#WIPpet Wednesday - To Be Sure (Trials) #amwriting #lgbtqia



WIPpet numbers for 28th June, 2017:

28 + 6 - 17 = 17 paragraphs
from To Be Sure

WIPpet Context:
Another snippet from To Be Sure, which continues directly from previous snippets. This is from the first chapter of my story for ‘SAGA’ (title TBC): an anthology of stories featuring older LGBT+ characters (out later this year, from Beaten Track Publishing).

The main character of To Be Sure is Saorla (seer-la) Tierney, a seventy-one-year-old woman from Derry in the North of Ireland. For readers of the Hiding Behind The Couch series, she’s Sean’s mum. Finn is Sean’s older brother. In last week’s snippet, Saorla had just got off the phone with Sean, and was preparing a meal while waiting for Finn to arrive home.


* * * * *
It was only when the front door opened that Saorla remembered the potatoes, which didn’t even have a lid on them, and they were all but boiled dry.

“That you, Finn?” she called and grabbed a fork. The click of Finn’s crutch preceded his answer.

“No, Mum, it’s the bogeyman.”

“Well, you look just like Finn Tierney,” she responded, as usual. The potatoes were soft enough—a bit crispy on the bottom, but they’d be fine once they were mashed up with the Sunday leftovers from the fridge. She passed Finn on her way to get them. She didn’t need to ask how the pain was today; the lips drawn tight over clenched teeth told her all she needed to know.

“Sean’s going to phone you about booking the hotel,” she said on her way back to the stove.

Leaning his crutch against the table, Finn pulled out a chair, holding his words until he’d eased into it. “He already did.”

“Did he now?”

“He did, aye. Couldn’t you have told him?”

“I wasn’t sure if you’d be needing separate rooms.”

“I’m a grown man, Mum.”

She had her back to him, but his tone was light, so she ventured further. “Are you an item again?”

“Trial period, so says Erin.”

“That’s probably wise.”

“For her. Not for me. Or you.”

“What’s it got to do with me?”

“Don’t you want me out from under your feet?”

This time, his tone was more cutting, and Saorla’s guilt gave her a jolt. “If I wanted you to leave, I’d tell you so.” Better he be a living burden than a dead one, and for that thought she refused to feel guilty after the strain of the past few months. God only knew where they’d have been without Erin and Aileen.
* * * * *
What is WIPpet Wednesday?

WIPpet Wednesday is a blog hop where authors share from their current works in progress - expertly organised/hosted by Emily Witt - and the excerpt has to relate to the date in some way. For links to other fabulous authors' WIPpets, visit: http://www.inlinkz.com/wpview.php?id=355404


Thanks for reading
Deb x

Comments

  1. It's fascinating seeing Finn from Saorla's perspective. "Better he be a living burden than a dead one" really got me as a parent. Yes.

    Also: the potatoes. I have done this, LOL. Oops.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I typed a whole reply to this but I was logged in on the wrong account...again!

      It was hard to write as a parent. Harder still is staying with seeing Finn through Saorla's eyes, because Sean's always sticking his nose in. I think I'll have to ask betas to go hard on me with that, especially.

      Potato burning is on the job description for 'adult'. :D

      Delete
  2. This is a great snippet. Pokes you right in the emotions(mine tend to be very pokeable. lol)
    I've boiled noodles dry before. Oops.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Fallon. It's funny being an author and not wishing to poke people too hard but being delighted when you do anyway.

      LOL at the boiled-dry noodles. Busy lives...easily done. :)

      Delete
  3. I enjoy reading stories from an older protagonist's perspective. My series' protagonist is progressing in age with every novel, so I'm interested in seeing how other writers do it...and do it well, like you are. Thanks for sharing.

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  4. I LOVE this, Debbie. Even without a lot of detail, I could feel myself in the kitchen of a little flat, hearing Finn's cane, smelling the gas and the boiled-down potatoes... It all felt so very real, and to a lesser degree I could totally see where Soarla was coming from.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Eden. *beams* At least it's not boiled cabbage. ;)

      Delete

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