Good Morning to You!
Hope this Blog entry finds you well and happy this fine February morning?!
I was fishing around this week for new ideas for blogging. I mean, I have written so many now over the years I'm beginning to get a little thin on ideas. So I thought, perhaps it's time to ask the internet?
What are good topics to Blog about as a writer?
Some okay ideas popped up. Things like writing a poem for your readers, which I've done on occasion.
Or share the worst day of your life, which didn't seem at all like fun. And write a to-do list which seemed even more boring! I know nothing about how to plan an event like a book signing, though I probably should. Yikes, don't tell my publisher about that one, please.
I know I get sick of having to self-promote and I imagine readers find it a bit boring as well, so what does that leave. Yes, I do promote other authors, of course. So in the end I decided to ask the readers. What topics interest you?
In the meantime, I'm going to use one of my mystery stories, a few chapters at a time, as a way to share with all of you. A novella I wrote two years ago on spec that has never been published before but has been edited. I will say it had a tongue-in-cheek tone that I quite enjoyed when I wrote the story. So without further ado, here we go!
PS. Wishing you a lovely February!
January Bain, Storyteller
A Scholarly Murder
Tales From The Script
Chapter One
Wellington Crescent, Winnipeg,
Manitoba, Canada 1953
I
shared a conspiratorial wink with my favorite Mona Lisa painting hanging
over the mantelpiece, a knife gripped in my left hand.
“Cake,
darling?”
Silence
greeted my inquiry. The dinning room table was littered with Pierce’s hobby, black-and-white
crime scene photos that I dare say Ansel Adams would not approve of. A ghoulish
interest of my own as well, though I preferred the evidence kept in the den and
out of sight at mealtimes, even if these particular murders were decades old
and had occurred in another country.
“That’s
exactly the type of inattention that helped Marie Antoinette lose her head,” I
said.
Pierce
glanced at me with eyes that lived up to his name though at the moment a twinge
of merriment softened those pearly-grays. “If King Louis had had the sense to
have a mistress, like most of his ilk in the day, she’d have likely caught the
blade before the much-abused royal did. Might even have saved her life.”
“Are
you saying having a mistress can save lives?” I held the knife poised midair, about
to cut into the decadent chocolate fudge cake made from an old family recipe…with
the generous addition of a delightful new ingredient.
“No,
just stating the obvious. Of course, it was more the fault of the guard in the dungeons
of the Conciergerie prison not having any qualms about accepting a bribe
and then not doing what he was paid for. No honor in that.” He shook his head
at the offer of cake. “I prefer vanilla. Why has Dorothy made chocolate?”
“True,
I don’t think any prisoner has gone to their death more politely. I recall that
she apologized for stepping on her executioner’s foot. I’d have made a fuss or
given a rousing speech, I think.” I raised the knife higher in a grand gesture
to illustrate my point.
“Perhaps,”
he said, with a hint of Mona’s smile gracing his lips. “You do have a
flair for the dramatic, Claire.”
“Remember
the Anderson case and the wrangling over the insurance money? Dramatic doesn’t
cover it.” I set the knife aside and picked up my coffee cup, eying my husband
of three years over the brim, enjoying the stimulating fragrance that rose from
the cup almost as much as the conversation. “Handy that you proved the doctor’s
collusion. That was one monster the world can well do without.”
“If
Doctor Seward hadn’t wanted to be caught, he shouldn’t have made so many house
calls that ended in sudden death. He got so sure of himself he became sloppy.”
It was Pierce’s turn to purse his lips, waving at the series of crime photographs.
“I still come to the same conclusions every time, though I lean a little
heavier toward Aaron Kosminski, the demon barber, what with his psychological
profile fitting the escalating crimes and his later confinement in the
asylum. But there are a handful of suspects that cannot be ruled out either and
likely never will be. Too much time has passed.”
“Why
are we revisiting a crime from eighteen eighty-eight again? Not like we don’t
have enough cold cases to examine right here in Canada. How about the
disappearance of Marion McDowell? A classic Lovers Lane mystery, not to mention
there’s all that lovely fraud involved with the feeding of false leads by a reporter.”
I
nodded at him over another sip of my coffee, glancing at the cake. It was my
own undertaking, rare in a household run by the iron fist of Dorothy, or Dot as
she like to be called, ever reminding anyone within earshot she was ‘always on
the dot’ with her punctuality. A woman I had inherited when I’d married Pierce.
Indispensable, on most occasions. Compromise is called for if a female wants to
have a professional career, and my cross to bear was letting her run the show.
Most of the time.
“The
Sherlock Holmes Society is meeting tonight and insists on revisiting the case
once a year. I thought I’d spare you the time involved by refreshing the facts for
the two of us.”
“Thank
you, darling. I’m beginning to find that old case beyond nauseating. And could
we pack up the photos? Before Dorothy comes in to clear the table? You know how
she gets.”
“Yes,
and remind her I prefer vanilla.”
I
frowned, squinting at the damning photos. “Remind her yourself.”
Silence.
He
blinked first.
“You
know, I think I might like to try a piece of that cake after all. It seems I’ve
developed a hankering for chocolate.”
“Wise
choice, darling.”
2 comments:
I hear you, January, about finding topics to blog about. I know for me, I never get tired of stories - or pictures - about cats. :)
Hi Tina, that's lovely! I too love cats! I'll keep that in mind. Wishing you a lovely weekend! Hugs, January
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