Random Snippet – Magic Investigation

I stood in the doorway, hesitant to enter.  There was blood smeared across the floor, leaving a wet, red trail into the next room.  I was called in to find the body.  The snarky half of my mind wondered if they had followed the bloody trail, but I  prevented the sentiment from leaving my mouth.

I crossed the threshold and felt the shimmer of a ward caress my skin.  Interesting.  Mr. Reynolds should not have needed a protection ward unless he thought he was being targeted.  It also meant that whoever killed him was a friend because he or she was invited inside.

The ward was weak but still intact.  If I became a danger to the one it was meant to protect, the ward would activate, with nasty results for the attacker.  At that point, the killer would have had two options:  break the ward or vacate the building as quickly as possible.

I thought perhaps the killer used a third option—kill Mr. Reynolds somewhere else and dump the body back into the house.  If he was already dead, then the ward wouldn’t activate.  But why?  Why move the body back into the house?

The question plagued me.  A murder to send a message was possible but all of our info on Mr. Reynolds said he was quiet and straight-laced.  He wasn’t involved with the mob and had no known enemies or even activities that would create enemies.

I followed the bloody streak on the floor.  It led from the living room into the kitchen before abruptly ending in the middle of the floor.  I scanned the room.  Magic remnants were thick in here.  So this is why I was called in.

The bloody smear ended in a perfectly straight line.  Something had erased the blood and left clean floor in its wake.  Two things came to mind.  The first was a teleportation circle, though that should have left the blood in an arc instead of a straight line.

The second was an illusion spell.  I moved closer, watching the ground carefully.  It shimmered ever so slightly as I moved.  I walked past the end of the blood.  Nothing.

An illusion that altered space was a difficult trick.  This meant a very powerful witch or wizard was involved and that narrowed the suspect list to only a handful of people, myself included.  I stepped back out of the area of illusion and called up my magic.

The illusion shivered as my magic rose, like a mirage or heat waves off of the hot August pavement.  I felt the edges of the foreign magic, a square about six feet across and two feet high.

The illusion was good, masterfully crafted and completely generic.  My eyebrow rose.  Magic was linked closely to the wielder.  Like a thumbprint, magic could be traced.  It took an enormous amount of time and effort to remove that thumbprint.  The list of suspects narrowed again, but without the magic link it wouldn’t stick to any of them.

I pushed gently, my magic curling around the edges of the illusion spell.  It held.  I pushed harder and the spell still didn’t budge.  Interesting.

“Mike,” I shouted, knowing the police chief was nearby, “you may want to pull back.  No telling what is going to happen when I crack this thing.”

Mike’s bald head popped into the kitchen.  “You find something?”

“Yeah, illusion spell.  Good one, too.  Going to take some doing to break it.”

“Okay, we’ll be outside.  Try not to blow yourself up…again.”  He smirked and ducked out of the kitchen.  I sighed—blow yourself up one time and you never live it down.

And The Winner Is…

…me!  Just over fifty-one thousand words in thirty days.  NaNoWriMo is complete with hours to spare.  Hours.  Woo hoo!

nano_09_winner

And now for the editing.  Oh, the editing…

Crossing 25k

So tonight I finally crossed the halfway mark in NaNoWriMo, right on track for the month.  However, it took a valiant effort today because I was behind.  I didn’t write at all last Thursday because of work, Friday I didn’t quite hit my daily goal, and yesterday I only wrote a few words because I was being lazy.

All of that added up to a goal today of 5510 to stay on track.  Yeah, over five thousand words.  Today.  Holy crap it adds up in a hurry.

I made it.  It took most of the day, but I did it.  I demolished my goal.*  How did I do it?  Blood, sweat, and tears.  Or maybe just diligence.  One of the two, for sure.

Like the Nike ad, the best advice is Just Do It.  I didn’t really want to write five thousand words today.  I’m in the middle of the book.  My characters are dumb.  The plot is going nowhere.  All I’m writing is dialog, which I hate with a fiery passion.

None of that matters.  What matters is that I’m doing it.  I’m writing and I’m forcing myself–for the most part–to stay on track.  I will win this year, if I have to drag my novel, kicking and screaming, across the line.  It may come to that.

*Okay,  I wrote 5614.  Not exactly a huge jump over 5510 but I’ll take what I can get.

NaNoWriMo Starts Tomorrow

If you haven’t signed up for NaNoWriMo yet, there’s still time.  You have all of today to procrastinate, but tomorrow is time to buckle down and get started.  So far I have three different story ideas calling to me, but they are just that–ideas.  No plot, no outlines, no character sketches, just three different ideas knocking around in my head.

Thirty Days of Genius – Recap

I made it!  Thirty days, thirty pieces of writing created from a prompt of three words.  Some I liked, some I didn’t, but I made it through and that was the goal.  I ended up creating more words than I would need. Here are the unused words:

ocean, woman, man, hatred, trails, mountain, shoelaces, tree, summer, Japan, lottery, gravy, plaza, duplicate, pants

I’m considering continuing with some sort of daily writing exercise, so let me know if you enjoyed this month-long peek inside my brain.

Now I’m gearing up for NaNo because November 1 is just two weeks from today.  I still don’t have any solid idea of what I’m going to write.  A couple of the story snippets I posted for the days of genius really appealed to me, so I might use them in the novel.  Or I could always write a sequel to last year’s novel.  Either way, I’m sure that on November 1, I’ll be writing something.

I’m thinking about posting my NaNo novel as I write it, but I’m not sure I’m that brave.   After all, the order of the day for NaNo is velocity, and the novel I wrote last year is in pretty bad shape.  A few hundred words a day with each day being unrelated is one thing, but nearly 2,000 words a day that are supposed to form a cohesive novel is something entirely different.