Terry L Probert is a novelist and shortstory writer. His debut novel KUNDELA earned a commendation in the 2013 FAW Christina Stead Award. Currently looking for an agent/publisher to bring any of his novels to print, Terry is a member of the Fellowship of Australian Writers, Writers Victoria and SA Writers. Terry is active in his local literary community. His Short Story Banib the Bunyip placed second in the City of Melton Short Story Competition 2013.
Thursday, 16 October 2014
Back to writing Les Gillespie's Gold today
Today I have spent the morning research gold exploration company requirements and my head is in a spin. One good thing though it has allayed some of my doubts for the story line. Word count is increasing and I can see the novel taking form. Roll on those last two words.
Wednesday, 15 October 2014
Character writing exercise: Goal, Motivation, Conflict
I presented this piece to the group today, who received it with mixed reaction. I wasn't as literal in my descriptions or conflict and aspirations, of Ciny, Faith and Ben, as the group expected, but I wanted to convey the characters in a more abstract way. I'm interested in everyone's comments. You can find the criteria in the previous post. I hope you enjoy my take on a popular exercise.
Bang
I knew my target’s
habits and knew what time he would arrive. The Awards Presentation would be
crowded but the lines of people lining the red carpet would work to my
advantage.
Television crews were
set up everywhere and it was easy to blend in, my only concern was the
occupants of room 515. From the fifth floor I would have a clean shot, it was only
four hundred metres, the carpet would provide excellent background and alignment.
I learned Faith and Cindy McLeod lived in 515 from the names on the apartment mail boxes. I arranged tickets to
the Oscars for them on the ruse that they won them in a competition. Their apartment would be vacant by noon and I did not expect them to arrive before midnight. Once
inside, all I had to do was wait.
I dressed as a staff janitor,
I stowed my rifle in a cleaning trolley and made it to the fifth floor. Just before noon the girls left via the lifts at the end of the hall. I used a
stolen house pass to gain access.
I took a towel from
the trolley and laid it on the table, where I put the unassembled rifle. I pulled
a cleaner through the barrel, looked down the bore and started assembly. I
knew I only need one shot, but filled the five shot magazine and put another cartridge in the chamber to be sure.
I moved furniture
to make sure I was comfortable and cracked a front window open. There was
nothing between my position and the target.
I shut the window and
waited, at 2.30 the phone rang, I ignored it. By 3-30, I heard people in the
hall, but they walked on. I kept the television muted and watched reporters
accosting celebrities making their way along the carpet.
At 5.00 pm I opened
the window again and took up my position. Flags hung listless from their
poles, no wind, that would help. I lined up a couple of guests who were about
the same height as my target, Ben.
A stretch Hummer
arrived, at 5.10 the target and his escort stepped out. I cursed under my
breath, the limo blocked my view. I cocked the rifle, slid the safety off and waited.
The Hummer glided away. He was clear, I squeezed the
trigger and watched the bullet take its mark.
My end of the
contract was complete. I closed the window, packed up the rifle, put the
furniture back and sauntered out.
Monday, 13 October 2014
Writing Exercise
A few weeks back one of the members of my writing group showed three pictures to us. Tracey thought we could use them for an exercise on Goal, Motivation, and Conflict.
We all agreed and someone suggested by the end of the month we should write short story around the pictures of the two women and a man. We decided on names and the goals etc are below..
The Girls were:
The motivation was sisterly rivalry
Conflict was Ben's high profile and fitness regeim
I self-imposed a word limit of 500 words and took what I hope is a different approach. I will post the story on Wednesday after the group has shared theirs too.
We all agreed and someone suggested by the end of the month we should write short story around the pictures of the two women and a man. We decided on names and the goals etc are below..
The Girls were:
- Faith: Serious and ambitious.
- Cindy: Bubbly and fun
The motivation was sisterly rivalry
Conflict was Ben's high profile and fitness regeim
I self-imposed a word limit of 500 words and took what I hope is a different approach. I will post the story on Wednesday after the group has shared theirs too.
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
Archie and Tana
Archie and
Tana
It is a family tradition now
And it’s been this way for years
After school Archie and Montana, take a
walk
Archie, he just listens, Tana, she just
talks
She tells him ‘bout her troubles
And says what makes her laugh
A lead hangs loosely from his neck
And loops back around her arm
He paces close beside her
He’s keeping her from harm
Walkers stop to greet them,
And Archie loves a pat
They talk about each other’s day,
Well, you know our Tana loves a chat
And while they are out walking,
In her head she sings a song
Around the corner and up the street,
Her troubles, quickly gone
Archie stops to sniff another dog,
He lifts his leg and smiles
Tana tugs his lead and walks
And Archie moves along.
He hears about her friends at school
What they like to say, and do
He hears about her teachers
And about the bullies too,
How their words and actions cruel
Her feelings are quite often hurt
And sometimes there’s bruise
Archie seems to understand her plight
His brown eyes stare up at her
And seem to question why
She sees her own reflection
Deep in his soft brown eyes
Our Tana’s getting smarter
Every day, she grows more wise
A growing girl with pretty looks
She is nobody’s fool
Archie, he just looks at her
As his lips, they fill with drool
She stops to buy an icecream
From a hot pink vending van
She buys one too, for Archie,
On the insistence of the man
Tana’s sitting on a park bench
An icecream in each hand
Both looking at the sunset
Clouds of red and crimson
Reflected in their view
An image of the houses
Floating on the lake
She nods to people walking by
And wonders about them too
This girl her dog and evening
Eating icecream by the lake
Across the water wafts
The smell of barbeque
Of chops, and sausages
Of onions mixed with mushroom
There’s bacon in there too
Tana’s thoughts are miles away
Archie lifts his paw to touch her arm
She lets him lick her icecream
And then she drops the cone
She gave it to him willingly
Two gulps, and it was gone
She hears someone singing
To the strains of their guitar
And in the corner of the park
She sees him strumming
He leans back against his car.
His song is one of love and loss
And aching of the heart
She smiles, and cuddles Archie
Back home, they have to start.
She drops a coin into his upturned hat
The music man, he nods and smiles
Never losing his rhythm or his beat
And there in that fleeting moment
Tana imagines dancing to his tune
Playing tambourine and singing
Or banging on a drum
A magpie warbles overhead
Drowning out the city’s hum
All the bullies in the world
Are now so far from her mind
All she wants to do is sing
To be with people who are kind.
Archie’s picking up the pace now
And he’s straining at his lead
Leading her down the street
To the butcher and a bone
This is a daily ritual
As Archie makes for home
Tom the butcher likes them both
And with Tana likes to chat
Archie doesn’t care about the talk
He is all about the bone
Soon back at home and
Archie’s lead is dropped
Mum growls about muddy prints
On a floor she’s freshly mopped
‘How was you walk?’ she asks
‘Yeah it was good, just tops.’
‘Better hit the homework then
before tea’ Mum says
‘You know, how your time flies’
Mum gives Archie’s back a rub,
And a scratch behind his ears
She lets her mind wander
To days of schoolyard bullies
And she hears their pain filled taunts
Feels the constant push and punch
She remembers lost and lonely thoughts
She remembers fending off the tease
But knew her vitality was shrinking
Under the bully’s constant jibes
Andy knows how much you need a friend
In a daughter’s ever changing world
And how close a friend this dog can be,
To her loving, growing girl
Again her mind drifts back
To those testing days of growing up,
Her old dog sat there by her side
His ears, all pricked and keen
For hours she told him all about
Her hopes, her fears. and all of her dreams
The memory lives within her still
It makes her strong and warm
As it has done for years.
Saturday, 19 July 2014
Looking for Les Gillespie's Gold
Spent today in the Orroroo area seeking the location of Les Gillespie's lost gold reef, I thought it may have been somewhere in the ranges of hills between Hammond and Carrieton. A further drive through the Oladdie Gorge and I am no closer to finding it. More work required. I did take some photos to help me with time and place. Take a look at Joe Gillespie's country in winter.
Hereford Cow took an interest in us as I tried to get her picture. House in the background was abandoned in the sixties
Oladdie staging house between Johnburgh and Carrierton.
The small outbuilding in the is built on the same line as the main building, this would have functioned as a hotel, ticket office and homestead in the early days.
Coal gas exploration threatens Joe and Laura's way of life, these are test holes similar to those drilled by RAYDOR Exploration on the properties of Joe's neighbours.
With plenty of good information tucked into notebooks and the computer I need to get down to writing and help Joe find this reef before Charles Winkler does.
Saturday, 12 July 2014
A Fisherman's Bay Memory
I
went to her again this morning. What should I do I asked? Her back was to me,
and she neither saw, nor heard. Even if she had, she would remain quiet; it has
always been this way. Dew seeped through what remained of the yellow dress that
covered her. Rainbow drops glistened on her exposed ribs, and she rested silent
among the leaf litter. As always, she waited and I let my mind wander.
I
close my eyes and conjure the same feelings that I experienced the first time I
saw her. Palpitations only an adolescent boy could know, my mouth was dry, and
blood pumped through me like I’d never felt before. She teased me, exposing a
little nakedness as she appeared before our art class. We sat there holding our
breath, tantalised by her form. Even the new chalk sounded delighted, and it squeaked
under Mr Howland’s right hand. He took his time, and this lesson we savoured. First
he traced her outline, and almost to a boy we were agog as he drew the detail.
This has never left me. We were drafting a
kayak/canoe.
Over a few days, sketches morphed from patterns on
the blackboard to bulkhead outlines on marine ply. My father and I would build
her at home. He hoped the canoe would strengthen a bond between brothers
competing for parental attention. A canoe, that has watched without complaint
as I have gone brotherless, from boy to grandfather. Would it be easier for me now
if we had given her a name? We didn’t, she always was, the canoe.
A
few months before, our small yacht had capsized. My young brother, trapped beneath
the sail, panicked and struggled for air. He was unwilling to sail again. I
told my craft teacher of Dad’s plan to build a canoe for Christmas. Swept along
by my enthusiasm, he agreed to make it a design project for our class.
‘You will help me build it.’ Dad said. ‘Not a word
to your brother now. We’ll make it a surprise.’ Forty two years on, I still
feel the pride those words gave me, yet they conjure sadness too. David never
did work with Dad like this.
The kitchen of our old home became a boathouse.Bulkheads lay beside maple spars on the
work bench. The scent of wood shavings filled the room. Sharpened chisels,
planes and spoke-shaves rested on a shelf above the bench. Wrapped in
yesterday’s news, copper tacks, marine nails and screws waited for their place
in the frame. Clamps held the keel to sawhorses we made from old packing
crates.
Our only power tool was a drill Dad bought after
the war, and now he let me use it. I’d earned his trust. Over the next two
weeks we shaped, nailed, screwed and tacked everything into place.
Two coats of blue marine undercoat picked out the
frame. She glistened, the colour matched Dad’s eyes and the shape of her spars
followed the crease of his smile. I can still hear him now, telling me to work
with the grain. I see wood shavings curl, break, and drift to the floor. I
smell the perfume of maple again, and it takes me back to a simpler time.
I stood at the stern, and with Dad at the bow we draped
canvas over the keel. Together we tacked it into place, working from the
centre, taking care to eliminate creases. Folding and stretching it, smooth
canvas cloaked her. Battalions of copper tacks shone against the green of the
fabric. The canvas gave her form, and she giggled as her timbers tensioned as the
first coat of yellow paint dried.
Dad flicked it with his finger. ‘A-flat’ he said.
‘Better try it again after another coat.’ A couple of coats, and the dry paint had
tensioned everything. Her frame no longer twisted and we achieved Dad’s A-sharp.
‘You did well son’ he said and I felt his arm
close on my shoulders. ‘Now, David will have something to keep him out of your
hair these holidays.’
‘Ta’ I said. ‘But, I didn’t do it for David, I did
it for me.’ Sure, the canoe was his and I could use it too, but I’d had three
great weeks working with my father. I learnt from his experience, I discovered
new methods, and I had spent time doing something for my kid brother. I felt
good.
Today I feel different emotions tearing at me. After
a few years we began to get along, gone was the jealousy we had of each other. Unfortunately
we lost David in a car accident before we could exorcise all of our demons. A
heart attack snatched Dad ten years later.
I
flick at a piece of curling paint from a spar, and run my hand along her
gunnels. I gaze at the curve of her bow, and my mind is back to that first
year, and a soft January evening. I feel salt water drying on my face and lick
my lips to taste it. My mate, Trevor sits in front of me and his paddle dips
with mine. A put-put fishing boat motors ahead of us, her white hull mixes with
reflections of sunset. We are heading east. A cormorant wheels inches above the
water between us. White water churns and boils behind the fishing boat. We make
a race of it now. If we stay to the starboard side, and get onto the boat’s bow
wave, we can surf in to shore. The fishermen urge us on, even though they are unwilling
to slow. Three kilometres from shore now and the tide ebbs, eddies swirl around
each dip of our paddles.
Seagulls
dive for fish scraps in front of us as the fishermen clean their catch. They laugh,
bombarding us with fish guts, we laugh too, but maintain our beat, and we are
gaining on them. Their boat follows the channel; our shallow draft lets us cut
across cockle flats. A blue swimmer crab rears at our shadow. Drenched from
paddling, we level with them now. More cormorants streak from the other side of
the bay, across our bow and to their nests on Shag Island. I am squinting and imagine
their reflections, saltwater burns my eyes, but their calls tell me they’re
there. Trevor is singing a shanty now, it helps keep our rhythm. I start
singing faster, I see his back bend, and his paddle digs deeper.
‘We are on top of the wave now.’ Trevor yells. ‘Let’s
surf it for a while.’
We slow our paddling and glide along, allowing
gravity to hold our speed. I drag my blade and steer the canoe up on the stern wave’s
curl. Closer to the boat now, the wave is higher and the canoe surges.
‘Get away out of it, you, crazy buggers’ One of
the fishermen yells and a fish head bounces off our bow. A gull dives and clips
Trevor, he grabs at his glasses sliding off his nose. We wobble and lose
momentum.
‘Snooze, you lose.’ The fisherman calls. ‘Race you
to shore.’
Trevor starts the shanty again, and they join in
too. Our paddles slash faster now and we draw ahead, we set our sights on
another boat one hundred metres ahead.
‘This one too?’ I pant between the bars of: Drunken Sailor.
Trevor nods, ramps up the rhythm, and we devour
the glassy surface. Dodging between moored boats we power toward shore, the
canoe bumps on the sand as waves from the ski-boats carry us through the
shallows.
We slump on our paddles, not moving, waiting to
get our breath back. We had raced several fishing boats home that night, and
our legs wobbled as we carried our craft up the beach. We collapsed on a bank
of seaweed and laughed. Friends joined us, and ribbed our singing.
Tonight
I touch her again and flinch. The prick of a splinter stings my finger. Is it
her way of telling me she needs care? Should I be angry? No, how can I be angry
with this piece of my past. She holds many fond memories.
The canoe always brought people to David, Dad and
me. She introduced us to people from all over the state. Many paddled her, but
no one mastered her like David or me, her round bottomed hull made sure of
that.
Stay
a little longer old girl. I’ll spruce you up nice, and one day you will play
with our grandchildren too.
Wednesday, 25 June 2014
Happy Birthday Isabella
Twenty one years ago today you burst into the world and made your presence known. I have to say it was one of the best days of my life and way back then I made up this rhyme for you.
Isabella, Isabella, Isabella Rose,
Tiny little fingers
Tiny little nose.
Big brown eyes
and a little button nose
Isabella, Isabella, Isabella Rose.
Happy Birthday from Ruth and I, just thinking about you makes us smile.
Isabella, Isabella, Isabella Rose,
Tiny little fingers
Tiny little nose.
Big brown eyes
and a little button nose
Isabella, Isabella, Isabella Rose.
Happy Birthday from Ruth and I, just thinking about you makes us smile.
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