Muddy Ribbon
Monday, July 30, 2012
Moving the Blog
Hey all-- I've finally gotten a real website, and have switched over to a Wordpress blog for convenience's sake. This will be the last site post here. Check out www.madeleineribbon.com for future updates and blog posts!
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Chick-Fil-A
Want to do something other than boycott Chick-Fil-A over their intolerance?
August 1, in response to Mike Huckabee's appreciation day: You could donate $6.50 (the cost of a chicken dinner) to your favorite LGBT charity. Details and list of potential places to donate are here-- join us in buying a chicken dinner for marriage equality!
August 3: It's a kiss-in! Find yourself a Chick-Fil-A, grab yourself a same-sex partner, and make out in public. Totally. Details here.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Falling Out of Fate Has Been Released!
Tonight might be the most surreal night of my life. I can say, officially, that I'm a published author. I've been dreaming of being all awesome-authorsauce since I stopped paying attention to middle school math classes and instead started creating fantasy motorized islands in my head. I've completed a life goal, and my mind is getting blown. Now I've got to start working for bigger and better goals!
Falling Out of Fate is officially out on Loose Id's website, a few hours earlier than I was expecting. I was all set to party the night away, too. (And when I say party, I mean bubble bath and a good book. It's a Monday night/Tuesday morning, after all.) If you check out the publisher's website, they have the full first chapter available to read as a preview. Go check it out! If paying for my stories isn't your thing, go find me on Literotica as OrangeRibbon. The last chapter of Taming the Stray went up this morning!
Falling Out of Fate is officially out on Loose Id's website, a few hours earlier than I was expecting. I was all set to party the night away, too. (And when I say party, I mean bubble bath and a good book. It's a Monday night/Tuesday morning, after all.) If you check out the publisher's website, they have the full first chapter available to read as a preview. Go check it out! If paying for my stories isn't your thing, go find me on Literotica as OrangeRibbon. The last chapter of Taming the Stray went up this morning!
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Falling Out of Fate: Sneak Preview
Here's an excerpt of my novella, Falling Out of Fate. It comes out June 19th! You can look for it here.
Chapter 1
The thread glinted
red in the midmorning sun, as thin as a strand of hair. Even in the bright
light, it was invisible to humans, but Kyon saw it. He could find it with his
eyes closed if he had to. His senses detected the pulse of power and the faint
vibrations as Fate’s fingers found the string and got ready to pull the soul on
the other end out of the living world. Kyon would play catch, snatching the
flying little ball of fleshless energy before it fled. If he didn’t catch it,
the soul would be lost and unable to find the way to the next life. Kyon didn’t
like having to chase after souls. It felt terribly undignified, even if the
humans on this plane couldn’t see him.
Fate’s thread
vibrated again, and Kyon slid a little closer to his assignment. The woman
washed her children’s clothing at the edge of the lake, the ends of her bright
green sari soaking up the water as she scrubbed at rough cotton. A few dozen
others had gathered close by with baskets and clothing and tiny children,
sharing jokes and laughing over the splashing water. The woman didn’t
participate.
Her movements became
slow and jerky. Kyon skirted around four older boys squatting around a pile of
shirts and found himself right next to her, ankle-deep in the lake as the sun
scorched his shoulders. Kyon’s silk pants dragged down in the water as he
crouched in preparation. Who knew which way her soul would fly, once released?
The woman convulsed
and fell. Her head struck a sharp stone as she landed in the water. Those
clustered nearby cried out, and a few ran her way, but it was too late. Kyon
felt the tug, red thread tightening and straining, and for a moment Kyon
wondered if it would snap off the soul.
The little ball
popped out of the body as one of the boys reached her.
Kyon reeled it in,
twisting the now-loose thread around his fingers. Fate no longer held on to the
other end. She’d cut the soul’s thread after she pulled it, relying on him to
bring it home. Kyon soothed the soul with soft humming until it came closer,
and he plucked it from the air with practiced fingers.
He’d barely gotten
hold of the soul when his body was yanked into the space between worlds. His
long-term commitment called him, dragging him in with violence. Kyon clenched
his fist around the soul, keeping it safe as he sped through the blackness and
reappeared outside an ornate house, just outside the living room window.
This particularly
needy assignment involved keeping an eye on a local politician with an
increasingly unstable personality. Peter Reid was a politician, a moneymaker,
the kind who always got his way and lorded it over the rest of the world. He’d
hidden the extent of his issues from his family and friends, but his mind was
rapidly deteriorating. He posed the most danger to his wife, an
obsessive-compulsive woman with a flair for social niceties, but Kyon worried
more for their son.
The boy, Patrick, was
all gangly limbs and freckles, timid and easily spooked, though he had a
fun-loving personality that came out when nobody else was around. Kyon had been
calling him polos—foal—in
his mind since the day they’d first seen each other, many years ago. Patrick
had grown up without learning to make a single decision on his own, and he
obviously resented it, though he’d done well to hide his rebellion from his
father. Patrick had turned eighteen a few days before and still had a solid
week until Kyon collected his soul, but his father acted unpredictably. If
Patrick died before his time, he could find himself trapped forever in the same
world as Kyon. The soul collector had his work cut out for him, keeping the kid
fully entangled in the complicated web of Fate.
It was nearly
midnight here, and the lights from inside made the dark feel thick and
impenetrable. Patrick sprawled on the floor, one hand pressed to his nose. His
school uniform soaked up the dripping blood, leaving splotches of scarlet on
the white polo shirt. His school bag sat at the foot of the stairs, and he had
yet to take off his shoes. He’d been out late.
His father towered
over him with clenched fists, chest heaving, eyes wild. “You will not see him
again!”
“He’s at the top of
the class, father. You had no problem with him when he tutored me in geometry.”
Patrick’s broken nose warped most of the words, and his hand muffled the rest.
His father took another swing at the boy. Patrick scrambled out of reach in
time to avoid a fist to the cheek.
“He is not friend
material, Patrick. He’s a bastard child of a whore. If I hear that you’ve
disobeyed me, I’ll make life hell for him, and God knows what I’ll do to you.”
“He’s not a bastard.”
Patrick’s voice shook.
“You heard me. I
don’t want you to see him again. The wrong friends led your sister down a dark,
dark road. I don’t want you to fall into the same trap she did. This is for
your own good.”
Patrick curled up
next to the couch, his back to the expensive white upholstery. Kyon shifted to
get a better view of his polos, and the movement drew Patrick’s gaze to him.
That first jolt of awareness always made Kyon uncomfortable. Humans weren’t
supposed to see him unless he wanted them to, but Patrick had always been a
little different. His polos could see
him.
It was the reason
Kyon always stayed outside the house.
In the beginning,
when Patrick was much younger and not yet disenchanted, he had wanted Kyon to
do something about the violence. The reaction was logical. That first time,
Kyon had been towering over the physical fight like a boxing referee. When
Patrick realized that nobody else could see Kyon, he’d stopped the accusatory
stares. Instead, Kyon became something of a talisman to the boy. When he showed
up, Patrick smiled and waved at Kyon if he wasn’t the focus of the fight. Kyon
would nod back. He wouldn’t let himself do anything more. He couldn’t afford to
care more than he already did.
Reid stalked off to
his office on the other side of the house. Patrick kept his eyes on Kyon and
attempted a bloody smile as he staggered to his feet. A bang and crash from the
direction of the office sent Patrick scrambling for the stairs. He disappeared
into the questionable safety of his room. Kyon wanted to follow, to comfort, to
care for the injury, but work waited for him. He went to check on the subject
of his assignment.
Kyon saw the office
clearly from the outside window. Mahogany furniture filled the large room, and
a giant television hung on one wall, the sleek flat-screen playing a muted
twenty-four-hour news channel. A bottle of Scotch sat on the desk, and Reid held
a full whiskey tumbler. He swore at the television, leaned back in his leather
chair, and drank. The gun was still locked in the top drawer of his desk. He
was occupied. He wouldn’t go after Patrick again tonight.
Kyon left the human
realm before giving in to the desire to stay with Patrick. He had unfinished
business with the near-forgotten soul still vibrating in his fist. He appeared
in the midst of thick gray fog. Wisps of musty air swirled around Kyon as he
stalked toward the towering stone walls. The ever-present haze almost
completely hid the ancient castle.
Kyon pushed through
the shadows of his broken comrades as they drifted across the dim landscape. He
could have appeared in the hall of Death itself, but he wanted a reminder of
what he didn’t need to become.
The oldest of the
broken Unfated had become cloudy mist in the air, their numbers high enough to
pollute the entire valley with dense gray fog. The more recently broken
remained a bit more solid, existing as shambling opaque forms, still recognizable
as they passed through the smoky remains of their brethren, always moving,
always dancing through the world their minds made for themselves when they
couldn’t cope with reality any longer.
Kyon had known a lot
of these shadows before they’d slipped away into slow delusions, before their
minds utterly destroyed themselves. Now they drifted, entirely oblivious to the
rest of the world. This was his future, to wander the dreary landscape trapped
in his own broken mind. He’d come to terms long ago with working alone, without
another soul to shore up the cracks in his own.
Kyon had never really
minded his position as an Unfated, hadn’t minded serving Death. His place in
the Gray Realm gave him far more satisfaction than his life as an Athenian
slave had. He’d continued to renew his contract with Death every five hundred
years. He had nothing better to do. He’d become integral in managing the
others, thanks to his love for organization. Death was forever thankful for
someone else to help with paperwork. Kyon liked his job, even if Fate hadn’t
found his partner. Even if his daily routine had long ago gotten dull and his
soul had grown tired.
He’d done well,
staving off the shadows for as long as he had. The oblivion of madness always
called out to him, but he still fought. Only the barest traces of soul-rot had
found him, and he took pride in lasting so long. Death worried. Kyon’s
coworkers constantly watched him. They evaluated every word, every deed, just
waiting for his mind to cave in on itself. They feared what would happen when
he broke. He took the trickiest jobs, and Death relied on him for so much.
Kyon had long ago
resigned himself as part of the unlucky 50 percent of Unfated who didn’t have
partners or broke before they found and bonded with their other half.
Kyon forced his feet
to move. His thick-soled boots sank into the earth and left deep tracks in the
dust. Walking on the ground in the Gray Realm was like walking on clouds, or
feathers, or those silly-looking yellow mattress toppers Death had handed out
to all his workers as a holiday bonus quite a few years before. Kyon had loved
the feeling of sinking down into the earth when he’d first come here. Now he no
longer cared. Instead, he worried over the politician’s son. He’d been worrying
ever since he met Patrick, and he’d continue to worry until the boy died. Then
he’d take the soul of his polos
and send it on and try to forget.
Worry spread faster
than plague in the Gray Realm.
Kyon had done
everything he could to avoid the disease, but Patrick had become special to
him. Kyon worried about his own reaction to Patrick. The boy had become a man
practically overnight, and Kyon found him more desirable with each passing day.
His polos had starred in one of
Kyon’s more erotic dreams last night, and the potential implications terrified
him. He’d invested too much emotion into this assignment. Now he wondered if
taking the boy’s soul would trigger his inevitable madness. Bringing the boy
into the afterlife was supposed to be a joyous event, but Kyon could no longer
imagine the human world without Patrick somewhere in it.
Monday, May 21, 2012
New Literotica Story: Taming the Stray
After a hard month filling the role of business shark and utilizing his unusual abilities to read the emotions of a bunch of New York CEOs and potential business partners, Derek is relieved to be home--even if it's been raining for four days straight. His little house in the forests of New Hampshire is his sanctuary, and he's been looking forward to some proper alone time for weeks. Derek arrives to find a dirty, naked young man huddled under the awning of his house. With an offering of cookies and a promise of more food, can Derek convince his feral visitor to stick around the area long enough to tame him?
The story of Derek Calbraith, Seth's younger brother, is nearly complete. Finally. I'm thanking whatever deity happens to be available that this one is nearly finished. I have had more trouble with Derek than I care to admit. He and I have been in a battle of wills since November. The stray, on the other hand, is probably my second-favorite character ever.
My Beta just got done with it, and I have a traditional two-week waiting period before I re-read it for final edits (otherwise everything looks the same to me, and I can't get proper perspective on what I've written), and then it's getting posted. Barring any complications, on June 1, the first of three installments will be getting sent to Literotica.
Finally.
Yay.
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Falling Out of Fate Cover
It's coming out June 19th!
Oh, I'm more than a little excited today. This morning I received the cover for my first book, Falling Out of Fate. Ginny Glass did a fantastic job! This just makes everything feel a little bit more... real.
Mmm, Kyon looks like a tasty piece of work. I'm going to make cookies in celebration.
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Coming Up for Air
I have at least four plotlines dancing around, taunting me with their potential awesomeness, and I haven't had time to write any of them down. They've been driving me nuts. I have potential characters popping into my dreams and making arguments for why I should get up and write them. I have new locations sprawling out at night, all fierce and wonderful and mysterious. Granted, as soon as I wake up properly, I don't remember a damned thing about them. That, more than anything, has been pushing me off the deep end.
I've had to put my usual writing goals on hold for the last week and a half to get through three rounds of edits, and my brain is going through a large-scale rebellion. Apparently, reading through the same manuscript twelve times in nine days is not conducive to sanity. Ask my husband. I've been a babbling, spaztastic, incoherent mass of nerves--though that could also be due to my increased coffee intake. I would not survive without coffee, but it sure ups my crazy factor.
At least I have time to sketch out plot ideas, now. And character sheets. And locations.
Oh my.
I've had to put my usual writing goals on hold for the last week and a half to get through three rounds of edits, and my brain is going through a large-scale rebellion. Apparently, reading through the same manuscript twelve times in nine days is not conducive to sanity. Ask my husband. I've been a babbling, spaztastic, incoherent mass of nerves--though that could also be due to my increased coffee intake. I would not survive without coffee, but it sure ups my crazy factor.
At least I have time to sketch out plot ideas, now. And character sheets. And locations.
Oh my.
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