Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Chapter One: Enter South America


This is a book idea I started a while back. I was wondering if people could help me out with something I'm worrying about. I'm wondering if the trust that Josephine Carmichael uncovers for Elroy Gray happens to suddenly by the end of it? Does she start talking too openly too quickly if you take into account the fact that she rarely speaks her mind, and when she does she speaks quietly and usually only to people she trusts fully? Does their relationship here move to quickly, did I rush the character development here, should I start further back in their lives to first put the characters into place?
Theses are just a few questions you might keep in mind while reading if you plan on giving me feedback afterwards. Would really appreciate the help! Thanks :)
Let's get to it then! Enjoy!:

CHAPTER ONE:

His cup of water was handed to him by a slender, well-manicured hand with red-painted, perfect nails, attached to an arm that was attached to a shoulder, attached to the body of the uniformed stewardess strolling down the aisle with the refreshment cart. The flight thus far had been a peaceful one in second class seats, the three on the right near the middle of the section, by the wing. Each seat was occupied by a person, each person in each seat had a story, and each story had a beginning but no defined end.
Elroy Gray watched the flight attendant closely as she handed him his water and then leaned over to the other side of the aisle to ask the other passengers for their desires. She was pretty and confident in her job. She regarded him as just another passenger on another flight. That was just fine.
The man on his right, large, overweight, was snoring heavily, sleeping soundly, and had been for the last two hours. Gray’s patience rewarded him well here. The young girl on the other side of the obnoxious sleeper, by the window, was the person that he was most interested in calculating at the present.
His gaze drifted towards her, almost subconsciously. She looked exactly the same…
~~~
The hum of the plane was constant. It was probably one of the reasons she’d never been able to sleep on a plane. But aside from that, what disconcerted her the most, was the man two seats away who wouldn't stop glancing at her with those emotionless blue eyes, staring without shame as though calculating her worth. If it weren't for his silver-like hair and clean-shaven pointed face, she never would have actually noticed him in the first place. Aside from the colour of his eyes, this man staring at her from two seats away on the long flight down south looked exactly as she had always pictured her father. He was the ideal man, in appearance, of the father that she’d never had.
Josephine Carmichael always did this in places with lots of people. She surveyed every face that passed her by, and eventually found the ones that looked like her “ideal parents”. This was the first time she’d ever noticed a man who fit her standards so perfectly. It was hard not to stare right back at him, and it was definitely impossible to go to sleep with him right nearby.
She didn't know why she did it; picked people out from a crowd whom she would describe as parent-like, but it was old habit, and habits die hard. It was unreasonable of her. She was only bringing more pain upon herself this way. She had to get over every person she saw who fit her standards enough, and these people always brought up unwanted emotions in her that she had a hard time getting rid of.
Josephine glanced furtively past the large, snoring man next to her to look at the ideal father figure on his other side another time. He was dressed between formal and casual in dress pants and a gray jacket over a red button-up shirt with a collar. His shoes weren't altogether fabulous, but they went nicely with his ensemble. He looked very official that way.
She looked quickly away again when his eyes seemed to turn towards her again. Supposedly, she had no right to be bothered by him staring at her when she was also staring right back at him, but the implications of a man staring at a young woman were much more numerous than those of a young woman staring at an older man.
Josephine forced her gaze out the round window by her head. She couldn’t see much past the wing of the plain by blue sky, and perhaps some rolling waves far down below. She needed to focus on why she was on this plane in the first place, she needed to forget her obsession with ideal parent figures and slap herself back into reality, back into the world she lived in, had always lived in, and would always live in, where she had no parents, and no siblings, and no family to care for her; she was on her way down south on this plane because the headmaster of the orphanage was kind to her and thought that an experience outside of her daily life and land would do her a lot of good. She was made out to be a mopey, depressed, and dark person in general, even though this wasn’t entirely true. She did not have a bright personality, but one shouldn’t exaggerate. She was on this plane for a new experience, she needed to forget her old habits for the time being…but it was difficult to forget them with such a perfect match sitting so close by, even if she’d probably never see him again after getting off of the plane in South America. She would probably end up being distracted by the thought of him for a long time after this was over.
The flight attendant was passing back with the cart after having passed through once already. The father figure had received a water from her but Josephine hadn’t asked for anything. As she was passing by their seats, the father figure stopped the stewardess and murmured something to her. She smiled and eventually handed him a second cup of water even though he still hadn’t finished the first cup from before. As she backed away with her cart, the father figure turned in his seat and held the second cup out to Josephine, over the snoozing middle-man. He offered Josephine a slightly amused smirk.
“Juice up. You should keep hydrated,” he said quite simply.
Josephine didn’t know whether to be surprised or offended, but she chose surprised and accepted his offer with a nod.
“”Flying by yourself?” he enquired. Was he just curious or did she have the right to be suspicious of him?
“Yeah,” she answered quietly after taking a sip of water, “You?” she found it difficult to look at him now that he was talking to her.
“Yeah,” he seemed at as much of a loss for words as she was. Either that, or he was just a naturally quiet person – like she was. And she wasn’t sure what the reason was, but he gave off a pleasant aura of sorts, in his tone of voice, his amused smirk, and his mannerisms that she’d taken note of so far. She liked to think that he looked trustworthy.
“I’ve been sent away on a vacation,” she found herself saying to him, with a hint of a smile at the memory of the headmaster telling her it was time to get out of the city.
“You too, huh? I didn’t think you were old enough to be told to go take a vacation. I get told to every month, but I’ve never agreed…”
“You’re out on business, then…” Josephine noted.
“You got family down in Santiago?” he asked her. She shook her head. She supposed she should have thought of this kind of situation beforehand, what with her travelling alone, but she didn’t usually talk to strangers. When she did and they asked her about family, if she told the truth they usually portrayed expressions of pity and said they felt sorry for her. She didn’t like hearing those words, seeing those faces, so she didn’t like talking about it. But she didn’t have a solid cover-story in place and she wasn’t sure what to say to him.
“Just a bag, some cash, and a hotel room with my name on it,” she smirked sheepishly. She wasn’t telling him the name of her hotel, now, was she? And unless he followed her, it wasn’t like it was a problem. She wasn’t being naïve now, was she?
“Well, if you’re just trying to get away, I guess that’s the way to do it,” he shrugged.
“What about you, here for a business opportunity or money issues?”
“You could call it both, but I prefer to think of it as criminal justice,” he clanked overhead for a moment and then back across in her direction. She smirked.
“You’re a cop?” she asked, though it was closer to a statement than an actual question.
“Federal Agent,” he shrugged with an affirming nod.
“Sounds…exciting,” Josephine decided with an arched eyebrow.
“It has its moments,” he smiled, and then watched her thoughtfully with narrowed eyes, “Now tell me, what would a person like you be doing, going to Santiago on your own like this? It doesn’t seem like the situation is…natural. I’m curious now; you don’t look like a regular working citizen taking some time off because your boss told you to.”
Josephine regarded his question carefully. He wasn’t exactly trying to pry, in a sense. He was a Fed, so he was bound to be good at extracting information out of people. And it wasn’t like she was hiding anything in particular or doing anything illegal. She also had a feeling that if she told him of her circumstances, he wouldn’t give her that look that she hated so much. She felt like she could trust him not to disappoint her in that way.
And she was right.
“The headmaster of the orphanage I live at sent me out to clear my head,” she told him, quite honestly and bluntly. If he was surprised, he didn’t exactly show it. He only nodded and then looked up the aisle a ways, seeming thoughtful.
“You could probably use the time,” he said after a moment. She’d been right to trust him, and because she’d been right, she smiled. She wasn’t exactly in a situation where one would normally smile, but she couldn’t help herself. He was, after all, the ideal father figure; not that it would matter in the long run.
“In your orphanage, is it co-ed?” he asked her after another pause. It didn’t surprise her that he would ask about her lifestyle, and for once, she felt almost comfortable enough to talk about it normally.
“Yeah, co-ed, with the sleeping quarters separated for the girls and boys into two different buildings on campus,” she was already thinking back to the girls’ dorm, to the cramped quarters and the pillow fights on hyper nights…it was, in general, a decent place. Temporarily. Living there for a long time was not ideal. It still had nothing over a real family lifestyle.
“Your Head sounds like a nice guy…” the father figure said to her. The father figure…it seemed a little ridiculous to think of him that way after talking to him for a while.
“He is,” Josephine smiled a little fondly. Everyone loved the old man, the headmaster, who was so much more lenient than any of the other staff at the orphanage, “I’m Josephine, by the way,” she finally said, turning to him with an air of friendliness that she hadn’t had the chance to use up until now.
“Agent Gray. But you can leave out the Agent,” he assured her. She grinned, but slowly adopted a more serious expression.
“Agent Gray…I think I’ve heard your name somewhere before…or at least, a mention of it…” Josephine frowned. The connection seemed to be in her grasp, but…she shook her head and sighed, “I can’t remember where though.”
Gray shrugged, “Wouldn’t expect you too. I’m not a big fan of the media, so any mention of me would be scarce.”
Yeah…just a random mention in the media.
The seat-belt light flashed on overhead and the pilot’s voice interrupted their thoughts over the com to introduce a turbulent leg in their flight.
The first few bumps were the usual, no big deal, a little troubling, but nothing out of the ordinary. The second wave cut out the lights overhead, leaving nothing but the windows on the sides illuminated. Even the seatbelt and no-smoking lights turned off. With the next hit of turbulence, the hum of the plane changed its tune and an alarming sensation in the stomach was felt by most passengers conscious of the changes.
Agent Gray looked nearly ready to jump out of his seat and head up to demand an explanation out of the pilot. His eyebrows had already arched into a slight frown and he was very concentrated on staring up the aisle towards the front.
Josephine had never imagined her entrance to the south this way. Her brain had a way of blocking things out, traumatic things, things she didn’t want to experience again, and it seemed that that was exactly what it was doing then and there. Before her conscious mind could fully process the details of what was about to happen, her subconscious shut down anything that would allow her to recall the even at any time in the future – if she did indeed survive long enough to try and remember anything.
Through blinks of light and fuzzy images, from the sounds around her that she heard as though she were submerged underwater, she knew that she must have managed to follow the emergency procedures indicated. Lifejacket. Check. Exits. Check.
The man between her and Agent Gray had awoken at some point and he was also, albeit frantically, following the flight attendants’ instructions.
Descent…water…no-fuel…malfunction…Screams, wails of “I don’t want to die”, panicky whimpers.
This was how Josephine would remember her entrance into South America. High levels of turbulence, bumps, squeals of distraught passengers all around, the distinct lurch and landing in the water of the Pacific Ocean. The sound of a voice, a distinct voice shouting in her ear, and then the sensation of a firm grip on her right bicep pulling her down the aisle to the exit.
Fresh air hit Josephine’s face like a wake-up call, unexpected and somehow refreshing, just as she was sliding down into the rolling waves of the Pacific. With the cool air and the cold, cold water lapping up against her and soaking her to the bone, it became excruciatingly difficult for her to lapse back into a nonsensical state. Her mind was in a state of utter panic. She realized, hardly, in the back of her mind, that she was having a panic attack while in the Pacific Ocean with nothing but a lifejacket to keep her afloat next to the body of a supposedly malfunctioned plane. Heart pounding, breathing unstable, hyperventilating, there was no way for her to control the way her body was reacting to her situation.
“Snap out of it, Josephine!”
Even over the rolling waves, the voice was back. It was the same voice, she would soon remember, that had gotten her out of the plane in the first place. It was the voice that had kept her alive.
“Land’s that way!” he was hollering above the sound of the sea, just so that she’d listen, and she was listening. Her panic attack was gradually calming, her heart rate slowing, her breathing evening out as much as their situation warranted, “Come on, Finn, swim!”
He was only about an arm’s length ahead of her. The word “swim” triggered her body to follow him, to make her way in the direction that Agent Gray was leading – the direction that everyone seemed to be going in.
Maybe she’d missed something about it in her state of delusion.
The whole way, Agent Gray remained only an arm’s length ahead of her, swimming just ahead to point the way and just close enough to keep her following with morale support. She wasn’t a strong swimmer, but she was swimming. She didn’t have high endurance, but she was enduring. If Agent Gray hadn’t been there, she most certainly would not have made it. Her will to survive wasn’t exactly her strongest point, but he made it her only point as he drove her along to land.
He didn’t seem ready to let a plane crash be the end of either of them. She was glad she had ended up talking to him in that seat, on that plane, even after the thought that she didn’t usually talk to strangers.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Toe Trauma...Tooth Trauma...The World of Trauma

Alright. I broke my toe once. I dropped a table on it - it's a long-ish story so I'll leave it at that. I went to the doctor and they referred to what happened to my toe as "Toe Trauma". Okay, so that's not weird at all.
Well, I had a root canal done on Thursday following the check-up with a dentist. The root canal went fine, I'm pretty sure it's all taken care of now except that they still have some prettying up to do for it. Other than that, done with. The pain before hand was worse than the procedure - the root canal itself didn't hurt at all. But low and behold, not two days after I had that done, problematic things (I give no details...yet...) began happening with another tooth. Top right, the tooth next to the right front one. Yeah, right there smack-dab in the middle of my smile.
No pictures now for a while because what happened was I got this lump on my gum above the tooth, swollen and ugly (blech, I know, I'm sorry, that's why I was planning on not giving details). We went to the dentist wondering if it had something to do with the root canal.
Good news: it was a completely unrelated matter.
Bad news: it was a completely unrelated matter.
What on Earth are the chances of having two major problems within your mouth in the span of a single week? I mean seriously here...
So anyways, turns out I had an infection in my tooth...because the tooth had suffered some sort of "trauma". There's that word again. Trauma. Toe trauma, now tooth trauma...I have this feeling that dentists and doctors - people in the medical world in general - really use that word a lot. For lots of things.
There. That's the relations between the story of my toe and now the story of my teeth.
As a conclusion then, the dentist used a fricking scalpel in my mouth (after the freezing, yes. Duh.). I didn't feel it, but as I was pretending to trick myself into thinking that I wasn't actually seeing what utensils they were using right in front of my face, I see this hand pick up this scalpel. I know what a scalpel looks like, okay? I've seen enough TV for that. Freaked me out. That's when I started to feel slightly frightened. I was fine up until that point.
And then she uses this scalpel within my pie hole up by my gum somewhere, and there was blood on the thumb of her glove afterwards.
Yeah, I couldn't trick myself into thinking that I hadn't seen that happening right in front of my face either.
So then my frightened feeling increased a bit and she did some drilling up into my traumatized tooth and she put some sort of product up where she drilled to help heal the infection and then she closed up the hole in my tooth so that there is now this spot on said tooth that consists of two different coloured flecks: one black and one white. The rest of the tooth is a grey-tinged white colour. You can't tell it's grey-tinged unless you look really close, but...anyways.
No pictures for a while. Not until this dentist does some beautifying on there. Yipee. I can be self-conscious about my smile for however long...

And voilà! This sums up the reason for a previous facebook post of mine:
"I feel like Aragorn and the ghost army stormed into the battle of Minas Tirith, Legolas took down more than one oliphant this time, and Gimli went crazy with his hollers and counting and killing - all of this inside my mouth. That dentist did something...and it packed the LOTR deadly combo right into my teeth...at least she didn't make any mistakes. But what else would I expect from the King of Gondor, the Beautiful Prince of Mirkwood, and the sturdy, gruff-voiced dwarf we all know and love so much?"
That was about one hour after the procedure with the...scalpel. *Shivers*
The pain is gone now, hallelujah, but I have been traumatized thrice now: toe trauma, teeth trauma, and scalpel trauma. Yes. This reinforces the fact that I will not be looking into becoming a doctor, or a dentist, or a nurse, or a paramedic, or anything particularly related to the medical field.
But I have no problem whatsoever with writing gruesome and bloody scenes in a novel. That is nearly the extent of my insanity, I believe.
"Now all I need is Aragorn to use his healing powers on me - he's supposed to be a great healer anyways - with Legolas sitting nearby and singing softly looking...beautiful and serene, and Gimli...well Gimli could just be sitting around looking concerned and mumbling and grumbling."
Another quote from myself. Yes, that would be ideal, but sadly...healing with patience will have to satiate me for the time being.
"[...] A dark day! A red day! Ere the sun rise-s!!!"
That was Theoden, Kind of Rohan, leading the Rohirim and other horsemen into battle, for those of you who don't know...Yep. A bit of Lord of the Rings all-out Fan-Obsessing is just what I need to make my day go pleasantly <3