A Time to Remember_Definitely Now_Chess Game of Life_The Debutant
Catalog Guide:
A Time to Remember
Well, the time has finally come. I can’t believe I am watching this sunrise with her for the last time. Where has the time gone? One day putting together science experiments for the science fair, the next we are here. I’m not ready.“Hey, you in there somewhere?” she asks. I squeeze her hand and smile.“Just thinking about all the science fair projects we did together,” I reply.“Oh yeah? I remember doing the volcano project. That one sure got out of hand, didn’t it?” She let out a chuckle. “I can still recall the look on your face when it shot out and hit the ceiling.” She laughs a little harder...
Definitely Now
Sally Baxter stood outside the bookstore in the rain, hood up on her drab gray sweatshirt, her sneakers wet and her soul bleak. She was tired; tired of working so hard and having nothing, of going it alone all the time. There, inside, signing her latest best-seller, was her mortal enemy, Cassandra Lilly. Oh, that wasn’t her real name, and the woman in question used to be her best fiend. At one point, when she went by her real moniker, Debbie Patowski, she’d been quiet, and plain, and supportive of Sally in all she did. But that changed one day when Debbie bought a Hoosier Huckster lotto ticke...
Chess Game of Life
The timeworn man abandoned his empty coffee cup and scooped the chess pieces off the end table and into a cloth bag. Picking up the brown and tan checkered game board, Adam headed up the stairs to his granddaughter’s bedroom. As he climbed, he couldn’t quite tune out the daytime news anchors’ daft drivel.“Like I’ve always said, life is like a game of chess…I don’t know how to play,” one bubble-head tittered.A second anchor cackled, “Oh dear, I thought you were going to say life is a game of chess that you will probably lose!”Thankfully their “news” laughter was silenced after Adam entered Sara...
The Debutant
When Witney first came home, she ped straight under the bed. There, she spent her first three months in her new home. The new Mommy and Daddy she adopted were big, loud, and sometimes scary. They took good care of Witney, made sure she had plenty of food and water available if she needed it. Witney's sandbox was cleaned, daily. Witney's needs were well met and taken care of. The environment was just www.onedoor.ccnew and she was unfamiliar with the people in it. Everyday, either mama or daddy lay of the ground. (The strange people Witney had found herself with insisted on using parental terms to identify th...