I'm sharing a new story, a Middle Grade/YA science fiction adventure, titled Rescuing Mara's Father. It's still a work in progress (though I just got my edits back), so suggestions would be great. The narrator is Mara, an almost 15-year-old girl. The scene is class in Teacher's study in a mining outpost on the Outer Rim. This snippet takes place immediately after last week's, which ended with Jako, her best friend, saying, “I heard a Voxian cargo ship came in this morning, wanna go to ‘port and see?”
Please excuse the creative punctuation, necessary to keep this within the guidelines. It's also edited from the original.
I look at the
darkening sky then at the clothes hanging on the line next to the house, “I
have to take in the laundry first, then I’ll catch up with you.”
I take the
clothes in through the side door, not the one to the classroom. If I hurry, I
can leave them on my bed and be off before Teacher
turns into Father.
It’s like
living with two different people. In the classroom, his study, he insists I set
an example for the others and call him Teacher.
There he’s a stern taskmaster. In the rest of our house, he’s Father, warm and caring—at least, he
used to be. A while ago, he started changing. Now, even at home he’s demanding,
and nothing I do is good enough.
Blurb:
Her father is gone! Taken by the Queen of Compara’s agents. Mara has to rescue him before the Queen tortures and kills him.
Instead of the kind, loving father she’s always known, he’s become demanding, critical, with impossible expectations—not just as Father but also as the only teacher in their frontier outpost. Mara would rather scoop zircan poop than listen to another boring lecture about governments on Central Planets. Give her a starship engine to take apart or, better yet, fly, and she’s happy. Now, he's gone.
Never mind, they’ve had a rocky road lately.
Never mind, Father promised she could go off planet to Tech Institute next month when she turns fifteen, where she’ll learn to fly starships.
Never mind, she ran away because she’s furious with him because he reneged on that promise. Father is her only parent. She has to save him.
Along with her best friend, eleven-year-old Jako, and his brother 15-year-old Lukus, Mara sets off to find her father. An old spaceport mechanic and her mentor seems to know why the Queen captured Father. In fact, he seems to know her father well. But, does he tell her everything? Of course not. He dribbles out info like a mush-eating baby. Worse, he indicates he’ll be leaving them soon. And Lukus can’t wait to get off our planet. Mara’s afraid they will all leave her, and she’ll be on her own. Despite her fears, she has to rescue her father.
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Interesting! I never would have guessed that her teacher is also her father.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jess.
DeleteSo excited to read this middle grade book!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Alyssa. Working on edits right now...when I'm not online. :)
DeleteI wonder what her dad's personality change has to do with his eventual disappearance. I assume there's a connection.
ReplyDeleteGood thinking, Ed.
DeleteWhat a fascinating premise for a novel! This snippet says such a lot in a few words!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Hywela.
DeleteAbsolutely exceptional. You carried this writer into a different world
ReplyDeleteThanks, Charmaine. I'm glad.
DeleteIt sounds sad and ominous about her loving father changing.
ReplyDeleteEspecially since she doesn't understand why.
DeleteOh! So the teacher is her father? I didn't realize that. Nice twist.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ian.
DeleteWow, didn't see that coming but it's a great twist! Loved the snippet...
ReplyDeleteThanks, Veronica. Happy to hear that. :)
DeleteSounds great! You're doing much better with your young reader project than I am with mine. :) I did see a typo at the end of the blurb. Then should be them.
ReplyDeleteSharp eyes, Jean. Thanks for catching that. I fixed it.
DeleteI wonder what has changed for Father to act so differently. I'm curious to know.
ReplyDeleteThat's good, Karen. Thanks.
DeleteWhen I read this, it was a surprise to me. During the classroom scene, I never even suspected that the teacher was her dad. :-)
ReplyDeleteJust love this story!
I'm glad. Nice to know I can catch you guys off guard.
DeleteI wonder what brought about Father's change? Tough for the kid, no matter what!
ReplyDeleteIt is tough for her. Add to that all her hormonal changes and you have a volatile mix.
DeleteI wonder why her dad has changed. Poor girl.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Elyzabeth.
DeleteNow that is a complicated house life!
ReplyDeleteLOL That it is, Amy.
DeleteThey dynamics you've set up between father and daughter are very interesting and make me want to find out more about them and what happens next.
ReplyDeleteI really love the antagonist perspective, but I don't always write stories that have a good/bad, right/wrong, hero/villain theme. I guess that's why I like short stories; I don't have to have all the traps of absolutes.
ReplyDelete