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Hello

So my plan (if you're interested) is to periodically post stories that I've written here on this blog. Let me know what you think (unless you hate them) even if you hate them (but please don't hate them).

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The Way Station: A Christmas Story by Luke Piotrowski

Madsen Morrow was eight years old the first time she met Santa Claus. She’d come downstairs to investigate a noise (sofa legs scratching on the floor as if shoved) that seemed to have come from the living room. It was empty when she got there; stockings hung, tree sparkling, fire burning low. “Well, that’s strange,” she thought and said out loud. This is was what characters on television did when they were by themselves. Madsen was very fond of television and watched it as often as possible. She was about to head back upstairs and into bed when she heard a new sound; a humming sound, coming from down the hall. “Ah-ha,” she said (this also from television). It was the toilet fan humming. Someone was inside if the light from the crack beneath the door could be trusted. “Who’s there?” she demanded. The light and fan went off at once. “It’s too late for that. You’d have done better not to turn everything off. Then maybe I’d have figured that dad or someone had forgotten.” She sighed. ...

March

Sorry this one's so late and so long. It almost didn't happen. As most of you know, my friend Ben and I are working on a new screenplay. But to those who reminded me that I have a responsibility: I thank you. Rene does too. Such Things 3: Saint Patrick and Purgatory The girl sat on my sofa in a pair of dark green pants that were far too much by way of being far too little; too low, too short, too tight. She dangled a black shoe from her big toe for a bit before stomping it back into place and finally offering me her eyes. Those almond eyes. I took them, of course, held her gaze a long, cold minute. She was sucking on one of those toffees. The kind in the little golden wrapper. Golden like her skin. Like the spine of the books that Easter makes me read. “I need you,” she said. Golden. “What for?” “To find someone. I heard you do that.” I told her I didn’t do it anymore, that I hadn’t for a very long time. “My friend is missing,” she insisted. "So tell the police." “I ...

Cai and the Devil in the Deep, Dark Woods

Hey, remember when I worked as a movie theater projectionist? I had embarrassing amounts of free time in which to read, watch trailers, pace, or write and illustrate stories on notebook paper. Never mind the illustrations, but here's a story I wrote when I should have been working. Cai and the Devil in the Deep, Dark Woods A girl named Cai was walking home through the woods late one night. The woods were deep. The woods were dark. But she was a brave girl and unafraid. She did not know that just up ahead, the Devil was lying in wait. He appeared to her in the shape of a man, beautiful and naked. He said: "Won't you take some tea with me "In my home beneath the earth? "A life lived alone is a life without worth, "So won't you come and be with me?" But Cai was clever as well as brave. She knew that the Devil was in the woods at night. And that he was always hungry. And that he liked to eat little girls. So she said: "No, I will not go w...