This is another aspect of my view this morning. It's a mug of tea and the fireplace. It's a gas fireplace on a timer so no tang of woodsmoke (which Durwood probably couldn't tolerate anyway) but it throws off lots of heat (which Durwood is a big fan of) and I predict that it'll be on pretty much all the time we're awake until we pack up and leave.
I told you yesterday that I'm tidying and polishing part of my novel to enter in a contest. I worked on it yesterday at work, last night, and again this morning. I think I've got it. One of the things I love about my Kindle Fire HD is that I can email my manuscript to my Kindle and then I can read it like it's already a "real" book. It gives a whole different perspective. I can't make changes on the Kindle but I can take notes while I read, go back into the laptop to make the changes and then send the corrected manuscript to be read again. So instead of writing from a photograph prompt last night and plonking that on here, I'm going to give you a tiny bit of the first chapter of my novel.
February 26--Barbara Malcolm, The Seaview (excerpt).
Chapter
1
I started my first full day of
owning the Seaview, a ramshackle hotel
on a Caribbean island, wide awake before the sunrise and unable to blame it on
the rooster that laid claim to the courtyard outside my door. Sheer panic slammed my eyelids open at about
four in the morning, my heart was pounding and I was hyperventilating. I could hear the slow, reasoned voice of my
son, Will telling me he did not think that “sinking so much of Dad’s life insurance
money into a decrepit hotel on an island at the back of beyond” was a very good
idea.
I couldn’t get started until the
shipping container got to the island and that depended on the weather and the
other ports the freighter needed to call at.
The wait would give me time to do any demolition and empty out broken or
outdated furnishings. The plumbing and
electrical work needed to be done before all the cosmetic work started.
Since I could tell that I wouldn’t
be sleeping any more, I got up and got my day started. I had the coffee pot ready to plug in and
there was enough light from the security lights so that I could sit out at one
of the tables overlooking the salt pond behind Sydans Garden Inn where I was
staying until the Seaview was inhabitable.
I took my notebook and pen with me to begin drawing up a plan of
attack. I wanted to consult with Ann, Sydans’
owner, before she went off to her job as principal at the middle school to get
names of two local men who were reliable and could provide the muscle. There was a lot of work that needed to be
done, tearing out the rotting walls, repainting everything inside and out,
making sure the roof didn’t leak, a million things before my guesthouse would
be safe for visitors. I hoped that Ann would
know a good plumber and electrician because I wanted to be absolutely confident
in the safety of the wiring and the plumbing.
By
the time the sun was up I had a long list of things to be done. Topmost was to get started tearing things
down and tossing things out. I needed a
man with a crowbar...
Okay, that's all you get. I hope you like it. Don't tell me if you hate it. Now I think I'm going to go soak in the jacuzzi or maybe I'll read a book... no, I'll read in the jacuzzi, that's what I'll do. Multitasking is the name of my game. Blub, blub.
--Barbara
1 comment:
I want to be the first guest in your guest house!! What fun to imagine and "live" an alternate life through your novel. We always love entering someone else's experiences by reading a book but you're actually "living" the other life (well, kinda) by writing it! Sounds wonderful so far!
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