Category: Stichomancy Prompts

Would You Like Me To Challenge You To A Duel

  • by KentOr a game of dominoes?
  • I live by the river
  • the Actor-Robot’s overwhelming hate
  • little sister, can’t you find another way?
  • and not a penny less

Tune in next time part 304      Click Here for Earlier Installments

“Would you like me to challenge you to a duel?” I yelled at John. “Or a game of dominoes?” Both questions were nonsense, as I lacked any weaponry or spotted game tiles, but maybe they would confuse John long enough for me to think my way out of this mess and off of this island. Perhaps I could get back home. I live by the river, and with my luck the house had been washed away by now. I had been away for a long time.

John did seem confused, but his hold on my arm didn’t loosen. His gaze lunged around the hut at each of us, and spittle flew when he snarled, “I cannot sense the Actor-Robot’s overwhelming hate. Without it I can’t get my bearings.”

“Now he thinks we’re robots!” Jason threw up his hands.

“I will deal with him,” Tessa said. She used her big toe to strike a pressure point on John’s arm, freeing me from his clutches. Her leg drew back for another kick, and I knew how deadly she could be.

John had caused me tremendous trouble over the years, betrayed me more often than I would likely ever know. But at the sight of him in mortal peril, something in my chest burst forth. “Oh, little sister, can’t you find another way?” I cried.

Everyone stared at me, especially Tessa. I wanted to amend my outburst, not call her that, but it was too late.

John rubbed his arm and said, “Look, I gotta get outta here. You guys are welcome to tag along as far as the plane, but then you’ll have to negotiate with the captain. He might fly you off this rock, for a price. He’ll want double the fair-market rate, and not a penny less.” He sized us up, nodding at Tessa but frowning at me and Jason. “You twinsies will have to strip down. He’s very strict about proper attire.”

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John’s Sudden Attack

  • by jen— mind the lobsters —
  • one weird trick
  • determine how much blood it would take
  • rank, leather-like odor
  • glimpse into his violent mind

Tune in next time part 303      Click Here for Earlier Installments

John’s sudden attack gave me a glimpse into his violent mind, and brought me far too close to his rank, leather-like odor. My own eyes began to water.

I twisted away and looked for a weapon, whilst trying to determine how much blood it would take for him to lose before he lost consciousness. At the Academy they taught us one weird trick to remember the blood loss formula, a mnemonic. And then it came to me — Mind The Lobsters — that was the key.

Now all I needed was a weapon, and a minute to complete the calculations.

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As John Cackled Nakedly

  • by Kentunder a layer of plastic
  • stooping to pick up the paper
  • in the right-hand corner of the davenport
  • all he kept was the duffle bag
  • in his rubbery grip

Tune in next time part 302      Click Here for Earlier Installments

As John cackled nakedly on the floor, Tessa folded her arms across her bare chest and huffed. Jason looked over at me and his mouth opened and shut several times as he thought of things to say and then thought better of them.

John picked up his bag and shook out its contents on the floor of the hut, beside the roiling mud pool. A bewildering assortment of bric-a-brac tumbled out, but John seemed intent on a particular item that came to rest under a layer of plastic sandwich bags. He stood to raise the duffle bag over his head for a final shake before stooping to pick up the paper airplane amid the baggies, in the right-hand corner of the davenport that he must have stolen from a dollhouse.

He unfolded the airplane, revealing a printed message. He scowled and flung it into the mud. While Tessa, Jason, and I exhorted him to explain himself, he used his feet to scuff all his belongings into the bubbling pit. All he kept was the duffle bag.

Then he lunged at me, showing sadness in his watery eyes and catching my arm in his rubbery grip.

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The Luchador’s Code!

  • by jenscratch his sunburned back
  • be more like New York
  • Especially nightmares
  • it’s just rust
  • “I don’t enjoy it.”

Tune in next time part 301      Click Here for Earlier Installments

The Luchador’s Code! That changed everything. No wonder I was having such trouble deciphering John’s message. My mind grappled with this new translation. “Wrestling?” I said to buy time. “I don’t enjoy it.”

It’s not that my brain is getting too old, it’s just rusty when it comes to these dusty codes. I hadn’t seen most of them since my Academy days. Still, the information was in there. I’d studied so hard for my cryptography certification that I still had dreams about it. Especially nightmares wherein a naked man repeatedly snuffled my toes and mixed together too many ciphers.

Oh wait. That wasn’t a nightmare, just my current reality.

And then I remembered that John had never been any good at codes, and it struck me that this whole show had just been a stalling tactic. He wasn’t sending me a real message, he was just fucking around.

I adjusted my voice to be more like New York‘s Bronx accent, and I laid into him with a barrage of New York-style insults.

All he did was sit up beside Tessa, laughing, and scratch his sunburned back.

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Part 300 – or – They Grow Up So Fast

Defying all logic, our chain story is still going strong three years later. Any pretense of a coherent backstory is long-forgotten. We find it difficult to even adhere to a single genre. No matter! The whole point of these exercises is to keep the creative juices flowing, and to keep the fingers nimble. That’s especially useful for us in times like these, when we’re at the point in our novels’ lifecycles when we’re not actively writing any novels.

Kent sometimes thinks that he’d like to wrap the chain story up and get back to a freer time when the writing prompts didn’t even need to pretend to continue an ongoing story, but so far we haven’t figured out how to give something like this an ending. Or at least a satisfying ending.

And so we soldier on, into ever more ridiculous storylines.

As you may have gathered from previous Friday Collaboration posts, Jen and Kent are learning Russian. To celebrate today’s big chain story milestone, we’ve pulled some phrases from an old Russian/English phrasebook that’s been sitting around the Writing Cave for years. We picked it up at a used book sale forever ago, and it is beyond amazing. It’s a dinky little pocket-size thing from 1951, and such a bizarre snapshot of its time. Out of all the things you could possibly want to say while staying in the Soviet Union during the Cold War, these are, apparently, among the most important. We think they’ll make for a stilted and hilarious 300th entry in Tune In Next Time. In other words, they’ll blend right in.

As these things usually go, Jen will start off the writing – after she includes the first trigger phrase she’ll hand the keyboard over to Kent. He’ll write until he works the next phrase in, and we’ll go back and forth to the end. Just like how we write our novels!

  • These pajamas are badly ironed.
  • She dances very well.
  • Three handkerchiefs are missing.
  • I should like to go wolf hunting.
  • Have you any records with Gypsy singing?
  • There are snipers behind these rocks.
  • Slower, please!
  • Will you take an X-ray?
  • What did you get those decorations for?
  • This wrestler is very strong.

Tune in next time parts 299 & 300      Click Here for Earlier Installments

John looked at a ball of silky fabric he’d pulled from the duffle bag. With a scowl, he said, “These pajamas are badly ironed.

Was that a hint for me? Years ago we’d known a certain woman who, despite her lack of a tiara, we both deemed trustworthy. Her favored slumbering attire was a belly-dancing costume not much bigger than the rumpled little square in John’s hand. I hope she still dances. She dances very well.

John tossed the pajamas over his shoulder and dug deeper into the duffle. As he kept up his distraction, I worked on decoding his sniff message. I thought I had it. His snuffling was a clue that he was using the Haberdasher’s Code.  I would know I was right if the next thing he said was a complaint about his hankies.

With great despair he said, “Three handkerchiefs are missing.

Try not to lay it on too thick, I thought. The message was starting to take shape in my mind, but I needed to verify what order he’d sniffed the toes on my left foot, without tipping off Tessa or Jason. So I said, as if to no one in particular, “I should like to go wolf hunting.

“I love wolf hunting!” Jason enthused. “Do you think there are any wolves on this island?”

John muttered, “Maybe the handkerchiefs are in the pajamas.” As he ooched naked across the floor to where they lay he passed close to me and resniffed my left foot, confirming my translation.

“Those pajamas remind of Fatima, and how she danced so beautifully to the songs of her Romani brethren.” I sighed as if lost in memory. “Have you any records with Gypsy singing?” That wasn’t code for anything. I just wanted John to know I’d understood him and he didn’t need to make another pass past my tootsies.

Nevertheless, he lavished further attention on them. The tableau was indistinguishable from a performance art piece wherein a nude man plays a feet-shaped harmonica with his nostrils.

By now I knew his message had something to do with rocks, and I knew where these rocks were located. These rocks are dangerous. There are snipers behind these rocks. There are landmines in front of them. And something important perched on top.

I flexed my toes against John’s nose, telling him, “Slower, please!

“For Pete’s sake, do you think you’re going to figure out what’s wrong with him by the way his feet smell?” Tessa demanded. “Is your nose some kind of medical instrument? Like a stink MRI? Will you take an X-ray? A stink X-ray?”

I was very disappointed in Tessa. Not that I wanted her to know the message John was passing to me, but I at least expected her to realize that we were passing a message. I thought of her as I’d seen her the evening before graduation, nude but for her Academy sash with its plethora of merit badges, and I wondered Damn girl! What did you get those decorations for?

John wriggled his naked way back to the duffle bag. He reached inside it and said, “It must be in here somewhere.” Tessa and Jason asked him what he was looking for, but he only grunted at them.

While he kept them preoccupied, I did my best to determine what it was that was so well protected in that lethal, rocky place. Perhaps knowing where to go was enough, really. Everything else would become clear in the moment. But if John devoted so much effort to imparting this detail, I owed it to him to do my best to work it out.

He finally withdrew his hand from the bag, holding aloft a colorful full-face mask made of satin. Splaying his fingers to unfurl it for better presentation, he told us all, “This wrestler is very strong.

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John Gave My Toes A Complex, Syncopated Snuffle

  • by Kenta pink checked pocket-handkerchief
  • the operation is undergone voluntarily
  • but, baby, I don’t want to bore you
  • reloaded at least twice
  • because she was wearing a tiara

Tune in next time part 298      Click Here for Earlier Installments

John gave my toes a complex, syncopated snuffle until he sneezed. He produced a pink checked pocket-handkerchief, even though he had no pockets, and blew his nose.

Jason lisped, “I won’t bless you unless you get dressed. Aren’t there any clothes in that bag?”

Tessa giggled. “What, are you going to force him to put them on?”

“Ideally the operation is undergone voluntarily,” Jason replied. “He still has that option.”

I was still deciphering the message John had imparted via my feet. This code wasn’t from the Academy. It was our private channel, one we’d both hoped we’d never have to use.

Tessa grabbed John by the ankles and dragged him away from me. “You need to tell me your story,” she said to him. “Tell me how you ended up in there.”

He made the soiled kerchief disappear and said, “I would tell you everything, but, baby, I don’t want to bore you. It’s such a long story, you’d feel like you were staring at a blank screen waiting for a website that won’t come up even after you reloaded at least twice.”

I needed more time to work out the message he had given me, preferably while he kept Tessa and Jason distracted with his story. So I said, “You owe the lady some kind of explanation. All of us are curious, I’m sure.”

“Well,” he said, reaching into the duffle, “like all the best stories it begins with a woman. A woman I thought I could trust because she was wearing a tiara.”

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John Wriggled Out of the Duffle Bag

  • by jentalking about his hang gliding
  • when no one’s watching
  • raising exotic fish
  • “Lactose intolerant? Swell.”
  • smelling my feet?

Tune in next time part 297      Click Here for Earlier Installments

John wriggled out of the duffle bag and lay on the floor of the hut while Tessa cooed about how happy she was to see his face and his equipment, and I’m not talking about his hang gliding gear.

“You gonna put some pants on or what?” I asked.

“I usually only do that when no one’s watching,” he said, and stayed naked.

Jason leaned in and lispered in my ear, “I haven’t seen a worm like that since I was at the Contrarian National Aquarium, raising exotic fish.”

The mud pool continued to churn and burp up thick bubbles. “Let’s get out of here,” I said. “That thing seems lactose intolerant.”

Jason laughed. “Lactose intolerant? Swell.” He started for the door.

Before I could follow, John rolled across the floor to where I was standing and buried his nose between my toes. Was he smelling my feet? If so, that could only mean one thing.

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Those Aren’t The Only Russians

  • by KentI will come and claim you
  • During the heyday of railway travel
  • that zipped on the sides
  • To John’s dull perceptions
  • the happiest girl in Utah

Tune in next time part 296      Click Here for Earlier Installments

“Those aren’t the only Russians in the world, you know.” I wasn’t sure whether I should ally myself with Tessa or Jason, or neither. I wasn’t sure of much of anything anymore.

“If Lyudmila or Svetlana take you away with them,” Tessa said solemnly, “I will come and claim you.” I smiled thinly.

Jason said, “During the heyday of railway travel, no one had luggage that zipped on the sides.”

I stared at him, wondering who’d betrayed Academy rules by teaching him the Stevedore’s Code. Thus it was several moments before the significance of that keyphrase sank in. By then, more bubbles were roiling the mud pool’s surface. A long, lumpy shape rose up and slumped against the rim of the pool.

Jason calmly approached it and found a zipper, opening it to reveal the last person I expected to see here. The man blinked and yawned, then groaned. He seemed to have been drugged, or just submerged in a duffle bag for too long.

“It’s you…” To John’s dull perceptions, Jason must have looked like me. Then again, my twin looked like me even to the unimpaired.

“Hooray!” Tessa said, clapping. “It’s so good to see that face. I feel like the happiest girl in Utah!”

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“Do You Think We’re Robots”

  • by jena unique view
  • “My mother makes them every day,” she whispered.
  • couldn’t buy their silence
  • where your imagination goes
  • Looks like Russians

Tune in next time part 295      Click Here for Earlier Installments

“Do you think we’re robots, Tessa?” Jason lisped.

“That would be a unique view,” she replied, rising to her feet.

“Because that would be a mistake,” my brother added.

“It’s hilarious to hear you talk about mistakes,” Tessa said as she rounded on him. “My mother makes them every day,” she whispered. “But I never do.”

Both Tessa’s parents lived off the grid in defiance to Mother’s belief that we couldn’t buy their silence, so I didn’t know why Tessa would mention the woman now. My mind spun all sorts of doomsday scenarios. It’s amazing where your imagination goes when you’ve had the kind of day I’ve had.

Keeping a wary eye on Tessa I bent down and pretended to examine some footprints on the dusty floor. “Looks like Russians built this place,” I fibbed.

Tessa gasped. “Lyudmila? Or Svetlana?”

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I Expected A Reappearance

  • by Kentare you referring to the caps lock button?
  • used his fingertips
  • with a straight face
  • married 11 times to 9 different men
  • didn’t know as much about anatomy as he believed he did

Tune in next time part 294      Click Here for Earlier Installments

I expected a reappearance of the bizarre creature who’d croaked at us about the ritual, but what arose from the mud pool this time was even stranger. It was like a Mesoamerican snake deity, and the metallic purple plumage crowning its enormous head came up clean, as if the thick muck it came from didn’t even exist.

“You called tech support?” it inquired of Tessa.

“Yeah, and I’ve been waiting forever for someone to get back to me. There’s a problem with my control interface.”

Are you referring to the caps lock button?

“No I’m not talking about the fucking caps lock. Look at these doofuses. I’ve been trying for weeks to get this debugged but it just keeps getting weirder.”

The serpentine technician revealed himself to possess arms, and hands with uncannily flexible digits. He used his fingertips to trace circles in the air, like he was drawing glasses and mustaches on me and Jason. He couldn’t do it with a straight face, and his fangs glinted in the dim light.

He turned back to Tessa. “Look, I’m going to need to escalate this to a level three tech. And my supervisor is unreachable at the moment, but she’s been married 11 times to 9 different men and two incarnations of lustful malice, so there’s no telling when she might come to the office to approve this. So you might be on your own here. Might be easier to just credit your account.” With a glance my way he added, “That one will probably come up with what you want, eventually. Assuming its tail is prehensile.”

And, thus proving he didn’t know as much about anatomy as he believed he did, the creature vanished beneath the mud.

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