sun’s last light. With
a loud “Heyah!” from the driver and a disconcerted bellow of horses and the
lentum lurched, shaking its passengers sharply. Miss Swift was almost knock
from her seat but for the quick steadying hand of Economous’ on her shoulder.
Tossed about smartly, the four travellers clung to whatever hold they could.
Rocking and leaping the carriage closed the final fathoms to the bastion gates
at a sprint, making the foreyard with a clash and boom of a gate closed abruptly
behind them.
“Thank you, Mister Musgrove,” Miss Swift
said as she coolly but firmly pushed Economous’ hand from her shoulder with the
guardstick of her closed fan.
The cabin door
burst open and the back-stepper was there, ready to hand the ladies alight, his
face flushed, his eyes gleaming with glee the lantern glow of the yard. “Did ye see the basket?” he exclaimed up to
the driver and the sidearmsman even as he opened the cabin door and handed the
ladies first from the lentum.
“Nay, di’n’t catch a hook of it,” cried the
sidearmsman. “But [NAME] thought he did and got us to th’ gate with all breath behind
him,” he declared with tip of his head and a smirk to the driver beside him,
clapping the pale and shaking fellow upon the back. “You getting the ghasts, me
hearty?”
The lentum
driver shrugged. “Better sure than sorry,” he muttered.
“A nicker was
after us?” Economous asked as he clambered out, looking back to the closed gate
that had made good their escape, then up to the wall tops where musketeers in
Imperial mottle stood peering into the deepening gloom.
“I say it was,
aye,” the lenterman replied sourly. “Just rose up outta the stubble and sprang
at us. I thought I was done, but got us away. Where’s yer eyes at, [NAME]?”
“In me dial, as
per usual,” the sidearms man grinned. “But I reckon yours are poppin’ out at
any lurching fancy.”
The driver said
nothing to thus but spitting a curse, stowed his whip and dropped stiffly from
his high seat to the still hard earth.
A single musket
shot hissed and popped into the silence from the battlements above, drawing
gasps from the new arrivals. Passengers, lenters and yardfolk alike looked to
the heights of the fortalice.
“Can ye see it?”
came a gruff call from the yard.
“Nothing, bell-sergeant,”
was the reply from pediteers watching from the wall-tops. “It has surly
scunnered … if it was there.”
Looking to
Economous then the rather paler sidearmsman, the lenterman adjusted his copstan
to a jaunty angle. “Got the ghasts have I?” he uttered, then turned and went to
help unharness the horse team.
“Aye.” The
sidearmsman looked uncomfortably at Economous. “What ye gawpin’ at, townie!” he
snarled and turned his back to clamber off his high seat on the lentum too.
But all Economous
cared for was how close he had just come to dire monstrous encounter.
“Withdraw
inside the coaching house, if you please, goodly peoples,” demanded a tired
looking man of middling years resplendent despite obvious weariness in military
harness of rouge, luec and or – red, white and gold.
Economous
training at the athenaeum had been martial enough that he recognised the
pediteer as a sergeant-at-arms of His Most Serene Emperor’s service.
Compliantly, the fabulist turned his attention to his luggage being heft from
the lentum roof, as he fellow three passengers retired with the elevated wind
of those who have just scraped with danger.
* * * * *
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Economous Musgrove Chapter 9 Part 2
Late again, but still arrived, more Economous is here.
May I just say too, how much I appreciate you all, whether you comment or not, and how much your comments encourage me to continue and aid in the creative process - it is like you are all some kind of beta (alpha?) testers helping guide the outcome of the final result. Anyway, lame similes aside, thank you all.
Economous
musgrove
© D.M.Cornish
PLEASE DO NOT PUBLISH OR REPRODUCE WITHOUT MY PERMISSION
Chapter 9 PART 2
The Sulk & Through
The next morning, with the sun already
beating with summer heat upon all uncovered pates, Economous found the lenterman
sitting easy with the side-armsman and the backstepper, all sipping the best
local under the shade of coachyard’s broad eaves.
“No passage
today, m’hearty,” the lenterman said with a lazy tip of his already lazily
tilted stovepipe hat.
The second day
proved even hotter and the lentermen all the more comfortably disposed under
the coachyard eaves, and the driver’s answer was the same as before.
“You’ll not
make the clock wind faster,” the fan-flicking woman observed as Economous
sought frustrated retreat to his small solitary bunk space.
Sat at a small
round budge-table just outside the common room door, she was sipping what the
young fabulist could only guess was salloop. Head now barely covered by an
impractically small version of a stovepipe known as a columna, she still wore
the same dark green travel cloak, satin mules of striking red poking out from
beneath the viridian hem of her light cloak. But more striking yet – and
catching Economous utterly off guard – were her eyes, now clear of any
obscuring hat-shade, were clearest blue with orbs of solid bloody red. She was
a falseman. A lie-seeing leer. A lady lie-seeing
leer.
“Neither will chiding me, madam!” Economous
retorted hotly, surprising himself so profoundly with his own heat that his
pace quickening in shame as he sought to retreat past her and seek the solace
of his hired room. Yet better nature over-ruled him the very next beat and halting
abruptly, the fabulist pivoted on his heal to face his fellow traveller.
She sat up the
straighter, fan clicking shut and readied as a weapon. She blinked at him with those disquieting eyes, expression pinned between dismay and self-defence.
“Uh…” he
fumbled, “I – I – Sorry for my impulsiveness, madam,” he bowed as low as seven
days aboard a po’lent would allow. “Please … please, allow accept my
apologies.”
This woman
beheld him in still silent deliberation.
“I am not of
the habit,” she returned at last, “for speaking freely to one of whom I am not
properly introduced.”
Economous
blinked at her. “Mister Economous Musgrove, Metrician Third Table and
Illuminator to Gentry.” The young fabulisto obliged his audience with a second
bow: a bumbling simulacrum of the sweeping bobs Mister Bidbrindle liked to beck,
if only to avoid looking into those red-and-blue eyes.
“Miss Swift, if
you must,” she returned, her voice cool but her fan a-flutter tightly. “Panapolë
Swift of Doggenbrass.”
“Well, Miss Panapolë
Swift of Doggenbrass,” Economous halted before her – A name at last! – “Surly you
find the delay tiresome?”
“I do, of
course,” she said, taking a sip of salloop, “but I know better than to fret at
a cause I cannot alter. Lights know I have had much practice,” she added, more
to herself.
With no counter
for this, Economous stood dumb, hands behind his back and cupping the bottom of
his bautis-box to give them something to do, sucking in the warm air as he
rocked upon booted heels and gazed up at the thin clouds drifting west.
“And how is it, Miss Swift,” he said at length,
“that you are still my travelling companion?”
Regarding him
for a moment with a must-thee-know stare,
she finally said: “I am seeking a particular personage in Knapphausen,” she
offered at last.
“As am I,”
Economous returned, his last syllable going mawkishly shrill in his surprised
delight.
He blinked at
her and she at him, quickly turned upon both sides to gaze-averting
embarrassment.
“It is hiring
season then, in the Subtle Pall…” said Miss Swift as she stared fixedly at her salloop
with those discomposing eyes and fanned herself with especial vigour.
“Aye,” was all
of Economous’ reply.
* * * * *
Carrying Miserichord about in its box on his back,
Economous took to assiduously avoiding Miss Swift, instead wandering about the village,
crouching to draw the sagging wooden highhouses with their distinctive conical
roofs of flax and their grim-faced denizens. At first he was a spectacle as
souls stood over him to watch him make his marks, but tiring quickly of
muttering wonders and beady observation, the fabulist fled east out through the
gated gap in Poonemünd’s warding dyke and moat. In the windy hissing solitude
of the surrounding pastures, the road actually went directly up a hill of all
things, a mound really, but a genuine lifting of the earth. It was a herald –
as he soon found – of much greater undulations east, the shadows of dark hills
on the horizon.
Clambering over
a stone fence that bordered the rutted, scarce-used way, Economous climb through
dry grasses and withered thistles to the highest point of hilly mound and found
it afforded a remarkably wide view of world. To the south the land fell away in
a series of wooded folds running over long miles to a dark stretch along the
horizon that occasionally glimmered with water reflecting the morning sun. A
fume seemed to hang over that far off strip, and from even such a distance
there was an obvious deep rouged taint upon it. With a queer inward leap of
fascinated fright then a sinking of dismay Economous realised that he was
seeing the dread Ichormeer, a vast swampland even the most closeted niavine knew
as a seat of unconquered and largely undocumented monstrous power.
“So close,” he
murmured in vocal amazement.
The trained
metrician in him thrilled to the thought of measuring even a small portion of
its unexplored precincts, report back the weird species creature he might
uncover and be an ornament to his profession at last. But the rest of him just
beheld it in the dread common to all everymen at such a prospect.
In the evening
– warm and clear, a glory had he been in the mind to care – he climbed upon a
hayloft roof as he had as a child, to lay and gaze at the meteor splendours of
the unclouded night sky until Maudlin was westering and weariness forced sleep
upon him.
The only wonder
of the next day was the late arrival of a post-lentum from the populated west,
disgorging its brood of rumpled passengers.
“Aye,”
Economous’ lenterman reported with a smirk and commendable patience as he
sipped a bowl of Mullhammer’s Best in the common room of the Cradle & Manger, “we have fares
enough to be going on tomorrow.
“Thank you,
sir,” Economous returned with a bow, taking and shaking the startled fellow’s
hand happily, “Thank you, thank you.”
“A’right,
mate,” the sidearmsman retorted, nodding over his own beer-bowl at this sudden
enthusiastic limb-pumping. “He’ll need that arm for the harness termorrow.”
“Yes, yes, of
course,” offered Economous, releasing the bemused lenterman and giving an
apologetic bob. “I will see you tomorrow.” With that he ordered [FOOD GOES
HERE] and retired to his room to wait the last hours of stranding.
At last!
Labels:
Chapter 9,
comments,
delays,
Economous Musgrove,
Half-Continent,
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Tuesday, January 07, 2014
Economous Musgrove Chapter 9 Part 1
So we begin again, Finnigan ("... he has whiskers on his chin again...")
It may well be noted that this chapter has the same title as the previous, and this is because I have actually renamed them in between postings; for this chapter bears the title much better than the previous (which is now called, "Humour" - tho this is not a title I am yet fully settled upon).
Things are likely to get lumpier still from now on for we are most definitely in "writing as I go" territory: let the terror begin!
As for Tales from the Half-Continent, it is 216 pages long, has 1 map (recycled from Factotum - please forgive me), 8 character illos but alas, no appendices - it seems I am become too obscure to be allowed such indulgences a second time.
Let us revel in the obscurity together \o/
I see too that I got the athy's names mixed up (THANK YOU, ANON, VERY HELPFUL INDEED): it is known by all three names in my various notebooks - I think because I cannot decide which noun I like the more (one for the suburb it is in, the other after its founder, a third for the street it is on) so perhaps I will keep them all?
Also: How's the story as a whole tracking so far, folks?
Economous
musgrove
© D.M.Cornish
PLEASE DO NOT PUBLISH OR REPRODUCE WITHOUT MY PERMISSION
Chapter 9 PART 1
The Sulk & Through
word ~ definition …………
Economous had thought
the three day journey from his childhood home to Brandenbrass three years
previous had been a bold and extended venture: it took four entire days upon
the Grand Trunk to make it even half way across the vasty fields of the Sulk. In
the first the young fabulist thrilled to the alien vista that was presented to
him through the sashed windows of the lentum; a land both familiar in its
pastoral simplicity yet subtly foreign in its form of building, fashion of
citizen and the utter flatness of the ground. He had once reckoned the
Milchfold about western curtains of Brandenbrass topographically unremarkable
but that region was a veritable downs of undulation compared to endless
evenness of this current scape. The word “plain” was well meant here.
Perhaps most
remarkable were the many white mill-towers with their red or blue roofs and great
wind-sails of red or white ever turning even in the light summer airs. Communities
of them were founded at every sight of the compass, the tips of rotating sails
even glimpsed peeping above the arc of the horizon green with row upon row of
low-sprouting vegetables – carrots, beetroots, radishes and chives. An uncommon
sight in the Page – where much milling was done by ox-drawn stones – Economous
watched these windmills with keen fascination, leaning out over the door sash
to crane his neck and stare if the road took them close to one of the
marvellous devices. In their shadows and out amongst almost every field toiled
a greater multitude of moilers and other labouring folk, a far greater number
than Economous had ever beheld during his child-years, each – man or woman –
dressed peculiarly baggy breaches of white or faun, gathered about their shins and bulging at the thighs.
At the
sprawling rural focus of Swaddle Tunp the rotund gentleman and his consort left
the journey, to be replaced the next morning by a fellow of advancing years who
smelt strongly of skolding parts. The vertical stripes he bore upon his face to
show that he was indeed a monster-slaying skold. This new passenger must have
been most talented at his profession: There
is no such thing as an old teratologist went the axiom yet here he sat.
“Hello and good
morning, sir,” Economous tried, wishing to express his admiration, a similar
greeting falling flat once again upon the young fan-flicking lady.
“I can see that
you are a measuring man and I will grant most readily that your kind are a boon
upon the road,” the old skold said with a glare from eyes especially and
penetratingly pale. “But I am not interested in chitter chatter, sir, and ask
of you the peace to travel quiet and unmolested by empty words.”
Eyes still hid
under the rim of her tricon yet clearly smirking, the fan-flicking lady hid her
amusement behind her fan.
Economous
returned his gaze to the sash.
By sheer
frequency the marvels of the region wore out their charm as the steadily
passing vista proved unchangingly horizontal, and despite the miles shared, his
fellow passengers remained self-possedly unengaging so that the young fabulist found
himself nodding. Resting his head upon his bundled coat – unneeded in the heat
of the cabin – he lost great stretches of road to his recollection, the journey
becoming a strange cycle of boarding, sleeping, eating, disembarking at some
new town: Swaddle Tunp, Eg Harbidge, Sulking Mede, Boston – each remarkably
similar to the last, each a place only to sleep until the small of the next day
when the sequence began again.
By the seventh
day travelling between the low sturdy bastion of Fauquemberg and Poonemünd –
the last concentration of population of the eastern Sulk – landscape and
architecture did change. The ground began to undulate and grow craggy with grey
granite boulders thatched with dull green lichen rising up from fields now
whitening with the heads of buck-wheat, barley and spelt, tossing and rippling
in the gentle warmth. The dry stone walls about fields became higher and more
often began to form the foundation for thick thorny hedges that now obscured
the once wide and open view from the carriage window just when the scene was
becoming more interesting. Once proceeding flat upon the flat land, the road
began to dip and rise and cut long furrows into the hilly earth. Pines and
cedars grew now in dark copses upon hillock tops or in tight windbreaks across in
growing count of low ridgelines. The people the lentum passed – day-walking
postmen amblers, itinerant soup-sellers, cart-driving farmers – did not grin or
wave as the more westerly denizens of the Sulk had done but went about with
frowning inward expressions despite the glorious bright of the waxing summer.
The post-lentum
arrived at Poonemünd as the wondrous yellow glare of a pristine sunset draped
every westerly surface in solar gold, making steady way along a broad unpaved
street of sun-hardened dirt, rutted and rough yet lit rather incongruously down
its middle by a line of fine lamps. The journey terminating at the wayhouse, [wayhouse name], a complex of low,
sole-storied, wide-roofed quadrangles connected by covered walks.
“Commerce
bain’t as steady regular as one might reckon betwixt them easternly folk and
us,” the lentermen informed Economous as the fellow put his mark upon the two
remaining passengers’ Ticket-of-Passage. “Dour and close, they keep well to
themselves and well may it continue so. We won’t be trundlin’ yonder” – he
nodded to the arc of pallid eastern sky already glimmering with the night’s
first stars above the red-tiled roof of the wayhouse coachyard – “until I have
a full count o’ passingers – not worth the wear or worry elsewise.”
Increasingly
keen to be at his new work, Economous thought this a remarkable inconvenience. However,
his fellow passenger – the young fan-flicking woman in the fashionable garb who
had shared the whole journey with scarce a word – took this information with a
patient nod and proceeded directly into the common room of the Cradle & Manger.
Frustrated but
helpless to alter affairs, Economous followed after.
Thursday, January 02, 2014
The Beginerringenine of Anno MMXIV
Welcome welcome to a new year!
Alas for 2013, t'was a lovely number now gone, the year itself full of twists and turns.
Normal transmission of Economous Musgrove will resume next week 6/1/2014 (that's how a date is logically writ in everywhere sensible ;p - a set of numbers expanding rationally in scale from least to greatest rather than some un-sensible jumble \o/ )
For those new, middle-arrived or just needing it, here is a link to the very beginning of Economous' tale - and I will be adding a button-widget-graphic thingo to the right that does the same: ECONOMOUS MUSGROVE: The Beginnering.
To tide us all over and as a murky kinda Yule-Christmas-New Year in-the-notion-of-some-sort-of-present-giving-malarkey thing I am well pleased to announce that March this new year (in Australia at least for now) the release of Tales of the Half-Continent (I wanted to call it Sensoria for reasons that I reckon will be clear once the stories are read, but was overruled).
Two stories set in the H-c (one already released in anthology, but now polished and with more WORDS[TM] added) involving new Sundergirdians doing their own thing (by which I mean NOT a sequel of MBT)
So, on we go and blessings to you all.
Alas for 2013, t'was a lovely number now gone, the year itself full of twists and turns.
Normal transmission of Economous Musgrove will resume next week 6/1/2014 (that's how a date is logically writ in everywhere sensible ;p - a set of numbers expanding rationally in scale from least to greatest rather than some un-sensible jumble \o/ )
For those new, middle-arrived or just needing it, here is a link to the very beginning of Economous' tale - and I will be adding a button-widget-graphic thingo to the right that does the same: ECONOMOUS MUSGROVE: The Beginnering.
To tide us all over and as a murky kinda Yule-Christmas-New Year in-the-notion-of-some-sort-of-present-giving-malarkey thing I am well pleased to announce that March this new year (in Australia at least for now) the release of Tales of the Half-Continent (I wanted to call it Sensoria for reasons that I reckon will be clear once the stories are read, but was overruled).
Two stories set in the H-c (one already released in anthology, but now polished and with more WORDS[TM] added) involving new Sundergirdians doing their own thing (by which I mean NOT a sequel of MBT)
So, on we go and blessings to you all.
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