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School`s Out

by Cornelia 

Posted: 23 February 2011
Word Count: 297
Summary: For Week 345 challenge


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Before it all kicks off, Colette leans from the terrace and points downriver. ‘That brown building is a pub called Samuel Pips’

‘Pips are what you get in oranges. It’s pronounced Peeps.’

‘Oh, always the English teacher!'

The view from the Tate is muddied, like a beginner's attempt at watercolour. The Thames has a tint of greegage under a plum-bruise sky; the grey dome of St Paul's squats like a cantaloupe on the other bank.

Colette places a slice of apricot tart on the table and indicates two forks. But there's an apple in my bag. Besides, I’d eaten a muffin at the National Film Theatre, where tickets for the pensioners' screening of Truffaut were sold out.

So, a stroll to the Tate instead. My name still on the computer, I'd revive my membership and we'd plan our visit, pencilling ticks on the programme.

But we'd forgotten it’s half-term. The Turbine Hall is filled with the very age-group we’d been glad to see the back of. Most are just milling about, shouting; some are running up the down escalators.

‘I had the same nightmare at the start of every term’, I say.

‘I didn’t sleep’

Suddenly, there's a loud beeping and a grabbing of coats and bags. Then six winding flights of hemmed-in panic.'Do you smell smoke?'. A young woman struggles with a red buggy while Colette and I recall students setting off school alarms for fun during the IRA scares.

Outside in the welcome chill, it’s as if a pop concert is about to begin, under the cherry blossom.

We laugh. 'School’s out. Come on, let's go visit Samuel Pips', I say. I'm wondering if he had his own suspicions, unmentioned in his diary in 1666.

But they didn't have half-term in his day, did they?






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Comments by other Members



dharker at 19:11 on 23 February 2011  Report this post
LOL! Pips? Peeps? Pepys? I'm lost! My heads spinning in a bowl of fruits and naughty school kids Sheila! A mad whirlwind of a story which I found strangely engaging...

Dave

Cornelia at 19:19 on 23 February 2011  Report this post
Dave, you commented before I'd quite finished editing. It's rough because I only wrote it today, based on what happened to me yesterday afternoon. Glad you were engaged, but I hope it's a bit more coherent now.

Sheila



dharker at 19:32 on 23 February 2011  Report this post
Apologies Sheila! *sheepish grin with tip of shoe drawing circles in the dust*
Dave

tusker at 07:26 on 24 February 2011  Report this post
Good atmosphere, Sheila.

It has a gentle flow to it. The past mingling in well with the present.

However, I feel there is more to tell. This reads like a first paragraph to a longer story or book. It perked my interest and I wanted it to go on.

Both characters have a tale to tell.

Jennifer

Cornelia at 10:16 on 24 February 2011  Report this post
Thanks, Jennifer, for your comments. I only wrote this yesterday, based on an actual incident the day before. I will try taking out the second paragraph and see if I can foreground the present.Oonah's story is a good example of how concentrating on the the details of an incident makes for a stronger impact. I think I can add to the part about the actual evacuation from the building to make up the word count. Fortunately, the paragraph to be removed doesn't have any fruit

Sheila



Katy Kat at 16:57 on 24 February 2011  Report this post
A lovely, easy to read story Sheila. I also wanted it to carry on. Best wishes
Kate

Bunbry at 19:04 on 24 February 2011  Report this post
Hi Sheila, some lovely images, but I too see it as the start of something rather than a piece in it's own right.

Nick

Cornelia at 19:53 on 24 February 2011  Report this post
Thanks, Nick. It usually takes lots of drafts and weeks or months before I get a story to amount to anything - this just proves the point for me. Thanks for your comment, confirming this needs further development. I will take heart from that and assume it at least it has some good points and is worth working on.

Sheila






Cornelia at 19:58 on 24 February 2011  Report this post
Katem thanks for the positive comments and the encouragement.

Sheila

dharker at 20:20 on 24 February 2011  Report this post
This has a lot of good points Sheila! Keep at it!
Dave

V`yonne at 18:49 on 25 February 2011  Report this post
I loved
The Thames has a tint of greegage under a plum-bruise sky; the grey dome of St Paul's squats like a cantaloupe on the other bank.

and the fire alarms during IRA scares - tkaes me back. I dodged teemagers all day today even though I haven't taught now for 4 yrs! Forgot it was half term ;

Cornelia at 20:15 on 25 February 2011  Report this post
Thanks for commenting, V'yonne. Yes, we'd forotten, too. I did notice the river was this odd green colour and the sky dusty pink.

Sheila

Manusha at 23:14 on 25 February 2011  Report this post
Hi Sheila,

I read this last night before your revision, but after seeing your comments I felt to wait until you'd made your changes. I'm glad I did - this for me is much better.
The view from the Tate is muddied, like a beginner's attempt at watercolour. The Thames has a tint of greegage under a plum-bruise sky; the grey dome of St Paul's squats like a cantaloupe on the other bank.

In the earlier version I already liked this, but now - I blow a kiss! Delicious.
The story is so much clearer now. One thing I still wonder about though:
No, I have an apple in my bag. Besides, I’d picked at a muffin at the NFT. The tickets for the pensioners' Truffaut screening were sold out.

The first time round I wondered if the speech marks were missing. In the second draft I still think the same. Might it work better as speech? But then again, I might simply be missing the point.

Regards, Andy

Cornelia at 11:02 on 26 February 2011  Report this post
Andy, thanks for your encouraging remarks about the improved sentence - I always find description tricky.

Thanks too for raising doubts about the speech marks. I've made it clearer, I hope, that it's not meant to be a speech at all.

I've also changed the end as I realised why Samuel Pepys is in there at all. I read somewhere recently about these unconscious connections coming to the surface if you just keep on writing until they emerge. I seem to have been fiddling with this story all week.

I think the focus is much clearer now and there's a sense of closure with the twist at the end, instead of it seeming like a part of a bigger story.

Thanks to all for hepful comments.

Sheila








OklyDokly at 18:00 on 26 February 2011  Report this post
Hi Sheila

Generally I liked this. The short paragraphs allowed for easy reading, and it brings back memories of when I was a child and there was a bomb scare in The National History Museum.

Just a couple of things which threw me off, and slowed me down a bit:

1) I don't know what the NFT is

2) Where you said:

The Turbine Hall is filled with the very age-group we’d been glad to see the back of.


I thought at first you were talking about the pensioners. It wasn't until further down that I realized that they were trying to avoid the kids. Although it was rather comical imagining the pensioners running up and down the escalator .

Thanks for the read

Chris

Cornelia at 19:13 on 26 February 2011  Report this post
Thanks you for reading and commenting Chris. I've changed NFT so I hope it's clearer. Don't know what I can do about the teenage/pensioner mix-up but I'll have a think.

Sheila

choille at 19:36 on 26 February 2011  Report this post
Hi Sheila some really lovely images of London all plum sky & greengage water. The cantaloupe's a bit too much but what an awful challenge & you've done it really well.

I have to agree it does seem like the opening scene in a short story & you should try & work it into a longer piece as it has great potential.

All the best
Caroline.

Laurence at 22:09 on 26 February 2011  Report this post
Loved the images - like the others it is the start of something really good. I want to know more about your characters - i imagine they lived really exciting lives.

Thanks for the read.

Laurence

Cornelia at 23:00 on 26 February 2011  Report this post
Thanks, Choille and Laurence. Lol. I agree about the cantalope image being an insult to Sir Christopher, but I will try to make more of this.

Sheila

crowspark at 11:22 on 27 February 2011  Report this post
Lovely piece of writing.
Like a day out in London, something I have not done in many years.
The view from the Tate is muddied, like a beginner's attempt at watercolour. The Thames has a tint of greegage under a plum-bruise sky; the grey dome of St Paul's squats like a cantaloupe on the other bank.

Greengage?
This did no quite work for me. If it is like a watercolour you might want to name the colours, or have someone say they don't know what the colours are called and then liken them to fruit? Very nearly there!
That brown facade

Maybe "building" would do the job unless your word choice says something about the character.
Thanks for a lovely read.
Bill

Cornelia at 12:04 on 27 February 2011  Report this post
Thanks for reading and making helpful comments. I have changed facade to building. I agree about making the fruits into the name of paint colours, and that's what I could do for a rewrite. I think maybe a conversation would take me over the top of the wordcount for the challenge, but a good idea for later.

Yes, I'm lucky to live here, especially now I don't have to work full-time.

Sheila


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